tv Dan Wootton Tonight Replay GB News September 1, 2023 3:00am-5:01am BST
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way. >> no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton tonight based on bogus science forced on people undemocratically is ulez the new lockdown on the independent scientist who endorsed sadiq khan's hated scheme has been exposed as a paid stooge and i'll continue to shine a light on one of the biggest deceptions in recent british political history . even if the msm won't. history. even if the msm won't. that's in my digest next before my superstar panawagan. and tonight , i'm my superstar panawagan. and tonight, i'm joined by allison pearson. she's shaun bailey and amy nicholl turner breaking tonight, a huge blow in the fight to slash nhs waiting lists and save lives as selfish junior doctors and consultants prepare to join forces. in his historic strike action next month , former strike action next month, former conservative minister and shadow health secretary ann widdecombe slams the medics holding the
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government to ransom shortly . government to ransom shortly. also on the way after labour's race baiter in chief, dawn butler launched this disgusting attack on superwoman suella. >> so you couldn't really have of a white home secretary saying the sort of things that suella saying and get away with it that easily. i don't think so . easily. i don't think so. >> has the left's obsession with race made them racist themselves? nana akua takes on joanna jarjue in the clash plus , it's 26 years since the world was rocked by the death of diana. but what is the lasting legacy of the people's princess? did she really change the monarchy forever? her long time critic and biographer, lady colin campbell, and one of the journalists who knew di best, phil dampier, provide their fascinating insight in a special edition of royal mastermind shortly . and can you imagine the shortly. and can you imagine the hit show clarkson's farm without clarkson ? well, according to clarkson? well, according to amazon's clueless telly boss
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who's turned on jeremy over his controversial meghan markle column , the series is much more column, the series is much more than its star and will plough on without him. kelvin mackenzie tackles this prime example of go woke go broke later as always, we'll bring you tomorrow's newspaper front pages . hot off newspaper front pages. hot off the press, too. this is dan wootton tonight. let's go . wootton tonight. let's go. you're watching tv news. britain's news channel shocking new information proving even more that ulez is one of the biggest deceptions of the people in recent british history. i'll tell you all about that in the digest straight after tatiana sanchez with the headlines . dan sanchez with the headlines. dan thank you very much and good evening. >> this is the latest from the newsroom. the chief constable of northern ireland has refused to
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step simon byrne attended step down. simon byrne attended a critical meeting with the policing board today. a recent court ruling deemed mr burns disciplinary actions against two junior officers unlawful , junior officers unlawful, lawful. the decision was reportedly driven by concerns sinn fein might withdraw support for policing, sparking accusations of appeasement from unionist . mr accusations of appeasement from unionist. mr byrne addressed the media a short while ago. i highlighted that after carefully reviewing the full judgement , i reviewing the full judgement, i sought further advice after consideration . consideration. >> the question of an appeal is now live further public commentary around this matter is not appropriate at this stage . not appropriate at this stage. thank you, chief. >> do you retain the support of the policing board? >> that's a matter for the policing board. >> chief constable, have you considered your position? >> i not resigning schools in >> i am not resigning schools in england, mr immediately shut buildings made with a type of concrete that's to prone collapse until safety measures are put in place. >> some schools will have to
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relocate children to other teaching spaces. more than 100 schools are being contacted before the start of the new term . education secretary gillian keegan says the government is keeping on top of doing all it can to deal with the issue. >> if it's in a place that is causing concern , you know, causing concern, you know, sometimes it can be in a part of the building that's, you know, doesn't have children in etcetera, so we have been going in great detail and we're taking a very cautious much, a very cautious approach, much, much than we would much more involved than we would usually be because the responsible have responsible building owners have their we are on their own plans. but we are on top that. the department is top of that. the department is playing role to try and playing a bigger role to try and make that we just support make sure that we just support those schools have risk and those schools that have risk and mitigate it minimise the mitigate it and minimise the disruption to children as soon as possible . as possible. >> junior doctors and consultants will be taking joint strike action in england for the first time across september and october. they'll walk out for four days in their long running dispute over pay. the british medical association says consultants will strike on september the 19th and 20th, with junior doctors also walking
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out on the 20th, followed by strikes on the 21st and 22nd. both consultants and junior doctors will strike again on october 2nd, third and fourth. former nhs trust chairman roy lilley told nigel farage this evening consultants have failed to read the room . to read the room. >> i mean, you can't i can't look a consultant in the eye. that's even if they're not doing private work, they're between 80 to 100 grand a year. they are highly educated people in doing the jobs they love and want how they can turn their backs on people in this way and say, oh, it's the government that's made me do it. it's not the only person that makes them do it. it's the person that looks at them in the mirror when they clean their teeth in the morning, make those decisions. >> i think they and finally, grant shapps has been appointed as defence secretary as the new defence secretary following the resignation of ben wallace . wallace. >> gm- gm— g years in the job, >> after four years in the job, he says wants to explore he says he wants to explore different opportunity and spend he says he wants to explore differitimepportunity and spend he says he wants to explore differitime with unity and spend he says he wants to explore differitime with hisy and spend he says he wants to explore differitime with his family. pend more time with his family. education minister claire
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coutinho takes over as energy and net zero secretary, replacing shapps. the this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now it's back to dan . dan. ulez is fast proving to be one of the biggest deceptions in recent british political history. >> london's failed mayor, sadiq khan has swindled the science to introduce use a devastating and destructive £12.50 daily tax that will hit london's poorest the hardest as part of the labour party's forthcoming war on cars and the motorists, especially early. given this is a story far more serious than the partygate farce which successfully ousted boris
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johnson, thanks to the relentless obsession from the establishment media. so where is the rolling coverage on the ulez deception from the british bashing corporation ? where are bashing corporation? where are woke itv's special investigations into how the mayor has hoodwinked the public, pressuring scientists to cover up the facts? just imagine if a conservative leader had done something as corrupt and damaging as gb news producer charlotte gilbert . charlotte gilbert. >> it it's incredible how little beth rigby, robert peston and paul brand seem to care about ulez if this was enacted by a tory mayor, they would be all over it, stalking them down the street. for example , your mayor, street. for example, your mayor, will you be resigning over your ulez policy? it would be relentless . relentless. >> it would. she's totally right. >> but the internal mic bias in the british media towards the labour party and net zero means they don't actually want to ask
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any tough questions about ulez. instead look at this. khan gets treated with kid gloves . treated with kid gloves. >> obviously this is your baby. >> obviously this is your baby. >> but there has been huge opposition to the expansion of this scheme from many groups, many residents, many businesses . why do you believe you're on the right side of history over this? >> the vast majority of young people this because of people support this because of the impact it is going to have on and generations after on them. and generations after them. do you think that's playing into the support that you that poll ? you have with that poll? >> heard you say previously >> i've heard you say previously that this expansion was a very difficult decision to take. tell me why you struggled with it . me why you struggled with it. >> oh, poor baby. poor siddiq. but despite that, msm support this scandal is growing by the day, as is public anger. the daily telegraph has now revealed that dr. gary fuller, a senior lecturer at imperial college, who quote independently peer reviewed a paper used to justify
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the ulez expansion is part of the ulez expansion is part of the environmental research group at imperial , the environmental research group at imperial, which was awarded over £800,000 in just two years by sadiq khan at city hall. this bloke is a full on leftie by the way, even writing for the guardian pollutionwatch column . guardian pollutionwatch column. gosh, no wonder that paper's sales are plummeting and surprise , surprise, fuller was surprise, surprise, fuller was the only reviewer of khan's so—called landmark report suggesting ulez had dramatically reduced pollution in london. let me be clear that was a lie. khan's 49% figure was actually closer to a negligible 3. it's not the only lie given the mayor claimed thousands of londoners die each year from air pollution when it's only showing up on one death certificate . btw, khan has death certificate. btw, khan has been found out the introduction of ulez is based on flawed
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science. it's a national disgrace and an embarrassment . disgrace and an embarrassment. the msm may ignore the consequences , but people power consequences, but people power is now an action. but to respond now my superstar panel daily telegraph columnist allison pearson , the man who ran against pearson, the man who ran against sadiq khan at the last london mayoral election, lord bailey and the best selling author amy nicole turner. allison pearson . nicole turner. allison pearson. by nicole turner. allison pearson. by the day , the revelations by the day, the revelations showing that khan has effectively used used people on the payroll on city halls, payroll to swindle the science, get more egregious. yet the msm are silent on this daily telegraph scoop . why? telegraph scoop. why? >> well, i completely agree with charlotte gill. spot on. if this was a tory mayor or any kind of tory administration , they would tory administration, they would be channel 4 would be dedicating its first opening half hour. this situation i'm not sure if
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viewers it's quite a complicated thing this peer review so there was a study about the effect of pollution in in london and this guy gary fuller, senior lecturer at imperial college, one of our most eminent scientific institutions, now a peer reviewer who looks at a study. it's normally more than one person. it's almost always more than one person. and the government guidance says that person has to be impartial, independent and not have any financial involvement in it. this guy, you know , fails on this guy, you know, fails on each of those criteria. it's absolutely . absolutely. >> and by the way, the original study , alison, we should also study, alison, we should also point out the original study was just written by khan's cronies at city hall . yes. and at city hall. yes. and officials. it wasn't it wasn't actually written by scientists to begin with. >> no. so they they rope him in, don't they? and he rubber stamps it. absolutely astonishing breach of science , basic etiquette. >> he's basically a guardian
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columnist who is desperate to prove that ulez and even more extraordinary in the study that he was in dependently quote unquote peer reviewing. >> they quote him . so, you know, >> they quote him. so, you know, this is, you know, it's you're kidding. no, they literally quote gary fuller. >> that's unbelievable . >> that's unbelievable. >> that's unbelievable. >> it is. it is. i mean, in any in any reputable scientific establishment, he would be. >> so this is a scandal. >> so this is a scandal. >> it is a scandal. it's a complete scandal because khan actually told us that this study provided categorical proof that ulez were . ulez were. >> yes, look, there's a number of how has he got away with this, sean? >> there's a number against the suv- >> there's a number against the guy. there's a number of important themes about this. >> the >> firstly, it's about the reputation of university reputation of that university and of its science and it's all of its science going forward. it's about the green do people green agenda. and do people believe all? believe it at all? >> and about the msn fake >> and it's about the msn fake thing. >> and it's about the msn fake thirlondoners has gotten >> londoners khan has gotten away this because the msm away with this because the msm have not focussed on it. >> asked the >> they've not asked the question, deliberately question, they've deliberately supported omission supported him with an omission
