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tv   Mark Dolan Tonight  GB News  August 27, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST

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gb news. it's 9:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. >> i'm leo kerr, standing in for the legend that is mark dolan for the final time in my big opinion, is covid making a comeback? if so, count me out of all the lockdown nonsense and nanny state of affairs. is the state too involved in our lives, or is it not involved enough? in my typekit ten race baiting off the back of lucy letby horrific crimes is nothing off the limit . so 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. but first, the headlines
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with tatiana sanchez . with tatiana sanchez. >> leo, thank you. this is the latest from the newsroom. nadine dorries has accused rishi sunak of whipping up a public frenzy against her, says he doesn't have the x factor of a winning prime minister in a blistering resignation letter, the former minister accused mr sunak of demeaning his office by criticise her. she says his government has abandoned conservatism and the 2019 election manifesto , which was election manifesto, which was published before boris johnson won an 80 seat majority . a won an 80 seat majority. a by—election will now take place in the usual safe tory seats of mid bedfordshire. labour's shadow secretary for women and equalities , liz anneliese dodds, equalities, liz anneliese dodds, told gb news that nadine dorries makes some valid points, although i disagree with nadine dorries on many things when she says that we currently have a zombie parliament and when she asks what rishi sunak stands for and what he has achieved, i think many people will be saying
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they don't understand either. >> and i think this is incredibly damaging when, as we know, our country in the middle of a cost of living crisis, we have a crisis in our nhs, crisis of crime on our streets . and yet of crime on our streets. and yet we seem to have a zombie government that just can't get grip. >> high street chain wilko could be saved from collapse after a last minute rescue bid was launched , but wilko collapsed launched, but wilko collapsed into administration earlier this month, putting 12,500 jobs at risk across its 400 stores. private equity firm m2 capital has submitted a last minute bid worth £90 million. they've confirmed themselves as one of several offers being considered by administrators . m2 capital by administrators. m2 capital has also said it plans to guarantee all employees jobs for two years for firefighters say the government has shown callous disregard for the safety of those on board the bibby stockholm barge and the fire brigades union has sent a pre—action protocol letter to home secretary suella braverman
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outlining its concerns over safety aboard the vessel, which is currently docked at dorset's port and port . the union port and port. the union previously branded the barge a potential death trap . it's now potential death trap. it's now demanding a response to its legal letter. by thursday , legal letter. by thursday, russian investigators say genetic tests confirm yevgeny prigozhin died in a plane crash on wednesday. the wagner boss was on the passenger list of a private jet that crashed north of moscow months after a failed rebellion against russia's military . dodi mikhail kasyanov military. dodi mikhail kasyanov was prime minister of russia from 2000 until 2004. he told gb news this morning that prigozhin had put unforgivable pressure on putin over his management of the war in ukraine. and finally , war in ukraine. and finally, residents of a road in london, which avoids the ulez charge say they're being offered £100 a month by people hoping to avoid the emission fee . people living the emission fee. people living along moor lane in chessington are being asked by motorists to use their driveways while the road remains charge free,
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turning off at any point would incur the £12.50 daily fee for non—compliant vehicles. the expansion of ulez aims to improve air quality and from tuesday will be expanded into greater london. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now it's back to leah. >> thank you, tatiana, and welcome to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kyrees. in my big opinion, a new covid variant is apparently swarming around . if apparently swarming around. if the powers that be want to reimpose a lockdown again, you can count me out in the big story. the most famous mugshot in history . story. the most famous mugshot in history. it's been quite the week for donald trump as well as the first republican primary debate taking place without trump, despite him being trump, despite him still being the frontrunner in the polls. i'm joined by a former republican congressman to break down this tumultuous week in us and world politics. a new
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research reveals that british people are in majority in favour of state intervention in public health. but is this just wishful idea ism? is there in fact too much state interference in our lives? i'll be delving into this with a director of research at the adam smith institute, maxwell marlowe. and in my take at ten as so—called academic dr. shola mos—shogbamimu brings race into the horrific lucy letby scandal, are there any depths to which these race baiters won't plunge? and tonight's newsmaker is the legendary former conservative minister ann widdecombe, who's here to give us her $0.02 on nadine dorries . us her $0.02 on nadine dorries. sensational resignation . and gb sensational resignation. and gb news is the home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from 10:30 pm. sharp with three top punst 10:30 pm. sharp with three top pundits who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script. tonight, we have a research fellow at the bow group, belgium min. loc ninh and political consultant emma burnell and the leader of ukip, mr neil hamilton. and tonight i'll be asking the pundits as
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the eu bails out the french wine industry . the eu bails out the french wine industry. does the eu bails out the french wine industry . does brussels just industry. does brussels just love wasting taxpayers money? is i and chatgpt killing off traditional education and is the practise of asking women , of practise of asking women, of women asking men out to masculine plus your emails, even the spicy ones send them into gb views gb news dot com. this show has a golden rule. we don't do boring. not in my watch. i just won't have it. let's get to work. and we start with my big opinion . there have been opinion. there have been rumblings recently that covid might be making a comeback. papers talk of an august surge to new variants and a bourbon hymer spike and mask mandates are being brought back by some schools and businesses in the states. should we be worried? well, i'm not going to panic just yet. i think some people are just not antalgic for lockdown for scientists, politicians and judges. lockdown for scientists, politicians and judges . gentle politicians and judges. gentle lefties, the pandemic was a
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glorious time. of course . glorious time. of course. scientists missed the pandemic lockdowns turned scientists from nerds to rock stars. they suddenly got money and fame. desperate politics has thrust handfuls of cash into their hands. professor neil ferguson, who's correctly predicted about 20 out of the last three pandemics, was in the news almost every day. terrifying the nafion almost every day. terrifying the nation into submission with his broken computer model. you could tell he didn't believe his own scaremongering, though, because he didn't follow his own advice. neil ferguson broke his own lockdown rules to have an affair with stats . if he really with antonia stats. if he really did believe that covid was as dangerous as said would he dangerous as he said would he have done that? and politicians loved lockdown was loved lockdown. lockdown was like steroids for politicians . like steroids for politicians. they got to increase their power past new laws, print money, and then grift that money to their mates through lucrative contracts for ppe . remember how contracts for ppe. remember how it looked like we were going to have a swedish style light lockdown? and then some politicians apparently realised how they could make
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how much money they could make through covid contracts. through dodgy covid contracts. baroness michelle mone lobbied hard for government government contracts to be awarded to ppe. medpro then stood down from the house of lords after it was revealed that her family trust had received £29 million from ppe . medpro. the national crime ppe. medpro. the national crime agency is investigating and the government is suing ppe medpro for £122 million. they say that the ppe supplied wasn't up to scratch. that's a stink so big it gets through any mask and mp own paterson had to resign after lobbying on behalf of covid firm randox, which was paying him eight grand a month while making millions from the taxpayer. and matt hancock even had a contract awarded to his former pub landlord. politicians were laughing all the way to the bank and with our money and they got to pass laws. it didn't matter if the laws were nonsense. they just love passing laws. picnics were made illegal because coronavirus can be transmitted via double dipping in hummus
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apparently the police in hove an engush apparently the police in hove an english seaside town, stopped a woman whose breast feeding because, according to them , it because, according to them, it constituted a picnic. i'm not joking. a picnic ? unless her joking. a picnic? unless her breast milk was being being expressed in the form of marinated mozzarella balls and prosecco . that is not a picnic. prosecco. that is not a picnic. and a lot of lefties missed lockdown . they got to sit in lockdown. they got to sit in their bum watching tiger king and eating takeaway instead of going to work and they still got 70% of their salary and they got to wear masks to hide their bad skin and lack of chin. and as and the mask became and as the mask became a signifier for people following the wokeist got to the rules, wokeist got to indulge in their favourite pastime. judging people and aggressively berating anyone who didn't wear a mask or get vaccinated . and i've got to vaccinated. and i've got to admit, i didn't get vaccinated. i was going to, but i just felt the government was trying to make the vaccine. like make me take the vaccine. like bill cosby, to make a bill cosby, trying to make a young drink her gin and young actress drink her gin and tonic. if the vaccines so great, why are you being so pushy ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjmea you being so pushy ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make being so pushy ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make myg so pushy ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make my own pushy ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make my own mind' ? just tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make my own mind up|ust tonic. if the vaccines so great, whjme make my own mind up .|st let me make my own mind up. also, started offering
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also, as they started offering better and better to get better and better bribes to get vaccinated , i was holding out vaccinated, i was holding out for a jet ski and weirdly, lockdown turned lefties into hardcore ukip ers, demanding the complete closure of borders . why complete closure of borders. why did they demand an end to all immigration? because of a highly survivable virus that was already in the country but don't want any restrictions to illegal immigration now it doesn't make any sense. so is lockdown coming back? listen if you want to stay home, wear a mask, descend into poverty, avoid all human contact, avoid crowds, avoid laughter, avoid fun, avoid comedy , avoid all the things comedy, avoid all the things that make us human. fine. you do it. i won't stop you. but this time, leave me out of it. i'm here. i'm here. i made it. >> all right. >> all right. >> carrying a cup of tea anyway . what do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? send your views in to
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gbviews@gbnews.com and i'll get to your emails after the break. reacting to my big opinion tonight brilliant panel tonight are my brilliant panel of research fellow at the bow group benjamin and group. benjamin lockdown and political consultant emma burnell . and we've got the burnell. and we've got the leader of ukip, neil hamilton here as well. now, emma, were you lockdown? you a fan of lockdown? >> no, hated lockdown. >> no, i hated lockdown. everybody sensible didn't enjoy it. >> i'm very baffled by your idea that people are desperate to bnng that people are desperate to bring it back. nobody de nobody wants lockdown . wants lockdown. >> i know for a fact that some people really enjoyed lockdown. i've spoken to people when the government stole my car because apparently i hadn't paid my road tax. i went to get my car back from the pound and the woman behind the counter said she loved lockdown because she didn't have to work didn't have to come to work and she not going to she still enjoyed not going to work for a while. >> but there are a tiny minority and they're not particularly i mean, did you her her mean, did you ask her her politics? is she some rampant leftie this car, leftie working in this car, pubuc leftie working in this car, public sector ? well, i mean, public sector? well, i mean, i've met plenty of tories in the pubuc i've met plenty of tories in the public sector. it will
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disappoint you highly to know, i'm sure. but no, honestly, nobody wants another lockdown. one of the reasons that i was so desperate to get as many vaccines as they could shove into my arm was because it didn't want to go back into lockdown. and i knew that that was the way out of it. we are now largely vaccinated. the covid has moved from being a pandemic to an endemic disease. it's not going to go anywhere. it's not going to go anywhere. it's a disease that now exists in our in in in the world. that's how diseases work. but we are now able to better deal with it. and we won't be in a state where the nhs will be overrun , where the nhs will be overrun, which is why we locked down so that we could protect the nhs and make sure that it could deal with those really extreme cases. >> neil, i see you shaking your head there. >> very pleased to say >> well, i'm very pleased to say that i member of the welsh that i was a member of the welsh parliament throughout all this lockdown. voted, lockdown. i spoke and voted, voted all the way voted against it all the way through . you know, is no through. you know, there is no problem. so bad governments problem. so bad that governments can't worse . and that's can't make it worse. and that's exactly what happened with the
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lockdowns. that the lockdowns. everything that the government actually government did actually magnified all other problems magnified all the other problems of nhs . and, you know, it of the nhs. and, you know, it was taking a sledgehammer to miss a nut actually , because it miss a nut actually, because it was quite clear from an early stage. if you listen to sensible academics like professor sunetra gupta , who's been been on gb gupta, who's been been on gb news many times, or carl hannigan, the centre for evidence based medicine, there was no case whatsoever for anybody the age of 60 or anybody under the age of 60 or 65 to be vaccinated unless they had very strange medical conditions as and when we got to the age of early teens, then vaccines were judged by by scientists to do more harm than good for the average age of mortality from covid or covid related conditions was 83, which was one year higher than the average age of mortality at birth. >> well, that's the thing. i mean, in scotland, the age of the average age of people dying from coronavirus is older, as you say, than the average life expectancy, which means in scotland, coronavirus disease. >> it's an antioxidant. people