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and matter what and what that is, no matter what their politics is, no matter the guardian's politics, is they should first. should support londoners first. that's the first piece. the second is, i have to say second piece is, i have to say congratulations to my colleagues on assembly . they've on the london assembly. they've been saying this from the very, very, beginning. and very, very beginning. and they've they've been they've been they've been treated were whistleblowers. >> they're their politicians whistleblowers. >> the look, |eir politicians whistleblowers. >> the look, just)oliticians whistleblowers. >> the look, just)oliticiaa; saying, look, just give it a fair look. nobody it a fair look. >> but the important thing here is the wider message is if you believe green agenda, believe in a green agenda, you're get people to you're trying to get people to come over to side to come over to your side to believe your side. i've sat believe in your side. i've sat in of khan so many in front of sadiq khan so many times heard that times and heard that man pontificate following pontificate about following the science. out he never science. it turns out he never followed in science. is he a liar? he 100. he lied. he invented the science and when it was challenged, then tried to was challenged, he then tried to rubbish saying they're rubbish people by saying they're far conspiracy because? far right. conspiracy because? >> i'll you why. >> because i'll tell you why. >> because i'll tell you why. >> he far right conspiracy theorists. >> because there a scientific >> because there is a scientific consensus that ulez works . consensus that ulez works. >> there is a scientific consensus that although you say there's one death, you haven't counted for the thousands of deaths that are caused by by
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co—morbidities of dirty air. but in the same way, there is a scientific consensus about climate. and that's why he used that that parallel. let's be clear. there is a scientific consensus. >> consensus. >> let's be clear. let's be clear again , do not rope other clear again, do not rope other things to in try and support his false science. that's what he tried to do with imperial college. and now they're going to to think cleaning to have to think about cleaning up reputation because of up their reputation because of something to them. right. something he did to them. right. that's the first thing. secondly, study in secondly, the study shows in london that the expansion of the ulez will have negligible. >> talking about we're >> you're talking about we're talking about facts here. >> the second study, which was actually the one done by the decent people at imperial, by the engineering group. yeah. showed that it had only cut emissions by 3. that was khan was trying to say to cut emissions by 49. i mean because we're not talking about a small discrepancy here. we are talking about a complete falsehood that has been perpetuated by sidique khan, present day impact versus the ten year impact which wasn't
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included in that. >> can we stop quibbling >> also, can we stop quibbling about because don't about science because we don't get no, should get anywhere? no, we should quibble. is. a quibble. no, it is. it's a quibble. >> it's the reality >> so reality it's the reality you are talking about hundreds of millions of pounds. >> okay. well, government >> okay. well, your government have. no. have. no, no, no, no. >> about the >> this isn't about the government. this is about sadiq khan. had opportunity. he khan. he had an opportunity. he had opportunity to the had an opportunity to clean the air of london. had an air of london. he had an opportunity support london's. opportunity to support london's. and a fib and what he did was told a fib that's to cost the poorest that's going to cost the poorest londoners. how is it going to cost londoners? cost the poorest londoners? >> know, what does >> because, you know, what does cost the poorest? london londoners? millions is the rising highest rising food costs the highest tax since world war ii. tax burden since world war ii. there are so many taxes to there are so many more taxes to contend with. as a poorest londoner , the poorest londoner londoner, the poorest londoner wouldn't a car, wouldn't even own a car, wouldn't even own a car, wouldn't be affected by this can get £2,000 scrappage scheme. >> this is this is why sadiq khan and you are wrong if you think you can replace your car for £2,000, you're wrong . if you for £2,000, you're wrong. if you think poor londoners don't think that poor londoners don't have wrong. have cars, you're wrong. >> londoners do not have >> 29% of londoners do not have cars people in the >> and that's people in the inside of london because they have decent transport. the
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further you out in london, further you go out in london, the dependent on. the more you are dependent on. this massively generous this is a massively generous scrappage. londoners, the poorest outer poorest londoners in outer london cars because they london drive cars because they have poorest londoners are have the poorest londoners are the impacted by the dirty air. >> amy. amy ulez look, there's lots of things you can say about the air by the way, london's air, ironically , is the cleanest air, ironically, is the cleanest that it's been for hundreds of years, since before we had people dying of smog . people dying of smog. >> amy you didn't seem like it wasn't exactly clean. >> seem to mind, amy, that this scientist lied . scientist has effectively lied. >> yeah, that's because i listen to asthma charities and let's be clear, kids. let's be breathing in poverty. nitrogen dioxide, poverty. >> the poverty caused by ulez, breaking up people's businesses that will kill you first. >> i'm telling you, your government poverty will kill them. >> the khan has lied over this. i think it's a £12.50 avoidable tax with a very generous for the poorest. has he lied for the poorest? >> no. >> no. >> okay . okay. and we have both >> okay. okay. and we have both sides of the story here on gb news. as you just heard, a spokesman for khan said dr. gary
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fuller is a world leading academic looking at air pollution, who also serves as a as an expert advisor to the government. and he suggests that octophylla is anything but an independent expert in his field is nonsense. it is right and proper that city hall works with the leading academics looking at how pollution damages our how air pollution damages our health. as the government health. just as the government does. amy nicole turner . lord does. amy nicole turner. lord bailey. allison pearson. my superstar panel with me all night. so do stand by. coming up, you believe it? can you up, can you believe it? can you remember you were when you remember where you were when you heard that diana had heard that princess diana had died? i can. >> and i know most of you will be able to, too. >> but did the people's princess change the monarchy forever in the end? and actually, what is her legacy? well, her long term critic lady colin campbell, and one of the journalists who knew her best, phil dampier, provide their facts and insight on that. soon but up next in the clash, after labour mp dawn butler disgustingly claimed suella braverman is only home secretary because of the colour of her
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skin has is the left's obsession with race actually started to make them racist themselves ? gb make them racist themselves? gb news nana akua takes on news darling nana akua takes on social commentator joanna jarjue next. but your view most important dan at gbnews.com and the email vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. back after this
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>> 26 years on from her death shortly. but first, the clash and the left's racism problem reared its ugly head again yesterday as labour's race baiter in chief. dawn butler launched this disgusting attack on home secretary suella braverman . braverman. >> i think they're kidding themselves and an extremely delusional in thinking that that they will be seen differently when push comes to shove. yeah, they get promoted because of the things that they're saying. so you couldn't really have a white home secretary saying the sort of things that suella saying and get away with it that easily. i don't think so . don't think so. >> why is the left so determined to see every everything through the prism of race? conservative politicians skin colour should have absolutely nothing to do with their views. i think with their views. and i think it's with their views. and i think ws fime with their views. and i think it's time this kind of it's high time this kind of bigotry was called out. but what do you think has the left's obsession race them
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obsession with race made them racist themselves? standard gb news.com racist themselves? standard gbnews.com in our poll at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. but to debate now, i'm joined by debate this now, i'm joined by gb news darling nana akua and the social commentator joanna jaflue. the social commentator joanna jarjue . so nana this just felt jarjue. so nana this just felt very racist to me . from dawn very racist to me. from dawn butler suggesting that suella braverman has only been hired because of the colour of her skin . what did you make of it? skin. what did you make of it? >> well, i mean, it's standard practise from the likes of dawn butler . it's actually a complete butler. it's actually a complete insult. suella braverman is a barrister. she's worked hard and she got the job by sheer determination and hard work. i find this sort of rhetoric typical of a lot from the left who are not expecting anyone like me because in their eyes, somebody who is dark skinned should not have such conservative views . and if you conservative views. and if you are, then you're stepping out of your lane. and as you stepped out lane, the only out of your lane, the only reason she's in the position is because someone like her could never say the things that she is
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saying or someone like her can only say the things that she is saying. sorry. pardon me, but two for dawn butler to say that she got away with she actually got away with saying is absolute saying anything is absolute nonsense. when suella nonsense. actually when suella braverman rightly identified the invasion on our shores, she didn't get away with it. people jumped on her case and immediately were telling her that , you know, she was immediately were telling her that, you know, she was being racist when she rightly identif defied racist when she rightly identif defied the pakistani grooming gangs because they were mostly pakistani men grooming young white girls. and that is what suella was pointing to. she was called racist and mean . if she's called racist and mean. if she's really going down that track , really going down that track, then what about rishi sunak ? i then what about rishi sunak? i mean, he's asian. is there ? what mean, he's asian. is there? what does she have in store for him? it is absolute nonsense and it detracts from the ability of an individual who is doing a very difficult job. and it's just not helpful. >> but joanna jarjue, you say it is convenient for the government to have a brown person as a
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mouthpiece to say things that are a little bit risky about other brown people because they can't be called racist . can't be called racist. >> yes , i do. and i think that >> yes, i do. and i think that it's not. i think dawn butler was getting at was that it's not that that's the sole reason that suella braverman was given this position , but it was definitely position, but it was definitely an added benefit that it kind of softened the softens the blow a little bit . you know, if it's little bit. you know, if it's a brown or black person saying things about other brown or black people, it does soften the blow. it's a very convenient shot and it just makes the conservative government's life a bit harder. yes, i do agree with nana that, you know, suella braverman did get some flak for saying, you know, invasion and saying, you know, invasion and saying migrants , but saying stuff about migrants, but she would have got a tonne of a lot but she would have got lot more, but she would have got a lot more. and you know, grief from people and from the from the public. had she been the british public. had she been a well, i say a white person? well, i say i say exactly what suella says . say exactly what suella says. >> i describe it as an invasion of our southern border. yes but
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also, you're not a politician. >> you know, she's. but are you saying that that's racist ? no. saying that that's racist? no. what i'm saying is that she's held to a higher standard to begin with because she's a politician . so she's expected to politician. so she's expected to speak in a certain way and speak certain language is completely different when me and you different from when me and you have conversation when there have a conversation when there are that people are things that maybe people tweet that, you tweet you and think that, you know, make those comments know, if you make those comments that racist, it's that it is racist, but it's completely different. if i actually i find this actually i actually find this approach the left in this approach from the left in this country despicable. >> it all the time. nana >> i get it all the time. nana as gay man who doesn't believe as a gay man who doesn't believe in the lgbt jukai whatever it is, that ridiculous agenda, i don't believe in that. so they come for me. they they say that i can't be a real gay man. and i presume you must get it too. >> that's exactly the key down. >> that's exactly the key down. >> the fact that you have the. >> the fact that you have the. >> it's my turn. we'll come back to you. i'm sorry, but it is my turn.i to you. i'm sorry, but it is my turn. i did listen to you, but i get it all the time because i'm not saying the things that
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somebody who is of colour should be saying. but because i say them, then i can apparently say them, then i can apparently say them away with it. i'm them and get away with it. i'm not getting away it. i'm not getting away with it. i'm saying what i yeah the saying what i think. yeah so the and have every right to say and you have every right to say it. >> whatever colour you are. >> whatever colour you are. >> mean what i'm saying, it's >> i mean what i'm saying, it's not about me getting away with it. it's me coming of a lane it. it's me coming out of a lane that i'm supposed to be in. sorry i will get to the end of this. this on a par for me this. this is on a par for me with joe biden saying you ain't black you vote democrat. black unless you vote democrat. so i think it's so you know, this. i think it's time black politicians to time for black politicians to acknowledge particular acknowledge in particular the likes dawn that we are likes of dawn butler that we are not one homogenous group who think same thing and think all the same thing and must say the same thing. it's time move away from talking time to move away from talking about of people's about the colour of people's skin and listen to they're skin and listen to what they're actually suella actually saying and what suella braverman on point. braverman is saying is on point. and the british public and what the british public have voted for. joanna look nana , i voted for. joanna look nana, i completely agree with you that black people are not monolith. >> you know, you don't have to be left wing for me to see you as a legitimate or the black person. that's fine. but you've also to admit that