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are living if they have are living longer if they have it . it doesn't make any sense. i it. it doesn't make any sense. i mean, benjamin, you were mean, benjamin, were you were you a lockdown ? you a fan of lockdown? >> saw it more as a list >> no, i saw it more as a list of rules to break like bucket list breach as much list of things to breach as much as possible. >> did you get in trouble >> did you ever get in trouble for breaching the rules? because one my friends fined like one of my friends got fined like £200 something walking one of my friends got fined like £2(dog. something walking his dog. >> it was i did once have a party where the police turned up, but we had to hide everyone in the attic like anne frank. so. we got with that. so. but we got away with that. i shouldn't admit that. really if that's actually true, i just that's actually not true, i just made up, your honour. but made that up, your honour. but no, never a fan of it. no, i was never a fan of it. i never went along with it as far as i was concerned. and the more you ignore what they bring in, the can by it. the less you can abide by it. just pretend it's not happening and on. on with your and move on. carry on with your life as normal. but i find it really convenient this new variants come just before really convenient this new varelectionne just before really convenient this new varelection in just before really convenient this new varelection in the just before really convenient this new varelection in the jlit's)efore really convenient this new varelection in the jlit's likee an election in the us. it's like so such good timing. >> the election's not for another a half. another year and a half. yeah, that's time to set in. that's time for it to set in. >> you know, you've got to talking about oh come on, it's time for the ball rolling. come
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on. >> time for biden to see time. i mean, if you've got an election in 18 months, you're not. >> not this is not an >> it's not this is not an october surprise. it's an august before surprise before august. surprise >> are you mad? and then campaign platform campaign on the platform of i'm going from your homes. >> if you vote for me, i'm going to i'm to going finally. >> that is a conspiracy theory too far even for gb news. come on, guys. >> come on. »- >> come on. >> i mean, think, >> i mean, don't you think, emma? mean, we see time and emma? i mean, we see time and time again scientists say sort of. like money guides the of. i feel like money guides the science sometimes. want science sometimes. so they want the want the funding. they the they want the funding. they want grants to keep want the research grants to keep rolling in. so they're going to talk of covid. no talk up the threat of covid. no >> yes . scientists need more >> yes. scientists need more research grants and there will be seeking them and they'll be trying to make the most persuasive case. that's going to be true, whatever it is that they're researching, whether it's or anything that you it's cancer or anything that you believe in. yeah ulez apparently turns to be climate turns out not to be climate change, we're really going change, too. we're really going for the hits tonight . yeah for the hits tonight. yeah research needs money. research takes money. it's important that
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we do it well. and if the research doesn't give the answer that the money wants, then the research doesn't get the money. science works. science is about consensus. yes. and trying to find answers. >> science is about it's not about consensus at all. >> in fact, the professor karl poppen >> in fact, the professor karl popper, who was a great expert upon scientific methods , said upon scientific methods, said that it's by conjectures and refutations that science advanced. >> well yeah. not by consensus. >> well yeah. not by consensus. >> what you do is you establish a methodology. you establish you a methodology. you establish you a thing that you are going to test and you test that and then you test it again and you test it in lots of different conditions. and then it comes to consensus. yeah, but so that's, that's the test. >> it you try to disprove it. >> it you try to disprove it. >> yeah, absolutely. that's what testing it means in covid. >> we didn't try to disprove anything. to prove anything. we just tried to prove it. did the opposite. if it. we did the opposite. if anyone tried to disprove it, they called a conspiracy they were called a conspiracy theorist. exactly same they were called a conspiracy th truet. exactly same they were called a conspiracy th true of exactly same they were called a conspiracy th true of climate :tly same they were called a conspiracy th true of climate change. ame is true of climate change. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and in fact, we're seeing now, during lockdown now, i mean, during lockdown a nofice now, i mean, during lockdown a notice i remember notice their videos. i remember there was a man screaming at a
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tiny the on a tube tiny woman on the on a tube platform because she wasn't wearing a mask or she hadn't worn properly. and worn her mask properly. and ironically, you know, him shouting releasing ironically, you know, him silot:ing releasing ironically, you know, him silot:ing covid releasing ironically, you know, him silot:ing covid than releasing ironically, you know, him silot:ing covid than anything; a lot more covid than anything. she was doing. but you know, we saw this vitriol directed at people for not obeying the rules that were laid down. and now that were laid down. and now that that's all in the past, people the same people are like, well, let's all just move on. and forget it. >> but i mean, they that went both ways, though. >> there was a lot of vitriol. i mean, we've seen video of mean, we've seen the video of chris whitty being accosted in the streets, matt hancock being accosted on the tube. okay for people who believe covid was a conspiracy theory. >> so looking for a small enough violin for man? >> well, i mean, yeah, matt hancock i don't particularly care. also don't think we care. but i also don't think we should be accosting politicians on yeah, you know, on the tube. yeah, you know, you've to be able to, to do you've got to be able to, to do yourjob, even you do it as yourjob, even if you do it as badly as matt hancock does. yeah. and i think it's, you know, can people out of politics. >> that's, that's fair enough. anyway, coming up next in the
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big what a week. it's big story, what a week. it's been donald a former been for donald trump, a former republican congressman joins me from to get from washington, dc to get the latest historic latest on these historic developments. in developments. i'll see you in a couple
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kyrees. now as the famous quote goes, when america sneezes, the world catches a cold. it's been quite the week for former president donald trump from surrendering himself to the authorities in georgia to delivering the most famous mugshot in history to missing the first republican primary debate and still remaining the frontrunner in the polls. are these seemingly relentless indictments against the ex commander in chief doing nothing but helping him win. could he become the first american in history to take the white house with criminal indictments ? he seems think indictments? he seems to think so. hours after the so. just hours after the historic mugshot hit the public domain, mr trump store was selling t shirts and mugs , selling t shirts and mugs, donning the iconic photograph ,
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donning the iconic photograph, the trump saga rages on and is showing no sign of simmering down any time soon. so what next? well joining me now from the united states is a man who has witnessed first hand some of the most extraordinary political events in us history. former republican congressman for ohio bob mcewen. hi, bob. thanks for joining us. >> my pleasure to be with you. thank you much. i certainly enjoyed that just the last section that you had on on the on the breakout and you make some very good points and i strongly support them . strongly support them. >> brilliant. thanks very much, bob.and >> brilliant. thanks very much, bob. and what about trump? what's what's happening with him? i mean, it seems that they're trying to bring him down, but the more arrows and sungs down, but the more arrows and slings they fire at him, the stronger he gets . stronger he gets. >> well, this is a very sad chapter in american history. >> well, this is a very sad chapter in american history . a chapter in american history. a couple of years ago, the democrat party said that democracy was on the ballot. everyone sort of quizzically looked. what were they talking about? little did we suspect that they would literally try to
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take a democratic candidate for office in a democratic election and to lock them up so that you couldn't vote for them? and that's what they're attempting to do. and quite frankly, i think most of the american people are seeing through it. but it's a it's been said but it's just a it's been said that cannot have that you cannot have self—government without self—discipline. the people self—discipline. and the people that are involved in this effort , the democrat are , the democrat party, are frightened to death of having to run against a free and run against him in a free and open election. and so this piling these things are so piling on of these things are so demeaning to our form of government. and i'm hopeful and optimistic that eventually it will be corrected and they'll be seen for who they are, those that unwilling go to the that are unwilling to go to the ballot and do you feel that ballot box and do you feel that this shows that there's a two tier justice this shows that there's a two tierjustice system in america? >> we've seen the rioters, the january sixth rioters being punished with a full force of the law, whereas whereas antifa and black lives matter rioters are sometimes let off, sometimes even compensated for being arrested. and, you know, we've seen biden avoiding any serious
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punishment for some of the same same things that donald trump is has been accused of, such as, you know, having the documents, the classified documents at his at his property. i mean, do you think this is really exposed that split? >> it's such a terrible thing to have to confess, but i don't see how else you look at it. the left is we've seen under mao tse tung called the great leap forward and klaus schwab calls it the great reset . you can see it the great reset. you can see this effort to undo the form of government that has maintained peace and stability for these last 70 years. and as they take over the cities, they've just gone too rampant and not enforcing the law, allowing people to come and steal and to urinate the sidewalks and urinate on the sidewalks and things. what has happened is things. and what has happened is democrats took over new york just 12 years ago, was considered the large city considered the safest large city on the planet, a beautiful restructuring of having for the first time in my lifetime, four consecutive elections of republican governors. well, once
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the democrat mayors, once the democrats came in, immediately began to allow people to sleep on the subway and to rape and pillage without consequence, just as you said then, we've seen our cities falling apart. there seems to be a two levels and now this effort to come after the president, which is coordinated by the justice department , that was headed by department, that was headed by mr obama's former attorney general, he's coordinating these things to have these at the local level, at the state level and to have a federal. but both of them, you mentioned about the documents. the law is very clear about the presidential documents . and i'm reminded that beautiful scene in the crown in which the night before her coronation queen elizabeth said she asked if she could borrow the crown to test the weight on her head and the keeper of the crown jewels looked at her and said, borrow it, ma'am. from whom? if it's not yours , whose whom? if it's not yours, whose is it? and it's exactly the same way with these presidential documents. they don't belong to some bureaucrat somewhere . or some bureaucrat somewhere. or the simply says that those
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the law simply says that those are then, of course, are his. and then, of course, what did were only talking what they did were only talking about 131 pages, 131 pages. and yet you'll see on the news all these boxes and in bathrooms and storage halls and all of this stuff, just to create the momentum, because they know that if he goes to the election, you saw what happened. america was in fact, the entire world in my lifetime , i've seen two lifetime, i've seen two opportunity is when a person was able to geopolitically change the planet without a war. the first one, of course, was ronald reagan. the collapse of the soviet union and then this 1 in 2016. china was on a roll. everybody was at their mercy. and one man, one man, donald trump said this isn't good. we shouldn't have all of our chips and all of our batteries and all of our communications and all the dependent and all of our pharmaceuticals dependent upon the dependent and all of our pha|country.:als dependent upon the dependent and all of our pha|country. and dependent upon the dependent and all of our pha|country. and when dent upon the dependent and all of our pha|country. and when het upon the dependent and all of our pha|country. and when he didioi'i one country. and when he did that stock market in that and the stock market in beijing went down 40, the stock market in america went up 50. you saw this great shift of wealth and brother, it made those people who had taken all of her retirement funds and all
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of her retirement funds and all of our money and invested in china, they were mad as can be. and they're process of and they're in the process of rebuilding china , as you just rebuilding china, as you just saw week, when they were saw last week, when they were they were meeting with the bric countries away from from countries to move away from from the and stability of post the peace and stability of post world ii world a world war ii world into a communist dominated leftist rank and that's what this battle is about. and donald trump is the strongest vehicle to prevent them from being successful in that effort . that effort. >> well, and it's interesting that mentioned china, that you mentioned china, because, the house because, i mean, the house oversight investigated oversight committee investigated or investigate ing the or is still investigate ing the biden family for corruption , biden family for corruption, particularly around hunter biden. and they've they've found evidence payments from evidence of payments from countries such as romania, but also china, business businessmen in china has paid, i think, some something in the region of $1 million to family. a family member joe biden , which i member of joe biden, which i mean, this this just seems an insane an insane thing for the for the mass media to be ignonng. for the mass media to be ignoring . and do you think the ignoring. and do you think the focus on trump and the circus around trump is a distraction from from that corruption and
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also from other issues around hunter biden with his illegitimate children and drug use ? use? >>i use? >> i love the question because it answers itself . if you're it answers itself. if you're 100% correct, if you wanted to talk about any issue , any issue, talk about any issue, any issue, if you wanted to talk about the strength of the dollar internationally, if you wanted to talk about inflation, if you wanted to talk the border, wanted to talk about the border, if wanted to talk about if you wanted to talk about education, if you to talk education, if you wanted to talk about cities, you wanted about our cities, if you wanted to at all to talk about anything at all that people would would be in complete revulsion to this administration. complete revulsion to this admi to tration. complete revulsion to this admi to waver. complete revulsion to this admi to wave the shiny object have to wave the shiny object and their object is to do and their shiny object is to do something that's never happened in and that's to in america before. and that's to attempt to put a man , a man in attempt to put a man, a man in jail. it's they're doing it in order to get people to turn against him and to get the left to smile and laugh about it. but one of them is a charge that he molested a woman 37 years ago. now, the statute of limitation has long since run . but now, the statute of limitation has long since run. but in a pubuc has long since run. but in a public building in which within a tee shot around the corner was