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also got to admit that your opinion black woman is an opinion as a black woman is an outlier in the that you outlier in the sense that you don't many people who look don't get many people who look like and you who do have like me and you who do have conservative views like you. and even in even if they are conservative in their numbers , they're probably their numbers, they're probably not wing outwardly and not as right wing outwardly and as vocally as you. so when you've got somebody like you , you've got somebody like you, let's say for argument's sake, nana, were a conservative nana, if you were a conservative mp and were in high office, mp and you were in high office, if were willing say quite if you were willing to say quite extreme stuff , that is really extreme stuff, that is a really big benefit because then if anything happens and let's say, for a white politician for example, a white politician also agrees you as a black also agrees with you as a black politician , then that's politician, then that's very conservative right wing. conservative and right wing. they always turn to you. they can always turn to you. >> and i'll give nana the final word. i'll give nana the final word, there's one thing that word, but there's one thing that i say. joanna very i have to say. joanna very clearly, that suella clearly, nothing that suella braverman says , nothing that braverman says, nothing that nana akua says is extreme. this is what the left try to say. what nana akua and what suella braverman say is actually the majority view in this country. the vast majority of people agree with them. but final word to you, nana. >> i just want to add in that
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just because only one person who used the of colour may be used the year of colour may be saying there was large saying that there was a large silent majority absolutely silent majority who absolutely 100% and are the 100% agree with me and are the same colour, but i have to keep stressing dawn butler and the stressing to dawn butler and the likes. they want to away likes. they want to move away from racism. yet they are from racism. um, yet they are the perpetrators of it it the perpetrators of it and it really needs to stop. >> it does. it does need to >> yeah it does. it does need to stop. joanna jarjue nana akua brilliant really brilliant debate. really appreciate you both. appreciate it. thank you both. but who do you agree with? has the left's obsession with race made themselves? made them racist themselves? damon said via twitter. it's in the eyes of the left. racism against white people is not possible have seen possible yet. i have seen several worrying of several worrying examples of racism from the left in recent years, none of which has ever called out by the msm. sarah writes there is a peculiar type of racism from some people on the whereby they think the left whereby they think somebody has somebody like braverman has no right to limit migration because she a family she comes from a family of immigrants. also prefer immigrants. they also prefer non—white the non—white people to be the victim . himars rather victim. himars rather than empower pip the left empower. and pip says the left cannot see the irony of their actions. they claim to be against racism, yet they peddle views which are totally racist
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themselves . and your verdict is themselves. and your verdict is now unwell. 92% of you with nana on this show, you say the left's obsession with race has made them racist themselves . 8% of them racist themselves. 8% of you with joanna jarjue, an and dawn butler. now coming up, kelvin mackenzie takes on sadiq khan's ulez fraud and jeremy clarkson's cancellation. first, the though , looks like the weather, though, looks like things are heating up . things are heating up. >> boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> good evening, i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some places see a few showers, but some spots will see some warm sunshine too . it's see some warm sunshine too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old area of low pressure hanging around and these weather fronts have been bringing cloud and across many areas and rain across many areas through day. the possibility through the day. the possibility of heavy showers just in of 1 or 2 heavy showers just in the far south—east through the night , the far south—east through the night, staying the far south—east through the night , staying fairly the far south—east through the night, staying fairly damp and murky and misty over parts of northern england . and some of
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northern england. and some of that light trickling into that light rain trickling into southern well. southern scotland as well. northern staying dry northern scotland staying dry and and quite chilly. and clear and quite chilly. temperatures well down into single further a single figures. further south, a pretty temperatures pretty mild night. temperatures holding in the teens. for holding up in the mid teens. for some, it into friday. as i said, a bit of a mish mash. the midlands northern england, parts of southern scotland fairly drab for actually for much of the day actually overcast , pretty cloudy, too, overcast, pretty cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and drizzle here and there, especially to the east of the pennines. further south, something sunny something a bit brighter, sunny spells, will also be spells, but there will also be a sprinkling of showers, mostly spells, but there will also be a sprioverg of showers, mostly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern vers, mostly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern scotland, ly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern scotland, 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees in the degrees here, 23 possibly in the south with some sunshine. a cool feel, though , with that more feel, though, with that more persistent cloud over northern england, here. so today england, 16 or 17 here. so today may also start a bit misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you're after dry and bright weather, some decent of weather, some decent spells of sunshine warmer with sunshine and turning warmer with temperatures over temperatures more widely over 20 c. and sunday also set fair with some warm, sunny spells. goodbye looks like things are
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heating up . heating up. >> boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news coming up of weather on. gb news coming up as junior doctors and consultants plan to cripple the nhs with historic joint strike action next month, is there any defence of a walkout which puts patients lives in such serious danger? >> former conservative minister and shadow health secretary ann widdecombe slams the medics holding the government to ransom shortly. but first, it's been 26 years since diana's death sent shock waves around the world. but what is the lasting legacy of the people's princess? her longtime critic, lady colin campbell , longtime critic, lady colin campbell, and one of the journalists who knew her best, phil dampier, offered their expert insight in a special edition of royal masterminds
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isabel monday to thursdays from six till 930 . time now for my six till 930. time now for my royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier and it was the story that rocked not just the nation , but the world. just the nation, but the world. >> 26 years ago today , in the >> 26 years ago today, in the early hours of the morning news began to break. that would change the monarchy forever . change the monarchy forever. >> buckingham palace has confirmed the death of diana, princess of wales. the princess died following a car crash in paris. a statement from buckingham palace said the queen and the prince of wales were deeply shocked and distressed by this terrible news. >> we don't know who they talked to put this on. the reuters news agency wire . it says princess
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agency wire. it says princess diana has died and that her partner , dodi fayed, has also partner, dodi fayed, has also been killed. >> they were apparently being pursued by paparazzi on two motorcycles. >> she died at 4 am. after going into cardiac arrest. >> that according to doctors at the hospital in paris . >> that according to doctors at the hospital in paris. diana, princess of wales, is dead now. >> times and monarchs have since changed. but despite diana's infamous reluctance to see charles ascend the throne, he is now king and her arch nemesis, camilla, our queen. but her eldest son, william, also plays a crucial role in our modern ized monarchy, which would undoubtedly make the late princess immeasurably proud. so what is princess diana's legacy and how has it shaped the royal family of today ? well, i'm family of today? well, i'm honoured to be joined tonight by my royal master, lady colin campbell, a respected royal insider who was the first to predict the wales separation and divorce in her 1992
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international very controversial best seller. diana in private, along side her is the author and journalist phil dampier, who spent six years following diana around the world as royal reporter for the sun and was there in person to witness the iconic handshake between the princess and an aids patient that changed around that changed the stigma around the disease forever . so look, the disease forever. so look, phil, the legacy of diana is, of course, immense . i mean, the course, immense. i mean, the fact that we're even talking about this event 26 years on, and i'm sure for you, it's still feels as real and shocking as it does for me shows that she made a huge impact. but does for me shows that she made a huge impact . but did does for me shows that she made a huge impact. but did she really change the monarchy in the way that she hoped to? >> yeah. good evening. >> yeah. good evening. >> dan sometimes seems like yesterday, doesn't it? looking at those clips. it's unbelievable, isn't it? 26 years ago, people who have ago, you've got people who have got of school age wandering got kids of school age wandering around who weren't even born when so it's just when it happened. so it's just
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quite to see that. quite incredible to see that. but think she changed the but i think she changed the monarchy she came along . monarchy before she came along. you know, for example, princess anne, president the save the anne, she president the save the children be in children fund, she'd be in africa. never think africa. she would never think about up a baby, a child about picking up a baby, a child in a camp in africa. diana really changed all that. she made it much more touchy feely. and i think we see that today, certainly with you talk certainly with her son. you talk about always used to say about legacy. always used to say her was her of her legacy was her sons. of course, unfortunately, with the events five years events of the last five years with harry, rather with harry, that's rather changed bit . i with harry, that's rather changed bit. i mean, it changed a little bit. i mean, it does make you wonder if you're still alive today. the situation would probably totally would probably be totally different. 62. i'm sure different. she'd be 62. i'm sure she wouldn't have allowed this situation hand situation to get out of hand where the two brothers fell out. but least know that but at least we know that william monarchy william think the monarchy is safe hands. she safe in his hands. and she always wanted william to succeed. the monarchy to succeed. and the monarchy to succeed. and the monarchy to succeed. sense , her succeed. so in that sense, her legacy is secure. >> lady colin campbell, you had an interesting relationship with diana. i believe you first met her when she was a teenager. but of course, your book was true , of course, your book was true,
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but also quite critical in parts . what do you make of her legacy now ? now? >> well, i actually agree with phil. i think her legacy is her children , but i think her legacy children, but i think her legacy is both her children . i think is both her children. i think that died . diana was a very that died. diana was a very contradictory personality. and diana could be a very divisive person . she had many, many person. she had many, many virtues. but diana was very damaged. she was damaged, by the way . she was brought up as a way. she was brought up as a child by her parents divorce . child by her parents divorce. >> she she got a ringside seat on what treachery and ambition was all about from her grandmother, lady fermoy, who testified against her daughter so that the spencer children would remain with their father and remain in the royal fold . and remain in the royal fold. >> instead of to going australia
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with francis and peter shand kydd. with francis and peter shand kydd . i mean, you know, she she kydd. i mean, you know, she she from a very early age, saw not only the brilliance of splendour and privilege, but it's underbelly. it's very unattractive underbelly . and she unattractive underbelly. and she i think she was very much a monarchist and she certainly wanted william to become king. and he will doubtless become king. and he is the best of diana. but harry, i hate to say , is the worst of diana and diana was both those people . diana was both those people. >> yeah, sort of the two sides of her personality. she it's incredible feel, though, looking at those pictures of diana, because she was a celebrity, unlike any other. there was something magna btec about her. and even now , she she really is and even now, she she really is one of those iconic figures. now, you obviously covered her
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up close and personal. what was she like as a person and what was she like when the cameras were off? >> she was she was great fun. she used to talk to us all the time. she was always having a bit of banter with the press. it normally revolved around clothes. remember she was clothes. i remember she was obsessed with clothes. she'd always come up you and say, always come up to you and say, why you wearing tie? is why are you wearing that tie? is that bet? you know, that for a bet? or, you know, don't your shoes or, you don't like your shoes or, you know, for the occasion or know, dress for the occasion or something that. she was something like that. she was always joking about it and always joking about it and always of course, one always remember, of course, one day there with day i was standing there with andrew who the time andrew morton, who at the time was the tabloids, and was on one of the tabloids, and he kept saying, she keeps looking keeps looking looking at me. she keeps looking me and down. i think she me up and down. i think she likes me. and of course, me saying, andrew, you saying, andrew, shut up, you know, don't what you're know, you don't know what you're talking and of course, talking about. and of course, a couple there he couple of years later, there he was diana, her true was writing diana, her true story. i have to say that story. but i have to say that lady c was very much ahead of the game. she never really got credit book, was credit for her book, which was way ahead morton's way ahead way ahead of morton's way ahead of else about. of everyone else about. >> well, indeed, indeed. >> well, indeed, indeed. >> c, i'm interested in
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>> and lady c, i'm interested in in the origin story of that book, true that at book, because is it true that at one you hoping to one point you were hoping to write authorised version of write the authorised version of diana's and in the way diana's story and in the way that andrew eventually that andrew morton eventually did? yes and no, because >> well, uh, yes and no, because andrew didn't actually write her authorised biography. she she wrote her covert the authorised biography . wrote her covert the authorised biography. my book wrote her covert the authorised biography . my book started out biography. my book started out as a fundraiser for three of her charities that were going to be three of my charities . liz and i three of my charities. liz and i went into buckingham palace after diana and i spoke about i saw dickie arbiter , uh, and it saw dickie arbiter, uh, and it was going to proceed as an anodyne biography , focusing on anodyne biography, focusing on her charity work. and then once we started working on it, diana decided at some point to change direction , change horses in direction, change horses in midstream . up until that point, midstream. up until that point, charles was fine. the marriage hadnt charles was fine. the marriage hadn't worked because they were
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totally incompatible. he allowed her to have her lover. he was a really great guy. and then overnight it changed and she was playing the victim card . and i playing the victim card. and i came to the conclusion , ian, came to the conclusion, ian, that she had been most likely speaking to friends of hers who said to her, you know, diana, it's not really going to play very well with factory workers in dagenham . if you say you have in dagenham. if you say you have to get out of this horrid royal way of life because you are being restricted, you need to come up with something more sympathetic . so she came up with sympathetic. so she came up with a victim card . and at that a victim card. and at that point, i pulled out because i was i actually thought it was outrageous that she could expect me to having told me she was going to expect me to write, why , and i just wouldn't do it. going to expect me to write, why , and i just wouldn't do it . and , and i just wouldn't do it. and i thought it was outrageous . and i thought it was outrageous. and i thought it was outrageous. and i still think it was outrageous . and i also think she didn't have to do it. you know, she could have left and she could have left rather more cleanly
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and nicely than she did leave. but the but it's all history. it's all it all happened. it is. but may i say, can i say she lived to regret it. she lived to regret it. because by the time she died, she understood good that she had played some really wrong cards . and by the time she wrong cards. and by the time she died , she was ostracised died, she was ostracised throughout the establishment . throughout the establishment. and she had only in the last few months before her death started to retreat of any sort of respect position within the established movement. so she learned her lesson. yes >> and of course, prince william would cast a lot of the blame for that situation. nation at the door of martin bashir and the door of martin bashir and the bbc. but that is a whole other conversation. but absolutely fascinating insight . absolutely fascinating insight. it's from two journalists who knew princess diana in very
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different ways , lady colin different ways, lady colin campbell and phil dampier. thank you so much. we'll speak on monday. but coming up, as students in huddersfield are pushed out of luxury flats on the night before term starts to make way for over 400 illegal migrants, why are small boat arrivals getting preferential treatment over british youngsters? superstar panel youngsters? my superstar panel returned in the returned to debate that in the next hour. but next, as junior doctors and fatcat consultants on figure salaries announced on six figure salaries announced they strike together for they will strike together for they will strike together for the first time, can they morally justify putting ahead of justify putting pay ahead of patients? former tory minister and shadow health secretary ann widdecombe, she's live on this. and strictly come dancing straight after this
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history . the coinciding strikes history. the coinciding strikes will happen in september and october. coming after a year of damaging disruption to the nhs caused ongoing king caused by ongoing king industrial action with the bma demanding a shocking 35% pay rise for junior doctors , rise for junior doctors, ministers today branded the joint strike callous and calculated dated. and welcome back to the show. how can all these striking workers sleep at night given the nhs is already crumbling under pressure and their demands and are just clearly so unreasonable . clearly so unreasonable. >> well , clearly so unreasonable. >> well, indeed. and they're acting like brutes and they are brutes to be doing this . brutes to be doing this. >> i mean, they know that every time they strike, that puts pressure on the nhs queues and that somebody somewhere suffers . in fact, quite a lot of people will suffer. and if the doctors and the consultants are out together, then that effect is going to be. now, the very fact that they're prepared to do that in pursuit of a ludicrous pay
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claim of 35, they're already well paid. i have no doubt at all that the value of their pay has been eroded over the years. that has also happened an awful lot of other professions as well. nothing unique well. there's nothing unique to them that. even given them about that. but even given that they are putting people at risk, putting people's welfare and possibly even their lives at risk to line their own pockets , risk to line their own pockets, they are immoral . there is no they are immoral. there is no other word for it . other word for it. >> i know, i know. other word for it. >> i know, i know . and it just >> i know, i know. and it just feels so political . an i mean, feels so political. an i mean, there's absolutely no way they'd be doing this under a labour government . government. >> well, don't know whether >> well, i don't know whether they do under a labour they would do it under a labour government not. i mean i do government or not. i mean i do remember the 1970s where the labour government, and labour government, one and a half country on strike, half the country was on strike, the gravediggers, the dustbin, absolutely on absolutely everybody was on strike. so i don't think necessarily that they wouldn't do it if it were a labour government, but i think there is certainly an added incentive there that they think it's
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damaging the conservative government. but i wouldn't go so far as to say that if labour were in control, they wouldn't strike because anybody who's prepared to strike at risk to other people is prepared to strike. okay now look, time for whitty's warning woke . and an whitty's warning woke. and an became something of a national treasure . treasure. >> as you remember with her unique performance on the bbc's strictly come dancing back in 2010, a show our very own angela rippon will be joining later this year. but the usual keyboard warrior is now attacking the show for the fact that some contestants have previous dance experience that could them sort of could give them some sort of advantage in the competition. so, anne, you were a star of strictly . you had no dance strictly. you had no dance experience , did you? anne? but experience, did you? anne? but you're actually angry that folk are creating problems here. >> yes, i am very angry about it. look, the whole point of strictly is that you don't start on an even keel. if you had
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everybody starting evenly, then you wouldn't have pensioners , you wouldn't have pensioners, which was when i did strictly you wouldn't have pensioners and young athletic dancers in the same competition. it just would be unheard of . it's supposed to be unheard of. it's supposed to be unheard of. it's supposed to be family entertain and the whole joy of it is that you have got this range of dancers, some will be utterly useless, some will be utterly useless, some will be utterly useless, some will be useless, but funny, which is what i was. >> some will be no , you were >> some will be no, you were better than that. look at you. there my goodness . there my goodness. >> no, i'm not useless . >> no, i'm not useless. >> no, i'm not useless. >> i've got no. i can't hear the music. i'm tone deaf in the literal sense. i cannot hear music . literal sense. i cannot hear music. couldn't discern a beat the day arch singers had to actually tell me what to do by emphasising words because i couldn't pick up a beat. anton would say stuff right at the beginning like, you know, go off on the fourth beat. and i would say, what's that? i couldn't hear it. so the dave arch singers, paul so he used to have to punch out words and that was my cue. >> but. anne i think , i think
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>> but. anne i think, i think angela rippon not that i like talking about a lady's age, but i think angela rippon might even be older than you when she is going on the show. so what's your advice to her? >> oh, i don't think angela needs much advice. she has danced in the past. she is. you know , she's a very intelligent know, she's a very intelligent lady who can work it all out for herself. i don't think she needs any advice from me at all. but my advice to all strictly contestants is always the same, whether they're very good or utterly hopeless whatever. utterly hopeless or whatever. it's same. enjoy it it's always the same. enjoy it because it's a once in a lifetime experience. you know , lifetime experience. you know, you can do big brother twice. you can do the jungle twice. you cannot do strictly twice. so enjoy it. you no enjoy it. and you have no regrets . oh, i have . far from regrets. oh, i have. far from having regrets, i reckon it was one of the best decisions i ever took and everybody who called themselves my friend was against it. i can tell you . it. i can tell you. >> really. they said, don't do it. >> yeah, the whole of the office said, don't do it. all my
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friends said, don't do it. they all gave the same reason. they said i would lose my said that i would lose my gravitas. i said, yes, gravitas. and i said, yes, that's what do i want that's right. but what do i want it for? >> well, you've got it back and you've certainly got it back. ann widdecombe, brilliant as even ann widdecombe, brilliant as ever. speak next and ever. we'll speak next week and thank much. coming thank you so much. but coming up, mcgehee becomes up, as danielle mcgehee becomes the first trans cricketer to compete in an international match, should cricket's governing bodies following follow other sports and ban trans women from competing alongside biological women? will olympic medallist sharon davies gives unmissable take on gives her unmissable take on that in the next hour. the next in the mediabuzz. we'll debate the disgraceful preferential treatment to migrants over treatment given to migrants over brits as students in huddersfield dumped out of huddersfield are dumped out of their digs to make way for asylum seekers. we'll also get a first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages, hot off the press and kelvin mackenzie is uncancelled on why amazon is trying to say that they can make clarkson's farm without jeremy clarkson. don't go anywhere . clarkson. don't go anywhere. >> the temperature's rising .
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>> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening, i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some places will see a few showers, but some spots will see some warm sunshine too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old area of low pressure hanging around weather fronts around and these weather fronts have cloud and have been bringing cloud and rain many areas through have been bringing cloud and rain day. many areas through have been bringing cloud and rain day. the1any areas through have been bringing cloud and rainday. the possibilitythrough have been bringing cloud and rainday. the possibility ofough have been bringing cloud and rainday. the possibility of 1jgh have been bringing cloud and rainday. the possibility of 1 on the day. the possibility of 1 or 2 heavy showers just in the far south—east through the night, staying fairly damp and murky and misty over parts of northern england. and some of that light rain trickling into southern scotland as well. northern scotland as well. northern scotland dry and scotland is staying dry and clear quite chilly. clear and quite chilly. temperatures down into temperatures well down into single a single figures. further south, a pretty temperatures pretty mild night. temperatures holding up in the mid teens for some friday. as i said, some into friday. as i said, a bit a mash. the bit of a mish mash. the midlands, northern england parts of scotland, fairly of southern scotland, fairly drab much of the day, drab for much of the day, actually. overcast and pretty cloudy, for northern cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and
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drizzle and there, drizzle here and there, especially to the east of the pennines. further south, something sunny something a bit brighter, sunny spells. also be a spells. but there will also be a sprinkling showers, mostly sprinkling of showers, mostly dry 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees 23 possibly in the degrees here, 23 possibly in the south with some sunshine. a cool feel , though, with more feel, though, with that more persistent over northern persistent cloud over northern england, 16 17 here saturday england, 16 or 17 here saturday may also start a bit misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you have to dry and bright weather, some decent spells of sunshine and turning warmer with temperatures widely over temperatures more widely over 20 c. sunday also set fair 20 c. and sunday also set fair with some warm, sunny spells. goodbye the temperatures rising i >> -- >> boxt solar power sponsors of weather on .