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the most beautiful hotel in the world, the plaza, which he owned. now, no one in their mind is seducing a woman. and you own the most beautiful hotel within walking distance. we're coming in, attack woman in a public. in, attack a woman in a public. so this woman is crazy. she's the head of a of a she writes a sex column. she was on cnn and said that women fantasise about being this woman. they took her off shelf just so that they off the shelf just so that they could this charge against could make this charge against him, which eventually, of course, by boards. course, will go by the boards. but meantime, he is but in the meantime, he is putting terrible, putting in this terrible, terrible position, something that should have been done that never should have been done and has never been done in our country ever before. is country ever before. this is third banana republic third world banana republic stuff . that's what the democrat stuff. that's what the democrat party to . party is up to. >> before before we go >> and bob, before before we go , mean, knew president , i mean, you knew president nixon back in the day. does this compare in any to watergate, compare in any way to watergate, which you know, in its which was, you know, in its time, a huge upheaval in political scandal ? political scandal? >> well, they of course , as you >> well, they of course, as you know, his campaign did some things and he tried to protect them. and for that, he he
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resigned and resignation in america is much different than resignation in a parliamentary system in america. when you resign , you're sort of resign, you're sort of considered that's the end of you. whereas in a parliamentary system, you go up a shelf to system, you go up on a shelf to pay system, you go up on a shelf to pay your dues then come pay your your dues and then come back. but he and this is this is an effort there wasn't the attempt to put him in jail like this. and this is this is just beyond the pale . beyond the pale. >> yeah. i mean it certainly die in jail. >> it certainly seems like something that's that's tearing the country apart. >> and right at a time when president biden should be trying to bring the country together anyway. bob mcewen, thank you so much for joining anyway. bob mcewen, thank you so much forjoining us and giving us giving us your insight. well i'm optimistic that this is going to turn and this will be actually good our actually very good for our future, that one will dare future, that no one will dare try this again they'll pay try this again and they'll pay a severe price. >> hoping and praying for it. >> well, we'll we'll see you over the coming coming over the next coming coming months. anyway, that's that's bob mcewen, former congressman in and america giving us his
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insight into the donald trump saga. insight into the donald trump saga . anyway coming up next with saga. anyway coming up next with the pundits , is it okay for the pundits, is it okay for women to ask men out on dates or is it just a bit too masculine? and does the eu love wasting taxpayers money? i think we know the answer to that. i'll see you in two minutes. don't go away. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast. i'm craig snell. we're looking ahead to the new week . for most ahead to the new week. for most of us, it's going to stay changeable. some further spells of also some of sunshine, but also some further at times . so as we further rain. at times. so as we end sunday, we've got this week weather front which will gradually way gradually spread its way a little further eastwards. little bit further eastwards. a ridge pressure trying to ridge of high pressure trying to build may build in from monday. it may well settle down well just settle things down briefly, as we end sunday, briefly, but as we end sunday, you just that weather you can just see that weather front gradually working its front just gradually working its way eastwards. rain very patchy . we'll see . and either side, we'll see plenty spells and under plenty of clear spells and under the clear skies, may just see the clear skies, we may just see some patchy mist and fog. for
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most cities, however, most towns and cities, however, temperatures staying comfortably most towns and cities, however, te|doubleires staying comfortably most towns and cities, however, te|double figures'ing comfortably most towns and cities, however, te|double figures .1g comfortably most towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so :omfortably most towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so as1fortably most towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so as we tably in double figures. so as we start monday, a bank holiday for most of us, a bright start for a lot of us actually . still this lot of us actually. still this area of cloud across central areas and that will just spread its a little bit further its way a little bit further eastwards. and as we go into the afternoon, many afternoon, actually many parts seeing around and seeing some cloud around and that will be thick enough that cloud will be thick enough in produce some in places to produce some showers, mainly across showers, mainly focussed across western northern western scotland and northern ireland. and for most it's a warmer feeling day could see highs reaching around 2122 down towards the south eastern corner into tuesday, a very similar day . a lot of dry weather around, but there will be some showers. this line of showers will just gradually its way gradually spread its way a little bit further southwards as we course of the we go through the course of the day. and then later on, some blustery showers working into the scotland the far northwest of scotland wednesday, still, but wednesday, similar still, but then thursday, we could see then on thursday, we could see a longer spell of rain arriving from west throughout the day i >> -- >> that 5mm >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of
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weather on . gb news earlier on weather on. gb news earlier on gb news radio. >> let's talk about those mysterious disappearances at the british museum because the chairman of the british museum, one george osborne, says they've started to recover some of the missing items about time. >> he's also promised to clean up the mess after the resignation of the director , resignation of the director, hartwig fischer, who's now facing calls to hand back a five figure bonus that he got. >> every week we'll be hearing
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your views from up and down the country in the real world. join me . at seven. well come back to me. at seven. well come back to mark dolan tonight with me, leo kyrees and plenty of you been getting in touch with your emails. >> graham says that anyone who follows lockdown rules again is an idiot . we're still recovering an idiot. we're still recovering
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from the farce of the last lot less. graham's definitely not going to be masking up and sticking to the rules, john says the benefit to a new the only benefit to a new lockdown would have to lockdown would be you'd have to be locked in the studio. leo because you've done such a good job mark has been and job whilst mark has been off and you scottish jokes about you took my scottish jokes about grouse so much. grouse whisky. thanks so much. really appreciate that. gareth says.i really appreciate that. gareth says. i can't understand why neil hamilton has this anti—vaccine attitude. why do you, neil i don't have an anti—vaccine attitude . anti—vaccine attitude. >> i had three vaccinations myself . well, i say, is that you myself. well, i say, is that you have to weigh up the relative risks . and if you're at no risk risks. and if you're at no risk from covid, why have the vaccine? and we know from the evidence in retrospect, although we could also have said it with reasonable confidence in advance, that anybody who is under the age of 60 or 65 was not going to suffer any severe consequences of contracting covid. yeah and we saw countries that down that didn't lock down particularly sweden particularly hard, like sweden for much for example, have pretty much the experience as countries the same experience as countries that . that did. >> anyway, back with me now and joining throughout the show joining me throughout the show are fellow bow
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are research fellow at the bow group, benjamin loudon , and group, benjamin loudon, and political consultant emma burnell . and we've got the burnell. and we've got the leader of ukip . you just heard leader of ukip. you just heard him, neil hamilton . now france him, neil hamilton. now france finds itself plagued by a problem that me sounds like problem that to me sounds like a blessing. the country has a surplus of wine. the eu has paid france £160 million euros to destroy all this extra wine. the surplus has been blamed on the growing popular rmt of craft been growing popular rmt of craft beer. the cost of living, crisis and overproduction . it's not the and overproduction. it's not the first time the eu has had to bail out surplus production production. it did the same thing to buy out butter mountains and wine lakes that were caused by government intervention the 70s. does intervention in the 70s. does the love rinsing the eu just love rinsing taxpayers money now? neil you can. i can remember the butter mountains and the eu the wine lakes.i mountains and the eu the wine lakes. i mean is this i was in the 1980s so that was yeah. the 19805 the 1980s so that was yeah. the 1980s and the, the eu was, was formed partly with the plan to make sure that we never had to
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go through rationing again. but do you think this is this is a step too far and they should let this this wine on to the market and let it find its value? >> well, i think i'm perhaps personally responsible for this because i gave up drinking french wine quite some ago french wine quite some time ago in the french is in protest at the french is anti—british attitude over anti —british attitude over brexit. so anti—british attitude over brexit. so i previously brexit. so. so i previously given up drinking argentine wine. so i. i swapped france for argentina. i'm now drinking argentine argentine malbec. >> so if britain goes to war with australia, you're going to have no wine left whatsoever . have no wine left whatsoever. >> this is devastating. >> this is devastating. >> replaced pretty >> have you replaced pretty typical eu ? typical of the eu? >> after all, when the eu was set back 1957, it was set up back in 1957, it was basically a deal between france and germany whereby inefficient french agriculture would be supported by by german industry . and the whole thing was a franco german racket at the expense of european consumers. yeah nothing much has changed. in the meantime. so this is just another flagrant example of the
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way in which producer interest groups in this particular case wine. but it could be anything. yeah have priority when the eu technocrats and bureaucrats decides what's best for us all. >> yeah. and emma is a remainer. i'm sure you disagree with with neil on that. i the bureaucratic part of it i just find silly. >> but on the other hand, we should not be destroying £160 million worth of wine because i would drink it. yeah. >> it's so sad. this is. this is good wine to destroy . yeah, it'd good wine to destroy. yeah, it'd be a great weekend, right ? be a great weekend, right? >> yeah. you could. >> yeah. you could. >> you could bathe in champagne. >> you could bathe in champagne. >> eu destroying wine, >> the eu destroying wine, destroying food when they're starving people in africa and sober people in scotland. >> i mean, it seems terrible. >> i mean, it seems terrible. >> there are no sober people in scotland. leah what are you talking scotland. leah what are you talino. >> no. >> no. >> with all that wine going down the drain, i mean, benjamin, what you make of this? what do you make of this? >> well, usually for >> well, look, i'm usually for all destroying french things. it's british tradition. it's a great british tradition. you know, napoleon. you know, like napoleon. we destroyed do the destroyed him. but i do draw the line wine because it's great.
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line at wine because it's great. french is fantastic. you french wine is fantastic. you shouldn't getting destroyed. french wine is fantastic. you shouldrwhy getting destroyed. french wine is fantastic. you shouldrwhy didtting destroyed. french wine is fantastic. you shouldrwhy did you destroyed. french wine is fantastic. you shouldrwhy did you justtroyed. french wine is fantastic. you shouldrwhy did you just come. >> but why did you just come back i was just in france. >> i shouldn't have told you that. i'm banning talking that. right. i'm banning talking in green shoots against. >> but. >> but. >> look, it's also from an >> no, look, it's also from an economic position. is what economic position. this is what caused revolution is caused the french revolution is when siloed all grain. when they siloed all the grain. back in the 1780s. and then the obviously famine. back in the 1780s. and then the obvi because famine. back in the 1780s. and then the obvi because they'd famine. back in the 1780s. and then the obvi because they'd siloed ne. back in the 1780s. and then the obvi because they'd siloed it, and because they'd siloed it, because the price was too low, they wanted wait for it to go they wanted to wait for it to go up. right. ended up up. right. it ended up plummeting control. they plummeting out of control. they said, siloed grain said, we need that siloed grain to famine and the to deal with the famine and the farmers refuse. so people rebelled. of lead rebelled. that's one of the lead causes of french revolution. causes of the french revolution. right if there's anything right and if there's anything that's second that's to going cause a second french revolution, then it's destroying good wine. i destroying good wine. yeah. so i personally think this is a bonkers it's just bonkers idea. and it's just typical eu nonsense. >> yeah, i couldn't agree more. now research has found that now new research has found that chatgpt a chatbot that can provide detailed on provide detailed prose on demand, perform demand, matched or perform better students when better than students when answering . answering assessment questions. subjects where the model outperformed the youngsters included computer science , included computer science, political studies, engineering and psychology. so if artificial
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intelligence does better than our students, are we set to see the decline of traditional education station? i mean, benjamin, what do you make of this? you don't look like you're long out of university yourself. >> not not too long. but i don't think it's because students are less intelligent i think less intelligent than i. i think they're more lazy , they're less they're more lazy, basically, right there. i doesn't know how to be lazy. it just perform times. but students, if they apply themselves, i think are just as capable of achieving. you know, a high grade an exam nation. a high grade in an exam nation. the problem has that the the problem this has is that the implication destroy implication is it will destroy jobs future. the jobs in the future. but the intelligence needed sitting intelligence needed for sitting exams for chatgpt exams is perfect for chatgpt it's regurgitating information in way, in a certain way. in a way, in a certain way. whereas jobs require initiative, different intelligence different kinds of intelligence . don't think ai . yes. which i don't think ai has up with yet. yeah. has caught up with yet. yeah. >> so, emma, do you think we need change way we teach need to change the way we teach students and change the way we grade instead of having grade them instead of having just rigged agitating information drilled just rigged agitating inforthem?i drilled just rigged agitating inforthem?i do drilled just rigged agitating inforthem?i do need drilled just rigged agitating inforthem?i do need to lled just rigged agitating inforthem?i do need to apply into them? we do need to apply those problem solving skills and things that i might might struggle with and maybe recognising which square contains a traffic light .