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after students are ruthlessly dumped from their luxury flats a week before the start of term to make way for over 400 miles warrants so why should the country's next generation be hurled to the back of the housing queue? i'll pose that to my superstar panel next. and tonight, i'm joined by alison pearson, lord bailey and amy nicole turner. pearson, lord bailey and amy nicole turner . also pearson, lord bailey and amy nicole turner. also on the pearson, lord bailey and amy nicole turner . also on the way nicole turner. also on the way it turns out, the scientist who a peer reviewed sadiq khan's ulez paper, was part of a group getting 800 grand in funding from the mayor himself. so is the scheme fast proving to be one of the biggest deceptions in recent british political history 7 recent british political history ? plus, after a boss at amazon backs meghan markle before their big star ridiculously claiming that clerks farm is so much bigger than jeremy clarkson is great tv under threat from the woke left fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie riled and ready for that and uncanceled elsewhere . trans cricketer elsewhere. trans cricketer danielle mcgahey is to represent
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canada in an official international match, but does the sport need to send this decision for review? fierce defender of women's rights, sharon davies speaks out on this suit and as gb news presenter nana akua says, the violent notting hill carnival has become aninqu notting hill carnival has become an insult to the celebration of canbbean an insult to the celebration of caribbean culture. does it need to move in order to survive? we'll tackle that in the media buzz. there'll also be a new greatest britain and union jackass revealed before the night is out and the first front pageis night is out and the first front page is arriving. i'll have them in mere moments, actually. in just mere moments, actually. right headlines right after the news headlines with sanchez . with tatiana sanchez. >> dan, thank you very much and good evening. this is the latest from the newsroom. the chief constable of northern ireland has refused to step down. simon byrne attended a critical meeting with the policing board today. a recent court ruling deemed mr burns disciplinary actions against two junior officers unlawful. the decision was reportedly driven by
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concerns by sinn fein might withdraw support for policing, sparking accusations of appeasement from unions. mr byrne addressed the media this evening. i highlight covid that after carefully reviewing the full judgement, i sought further advice after consideration. >> the question of an appeal is now live further public commentary around this matter is not appropriate at this stage. thank you , chief. thank you, chief. >> do do you retain the support of the policing board? >> that's a matter for the policing board. chief constable, have you considered your position? i'm resigning . position? i'm not resigning. >> schools in england must immediately shut buildings made with a type of concrete that's prone to collapse until safety measures are put in place . some measures are put in place. some schools will have to relocate children to other teaching spaces . more than 100 schools spaces. more than 100 schools are being contacted before the start of the new term . education start of the new term. education secretary gillian keegan says the government is keeping on top of doing all it can to deal with
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evening. consultants have failed to read the room . to read the room. >> i mean, you can't i can't look a consultant in the eye. that's even if they're not doing private work , they're between 80 private work, they're between 80 to 100 grand a year. they're highly educated people in doing the jobs they love and want , how the jobs they love and want, how they can turn their backs on people in this way and say, oh, it's the government that's made me do it. it's not the only person that makes them do it. it's the person that looks at them in the mirror when they clean their in the clean their teeth in the morning, they make those decisions. >> i think they and finally, grant shapps has been appointed as defence secretary as the new defence secretary following resignation ben following the resignation of ben wallace after four years in the job. >> he says he wants to explore different opportunities and spend more time with his family . education claire . education minister claire coutinho takes over as energy and zero secretary replace and net zero secretary replace singh shapps 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 dan .
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news. now it's back to dan. tomorrow's news tonight in our media was first front page as they are in their just been delivered hot off the press. >> let's go straight to the metro which leads with the death of a british fighter in ukraine. they say samuel newey had fought repeatedly on the front line since joining an international unit at start of the war. 18 unit at the start of the war. 18 months ago . thousands of months ago. thousands of children face home schooling for weeks . that's the headline in weeks. that's the headline in the eye newspaper . as fears over the eye newspaper. as fears over the eye newspaper. as fears over the safety of some concrete buildings have forced 104 schools in england to shut their doors . my superstar panel back doors. my superstar panel back with me now, top daily telegraph columnist allison pearson and conservative peer lord bailey, and the author and broadcaster amy nicole turner. now for yet another glimpse into britain's broken immigration system, 168
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british students have been ruthlessly turfed out of their accommodation in huddersfield after the home office bought a luxury housing block to accommodate migrants . more than accommodate migrants. more than 400 will move into the student halls, which boasts a cinema room gym and games room. meanwhile all the students have been left scrambling to find an alternative place to live. just alternative place to live. just a week before term starts in a town that already has a shortage of student digs, the overwhelming number of illegal migrants crossing the channel, which has now reached 20,000 for the year, has the home office, under pressure to sort accommodation. but why on earth, alison, should our young students pay the price for the government's failure to control our borders and secure our borders ? sorry. borders? sorry. >> yeah, it's a complete catastro dan, i mean, student accommodation used to be cheap. that was the whole point of it. my friend's daughter, she's in durham university. she's paying about ten grand a year for a grotty room in a three bedroom
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terraced house. the landlord of that student house is getting almost £50,000 a year for a horrible house that's on a main road in the north—east. it's absolutely astonishing . and now absolutely astonishing. and now what we have is if that isn't bad enough, we have government agencies, home office agencies competing with students , rents, competing with students, rents, driving up the price of accommodation, and then turfing these poor kids out in huddersfield, they're about to start term in a couple of weeks, all excited and got their rooms sorted out . they're going to be, sorted out. they're going to be, you know, sleeping in parks, probably . it's absolutely probably. it's absolutely dreadful, but there's no joined up thinking between the home office and the office for students. and it's absolutely disgusting. and this is this is a catastrophe not only in student accommodation. we are seeing the government is letting in more and more foreign students on high incomes who are also paying over the odds for their university place. they're taking university places from british students. they're taking
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accommodation from british students . if you are a young, students. if you are a young, bright, working class kid who was thinking about going to uni , the prospect of paying . , the prospect of paying. £10,000 a year for some scuzzy room would be undoable . so room would be undoable. so you're going to be putting our own young people off from higher education. plus we've got these asylum seekers. the government is embarrassed to hell about how many they've let in. they're just trying to keep it below the radar. these government radar. so these government agents , places like serco, are agents, places like serco, are bidding up prices with private landlords offering them sweetheart deals to hide the asylum seekers away from the pubuc asylum seekers away from the public gaze . and they are public gaze. and they are depriving our own young people of those rooms . it's terrible. of those rooms. it's terrible. >> it is, sean and this is going to keep happening because as not only are we not stopping the boats, but we are not housing them on barges. we're not putting them in tents. so they have to go somewhere and now it's the students being hit, which makes me so angry .
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which makes me so angry. >> there's a number of things you see going on here. there's a talk about the government failing. actually, the whole political failed. political class has failed. yeah. yeah yeah, yeah. every every have every tactic the government have tried. somebody on the left has got involved they've got got involved and they've got lawyers out. kinnock. stephen kinnock, who's a shadow minister, a shadow minister for immigration, he has said the government's in this position because a dependency on because it has a dependency on temporary accommodation. so is his suggestion that we house them you know, for in them for you know, for in perpetuity? what's he saying? is he saying permanent accommodation, the i'm accommodation, the point i'm making have shouted making is people have shouted from sidelines with from the sidelines with absolutely no realistic suggestion as to what can be done. and what you're seeing now is it's becoming a real problem for other people. so in the beginning, was only beginning, the boats was only a problem for people in the south eastern we're eastern country. we're now seeing spread and all seeing the impact spread and all those students who went those lovely students who went on who said, know , on marches who said, you know, you're wrong for trying to do this now they're going to feel it. >> i mean, it.— >> i mean, carl, is it. >> i mean, carl, is true it. true that >> i mean, carl, is it true that you have said you would absolutely move out the way for
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migrants to be housed in comfortable accommodation rather than barges or tents? than inhumane barges or tents? >> of course, that's true. >> of course, that's true. >> okay. so how many migrants , >> okay. so how many migrants, the only boat house, the only boat you've managed to stop is the biggest stop. so how many migrants currently migrants are you currently housing prepared to house? housing or prepared to house? >> why it always come back >> why does it always come back to that? >> why? well, no, because, you see, i don't have a bearing. >> we would move the >> we would never move out the way. >> we would never move out the wayl'd >> we would never move out the way i'd to >> we would never move out the wayl'd to bring up >> i'd like to bring up something that stephen kinnock sorry, clarify you? sorry, can i just clarify you? >> don't have spare room. >> i don't have a spare room. >> i don't have a spare room. >> there is. >> can i? there is. >> you're absolutely move out the for migrants to be the way for migrants to be housed and comfortable. >> i migrants. >> i want migrants. >> i want migrants. >> do you do you know >> what do you mean? do you know to move out of your house? >> this is my home office crisis. yes. we idea who crisis. yes. we have no idea who these people asylum these people are. the asylum claims processed. claims are not being processed. there are hundreds thousands there are hundreds of thousands of people. the illegal of people. and the illegal migration bill has made it clear that we're going to process that we're not going to process them. to going detain them. we're to going detain them. we're to going detain them. you make them. so when you make a promise, you put a bill promise, when you put a bill through parliament that says we're asylum we're going to detain asylum seekers, where are you going to do just clear, you're
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do just to be clear, you're going to run out of space. >> you're happy the students >> you're happy for the students to but you're not happy to move up, but you're not happy to move up, but you're not happy to migrants at your to house any migrants at your house you're happy to house and you're not happy to move yourself. i just want move out yourself. i just want to clarify. well, is to clarify. well, this is important clarify. important to clarify. >> really upset that these >> i'm really upset that these student accommodations being student accommodations are being used, some have used, but it has some you have to somewhere if you to put migrants somewhere if you are you're if you if are going if you're if you if you going to vote for a you are going to vote for a government that safe or government that has no safe or legal routes for these people and plans, when you . and plans, when you. >> dan, i'm sorry, you don't have have to house these people somewhere. what you've got to do is deal with the influx and amy's right. you need to treat people humanely. but you are never going to treat people humanely if you don't deal with the influx. so anybody on the left, stephen kinnock . keir left, stephen kinnock. keir starmer fine. what are you actually going to do about it? and we know going it's completely clear what what the left intends to do . left intends to do. >> there are no safe anymore. alison can come back. >> you've got a young son in about ten years time and he will probably be wanting to go to
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college he will be competing college and he will be competing with you will with asylum seekers and you will be having to dig into your back pocket as i've to into pocket as i've had to dig into mine for children to provide mine for my children to provide them with accommodation, which is price. i find it is soaring in price. i find it astonishing that you think that migrants want to live on £9 a week in indefinite accommodation, that they have no control over making the argument i made is find out who they are. >> we're not. let them live in the uk and let them work and contribute to our society wherever. >> for people who come to this country, the uk is going country, live in the uk is going to an impact, right? and to have an impact, right? and you're seeing one impact of you're just seeing one impact of that let me make it that now because let me make it quite there's very few quite clear, there's very few parents can compete with parents who can compete with the government it's more parents who can compete with the govern seeing. it's more parents who can compete with the governseeing. indeed, it's more parents who can compete with the governseeing. indeed, indeed.e you're seeing. indeed, indeed. >> amy, finally, >> but amy, just finally, because, always like because, you know, i always like to things. you say to clarify things. you say you're clarifying something ridiculous, way for ridiculous, move out the way for migrants, you're not migrants, but you're not prepared to move out to leave my own house, to leave my own to house, have any. >> you want me to leave my >> well, you want me to leave my own house. >> well, you want me to leave my own h0|what did you mean? i'd >> but what did you mean? i'd absolutely if i had a spare room? >> of course. what i mean is
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you're not prepared to housing. >> prepared to move out. >> i don't know why you don't respect these people as the equal people that they are. respect. i'm just i'm just respect. i do. i'm just i'm just wondering a separate wondering them as a separate species, just because they're in competition own young competition with our own young people, welcome people, that's fine. welcome that, sides that, because we have both sides of story here of the argument and story here on news. on gb news. >> so a home office spokesman said we continue to work across government local government and with local authorities to identify a range of for of accommodation options for migrants. the government remains committed with local committed to engaging with local authorities stakeholders committed to engaging with local authoritiesthis stakeholders committed to engaging with local authoritiesthis processtkeholders committed to engaging with local authoritiesthis process .eholders as part of this process. prestige student living, which manages the student accommodation huddersfield, accommodation in huddersfield, said our team took immediate action to inform students and help them secure alternative accommodation huddersfield help them secure alternative accoreturnation huddersfield help them secure alternative acco return all n huddersfield help them secure alternative acco return all paymentsersfield help them secure alternative acco return all payments madei help them secure alternative acco return all payments made to and return all payments made to us. we deeply sympathise with the affected by the students affected by the news we'll do all we can to news and we'll do all we can to support them. now. lost support them. now. i've lost count times i've count of how many times i've shown sleepy joe biden's shown you sleepy joe biden's gaffe this show with the gaffe on this show with the doddery president clearly not fit office. but as you fit to be in office. but as you know, we do do both sides of the story here on gb it's story here on gb news. so it's only fair also show you only fair that i also show you republican senate leader mitch
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mcconnell his funny so mcconnell and his funny turn. so this the 81 year old at an this is the 81 year old at an eventin this is the 81 year old at an event in kentucky over the past 24 hours. >> my thoughts about what running for re—election . in 2026 running for re—election. in 2026 should . did you hear the should. did you hear the question, senator? >> running for re—election in 2026 . all right. i'm sorry. 2026. all right. i'm sorry. >> you all are going to need a minute. senator denny . it's the minute. senator denny. it's the second time in a month that the newly styled glitch mcconnell has mysterious turned to stone. >> so with both him and biden deteriorating before our eyes, some folk in america think there should be an upper age limit for politicians. don't suggest that though to the fighting fit donald trump. allison pearson shaun bailey. amy nicole turner. do stand by because coming up, king charles sword wielding minister penny morton wants
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national service to be compulsory for 1816 year olds. sorry, but should britain follow the example of south korea and impose military service for all teenagers? we'll debate that and have more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages . the next. newspaper front pages. the next. is it fair for this canadian trans cricketer to take to the field in an official women's international match? former olympian sharron davies says the prospect of this happening should be hit for six. she's live with
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gb news radio. fleet street firebrand calvin mackenzie coming up. >> and now it's time for olympic medallist and women's rights warrior sharron davies. and the warrior sharron davies. and the war on women's sports continues with controversy in canada , with controversy in canada, where danielle mcgahey will become the first transgender cricket player to play in an official international match. after passing all the eligibility eligibility criteria excuse me, to represent canada on their qualifying journey towards the 2024 women's t20 world cup in bangladesh . the 29 world cup in bangladesh. the 29 year old was born male and would not be able to compete for a women's team under the rules of athletics , cycling, swimming and athletics, cycling, swimming and rugby. but the international cricket council's eligibility rules mean there is nothing blocking the milestone moment for the world of sport . well, for the world of sport. well, sharon, great to have you here. the women's rights network have slammed this development. what do you make of it?
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>> you say this person was born male. they're still male . male. they're still male. >> i mean, human beings cannot physically change our biological sex. >> sex. >> men will throw a ball 25% faster. >> and at the moment, every single piece of peer reviewed science we have says that we cannot remove male puberty advantage. so we're basically saying that this trans identifying male can go into women's sport with a known advantage, can displace a female athlete from competing for their country. and that's all okay. and i just don't understand. i really don't understand why we're doing this. you know, we fought for years to get equality for women in sport and sports like cricket, rugby, football, where actually you can earn a living. you are taking away the opportunity for someone, for a female to a living in this female to have a living in this sport, the thing that they sport, doing the thing that they love doing. >> i know i think it's so wrong, but you know, we do both sides of the story on gb news. so what i to do is let you know
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i want to do is let you know what the international cricket council about and i'll what the international cricket coun get about and i'll what the international cricket coun get you bout and i'll what the international cricket coun get you to jt and i'll what the international cricket coun get you to respond 1d i'll what the international cricket coun get you to respond off 'll what the international cricket coun get you to respond off the then get you to respond off the back. they have said in a back. so they have said in a statement tonight that we can confirm danielle went confirm that danielle went through process as required through the process as required under the icc's player eligibility regulations. and as a result has been deemed eligible to participate in international women's cricket on the basis that she satisfies the mtf, transgender eligibility criteria. so what do you make of that, sharon okay, so i'll let you know what the critera is, because i always like to deal with facts. >> okay? so this is what i always talk about. all right. you know, i absolutely believe anyone should be able to identify and live their life authentically. however, i believe we do sport believe in sport. we do sport with our bodies. we don't do them our feelings. we them with our feelings. so we have with facts. the have to deal with facts. the criteria that they have to meet is one year only, they is that for one year only, they have their have to reduce their testosterone to nanomoles. testosterone to five nanomoles. now than one now i have less than one nanomole my system, so they nanomole in my system, so they get to reduce their testosterone, which they've had all for 26 years all of their life. for 26 years they identified as a male, went
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through male puberty and played they identified as a male, went throuinnnale puberty and played they identified as a male, went throuinn australia rty and played they identified as a male, went throuinn australia reasonably yed cricket in australia reasonably unsuccessfully, moved to canada , reduced her testosterone to five times the level of the average female male. and then they get to compete for canada against women . and the thing against women. and the thing that's even more ironic is that the they have do the testing that they have to do is once month and they is once a month and they organise that with their own doctor. there's no spot doctor. so there's no spot checking and i know because of all the history with the east germans, takes two days germans, that it takes two days to testosterone from your to remove testosterone from your system. that that's the system. so that that's how the east germans were able to, to pass the when they pass all the tests when they went to all the major internationals. so, you know, it would extremely easy to turn would be extremely easy to turn around go, well, i've got a around and go, well, i've got a test on friday and here we are on monday. i'm going make on monday. i'm going to make sure reduce my sure that i reduce my testosterone. on friday, testosterone. so on friday, i pass then immediately pass and then immediately afterwards i'll stop suppressing my have my testosterone because we have no independent only no independent testing. we only have testing by the athlete with their doctor . so there are their own doctor. so there are so holes in the system. and so many holes in the system. and here in the uk, the ecb's policy is self—identification. no reduction of testosterone for any period of time whatsoever.
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just today i'm rocking up and today i feel like a woman. so i'm going to actually play against the women. and we have fully grown, um, you know, males that identify as females that have gone through puberty, throwing year old throwing balls at 12 year old girls this country, girls in this country, absolutely nuts. >> because it's a team >> and then because it's a team sport, we also get into sport, sharon, we also get into some of the areas that turned into a controversy with leah thomas and the swimming team in the us because, for example, presumably they will be sharing, changing facilities. now, i have noidea changing facilities. now, i have no idea if danielle has medically transitioned, has had surgery to transition, but leah thomas hadn't. and many women in the team actually felt deeply uncomfortable being in a changing room with leah thomas . changing room with leah thomas. male bits on display. changing room with leah thomas. male bits on display . okay. male bits on display. okay. >> yeah. i mean , i'd be pretty >> yeah. i mean, i'd be pretty confident to say there's no surgery happens because if someone has to suppress their testosterone , that means that testosterone, that means that they have the facility to
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produce testosterone. so you know, the chances are that there hasn't been any surgery . yes. hasn't been any surgery. yes. i mean, it just makes makes women extremely uncomfortable that they're forced to share a space with someone that has male genhaua. with someone that has male genitalia . and i just believe, genitalia. and i just believe, particularly when it comes to young children , that should young children, that should absolutely not be the case. you know, if you're an older person, maybe you can find ways or you can voice your opinions. but having said that, though, i mean, know, i know from mean, you know, i know from speaking female athletes in speaking to female athletes in this country and from around the world, have a real problem world, they have a real problem speaking speak speaking out. they wish to speak out, they are scared witless out, but they are scared witless of speaking out. and that is the place. so now that we have seen what's happened with rasheen murphy this week, you know, the irish singer , rasheen murphy, irish singer, rasheen murphy, she she talks about puberty blockers. >> sharon and tonight her record company, shame on them, says we're not going to promote her record anymore. so this is what happens. and this is why people are too scared to speak out . are too scared to speak out. >> that's right. and that's why it's really important that
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people the put all people like the ecb put all their members , you know, ask their members, you know, ask their members, you know, ask their members, you know, ask their members what they want to do. and every single time a governing body does this, we come back with the right answer is that the vast majority in the 80s and the 90% want fair sport. and that is our priority. >> will england netball's just done and as a member i was done that and as a member i was asked and i thought that was very respectful, but i hope that they are transparent with the result of it as well, so that we are listened to. but sharon davies brilliant. are listened to. but sharon davandirilliant. are listened to. but sharon davand we're1t. are listened to. but sharon davand we're going rowing, have >> and we're going rowing, have done the right thing. >> so when do, you know, we >> so when we do, you know, we get right results. so just get the right results. so just keep to be as as keep trying to be as vocal as you possibly can. >> good message, sharon. our olympics swimming star, thank you kelvin you so much. now kelvin mackenzie on woke liberal mackenzie on the woke liberal media's attempted cancellation mackenzie on the woke liberal m that warm feeling inside. aside from boxt boilers is proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> good evening i'm alex deakin.