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contains a traffic light. >> yes, i mean, i've long been worried about the kind of the real, oh, almost mechanisation of education. you teach to the test rather than teaching children to think . and i think children to think. and i think one of the things that's so brilliant about studying things like literature, you know, there is no real job application . is no real job application. trust me, i've got a degree in literature , but there's no job literature, but there's no job application to that. but it helps you to think more creatively. more interestingly . creatively. more interestingly. and i just worry that we've got so far down the road of exams and just about the job you're going to do rather than the person you're going to become . person you're going to become. and i think we could do much better for at thinking about education in a much more rounded sense. >> yeah, that sounds like somebody trying to explain why they failed their exam . they failed their exam. >> i mean, to be fair, i did very poorly most of my education. >> it wasn't until i did my masters in my 40s i actually did
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any good. >> are you worried about al >> neil are you worried about al taking jobs? >> well , at the age of 74, no, >> well, at the age of 74, no, not but having grown up in the steam age, literally , i was a steam age, literally, i was a teenage trainspotter when steam was still on the railways. >> i haven't really quite got to gnps >> i haven't really quite got to grips yet with these technological advances , but it technological advances, but it seems to me that it's something which could be applied to government because we could replace real stupidity there with intelligence with artificial intelligence there. be worse, can there. it can't be worse, can it? worse. it? it can do much worse. >> no. a 28 year old perpetually single woman took to the uk parenting site mumsnet, to announce that she's tired of sitting around hoping a man likes me back and said she'll be bolder in her approach to dating . rebuffed expectation . she rebuffed the expectation that women should sit back and let make the first move let a man make the first move and asked users of the site how to be confident without coming across as or off putting across as brash or off putting as making first move as a woman making the first move when dating too masculine. now neil, i know , i know your your
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neil, i know, i know your your wife isn't isn't shy about you know , putting her foot forward . know, putting her foot forward. >> well, i didn't dare make any move at all. i was like a rabbit in the headlights when i first met her. actually, i was playing the piano. >> oh, really? >> oh, really? >> well, she came up in a student conference and i was playing the piano, and she came and draped herself over the piano. wow. and the rest is history, as you say. yeah yeah. >> a wonderful couple you make, emma. i mean, as a woman, do you think this is a fuss over nothing? of course, women should be able to. >> yeah, it's just. i mean, i can't this is a story. can't believe this is a story. it's like women ask men out that's been happening. i'm i'm 48, certainly never 48, and it's certainly never been in my lifetime . um, been unusual in my lifetime. um, yeah, we've had the sexual revolution in quite a long time ago . ago. >> i mean, talking of revolutions, i mean, we've seen in the last maybe ten years, 20 years men just being punished if they're forward in any way with women, they run the risk of me too, or run the risk of being accused of sexual harassment . do
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accused of sexual harassment. do you think that's what's behind these men? >> of it is also the rise >> a lot of it is also the rise of dating apps and the virtualisation of society. people lost social skills virtualisation of society. pe0|when lost social skills virtualisation of society. pe0|when they st social skills virtualisation of society. pe0|when they do ocial skills virtualisation of society. pe0|when they do tryal skills virtualisation of society. pe0|when they do try to ;kills virtualisation of society. pe0|when they do try to date and when they do try to date through apps, they face so much more rejection the more rejection because the algorithm keep algorithm is designed to keep you the app, not for you addicted to the app, not for you addicted to the app, not for you delete it when you you to then delete it when you find a lot of find someone. yeah so a lot of the way that dating has become commercialised through things like destroyed like apps, it's destroyed the dating landscape people get dating landscape and people get so in this so deeply entrenched in this disappointment and dissatisfaction, they just give up right ? so dissatisfaction, they just give up right? so think up completely right? so i think there's factors play . there's other factors at play. it's just about, you know, it's not just about, you know, people. also about the people. it's also about the technology involved. yeah >> so technology is also destroying dating . but destroying our dating. but coming up, brits largely think that nanny initiatives that nanny state initiatives make healthier. but the make us healthier. but the government is doing it all wrong. is the too state involved in our lives or is it in fact not involved enough? see you
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welcome back . know the social
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welcome back. know the social market foundation , an market foundation, an independent think tank, has found that brits largely support nanny state policies to improve the nation's health. in a report set to be published tomorrow, the research claims that there is a public appetite for public health interventions like restricting on advertising, regulating food prices and affordability limits on gambling. but the organisation also found that people are unhappy with the government's current approach. but how involved blvd. in our lives do we want the state to be? joining me now is the director of research at the adam smith institute, maxwell marlowe. maxwell, how are you . maxwell, how are you. >> can you very well, thank you, leo. how are you? >> not bad, no. what do you make of this of this report? do you think were you surprised to see that people want nanny state interventionism in their lives or do you think they're thinking ideals and they haven't thought it through to how actually it through to how it'll actually work in reality .
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work in reality. >> i think it makes sense . so >> i think it makes sense. so what is the people really being asked here? so is it do they want to have less obesity, less smoking? you know , they want smoking? you know, they want fewer people to be harmed by gambling. all make sense. but how is it that people interpret getting those results? they think it's through the nanny state. now let's remember state. and now let's remember that in 2021, 85% of the public wanted another lockdown. and i don't think lockdowns were that good for public health, nor do i think it's a good idea to follow the polls just because the polls say so. and also, let's look at the minimum unit pricing for alcohol that happened in scotland. 49% of the public, which is a is a plurality, as we'd say. and support it. it's been a massive failure . so, i been a massive failure. so, i mean , mean there's a problem is mean, mean there's a problem is simply people are quite limited. really in how they think about getting to those great outcomes is when really the way you do it is when really the way you do it is through technology and innovation on so how would how would technology and innovation help something like obesity for
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example, or a drug abuse. >> well , let's take obesity, >> well, let's take obesity, right? >> so we've as you will have seen in the news recently, this new brilliant drug called wegovy, which is a really it's really amazing, really it it imitates in your head the chemical reaction to feeling hungry. and it stops that from happening. now that has been shown but you know with some really good research which is very much of the consensus of the scientific to community stop basically bring people away from eating loads of bad food and people lose loads of weight. now, lots of people have said, oh, well, you have to take the rest of your life. it's the case with any medication. we wouldn't say that about statins. you go for one round and then that's it. done. no, you keep taking them. there are problems them. and now there are problems with of course, may with that. of course, you may not taking them, not want to keep taking them, but you're going to eat but then you're going to eat more and, know, put on the more and, you know, put on the weight you can look at weight again. you can look at smoking, for example. there's the done really the government has done a really good helping down good job of helping cut down smoking prescribing, smoking through prescribing, vaping, and heated tobacco to be
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pouches and heated tobacco to be more readily available, and people 74% of smokers, i people about 74% of smokers, i should quit. and should say, want to quit. and now got even more now they've got even more opfions now they've got even more options so . options to doing so. >> and i mean, in scotland we've had our weight loss had our own weight loss injection a while . it's injection for a while. it's called but it does have called heroin, but it does have some terrible side effects. i mean, how you think how do mean, how do you think how do you would you would you you think would you would you see drugs like heroin being being legalised, or do you think it's right that the state actually intervenes there to stop injecting it ? stop people injecting it? >> well, it's interesting. you talk about heroin. so heroin is actually on the on the it's actually on the on the it's actually falling, actually, because the taliban in afghanistan, where they make most of the world's heroin, they've actually said you can't grow it anymore. so what's come on the market is synthetic on to the market is synthetic opioids, which are about 400 times more dangerous . so the times more dangerous. so the problem is, is that this this is stuff that people want to consume, they're addicted to. and, you know, criminals have no problem . just problem breaking the law. just because we ban it doesn't mean that stops going the that it stops going to the market. signed market. i've recently signed a paper well put signature by
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paper well put my signature by the of a paper put out by the side of a paper put out by the side of a paper put out by the cranborne institute by guy the cranborne institute by a guy called lehane, who's got called ant lehane, who's got a range of i it's about 20 range of i think it's about 20 different policies that can help cut down on both the intake of heroin and also the treatment of heroin and also the treatment of heroin in a safe and heroin addicts in a safe and humane way. that like humane way. that stuff like setting up support centres, allowing people to safely inject and the treatment they need and get the treatment they need and get the treatment they need and up more kind and really setting up more kind of better police enforcement of those drug dealers. so legalisation isn't exactly the case with these very bad drugs. but let's look at, you know, stuff like marijuana or medical mushrooms. they should be actually legalised because they're low in harm. and if they're very low in harm. and if they're very low in harm. and if they're properly by they're produced properly by pharmaceutical companies and sold properly , then actually the sold properly, then actually the harm comes down and the money comes criminals pockets . comes out of criminals pockets. >> take issue with >> i've got to take issue with that because cannabis is one of the most corrosive of drugs i've seen of my seen it in so many of my friends. sap, sap their ambition, whereas with with heroin or cocaine , they hit rock heroin or cocaine, they hit rock bottom quickly and then reform their lives . but i'm surprised
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their lives. but i'm surprised to hear you in favour of state intervention. i mean, quickly, before we go, what are the negative side effects of state intervention in our lives like this as well? >> it doesn't work . i mean, >> it doesn't work. i mean, you're talking about, you know, you've seen your friends have their lives that way by by cannabis , it's banned. and if cannabis, it's banned. and if you're caught with it in possession, then it doesn't. you know, then you go to prison or you at least get a slap on the wrist. i mean, the policing around this stuff is not very good as we know. also it's good as we know. and also it's just massively expensive. the department hires department of health hires hundreds, of hundreds, if not thousands of people obesity . people to combat obesity. >> we have sorry, we've >> and yet we have sorry, we've got to get to the got to we've got to get to the break, unfortunately. maxwell but for but thank you so much for joining us. that's maxwell marlowe from the adam smith institute. coming next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy te. coming next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy take coming next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy take at coming next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy take at ten ning next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy take at ten race next marlowe from the adam smith inrmy take at ten race baiterst in my take at ten race baiters use lucy letby crimes to exacerbate racial divisions is nothing off limits. i'll see you in a couple of minutes. >> looks like things are heating up . boxed boilers, proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest news weather forecast. i'm craig snell. we're looking ahead to the new week. for most of us, it's going to stay changeable. some further spells of sunshine, but also some further rain at times. as we further rain at times. so as we end sunday, we've got this weak weather front which will gradually spread its way a little further eastwards. a little bit further eastwards. a ridge high pressure trying ridge of high pressure trying to build in monday. may build in from monday. it may well just settle things down briefly, as we end sunday, briefly, but as we end sunday, you just that weather you can just see that weather front just gradually working its you can just see that weather fronteastwards. ially working its you can just see that weather fronteastwards. rain norking its you can just see that weather fronteastwards. rain very ng its you can just see that weather fronteastwards. rain very patchy. way eastwards. rain very patchy. and we'll see and either side, we'll see plenty spells and under plenty of clear spells and under the we may see the clear skies, we may just see some patchy mist and fog. for most cities, however, most towns and cities, however, temperatures comfortably temperatures staying comfortably in double figures . so as we in double figures. so as we start monday, a bank holiday for most us, a bright start for most of us, a bright start for a lot of us actually still this area of cloud across central areas and that will just spread its way a little bit further eastwards . and go into the eastwards. and as we go into the afternoon, parts afternoon, actually many parts seeing around and seeing some cloud around and that be thick enough that cloud will be thick enough in places to produce some showers, mainly focussed across western scotland and northern
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ireland. most it's a warmer ireland. for most it's a warmer feeling day could see highs reaching around 21, 22 down towards the south corner towards the south eastern corner into tuesday, a very similar day . a lot of dry weather around, but there will be some showers. this
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gb news. >> it's 10:00 gb news. >> it's10:00 on gb news. >> it's 10:00 on television, on >> it's10:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. i'm leo kyrees, standing in for the iconic mr mark dolan for the final time. in my take at ten, a wokeist academic uses lucy letby horrific crimes to stoke race rows. is there no limit to how low these race baiters will stoop? and tonight's newsmaker is the legendary former conservative minister ann widdecombe and gb news is the home of the papers with tomorrow's front pages from exactly 10:30 pm. sharp . so
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exactly 10:30 pm. sharp. so a busy hour 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 . tatiana sanchez. >> leo, thank you very much and good evening. the latest from the newsroom. breaking news in the newsroom. breaking news in the last hour. a man and a woman have died after a black mercedes was driven into a flooded area of liverpool last night. merseyside police were called to queen's drive in mosley hill around 9:20 pm. after reports of a concern for to the safety of a concern for to the safety of two people who were trapped in a car submerged in water under a bridge . they were taken under a bridge. they were taken to hospital where they were pronounced dead. more on this as we get it. nadine dorries has accused rishi sunak of whipping up a public frenzy against her and says he doesn't have the x factor of a winning prime minister in a blistering resignation letter, the former minister accused mr sunak of demeaning his office by criticising her. she says his
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government has abandoned conservatism and the 2019 election manifesto, which was published before boris johnson won an 80 seat majority . a won an 80 seat majority. a by—election, will now take place in the usually safe tory seat of mid beds, wiltshire. labour's shadow secretary for women and equalities , anneliese dodds, equalities, anneliese dodds, told gb news this morning that nadine dorries makes some valid points . points. >> that although i disagree with nadine dorries on many things when she says that we currently have a zombie parliament and when she asks what rishi sunak stands for and what he has achieved, i think many people will be saying they don't understand and either and i think this is incredibly damaging when as we know, our country is in the middle of a cost of living crisis, we have a crisis in our nhs, crisis of crime on our streets, and yet we seem to have a zombie government that just can't get a grip on high street chain. >> wilko could be saved from collapse after a last minute rescue bid was launched. wilko collapsed into administration earlier this month, putting
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12,500 jobs at risk across its 400 stores. private equity firm m2 capital has submitted a last minute bid worth £90 million. they've confirmed themselves as one of several offers being considered by administered . m2 considered by administered. m2 caphaps considered by administered. m2 capital's also said it plans to guarantee all employees jobs for two years. fire fighters say the government has shown callous disregard for the safety of those on board the bibby stockholm barge. the fire brigades union has sent a pre—action protocol letter to the home secretary outlining its concerns over safety aboard the vessel , which concerns over safety aboard the vessel, which is concerns over safety aboard the vessel , which is currently vessel, which is currently docked at dorset's portland port. the union previously branded the barge a potential death trap. it's now demanding a response to its legal letter by thursday , and residents of a thursday, and residents of a road in london, which avoids the ulez charge say they're being offered a £100 a month by people hoping to avoid the emission fee. people living along moor lane in chester , aiden, are
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lane in chester, aiden, are being asked by motorists to use their driveways while the road remains charge free, turning off at any point would incur the £12 £50 daily fee for non—compliant vehicles. the expansion of ulez aims to improve air quality from tuesday will be expanded into greater london this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's back to . leo news now it's back to. leo >> thank you, tatiana, and welcome back to mark dolan tonight. with me, leo kearse. tonight's newsmaker is the legendary former conservative minister and widdecombe, she's going to give us her $0.02 on nadine dorries. sensational resignation . and we've got the resignation. and we've got the papers at 10:30 pm. sharp with full pundit reaction . plus, full pundit reaction. plus, we'll have tonight's headline heroes and back page zero's big stories . big guests and always stories. big guests and always big opinions. here is my take.