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this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start . tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some see a few some places will see a few showers , but spots will see showers, but some spots will see some sunshine too. it's some warm sunshine too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old area of low pressure hanging and these weather hanging around and these weather fronts have bringing cloud fronts have been bringing cloud and many areas and rain across many areas through the possibility through the day. the possibility of 1 or 2 heavy showers just in the far south—east through the night, staying fairly damp and murky and misty over parts of northern england. and some of that light rain trickling into southern scotland as well. northern scotland staying dry and chilly . and clear and quite chilly. temperatures well down into single south, single figures. further south, a pretty night. temperatures pretty mild night. temperatures holding the teens for holding up in the mid teens for some as i said, some into friday. as i said, a bit of a mishmash. the midlands, northern parts of northern england parts of southern drab southern scotland, fairly drab for much the day, actually for much of the day, actually overcast and pretty cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and drizzle here and there, especially the especially to the east of the pennines. further south, something sunny something a bit brighter, sunny spells. but there will also be a sprinkling of showers, mostly dry 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees possibly in the
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degrees here, 23 possibly in the south with some sunshine. a cool feel , though, with that more feel, though, with that more persistent over northern persistent cloud over northern england, 16 or 17 here saturday may also start a bit misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you have dry and bright you have to dry and bright weather, some spells weather, some decent spells of sunshine warmer with sunshine and turning warmer with temperatures more widely over 20 c. and sunday also set fair with some warm, sunny spells. goodbye that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers >> proud sponsors of weather on gb news coming up in uncanceled as it emerges, the sciences who peer reviewed sadiq khan's ulez paper was part of a group getting 800 grand in funding from city hall was the eco tax to be implemented come hell or high water fleets recycling kelvin mackenzie delivers his first response in uncanceled the next in the mediabuzz. >> do you support compulsory national even military national or even military
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service for british 16 year olds after many more than talked up the benefits and as nana akua write that the dangerous notting hill carnival needs to change in order to survive. my superstar panel those controversial panel debate those controversial topics. have more topics. plus, we'll have more more of tomorrow's newspaper front back
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radio. >> tomorrow's news tonight. now in our mediabuzz, more front pages are in triggering headline in the daily telegraph for me lockdown return returns as schools shut over fears of collapse. this is the news that more than 100 schools forced to close their doors today because of crumbling concrete. and what does mean? back to zoom does that mean? back to zoom lessons. absolutely appalling stuff students . it's leading stuff for students. it's leading the daily mail tonight. we spoke about ann widdecombe. about it with ann widdecombe. how you get those how callous can you get those are that's in reaction to the news that both consultants and junior doctors will strike together for the first time. my superstar panel return now, top daily telegraph columnist
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allison the concern of allison pearson. the concern of peer lord bailey and the author and broadcaster amy nicole turner , now former defence turner, now former defence secretary penny mordaunt has given her seal of approval to a new national service proposal that would see every 16 year old in britain take part in a two week civic exploration trip and yearly volunteering . writing the yearly volunteering. writing the telegraph, mordaunt said young people crave the purpose and responsibility . national service responsibility. national service can provide a youth volunteering force based on the principles of civic pride and community is an idea ripe for reinvention . but idea ripe for reinvention. but with lawlessness out of control in britain, does the scheme which teens can opt out of go far enough? indeed, should we actually be looking to the likes of israel and south korea, which both have compulsory military service for inspiration? allison pearson can you imagine not having a compulsory year? >> i think it would be good for them, right? >> allison could you imagine our love? >> i want to send that little miss my feet away. >> miss this man's telling me,
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miss you, miss. look, penny mordaunt is herself a naval mordaunt was is herself a naval reserve. and she's benefited enormously. she came from a really ordinary working class background , and i think she background, and i think she stood with such astonishing stature and beauty and dignity at the coronation partly because she'd had that ramrod dedication to duty instilled in her. so she really values military training. i don't think we can have full on military training, although i do think sean will talk more eloquently about this. the cadet training and so on can be particularly beneficial to, you know, kids from homes where they haven't had structure and discipline. what i would like to see if they did bring in this scheme, and i do support it, is this idea children are told so much they live in a terrible country. it's awful history, slavery , racist. this could be slavery, racist. this could be a force for uniting young people , force for uniting young people, bringing people from all classes together, patriotism. this is a great country. plus post covid, of course , there's been an of course, there's been an
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immense alienation, depression amongst the young, and i think that they are owed some big initiative. >> so, sean, you like this idea ? >> ?- >> 100. 7- >> 100. i 7_ >> 100. i just 7 >> 100. i just want to pick up >>100. i just want to pick up on where allison left off. this is about service. it's not about military service. a modern military service. a modern military needs people who want to be there. it's tough work. you've got to really want to be there. it isn't about that, but there. it isn't about that, but the idea that you have to opt out rather than opt in is important. i remember going around america meeting some around america and meeting some really american really inspirational american schools and they had the notion of volunteering and of compulsory volunteering and what were basically saying what they were basically saying to are, we're to these children are, we're going adults, teach you going to, as adults, teach you how to support your community. and actually it is something that you should learn and this is one way of going about it. but i go back to key point but i go back to that key point for the last 10 to 15 years, we've had forces, twitter, all kinds of things, our kinds of things, telling our children place kinds of things, telling our chil
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well, what's wrong with the idea of you opposed to 1y, why well, what's wrong with the idea of you opposed to it?why are you so opposed to it? >> mean compared? glossary >> you mean compared? glossary national service. compulsory national. >> do national. » to national. >> do south korea. >> they do it in south korea. even they do boy band. even the they do boy band. >> do had to go. they've >> they do it had to go. they've abolished in france, germany, abolished it in france, germany, italy switzerland . italy de austria, switzerland. and because the consensus is basically what sean said, if you force someone to do something , force someone to do something, it doesn't have the outcome that you expect that that everyone's discussing the positive outcome. so no, it's not going to be a life transformed event. if it is that if it's voluntary. >> but the thing the thing that has to be said is let's be clear, you've all used the word milk free and compulsory. this is neither of those things. yeah a young person could opt out and it certainly isn't military. that's the although that's the point. although i think could be a good thing actually. >> at the weekend, >> now at the weekend, lawlessness descended on notting hill carnival there were hill carnival where there were over arrests, 75 police over 300 arrests, 75 police officers and eight officers injured and eight stabbings, the most seen in years. the distress in scenes prompted senior officers at the met to review the policing operation and consider potential changes to the carnival . and
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changes to the carnival. and writing for the daily mail today, gb news presenter nana akua says of the caribbean festival to call this a celebration of black culture is an insane assault. she backs the tory london mayoral candidate, susan hall, who on this show earlier in the week called for it to be moved to a more open space. so sean, do you agree with nana akua that it's actually an insult to describe the notting hill carnival as a celebration of black culture? >> my own family's had an association with the notting hill carnival for well over 30 years. we ran stalls there. obviously. i attended young person. it has definitely evolved . it is not a celebration evolved. it is not a celebration of our culture as it was in the beginning. it feels much more corporate now , but the wider corporate now, but the wider conversation really is, is how safe it is and what's interesting is susan hall got a lot of heat for suggesting it could move to hyde park. and remember, she didn't say cancel it. she said move to hyde park and be safer. but remember, that's something that ken
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that's also something that ken livingstone awful of livingstone did an awful lot of work. almost that as work. he almost achieved that as one things worked on. one of the things he worked on. the would say is there the thing i would say is there is still great white black is still a great white black community at the heart of providing and providing the carnival and they would distraught would be absolutely distraught if but it means if it was moved. but it means that they should be supported in continuing to make it safe because no joke that because it's no joke that 75 officers it's joke that officers and it's no joke that eight people are stabbed. no, indeed. >> and alison, i mean, i really struggle having at of struggle having looked at all of the see how can the footage to see how this can be safe. also felt like be made safe. it also felt like a bit of one of those black lives matter ruses, you know, a mostly safe carnival. everyone had a great time. oh, apart from the eight people stabbed, i thought that you could contrast it with how, if anything like this was kicking off at royal ascot. >> you know, you know, we had an absolutely marvellous day, but three horses were beheaded and the pimm's tent was set on fire. so you've got this. it's very strange, reporting. think strange, the reporting. i think people worried people are very, very worried about sensitivity and about cultural sensitivity and nobody of being called nobody scared of being called racist, called racist, scared of being called racist, scared of being called racist . i mean, facts speak racist. i mean, the facts speak for themselves . it's like sean, for themselves. it's like sean, i mean, as a young woman, i went
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and time. likewise, and had a lovely time. likewise, didn't didn't feel didn't feel didn't feel threatening all. but 75 threatening at all. but 75 police officers assaulted, six were bitten. one was sexually assaulted. i've got a friend who has become so sexually charged , has become so sexually charged, it never used to be like, no. i mean, it's i mean, there were people literally sexually assaulting police officers on camera, doing sexual camera, people doing sexual things in front of young kids. >> i mean, amy nicholl, i mean, look at this. amy nicholl, i hate these out of context. >> short, out of context. >> look at the children. there are the children. there are the children. what's going children. look at what's going on. of context about on. what is out of context about any this? that one, there is any of this? that one, there is not bad . there's more kids. not that bad. there's more kids. >> the thing i do think in >> the thing is, i do think in amy's house, we have this conversation every interesting style i can't style of dancing. i can't i can't say i can perform that myself. and so but i do think we have this wanting to defend this. >> you're wanting to defend this. >> i want to kind of try and explain it a little bit. so it's a non ticketed event and 2 million people turn up and it's
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quite if you put it in context of other similar events, it's quite underfunded and it's not really supported . it's nine £9 really supported. it's nine £9 million spent on police , 9 million spent on police, 9 million. but the revenue it creates is £990 million, right ? creates is £990 million, right? so i just feel like you could invest that. you could invest that back, surely a bit more and support carnival to make it safer. but actually it's 3 in 10,000 odd people that are victims of a crime. at creamfields, it's 23in 10,000. so it's not the most safe event. police don't go to police. it's represented that way in the press. >> but there's two things here. just because somewhere else is equally as bad, it doesn't. >> but we never talk about creamfields maybe? >> because the difference >> no, because the difference is cream a venue , an cream fields is at a venue, an open field. the issue with notting hill is this is through the streets. this is where people live . so, look, i think people live. so, look, i think the debate will continue. amy nicole turner, shaun bailey allison, by the way, no is allison, by the way, no one is saying the carnival should stop
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. where the carnival . it's about where the carnival is but coming after is held. but coming up after penny morton, that former navy reservist, has overlooked for defence today's defence secretary in today's cabinet reshuffle, was it a sign of weak premiership and of sunak's weak premiership and giving to long time giving the role to long time ally grant shapps? we'll discuss when tonight's when we nominate tonight's greatest britain and union jackass. greatest britain and union jackass . but next is the ulez jackass. but next is the ulez scheme. fast proving to be one of biggest deceptions in of the biggest deceptions in recent political history recent british political history 7 recent british political history ? and why the woke bosses at ? and why do the woke bosses at amazon appear to be siding with meghan markle over their tv megastar jeremy clarkson? kelvin mackenzie uncancelled on both those stories. go anywhere those stories. don't go anywhere because is live because kelvin mackenzie is live in
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it's time now for uncanceled and this is where britain's top commentators speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture sweeping the rest of the media. and sadiq khan has accused and sadiq khan has been accused of bulldozing through his ulez scheme without backing of scheme without the backing of the london, or indeed
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the people of london, or indeed the people of london, or indeed the science. already the science. it's already emerged that his administration pressured imperial college london to cover up results that didn't fit his clean air agenda. and dr. gary fuller, a senior lecturer at the university, who quote independent peer reviewed a paper used to justify the ulez expansion as part of the environmental research group at imperial, which wait for it was awarded £800,000 in just two years by city hall. and to top it all off, kelvin mackenzie, dr. phil also also writes for the guardian in a column about pollution . so khan's been found pollution. so khan's been found out here, hasn't he . well it is out here, hasn't he. well it is beyond shocking all this. >> the idea that a guy is supposed to be this is the whole point of peer reviewing. >> it's supposed to be independent and somebody is stuffing your mouth with gold. mean £800,000 is not nothing . mean £800,000 is not nothing. right. and you are actually actually in the payroll of city