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at ten. what a week it's been for race grifters . these are the for race grifters. these are the people who latch on to any news topic and make it about racism . topic and make it about racism. they can then get attention and money from white people who are desperate to absolve themselves of this manufactured guilt. this week, the women's world cup team came under fire for being too white. the edinburgh fringe was accused of racism and in the most tasteless race, grifting since 1930, germany . dr. shola since 1930, germany. dr. shola mos—shogbamimu somehow managed to make the horrific lucy letby case about race, she said. lucy letby exemplifies how ideology of whiteness keeps britain in a chokehold. they believed her tears, denials, even though evidence said otherwise, for no other reason than she's white. a black or brown nurse would have been reported to the police immediately and sacked for suspicion . really, if there is suspicion. really, if there is a systemic bias in the british pubuc systemic bias in the british
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public sector, there's evidence that it tilts away from white people. in may, glasgow city council posted a job ad explicitly aimed at those quote, who identify as black , asian or who identify as black, asian or minority ethnic . who identify as black, asian or minority ethnic. london's who identify as black, asian or minority ethnic . london's mayor, minority ethnic. london's mayor, sadiq khan has said that white people aren't real londoners and the raf were forced to apologise for discriminating against what they're recruiter described as useless white men. ever since the macpherson report introduced the macpherson report introduced the spectre of institutional racism as the number one menace two decades ago, the paramount aim of everybody in the public sector has been to look as non racist as possible. what should be a noble aim? of course people shouldn't be racist. has had terrible consequences . grooming terrible consequences. grooming gang whistleblowers were demoted and sacked or sent on diversity training because their bosses were so afraid of being accused of racism if they tackled the issue. but facts don't matter when there's to money be made by grifters such as dr. shola, filtering every event through the poisonous prism of critical race theory that says that all
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white people are inherently racist. you'd think she'd maybe take a day off when we're talking about the most abhorrent serial killer in contemporary history, but actually , this is history, but actually, this is perfect for dr. shola . the more perfect for dr. shola. the more disgusted people are by her, the more outrage flows in her direction. the more she can hold it up and say, look at this horrific racism directed at me and she gets attention. she gets speaking engagements. she gets appearances on jeremy vine and good morning britain and she gets sales tithes paid to gets book sales tithes paid to the high priestess of racism to atone for the ever present sin of whiteness. it's not a new thing in mediaeval times. of whiteness. it's not a new thing in mediaeval times . holy thing in mediaeval times. holy men raised huge sums of money by selling indulgences which purified souls of their sins. the church had a complex system to calculate exactly how much less punishment you'd get in the afterlife for purchasing an indulgence , sort of like indulgence, sort of like a carbon offset scheme for morality. and the money they made was astronomical. sailing indulgences paid for the construction of saint peter's basilica in rome. we do the
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exact same thing now, but our societies original sin is whiteness and the indulgences are purchased through diversity training by racial awareness coaches, donations to black lives matter and talks by dr. shola. it's a huge industry , shola. it's a huge industry, according to the economist, between may and december 2020, donations to black lives matter related causes amounted to $10.6 billion. that's billion, not million. there's a lot of controversy around how much of this actually goes to helping people and how much goes to ensuring a luxurious life for these modern day televangelists. patrice couleurs, the founder of blm , syphoned off millions of blm, syphoned off millions of dollars to buy luxury properties. but it doesn't matter. the money's not to do good.the matter. the money's not to do good. the money's to absolve guilt. according to her agents website, dr. shola commands fees of 5 to £10,000 per appearance. the handily remind any corporate bookers of key dates when they need to buy their indulgences race, equality week the international day for the
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elimination of racial discrimination and black history month. how ironic that dr. shola makes money from perpetuating racial animosity in the name of eliminating it. racial animosity in the name of eliminating it . anyway. what do eliminating it. anyway. what do you think? do you agree? do you disagree? send your views into gb views at gbnews.com and i'll get to your emails after the break. but reacting to my take at ten tonight are research fellow at the at the bow group, benjamin lakhonin political consultant, emma burnell and the leader of ukip, mr neil hamilton . on now. coming up. leader of ukip, mr neil hamilton . on now. coming up . coming up, . on now. coming up. coming up, we've got new dean dory. oh, sorry . i've gone on. i've gone sorry. i've gone on. i've gone too on far. i just i'm like anchorman. >> but i mean, what did you make of what did you make of dr. shula's comments about the lucy letby case? >> i mean, i found it so tasteless. i thought, you know, surely if there's something that's going to remain sacrosanct and can there be such
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bottomless stupidity as the thought i had ? thought that i had? >> but think maybe she is so >> but i think maybe she is so stupid that she doesn't really understand the importance of what she's been saying. but i do think there's an element of calculation in as well, for calculation in this as well, for the reasons that the very reasons that you alluded in what i thought was alluded to in what i thought was your brilliant polemic a moment ago, which summed it all up follow the money is a good principle to have in mind whenever you see somebody pontificating in the way that dr. shola did in public. of course, she relies upon white people in particular beating themselves up for the imagined guilt that they bear as a result of whatever was done a hundred years ago or 500 years ago. a thousand years ago . you know, we thousand years ago. you know, we don't see the italians beating themselves up because the romans practised slavery. but we are supposedly free to bear the marks of guilt forever if we're in the now successful west, whereas all the people who suffer under the yoke of
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incompetent and corrupt regimes incompetent and corrupt regimes in africa transpose the guilt which they should apply to their own leaders onto us. and it's about time that we fought back and fought back vigorously and dismissed this nonsense for what it is. >> i mean, benjamin, do you think it's actually possible to fight back when and guides fight back when esg and guides are corporations and institutions to enforce this? this idea ? this idea? >> well, i think, yeah, they have taken, you know, as gramsci's talked about, the long march through the institutions they have taken over the institutions they are the institutions they are now the established but established movement, but they're still acting though they're still acting as though they're still acting as though they're anti—establishment. they're still acting as though they're giving:i—establishment. they're still acting as though they're giving protest»lishment. they're still acting as though they're giving protest speeches they're still acting as though they're themselves. ;t speeches they're still acting as though they're themselves. as peeches they're still acting as though they're themselves. as you:hes they're still acting as though they're themselves. as you know, against themselves. as you know, they've every they've occupied every institution. the top institution. they're at the top of possible organisation of every possible organisation option, still option, and yet they're still out on the streets like out there on the streets like they're, you marching they're, you know, marching against vietnam or against the war in vietnam or something. absolutely something. it's absolutely absurd. find it a bit absurd. but i do find it a bit sick that if you look at the mass murder of the most vulnerable newborn children and you make it about race. you try to make it about race. so personally think worst so i personally think the worst thing letby case thing about the lucy letby case was killing of children, not
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was the killing of children, not the potential, the possibility that maybe there was some racism involved, even if that were that maybe there was some racism invol'whichfen if that were that maybe there was some racism invol'which it'sif that were that maybe there was some racism invol'which it's not.|t were that maybe there was some racism invol'which it's not. i were that maybe there was some racism invol'which it's not. i don't true, which it's not. i don't find it particularly relevant when talking mass when we're talking about mass infanticide. something infanticide. you know, something much important to focus on much more important to focus on here. yeah absolutely. much more important to focus on here. mean,ibsolutely. much more important to focus on here.mean, emma,ly. much more important to focus on here.mean, emma, do think do >> i mean, emma, do you think do you think the race was an element in the lucy letby case? >> don't think so , no. i >> i don't think so, no. i thought that the comments about lucy letby were crass . yes, but lucy letby were crass. yes, but i am a little uncomfortable that we are for white people talking about race in this way and it just i white people shouldn't be allowed an opinion about race. not that we shouldn't have an opinion on it, but that there is nobody pushing back who has experienced anti—black racism on this and think that is this panel. and i think that is a valid perspective to be heard from to the closest i've got is having relatives who are of colour . and i having relatives who are of colour. and i know that i haven't had the same experiences as them and i haven't gone through the same. >> they'd be sitting on this couch right now saying, no, dr.
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shula was right. >> no, i think that i don't know what they think. i haven't spoken to them about dr. shula in don't go to my in particular. i don't go to my black relatives and say, please give me your wisdom that's give me your wisdom as if that's some sort of way of behaving to go black people. but i'm go to black people. no, but i'm saying is a look, saying that that this is a look, we are a look right now, we are giving a look right now, and i'm not comfortable with it. and that's my opinion of something objectively. >> can. something objectively. >> and can. something objectively. >> and i can. something objectively. >> and i observing. something objectively. >> and i observing something >> and i am observing something objectively and i'm pointing it out. i think there is also the other thing that i would point out is that if you want less attention to be paid to dr. shula , maybe don't do an entire shula, maybe don't do an entire monologue about her because you guys are feeding each other. you seriously are feeding each other. >> i think i think she's not feeding me at all. the only thing she's she's fed me is when we appeared together on good morning britain, i received death threats next day from death threats the next day from angry islamic. >> it's so you know, i'm happy to leave it. >> but if you're worried, leave
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her alone. if she's attention, then stop giving her attention. >> that's an absolute nonsense. that's like saying, oh, if we just if we just ignore all the evil in the world, it'll it'll disappear. you've got to confront on. but confront things head on. but also, i think it's think it's also, i think it's i think it's absolutely also, i think it's i think it's absilutely also, i think it's i think it's absi either think she's got no >> i either think she's got no point at all or you think she's got a worth countering. if got a point worth countering. if you got point you think she's got a point worth countering, get worth countering, don't get upset getting upset that she's getting attention. you can. >> but this is exactly what we're talking about earlier. if something if something is ridiculous and if something is ridiculous and if something you something is wrong, then you should feel to say that should feel free to say that thatis should feel free to say that that is she doesn't have that is wrong. she doesn't have to point every right to to have a point every right to say this, but don't get cross that she's getting attention when one it to her. >> i'm not giving her any money. >> i'm not giving her any money. >> i'm not giving her any money. >> i don't care. >> presumably i don't care. >> presumably i don't care. >> you're giving her >> but you're giving her attention. you're raising her profile and that's what gives her that's why she said these >> that's why she said these stupid things, presumably to raise her profile she raise her profile and if she raised she must raised her profile, she must expect criticised the expect to be criticised in the kind moderate, sane and kind of moderate, sane and rational which leo did rational way which leo did in his monologue perfectly justifiable believe that the same >> i can't believe that the same platforms that would ban you cancel no platform somebody platforms that would ban you can(graham platform somebody
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platforms that would ban you can(graham platfornfor»mebody like graham linehan for believing in biological reality will platform dr. shula who is obviously well i wouldn't know platform either divisive person you wouldn't platform either of them i wouldn't know platform either or you wouldn't know platform either. >> all right i think i think we should have debates public. i should have debates in public. i absolutely that fact. absolutely agree with that fact. i platform anybody i wouldn't no platform anybody would make sure would you would you make sure that enough that there's enough representation every representation from every every type of person in the world before that debate could go ahead? >> because apparently four white people can't can't talk about this. >> i'm not saying four white people can't talk about it. i'm saying that missing saying that we are missing perspective when is just four perspective when it is just four white talking about it. white people talking about it. but missing but that is a missing perspective from this conversation racism, conversation of reverse racism, which because the which exists now because the wheel full circle, wheel has come full circle, hasn't it? >> because there's in the >> because now there's in the cancel culture, there are certain things it's very certain things that it's very unfashionable say and you can unfashionable to say and you can lose your job, your your livelihood and all sorts of things if you step out of line. indeed, we saw this a couple of years ago lawrence who years ago with lawrence fox, who expressed reasonable
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expressed a perfectly reasonable opinion on on question time and then had his had his had his long standing acting career pred long standing acting career ripped out from under his feet by by people purely because he expressed that opinion. >> so everybody has to hide in the shadows and lie to each other. anyway, coming up, nadine dorries sensationally resigned from the commons with a flurry of attacks on the prime minister. we're joined the minister. we're joined by the legendary ann widdecombe for her thoughts on this explosive political event . see you in political event. see you in a couple of minutes . earlier
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radio. >> welcome back to mark dolan tonight. with me, leo kyrees. now i've got a couple of your emails. lorna says if the french receive money from the eu to destroy their wine, do you really think they would destroy it? feel like it would be more it? i feel like it would be more like a scene from whisky galore with it in their with everyone hiding it in their basements and thought of that. but would exactly what
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but that would be exactly what i'd as well. richard says. i'd do as well. richard says. butter, mountains and lakes of wine. are they? i want to wine. where are they? i want to go and me too. i'll take go and visit. me too. i'll take some . now, arch . some toast. now, the arch arch. bofis some toast. now, the arch arch. boris johnson loyalist nadine dorries sensationally stepped down from parliament yesterday after weeks of criticism for being invisible from the commons. after announcing her intention to leave in her explosive resignation letter , explosive resignation letter, the former minister accused rishi sunak of abandoning the principles of conservatism by betraying the green agenda and sacking off the online safety bill. what about those ideas? were conservative in the first place? some have accused ms dorries of resigning in bitterness after not receiving a peerage, promised to her by bofis peerage, promised to her by boris johnson. but what is really going on here and what does nadine dorries scathing verbal ambush on rishi sunak mean for his future ? well, mean for his future? well, joining us now is legend former conservative mp and minister. it's tonight's newsmaker , ann it's tonight's newsmaker, ann widdecombe. and it's to great see you again .
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see you again. >> good to be here. >> good to be here. >> and what did you make of nadine's resignation letter and her attacks on rishi sunak? do you do you agree with her? well there wasn't much dignity in doing it this way, but there was an awful lot of truth. >> i mean, it is quite true that the levelling up agenda has seemingly disappeared. >> it is quite true that he has taken a very, very unconcerned conservative line on taxation. we've now got taxes in this country at a record high that shouldn't be the result of a conservative government. so i think that she had she had points to make. and on the issue of bitterness, i too would be pretty angry because she wasn't just promised a peerage, you know, in some sort of whispered conversation. i mean, boris did actually put her forward. he put her on his resignation honours list , and it her on his resignation honours list, and it was decided to deny her the peerage . now, normally her the peerage. now, normally that only happens if there's
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some question of probity , and some question of probity, and then that can happen. and she's never received an explanation. and i think that is what is really bugging her. so i understand where she's coming from. i wouldn't have done it that way. i think if you're going to retire from parliament, the watchword should be dignity. you go , you thank your workers , you go, you thank your workers, you thank your constituent servants, you thank fellow members of parliament and the civil service etcetera. and that is how you do it. now nadine has many enormous qualities which i admire, but she ain't subtle and there's nothing subtle about this. >> yeah, i mean, i think we may just be living in a post dignity society and that might be one of the reasons behind it. but what do you make of her comments about conservatism? i mean, the online safety bill and the green agenda, they've never been, you know, things like state control of our communication and green issues. they've never been seen
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as conservative issues. do you think the meaning of conservatism has changed? well if it has, cameron changed it because he came to power. >> if you remember with the slogan, you know, vote blue, get green, and he was the one who tried to turn the conservative party into the ultimate in greenery . and boris has carried greenery. and boris has carried that on. but what most people criticise is not the fact that they want to look after the planet. it's that the response net zero, the response is completely disproportionate to the amount that we contribute, that we britain contribute it to global warming. it's disproportionate and it's hitting people in their pockets at a time when they can least afford it. you know , unlike afford it. you know, unlike rishi sunak, people can't just go and buy new cars that are more expensive than the cars they wood. they can't just suddenly install all new boilers. you know, it doesn't work like that in most households in this country. so i
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you know, i don't agree with nadine over, you know, the desirable of the net zero policies. and i didn't agree with boris on them either, despite the fact that i also didn't agree with what was done to boris. >> and what do you think this will mean for rishi sunak going into as is going into an election year? do you think this is going to tear the party apart further .do you he can further or .do you think he can he it together? he can hold it together? >> i don't that this is >> i don't think that this is going tear the party apart, going to tear the party apart, because the fact the party is because the fact is the party is already very profoundly divided. it's between those who, it's divided between those who, like nadine, want real conservative and they want low taxes as they want brexit delivered properly. they they want those things. and on the other hand, is that section of the party really quite a large one these days? who want to do all the trendy things, who want to do the net zeros, who want high taxes, who want more state interference , and the party is
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interference, and the party is divided. i mean , that defines divided. i mean, that defines the conservative party . now, the conservative party. now, what is it? it's a divided party. >> yeah, i couldn't i couldn't agree more. and thanks so much for joining us. i'm really going forjoining us. i'm really going to miss our sunday evening chat. but coming up, we've got the papers at 10:30 pm. sharp with full reaction . plus, full panel reaction. plus, tonight's heroes and tonight's headline, heroes and back page zeros. and i want to know yours. them into know yours. send them into vaiews@gbnews.uk . see you vaiews@gbnews.uk. see you in a few minutes . few minutes. >> a outlook with boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast . i'm craig snell. we're looking ahead to the new week. for most of us, it's going to stay changeable. some further spells of sunshine, but also some further rain at times. so as we end sunday, we've got this weak weather front which will gradually spread its way a little further eastwards. little bit further eastwards. a ridge trying to ridge of high pressure trying to build monday may well build in from monday may well just settle down briefly. just settle things down briefly. but sunday, you can but as we end sunday, you can just weather front just just see that weather front just gradually its way gradually working its way
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eastwards. patchy. and eastwards. rain very patchy. and either we'll see plenty of either side we'll see plenty of clear spells and under the clear skies, may some skies, we may just see some patchy mist fog for most patchy mist and fog for most towns cities, however, towns and cities, however, temperatures comfortably towns and cities, however, te|doubleires comfortably towns and cities, however, te|double figures comfortably towns and cities, however, te|double figures . comfortably towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so :omfortably towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so as1fortably towns and cities, however, te|double figures . so as we tably in double figures. so as we start monday, a bank holiday for most of us, a bright start for a lot of us actually. still this area of cloud across central areas and that will just spread its way a little bit further eastwards. as we go into the eastwards. and as we go into the afternoon, actually many parts seeing cloud around and seeing some cloud around and that be enough that cloud will be thick enough in produce some in places to produce some showers, focussed across showers, mainly focussed across western northern western scotland and northern ireland. and for most it's a warmer feeling day could see highs reaching around 2122 down towards the south eastern corner into tuesday, a very similar day . a lot of dry weather around, but there will be some showers. this line of showers will just gradually spread its way a little bit further southwards as we course of the we go through the course of the day. on, some day. and then later on, some blustery working into blustery showers working into the northwest of scotland the far northwest of scotland wednesday, still, but wednesday, similar still, but then on thursday, we could see a longer spell of rain arriving from the west throughout the day
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, a brighter outlook with boxt solar are proud sponsors of weather on .