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hall and actually this was reported even earlier in the week that that when you analyse guys the way that he gets science artists to support them all the scientists who support him are on his payroll . but have him are on his payroll. but have you seen tonight that what's happening to all those ulez cameras did you see in the london borough of bromley ? and london borough of bromley? and it's just been revealed just now that 81% of those cameras have now been damaged and 81% of the london borough of bromley, which is the biggest borough in of the caphal is the biggest borough in of the capital. and the other thing , a capital. and the other thing, a third of all ulez cameras have been damaged across london. this is a really serious a political and actually police issue . i and actually police issue. i mean, what is going to happen? are they all going to be destroyed? and what is khan going to do about it? is he going to do about it? is he going to do about it? is he going to say, i accept it? i'm just going to say i made an error. london is not behind me. i'm going to wait until after
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the next election. or is he going to simply keep repairing these cameras till till the bill goes off the dial? i am not in favour of them being destroyed, but londoners who are paying the price for this political decision, they are making a decision. they are damaging those cameras . and i don't see those cameras. and i don't see how it is resolved totally. >> and again, kelvin, this is one of those stories where there's a real disconnect between the mainstream media coverage of the story and actually what real people are feeling. but, you know, we give both sides of the story here on gb news kelvin. so a spokesman for sadiq khan has said over the imperial story that dr. fuller is a world leading academic, looking at air pollution, who also serves as an expert advisor to the government. any suggestion that fuller is suggestion that dr. fuller is anything an independent and anything but an independent and anything but an independent and an in his field is an expert in his field is nonsense . now look elsewhere, nonsense. now look elsewhere, kelvin, i want to move on to this story about jeremy clarkson and bosses at amazon studios have said they were, quote , have said they were, quote, shocked and disappointed by his
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controversial sun newspaper column on meghan markle, but ultimately made the decision to continue his hit show , continue his hit show, clarkson's farm. so this is their executive, fozia khan , their executive, fozia khan, speaking at the edinburgh tv festival in front of a whole load of luvvies saying there's lots of conversations going on. but i think the thing that i want to say is that the show is so much bigger than clarkson. it's a really good show. i mean , kelvin, earth is she , kelvin, what on earth is she talking about? this show is called clarkson's farm. it is the clarkson show, right? the jeremy clarkson show, right? >> well , she clearly hasn't >> well, she clearly hasn't watched it because if you watch it, the whole interaction on whether it's with caleb or with with the best, the best star in it of all is the guy who speaks in this cotswold accent that nobody can understand. and clarkson finds it hilarious. all of that is interactions between clarkson and other people. no clarkson, no show , no clarkson, clarkson, no show, no clarkson, no hit. and the truth about the matter is, right now, amazon and
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they're it's going down the tube anywhere on this tv. i don't know whether you you ever watch it the only thing worth watching on amazon right now is clarkson clarkson in his own way . hey you clarkson in his own way. hey you know you can have any view you like about clarkson but it's this is a funny show. like about clarkson but it's this is a funny show . and in this is a funny show. and in some respects , that one that's some respects, that one that's being shown right now is the best so far . so i'm afraid that best so far. so i'm afraid that miss khan should actually be spend a little more time watching her own output and a little less time giving her views to a collection of tv. has beensin views to a collection of tv. has beens in edinburgh. but isn't this what's so pathetic now, kelvin, you're not even allowed to make a mistake. >> i mean, come on. clarkson was hauled over the coals, you know , he had international national disgrace over this card . he disgrace over this card. he could not have apologise . could not have apologise. harder. come on. we have to move on. let the guy make his show. stop slagging him off. you're
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his boss. you know, if you want to show his show, you either stand by him now or you axe him. and there's a very clear decision there right . decision there right. >> well, the truth about the matter is they've got nothing to replace clarkson with. that's the reality. they've just lost the reality. they've just lost the tennis, by the way. that's all gone to sky , right? if they all gone to sky, right? if they lost clarkson, might as well lost clarkson, you might as well give amazon give up watching amazon prime. they everything else, they charge for everything else, basically. so. clarkson is the only quotes free bit that you get. and along with your parcels , the woman is talking rubbish . , the woman is talking rubbish. she's in the wrong game. if she doesn't think if she thinks there's a lot more to this show than clarkson, there isn't. and the whole point , the reason they the whole point, the reason they paid him so much money is because attracts a massive because he attracts a massive audience, because he is a fantastic performer. whether it's, after all, single handedly he reworked who wants to be a millionaire . nobody was watching millionaire. nobody was watching the thing. hadn't even been on there for about a decade or so, and they won't be dumping him either from that because he is talent and talent is worth indulging. fuzzy can get real
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and get out its good message. >> but look, this is what they do. this is what they do with the stars that are too big to cancel. like jk rowling they do all the rhetoric, you know, to make it look as if they won't. but actually, when it comes down to a business decision, i think you're right. they won't sack clarkson did, clarkson because if they did, there'd be other there'd be a million other people be prepared to people who would be prepared to pick that show or fund it pick up that show or or fund it in way, including gb in another way, including gb news. he'd be very news. and indeed, he'd be very welcome kelvin mackenzie welcome here. kelvin mackenzie thank much. we will speak thank you so much. we will speak on it's time now on monday, but it's time now to reveal greatest on monday, but it's time now to reveal in greatest on monday, but it's time now to reveal in union greatest on monday, but it's time now to reveal in union jackass. my britain in union jackass. my superstar panel return an allison pearson. who's your nominee? >> it is kane blackwell, a brilliant young producer on the dan wootton show who is leaving us for political pastures . new us for political pastures. new kaneis us for political pastures. new kane is a brilliant political analyst about to become the joint youngest mp. please god and i hope kane, i live long enough to see prime minister blackwell. oh and he was the only tory i'd give a kiss.
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>> speaking at the conservative democratic organisation . democratic organisation. >> yes, he's. he's going to work . i can reveal for his political hero , priti patel, so he will be hero, priti patel, so he will be a big loss to us. but good, good, good. hi, rhiannon. pretty part shaun bailey your nominee . part shaun bailey your nominee. >> my nominee is national service. a great idea from the onward think tank. let's be clear. this is not national military service. it's national voluntary service. our young people have had a tough time. they have powers all over the world. tell them what a terrible country what a great country this is. what a great way to get them to understand. this is the greatest nation on the of earth. the face of the earth. >> nicole, nominee , >> amy nicole, your nominee, i've doubt i'm going to i've got no doubt i'm going to win this week. >> it's sadiq khan, everyone's favourite burn . it's really sick favourite burn. it's really sick of the misrepresentation he's had to face. i just want to stick up for having a bit of a political backbone in misrepresenting asian. >> what are you talking about ? >> what are you talking about? >> what are you talking about? >> ulez. >> ulez. >> he's the king of misrepresentation. he's
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misrepresented the science. i don't think you were listening to my digest. amy >> i don't think you've been reading the rest of the whole scientific community committee that's backing this scheme . oh, please. >> anyway, look, obviously it's in house, but we've got to go for our very own kane blackwell. a name? yeah, we support that union. jack has time now, though. allison pearson, your nominee. >> it's the notting hill carnival, formerly a family friendly, friendly festival of fun, now assaulting 75 police officers, biting six police officers, biting six police officers and costing £9 million in policing . move it into hyde in policing. move it into hyde park . let's get some scanners in park. let's get some scanners in to take all that weaponry off people and restore it to the wonderful festival of caribbean life that it was shaun bailey your nominee? >> my nominee for uni is the royal society of protection for birds, a wonderful charity , a birds, a wonderful charity, a really useful one. but the pubuc really useful one. but the public are sick of paying money to two charities, to organisations who then turn
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around and campaign against the government. some of their points are correct, but they need to make them in a more grown make them in a much more grown up rant on twitter was up way. they rant on twitter was childish, particularly from an organisation had upwards organisation that's had upwards of £78 million in public funding. they've got to do better than that so that we can support them. >> and amy nicol, your union jackass >> so i've gone for grant shapps ups because i believe rishi sunak did the political equivalent of turning your knickers inside out and hoping for the best by his little rishi tfl this morning . for the best by his little rishi tfl this morning. but i do wish him the best of luck. now he's had as many ministerial jobs as he has identities. >> sean , what did you make of >> sean, what did you make of his hiring? i thought, look, ben wallace was a tremendous loss . wallace was a tremendous loss. >> he he understood what >> he really he understood what was on, even right down to was going on, even right down to rank and file soldiers, liked him, liked to agree with that. he was really trying to get some of the you systemic of the big, you know, systemic things look, if things changed. but look, if you're have to you're rishi sunak, you have to appoint you trust appoint someone you trust and someone isn't take
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someone who isn't going to take too much time understanding what it to be a secretary of state it is to be a secretary of state general election very soon. you can't newbie. can't play around with a newbie. you've got to get the job you've just got to get the job done. probably why he picked always of options. always run out of options. >> problem is, though, >> the problem is, though, alison, all of the people who have under have been promoted are under order. the tory wets. they order. sunak the tory wets. they represent one wing of the party. don't they? and other than suella braverman around that cabinet there's no one cabinet table, there's no one actually that represents the tory i'm struggling tory members. so i'm struggling to he gets the vote out. to see how he gets the vote out. >> i think it's a real sign of weakness on the prime minister's part. he's promoted claire coutinho very young, part of the 2019 intake, given her this huge job of energy in net zero, which god knows the conservatives. she's his mate need to get right. she's his mate. she's in the same mould. i'm not convinced that she is. is up to exactly. >> he's not even prepared now to reach other wing of reach out to the other wing of the party. but look, i'm actually go with sean , actually going to go with sean, the royal society for the protection of birds, because at the end of the day, they get all of that government money and we
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do have to start building some more houses. seriously, we do. we do. and i don't give a about the birds. actually what i do, i'm somewhat actually, that's not a surprise. >> you said you were an environmentalist. >> sure. >> sure. >> shaun bailey allison pearson, medikal. >> thank you so much. i'm back monday from 9:00. headliners is next, though. have a brilliant weekend. good night. >> the temperature's rising . a >> the temperature's rising. a boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening. i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some places will see a few showers, but some spots will see some warm sunshine, too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old low pressure hanging old area of low pressure hanging around and these weather fronts have bringing cloud and have been bringing cloud and rain areas through rain across many areas through the the possibility of 1 or the day. the possibility of 1 or 2 showers just the far
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2 heavy showers just in the far south—east through the night, staying fairly damp and murky and misty over parts of northern england. and some of that light rain trickling into southern scotland well. northern scotland as well. northern scotland as well. northern scotland staying dry and clear scotland as well. northern scotquite;taying dry and clear scotland as well. northern scotquite chilly. dry and clear scotland as well. northern scotquite chilly. temperatures and quite chilly. temperatures well down into single figures. further a pretty mild further south, a pretty mild night. holding night. temperatures holding up in for some into in the mid teens for some into friday. as i said, a bit of a mish mash. the midlands, northern england, parts of southern drab southern scotland, fairly drab for day, actually. for much of the day, actually. overcast pretty cloudy, for overcast pretty cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and drizzle here and there, especially to the east of the pennines. south, pennines. further south, something sunny something a bit brighter, sunny spells, will be spells, but there will also be a sprinkling showers, sprinkling of showers, mostly dry northern scotland, 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees here, 23 possibly in the south with some sunshine. a cool feel, though, with that more persistent cloud over northern england, here for england, 16 or 17 here for saturday may also start a bit misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you have two dry and bright weather, some decent spells of sunshine and turning warmer more warmer with temperatures more widely over 20 c. and sunday
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chief constable who said this evening he won't be stepping down. simon byrne attended a critical meeting with the policing board today. the chair of the police federation said he was disgusted and angered by mr burns statement , was disgusted and angered by mr burns statement, adding that he has to be condemned in a recent court ruling deemed his disciplinary actions against two junior officers unlawful. the decision was reportedly driven by concerns sinn fein might withdraw support for policing, sparking accusations of appeasement from unionists . appeasement from unionists. well, here's mr byrne addressing the media earlier tonight. >> i highlighted that after carefully reviewing the full judgement , i carefully reviewing the full judgement, i sought further advice after consideration, the question of an appeal is now live and further public commentary around this matter is not appropriate at this stage. thank you , chief. thank you, chief. >> do you retain the support of the policing board? >> that's a matter for the policing board. chief constable, have you considered your position? i'm not resigning.
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