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . it's10:30 p.m. >> you're listening to gb news radio . it's10:30 pm. and radio. it's10:30 pm. and you're watching mark dolan tonight . tonight. >> so it's time to have a look at tomorrow morning's newspapers . hot off the press. i've got them here. the eye leads with tory, big beasts facing wipe—out at next election . as dorries at next election. as dorries opens up new splits. so some of some of the stalwart tories are going to be possibly losing their seats next year. the independent has as there's a picture of prigogine or prigogine as some call him, because he's such a memorable person, even though he's an absolutely horrible person as well. well, not a person
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well. well, he's not a person anymore . he's been apparently anymore. he's been apparently identified by genetic analysis from wreckage of his plane from the wreckage of his plane that was shot down a few days ago or bombed out of the sky. and russian investigators say that he did die in the plane crash, which means that he probably didn't. and they also have an independent campaign victory. there's a number 10 crackdown on racism after the n—word revelation. so the cabinet office warns all government departments not to use racist language following independent reports on the use of offensive slurs in multiple official documents . i can't official documents. i can't believe that this was actually still going on. actually, i remember. i remember this. this was it was antiquated language in documents that hadn't been updated. it wasn't new language. it wasn't being put in as is what i'm saying. it was it was an oversight. but obviously, you know, a terrible one. and that's good that they've they've moved to sort that out. moving on to gardai in has ultra processed foods causing tidal wave of foods causing a tidal wave of harm according to experts . so
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harm according to experts. so this is the next health issue for us to worry about. this is foods that have lots of e—numbers and have been through lots of processing and unfortunately probably taste delicious . they also have the delicious. they also have the prime minister putting progress on clean air at risk. that's according to can sadiq khan, who obviously wants everybody thinking there's lots of dirty air. so that they pay his taxes and moscow confirms the death of prigozhin there and also a picture from the notting hill carnival, very colourful picture there. looks like a lot of fun. and i'll probably see some of it on the tube on the way home. and they have the daily mail has the nhs trying to erase women. so the health sector is anger as 77 trusts sign up to rainbow badge scheme that marks down hospitals for using words like mother. scheme that marks down hospitals for using words like mother . and for using words like mother. and they also have a picture of prince andrew and william and kate in the back seat . and this kate in the back seat. and this is prince andrew possibly being
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brought in from the cold and joining the royal family again. possibly. i don't know. but yeah, let's let's have a look at these actually. let's let's start with the nhs trying to erase women. luckily, we do have a woman in the panel. if we had four white men, we wouldn't be able to discuss this. but we do have a woman. i mean, what do you make of this? because i mean, they're the thing that blows my mind is they're trying to good and it ends to do something good and it ends up alienating lots of lots of people . people. >> yeah, i think that's the problem . this is all coming from problem. this is all coming from a place of compassion for people who struggle with their with their gender identity. now i'm an old fashioned radical feminist. so you're going to see old fashioned women and well, i'm both an old fashioned woman and an old fashioned radical feminist . so very much of feminist. so i'm very much of the opinion that, you know, i know what a woman is and i fight for the rights of female people. thatis for the rights of female people. that is my number one priority. but i think the other question that we need to think about here
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is that clarity in medical language is absolutely important . but we know that people know that if you're a woman, you need to go and have a smear test. but very few people know what their cervix is and quite a few people don't know if they have one. so referring to cervix, hathor is actually unclear and could put people at more risk of health problems. so you do need to use clear language in medical documents. so i do think that there has to be a balance . yes. there has to be a balance. yes. i don't want to see trans people feeling at all under attack. and i know that they do. and i know that this is a difficult moment for they feel under attack because the nhs described mothers as mothers. not but for not reason. but not this particular reason. but in moment that in the in the moment that we're in the debate nasty, it's heated, debate is nasty, it's heated, it's been nasty towards people like myself who campaign for sephoras, for sex based rights . sephoras, for sex based rights. but it's also been nasty for people on the other side of that debate. >> but i don't think it's the thing is we've had trans people
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for a long time and everybody or most people were accommodating and polite and i think most trans people just got on with their lives and a lot of cases people didn't even know that they were trans. now there's a new wave of trans people who frankly look like me, and they are trying to make the debate about so women like me about them. so women like me want go into changing rooms, want to go into changing rooms, want to go into changing rooms, want to go into changing rooms, want to go into , you want to want to go into, you know, prisons and female prisons. >> and as female sports as well. >> and as female sports as well. >> i completely oppose male bodied people in sex segregate spaces.i bodied people in sex segregate spaces. i think women do need to have the safety of sex segregated spaces . and again, segregated spaces. and again, sports is an obvious it tends to be sports where these things always come through because there is quite an obvious power disparity between a male weightlifter , for example, and weightlifter, for example, and a female weightlifter . weightlifter, for example, and a female weightlifter. and i think we just saw a case where the male in a female category, the
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female identifying male , lifted female identifying male, lifted 200 kilos more than it was insane. >> it was in canada. >> it was in canada. >> this i mean, we see a trans woman. >> it wasn't it was a bloke . >> it wasn't it was a bloke. >> it wasn't it was a bloke. >> and it went along, you know, said like zubi did, said, i'm a woman. and, and just smashed the records . i mean, you know, at records. i mean, you know, at peak athletics you'd maybe get a record broken by, i don't know, maybe two kilos, five kilos, smashed it by 200 kilos. it was it was an amazing win for the patriarchy, barring. yeah, it was fantastic. yeah i mean, are you inspired to perhaps become a women's tennis player? i've actually thought about it a lot. >> it's great, you know, because i give my sport career i had to give up my sport career by being not good but by being not good enough. but now a new avenue i can now there's a new avenue i can finally it's to finally compete. it's going to be wonderful. finally compete. it's going to be andierful. finally compete. it's going to be and neil,. finally compete. it's going to be and neil, do find the nhs >> and neil, do you find the nhs spending money on rainbow badges and finding ways, new words and finding new ways, new words for women at a time when they've obviously got other be obviously got other things to be spending on? do you find obviously got other things to be spbecause on? do you find obviously got other things to be spbecause i'm on? do you find obviously got other things to be spbecause i'm inon? do you find obviously got other things to be spbecause i'm in thisdo you find it because i'm in this politicised nonsense is just something happen something which shouldn't happen at it's a function of at all, but it's a function of the sort of hr obsessed world
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where, as you were saying earlier on, esg rules the roost i >> -- >> yeah. and the equality act 2010, which the tories actually put through because it would otherwise have fallen with the general election when harriet harman was the force behind it. yeah ceased to be the minister. and of course labour lost the majority. but the tories in a coalition with the liberals forced it to enforce it through because there was almost no debate about this. that's the trouble. yeah, but you know that that legal underpinning has to be taken away in order to stop this kind of nonsense happening , because organisations , , because organisations, companies, particularly big businesses , feel that they might businesses, feel that they might have some legal repercussions if they don't conform to this modern shibboleth. you know, the shibboleth was was a word which you couldn't pronounce properly unless you were forget my bible. now which tribe of israel it was that used this as a means of
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determining who was a foreigner and who wasn't. but we've gone back into that kind of world, which we should have left thousands of years ago. >> yeah, but it feels like they've invented a new vocabulary to identify. >> a new caste system. >> it's a new caste system. a new a new class system where if you've you read the you've got the if you read the right books and the right if you read guardian and you learn read the guardian and you learn all the new and then all the new words and then you're that system and you've you're in that system and you've got the right opinions and you're exalted you're you're exalted and you're correct not, then you're correct and if not, then you're sidelined career be sidelined and your career can be destroyed. yeah i mean, it seems ridiculous. moving on, the ultra processed foods causing a tidal wave of harm . this is we have wave of harm. this is we have seen ultra processed foods , corn seen ultra processed foods, corn syrup, processed oat starchy carbohydrates. you know, scientists are so clever at finding the right combination of fat , sugar finding the right combination of fat, sugar and finding the right combination of fat , sugar and crack cocaine. fat, sugar and crack cocaine. that makes a pizza delicious and i mean, is this something that that worries you? >> yeah, well, for a long time i've been against the sort of rise in seed oils, which you now
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see replacing in lot of cases see replacing in a lot of cases due to what began as health concerns. people said, these concerns. people said, oh, these fatty things, we've got fatty kind of things, we've got to them with to replace them with these artificial oils . well, artificial seed oils. well, yeah, course. yeah, of course. >> butter. remember when i was >> butter. i remember when i was a butter considered a child, butter was considered unhealthy you're supposed to unhealthy and you're supposed to change and change to margarine and fat isn't if it's natural i >> -- >> good, proper fat in the right context, it it's actually quite good but processed food good for you but processed food as a whole, it's this typical thing scientists trying to thing of scientists trying to make by make food more healthy by processing manufacturing processing it and manufacturing it, ends up being far it, and it ends up being far less healthy because nature knows best. this is the vegan food well, you know, that food as well, you know, that processed beyond that processed beyond meat. that stuff's for stuff's terrible for you. for ten be talking ten years, we'll be talking about it's killing people. about how it's killing people. >> yeah, well, mean, i think >> yeah, well, i mean, i think i think in this case, they're not processing it so much to make it healthy as give it a longer healthy as to give it a longer shelf to make it shelf life or just to make it just down ibly delicious. just unput down ibly delicious. they're trying to our they're trying to tweak our brains like the maker of candy they're trying to tweak our brainstries the maker of candy they're trying to tweak our brainstries toe maker of candy they're trying to tweak our brainstries to tweak r of candy they're trying to tweak our brainstries to tweak our candy they're trying to tweak our brainstries to tweak our brains crush tries to tweak our brains with, you bells and with, you know, bells and flashing pictures . so, i with, you know, bells and flashing pictures. so, i mean, do you think this is something that we just need to get back to
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basics and start? you know, eating food again? eating real food again? >> yeah, i mean, it's all things in moderation, isn't it? if you want have a highly processed want to have a highly processed burger or whatever, every now and again, go for it, you know? but most of the time an awful lot of what we're eating, we're not really aware of what's in it properly. yeah. when you're on the go and it is, you know, you just want to shove something in the microwave. it's very the microwave. ave it's very unlikely to just have the ingredients that are pictured on the box. you know, there's an awful stuff in awful lot of other stuff in there . um, and it awful lot of other stuff in there. um, and it is awful lot of other stuff in there . um, and it is about sort there. um, and it is about sort of this longer shelf life stuff. and as you say , about making it and as you say, about making it something that we keep going back to and going back to. and you know, i'm quite obviously the worst for going back to a bag of crisps when i shouldn't . bag of crisps when i shouldn't. but you know, it i think we have to be understand ending of the kinds of lifestyles that are that are leading to people eating unhealthily and trying to maybe think about how we can
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allow people to have better access to fresh food and better ability to have the time. >> and i think they can just go to the shops and buy it. >> yeah, i think when you go in the supermarket, they've got the fresh food in there and you've got the choice, are you going to get pizza? get the frozen pizza? >> there are places where that's just not available to people in the city and the city. >> can get the you can get >> you can get the you can get food easier than you can get fresh there's markets all fresh food. there's markets all over you get it over the place. you get it delivered your door. delivered to your door. >> literally excuse. >> there's literally no excuse. >> there's literally no excuse. >> are real food >> no, but there are real food deserts the country. we deserts in the country. and we do need to make sure that people have the availability are have the availability and are able have the availability and are abli think it's a crisis of >> i think it's a crisis of people's willpower people's people's willpower rather else. rather than anything else. >> laziness not. >> laziness not. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. neil, i'd like about just like to come to you about just on 12 hour shift. on a 12 hour shift. >> are you going to spend an hour at the stove? because i'm not. i think honestly, i think cooking of the most cooking is one of the most therapeutic you can therapeutic things you can do. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> and also things you can. >> and also things you can. >> hours your feet in >> 12 hours on your feet in a warehouse going to warehouse you are not going to then to spend. i used to
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then want to spend. i used to work in a warehouse. >> you know what? >> you know what? >> it's actually cheaper and easier healthy food. a easier to eat healthy food. so a can chickpeas or eat of can of chickpeas or eat a can of chickpeas warehouse might be chickpeas warehouse might not be the thing, but the most delicious thing, but with a bit of pesto into it. i don't know what you want to do. put of butter on it. put a block of butter on it. you're allowed know and you're allowed to know and that's to be that's going that's going to be that's going to be healthier. but neil, i'd to be healthier. but neil, i'd to love come you this. to love come to you about this. the beasts facing the tory big beasts facing wipe—out next election wipe—out at the next election after up after doors opening up new splits and they're already quite a splits in the party. but a few splits in the party. but it mentions members it mentions cabinet members penny shapps and penny mordaunt, grant shapps and mark face losing mark harper, who face losing their labour being 15 their seat and labour being 15 points ahead, actually points ahead, which is actually less thought they were ahead. >> we've here before. >> well, we've been here before. i i was a member of i mean, i was a member of parliament back in the mid 1990s and nearly years after and for nearly five years after britain fell off a cliff of the erm the tories were flatlining in the polls. yeah it was quite clear that 97 was going to be a wipe—out and nothing that, that they could do under john major's they could do underjohn major's prime minister who refused to accept responsible for the greatest economic disaster that
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we've seen since the gold standard in 1931. he wouldn't resign. so the electorate then got their own back. and i think the tories, in the same period of denial ism now and as nadine dorries said in her explosive resignation letter, why would you vote for a tory party that isn't conservative conservative just doing all the things that that the labour party would do? actually, we're now seeing a reversal of roles today. the labour party is saying, no, no, we're not going to up taxes we're not going to put up taxes on rich people, we're not on on rich people, we're not going wealth tax and going to have a wealth tax and so i mean, meanwhile the so on. i mean, meanwhile the tories have produced the highest tax the attlee tax burden since the attlee government of the 1940s. it's government of the 1940s. so it's no the tory big no wonder that the tory big beasts and i think a lot of little beasts also will will be wiped out. some people will be very sorry to see lose like lee anderson. so we need more people like him and maybe then the tories wouldn't be this tories wouldn't be in this predicament doldrums. predicament in the doldrums. >> yeah. and it looks >> they are. yeah. and it looks like could be 1997 style
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like it could be a 1997 style wipe—out. earlier today we wipe—out. no, earlier today we asked viewers, was asked you, our viewers, was nadine about rishi nadine dorries right about rishi sunak? the results are . in 84.7% sunak? the results are. in 84.7% of uk's well, 15.3% of you say no. around that, up to 85. so yeah, you're overwhelmingly agree with nadine dorries now coming up, we've got more from the papers next. we've got the telegraph and the star, plus tonight's headline, heroes and back page zeroes. and i want to know yours . send them into know yours. send them into gbviews@gbnews.com and we'll see you in a couple
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welcome back to mark dolan tonight . i've got a couple of tonight. i've got a couple of your emails here. linda says, i love ann widdecombe . she is an love ann widdecombe. she is an amazing, principled woman . i amazing, principled woman. i never disagree with her. i wish she was our prime minister. well a lot of people are going to be agreeing with you. i think you've made some good points there. tron says. i think emma is right about dr. schuller,
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isn't it? quantum physics that we on we focus we create that on which we focus our attention? all we do by response leading to is response leading to her is feeding her overreach , causing feeding her overreach, causing ego. maybe if you've got a point , to come , emma, i'm starting to come round it. maybe should just round to it. maybe i should just ignore in future, ignore dr. schuller in future, no matter how much it gets my back andrew says leo, back up. andrew says. leo, i love new jacket. thanks love your new jacket. thanks very much, andrew. £50 in tkmaxx. richard says. leo just wanted to say on your last shift that you have done an amazing job covering mark and have kept the an elite level. all the show at an elite level. all month. thank you so much, richard. i didn't even pay him to that. to say that. >> that's fantastic. no i paid tron . tron. >> let's have a look at the papers that have just come in. we've got the star, which has 23 c. happy monday. i mean, i wouldn't have thought with all this talk of the planet being on fire, i wouldn't have thought 23 degrees is particularly warm. degrees c is particularly warm. and that's coming from a scotsman . but apparently scotsman. but apparently we're going sunny bank going to get a sunny bank houday going to get a sunny bank holiday indian summer. holiday and an indian summer. >> and we say indian summer now,
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surely. >> well, they did. >> well, they did. >> they on the star. if >> they did on the star. if they're if they're being racist, i'm just quoting them now. i think think it's fine to say think i think it's fine to say that. we're going to that. so yeah, we're going to get summer. i remember get an indian summer. i remember last september was last year, september was amazing. like best amazing. it was like the best month of the it nearly month of the summer. it nearly convinced me of climate change. the daily telegraph has braverman police must investigate every theft. the home secretary tells forces that ignonng home secretary tells forces that ignoring low level crimes is no longer acceptable and labour will pay gp's more if patients can see doctor of choice . and can see doctor of choice. and also they've got a picture of prince andrew they're saying has william forgiven his disgraced uncle? i just want him to go on newsnight again and do another interview. that was the most entertaining thing i've ever seen. gb news yeah, yeah , yeah. seen. gb news yeah, yeah, yeah. i mean, well, be careful what you wish for. um, so, i mean, this this thing about braverman saying the police must investigate every theft . i'm investigate every theft. i'm kind of shocked, are they not?
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>> they weren't that already. this already? >> they weren't investigating every burglary or every car theft . so, i mean, and every burglary or every car theft. so, i mean, and i guess going into an election year, neil, this is this is something that politicians always rattle the sabre about. >> yeah, but obviously she can do actually to influence do nothing actually to influence operational policing on the ground. >> it's just a ground. >> it'sjust a bit ground. >> it's just a bit of sound bite vacuity really . but she's vacuity really. but she's absolutely right in principle . absolutely right in principle. >> the police who'd have thought ? >> 7. >>i 7- >> i mean, 7— >> i mean, as 7_ >> i mean, as a ? >> i mean, as a political consultant , >> i mean, as a political consultant, i mean, she's so much in the in the world of policing is politicise it. >> now we see the focus on non—crime hate incidents. you know, people sending, you know, a transphobic limerick on twitter or whatever nonsense they get investigated for. and obviously police like obviously the police like investigating them because they're easy. not rolling they're easy. you're not rolling around the gutter with around in the gutter with somebody knife. but somebody with a knife. but but this could steer some of this this could steer some of the to focus actual the forces to focus on actual crime instead of nonsense crime i >> -- >> well, you'd hope so. but you also wonder why the home secretary has to come out and
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say this now and what she's been doing for the last, you know, four years or so . four years or so. >> she hasn't been home. >> she hasn't been home. >> well, i mean, how long ever long she's been home secretary she was her she's had two goes at it, hasn't she, because she was sacked for being indiscreet. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> she get much done there. >> yeah. but i mean the sacking was a very minor was a very was a very minor it was a very minor indiscretion. was a very minor it was a very mirandidiscretion. was a very minor it was a very mirand then etion. was a very minor it was a very mirand then .tion. was a very minor it was a very mirand then . but i mean, yeah, i >> and then. but i mean, yeah, i just it always makes me laugh when a politician who is home secretary comes out and says something as blatantly obvious as police should investigate crimes like do i do agree with that? >> it's like when priti patel was came out and said, we need to do something about these channel crossings. it's like you're the home secretary. you do it exactly. you know, like if only you were the home secretary to fix it. >> well, moving on. we've got your headline and back >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros.1e and back >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros. so and back >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros. so ben, and back >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros. so ben, whoi back >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros. so ben, who is ack >> well, moving on. we've got your izeros. so ben, who is your page zeros. so ben, who is your headune page zeros. so ben, who is your headline this week? headline hero this week? >> seem have forgotten. >> oh, i seem to have forgotten. i nadine dorries, i think it was nadine dorries, right? not because right? because not because i like dorries, but because like nadine dorries, but because she scathing attack on she gave a scathing attack on
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rishi was entirely rishi sunak, which was entirely correct. actually very well correct. and actually very well written. she's great written. she's she's a great writer when it's, you know, polemic she polemic against someone she hates , she she can hates massively, she she can bnng hates massively, she she can bring out words. but i read hates massively, she she can briher)ut words. but i read hates massively, she she can briher and words. but i read hates massively, she she can briher and i words. but i read hates massively, she she can briher and i thought,3ut i read hates massively, she she can briher and i thought, yeah,ead to her and i thought, yeah, she's pretty much spot on on all of i think maybe it of this. and i think maybe it might reform her reputation slightly among and also she might after might have a career after politics boris johnson right. >> writing columns. >> writing columns. >> emma, who's your headline hero. is the hero. so my headline hero is the spanish women's team. >> i also want to give >> but i also want to give a shout out to mary earps, who i think has been an absolute hero of women's cup , not of the women's world cup, not only in the fact that she saved a penalty, which also never happens, but also in that amazing moment that we all saw her mouthing what we saw her mouthing very, very clearly . but mouthing very, very clearly. but the spanish women's team have really stood by each other in solidarity over their dispute with the incident, with the one of the. >> but we see that in men's football all the time. you know, passions are high. men kiss each other. >> they do. but there's usually a sense that you check in before
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you that. and i think this is you do that. and i think this is what not happen. she says what did not happen. she says she an email she very clearly sent an email to beckham being like, to david beckham being like, i'm planning you. planning on kissing you. >> i am always planning on kissing beckham. kissing david beckham. >> anytime he's available, >> and anytime he's available, we can make an arrangement. but yeah, just i've been really yeah, i just i've been really impressed way that impressed by the way that they've together they've stood together as a team. i just that's team. and i just think that's a really beautiful thing to see. >> yeah, great. >> yeah, great. >> neil, who's your headline >> and neil, who's your headline here? >> well, it was nadine dorries, but i think i'm going to have to swerve, i? same swerve, aren't i? for the same reason you still have her, so. >> well, i'm, i'm going to say dr. stephen brewery, who was the consultant at council of consultant at the council of chester who actually chester hospital, who actually did who blew the did call out who blew the whistle letby and but was told to apologise to her for his , uh, to apologise to her for his, uh, his impertinence or for falsely accusing her. yeah. >> and now let's just whiz through your zeroes. ben. who's yours ? yours? >> i've gone for someone called emma haddad. who was the home office's asylum chief until recently, and she's now gone to work for amnesty international,
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where she's turned around and said that the government and the home office massively racist home office are massively racist and need all the and that we need to let all the asylum seekers well, the asylum seekers in. well, the government home office government and the home office that was a part of the that she was a part of the massively racist in charge of the asylum this the asylum system of this country, her country, wasting her own hoisting by own petard. >> and emma, who's your zero? >> and emma, who's your zero? >> so ironically possibly as >> so ironically and possibly as a of my role in this a result of my role in this panel and zero is nadine panel and my zero is nadine dorries, while agree with dorries, while i agree with every she says about rishi every word she says about rishi sunak , i just think the whole sunak, i just think the whole thing has been a really distasteful , undignified, distasteful, undignified, undignified , undignified. and undignified, undignified. and neil, who's your. >> well, i think something seems to have gone wrong tonight because emma haddad was also my choice for exactly the same reason . am i being spied upon here? >> no . were you looking over the >> no. were you looking over the same wavelength? >> did you both get chat gpt to write your answers ? this is. but write your answers? this is. but yeah, clearly. i mean if she's she's bad mouthing the government that she just left . government that she just left. yeah. calling it racist that seems i mean what was she doing when she was there exactly. >> i mean, the worst thing about
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this and we saw it with sue gray as well, who who was doing that inquiry into boris johnson whilst he was talking to keir starmer keir starmer about becoming keir starmer's chief of staff, is how it brings the whole civil service disrepute. service into disrepute. >> well, thanks for >> okay, well, thanks for watching tonight. mark back >> okay, well, thanks for wathyou tonight. mark back >> okay, well, thanks for wathyou onlight. mark back >> okay, well, thanks for wathyou on fridayviark back >> okay, well, thanks for wathyou on friday and back with you on friday and headliners next. stay headliners is up next. stay tuned that in a few minutes. tuned for that in a few minutes. and thanks for watching. while i've been filling for mark by i've been filling in for mark by the temperatures rising, boxt solar, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there . welcome to your >> hello there. welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast . i'm craig snell. we're looking ahead to the new week. for most of us, it's going to stay changeable. some further spells of also some of sunshine, but also some further rain at times. so as we end sunday, we've got this weak weather front which will gradually spread its way a little further eastwards. little bit further eastwards. a ridge trying to ridge of high pressure trying to build monday. it may build in from monday. it may well down well just settle things down briefly. we end sunday, briefly. but as we end sunday, you can just see that weather front just gradually working its way very patchy.
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front just gradually working its way either very patchy. front just gradually working its way either side very patchy. front just gradually working its way either side we'll/ery patchy. front just gradually working its way either side we'll see patchy. front just gradually working its way either side we'll see plenty. and either side we'll see plenty of clear spells and under the clear we just see clear skies, we may just see some patchy mist and fog. for most cities, however, most towns and cities, however, temperatures staying comfortably in figures . so as we in double figures. so as we start monday, a bank holiday for most us, a bright start for most of us, a bright start for a lot of us actually still this area of cloud across central areas and that will just spread its a little bit further its way a little bit further eastwards. go into the eastwards. and as we go into the afternoon, actually many parts seeing some cloud around and that be thick enough seeing some cloud around and th.places be thick enough seeing some cloud around and th.places to be thick enough seeing some cloud around and th.places to produceick enough seeing some cloud around and th.places to produce someough in places to produce some showers, mainly focussed across western scotland and for northern ireland most it's a warmer feeling day could see highs around down highs reaching around 2122 down towards southeast corner towards the southeast corner into tuesday , a very similar into tuesday, a very similar day. a lot of dry weather around, but there will be some showers. this line of showers will just gradually spread its way a little bit further southwards as we through the southwards as we go through the course of the day. and then later on, some blustery showers working far northwest working into the far northwest of wednesday, of scotland wednesday, similar still, thursday , we still, but then on thursday, we could a longer spell of rain could see a longer spell of rain arriving the west arriving from the west throughout the day , the
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throughout the day, the temperatures rising , a boxt temperatures rising, a boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on
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gb news good evening. >> i'm tatiana sanchez in the newsroom . i'm nadine dorries has newsroom. i'm nadine dorries has accused rishi sunak of whipping up a public frenzy against her and says he doesn't have the x factor of a winning prime minister. in a blistering resignation letter, the former minister accused mr sunak of demeaning his office by criticising her. she says his government has abandoned conservatism and the 2019 election manifesto , which was election manifesto, which was published before boris johnson , published before boris johnson, won an 80 seat majority in a by—election, will now take place in the usually safe tory seat of mid bedfordshire high street chain wilko could be saved from collapse after a last minute
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rescue bid was launched. wilko

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