tv Dan Wootton Tonight GB News September 11, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST
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gb news. >> no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton . censorship. i'm dan wootton. tonight, the civil service have always hated brexit and it's just been confirmed by the eu loving former foreign office chief simon mcdonald in feeling in the foreign office building was of morning . was of morning. >> people were in tears as people were in shock . and as the people were in shock. and as the bods people were in shock. and as the boris johnson witch hunter in chief sue gray tells her, new labour party cronies. >> you had my back, i'll always have yours . >> you had my back, i'll always have yours. has the >> you had my back, i'll always have yours . has the woke >> you had my back, i'll always have yours. has the woke blob taking control of britain in an anti—democratic coup? that's the topic of my digest, next. then my superstar panel weigh in. and tonight i'm joined by carole malone. benji butterworth and beunda malone. benji butterworth and belinda de lucy. plus, as liz truss also hits out at the left wing orthodoxy that destroyed her premiership, her former chancellor kwasi kwarteng joins
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me live in the studio to give a first hand account of the anti—growth coalition that they faced in the treasury and elsewhere as caribbean nations prepare to formally request reparations from the royal family. do you think the king should be made to cough up petronella wyatt and femi nylander go head to head in the clash ? and both the rugby world clash? and both the rugby world cup and invictus games kicked off at the weekend. but off the field there was an even fiercer pr contest between the firm and the sussex . the sussex. >> i'm not going to say you're really competitive where kunneman and invictus games 2023 here in dusseldorf . here in dusseldorf. >> so which side is winning the battle for hearts and minds by royal mail semis? >> lady colin campbell and phil dampier delivered their expert approach shortly. and you remember marianna spring, the bbcs. so called disinformation correspond point. >> why does this matter? well mistruths can cause really
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serious harm to society and to the people in them. and so we want to show you our workings and really help you understand how we get to the bottom of what's happening. how we get to the bottom of wh(well,ippening. how we get to the bottom of wh(well, aftering. how we get to the bottom of wh(well, after being appointed >> well, after being appointed as broadcaster's as the state broadcaster's arbiter truth , she's been arbiter of truth, she's been caught for lying on her cv. caught out for lying on her cv. so is the bbc actually abusing britain's trust? lawrence fox is all over this one. and the fox report. we'll have tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you. too hot off the press and after the last night of the proms is by ramona's flying eu flags , is by ramona's flying eu flags, is the british bashing corporation wilfully turning a blind eye? plenty of feisty debate to be had on that and so much more. this is dan orton tonight. let's go . go. you're watching gb news, britain's news channel. the blob has taken over the uk. i'll tell you how straight after the news with tatiana sanchez .
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with tatiana sanchez. >> dan, thank you very much. and good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. we start with breaking news. a two year old girl has died in hospital after being found in kingsley pondin after being found in kingsley pond in hampshire yesterday . a pond in hampshire yesterday. a woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder after the girl was found unresponsive. more on this breaking story as we get it . the prime more on this breaking story as we get it. the prime minister has told the house of commons the sanctity of westminster must be protected following chinese spy be protected following chinese spy allegations . it comes after spy allegations. it comes after an unnamed parliamentary researcher who was arrested in march issued a statement saying he is completely innocent. rishi sunak, who's been facing calls to designate china as a national security threat , told mps such security threat, told mps such actions will not be tolerated. the whole house is rightly appalled about reports of espionage in this building. >> the sanctity of this place must be protected and the right of members to speak their minds
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without fear or sanction must be maintained . we will defend our maintained. we will defend our democracy and our security . so democracy and our security. so i was emphatic with premier li that actions which seek to undermine british democracy are completely unacceptable and will never be tolerated . never be tolerated. >> labour leader sir keir starmer has called on the prime minister to reveal what he knew and when china is a strategic challenge. >> that's for sure. and what we needis >> that's for sure. and what we need is a policy that is clear and is settled. now. we haven't had that for the last ten years. we've had division and inconsistency from this government. but i think this morning ing there's a very big question now for the prime minister, which is was this raised these arrests took raised when these arrests took place back in march or has it only been raised now that it's come into the public domain? i think that's the central question that needs to be answered by the prime minister today. it gb news sources have confirmed terror suspect daniel
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khalife has been taken to belmarsh high security prison. >> the 21 year old appeared in court today, charged after escaping from wandsworth prison last week . he was arrested on last week. he was arrested on saturday after a four day manhunt. west minster magistrates court was told the former soldier allegedly escaped by strapping himself to a food delivery vehicle using material which may have been bedsheets. khalife disappeared while awaiting trial after being charged with terror offences in january . and administrators have january. and administrators have said a further 9100 wilko employees will be made redundant by early october . it employees will be made redundant by early october. it comes after a last ditch bailout by hmv failed the company had been in discussions to buy around 200 stores, the first 24 outlets are now scheduled to shut their doors tomorrow . this is gb news doors tomorrow. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker. by saying play gb news now it's back to
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dan . dan. >> if you were in any doubt that the united kingdom is now being run by the shadowy dark forces that make up our civil service then the weekend provided ample categorical proof since the people took control of our future by voting to exit the horrible european union against the wishes of the political and media establishment, the blob has attempted to take over the uk from deposing two democratically elected prime ministers and boris johnson and liz truss to trying to overturn the biggest democratic mandate in british history to overruling political leaders attempting to battle lockdowns. this nefarious force upholds the globalist orthodoxy they are now counting down the days until they can impose their folk slippery starmer in the labour party into
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number 10. the boris johnson witch hunter in chief sue gray admitted as much when she took up her position as starmer's chief of staff. this is what she told fellow labour staffers . if told fellow labour staffers. if you had my back, i'll always have yours . what an have yours. what an extraordinary admission from the woman who was number two in the cabinet office who we were meant to trust for her. politico neutrality. but this is now accepted practise in westminster , isn't it? i mean, the daily mail revealed over the weekend that grey's boss, the cabinet secretary, simon case , britain's secretary, simon case, britain's most powerful civil servant, bounced. liz truss into axing her cuts to corporation tax in the most vexatious manner possible by briefing that she had already made the decision to the press of course, the obsession with removing truss was a massive mistake, as it was the only hope we had to put the uk on a path to growth. even
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rabid lefties like labour broadcasting companies. andrew marr now admit that's the case and we see it, is that the trouble is that the british economy is simply too small to give the british public the kind of public services and living that they have come to think. >> they expect and deserve. and the problem is going to be growth to that extent . liz truss growth to that extent. liz truss was right all along, but out of all of those outrages, i admit to being the most disgusted by the boasts of simon mcdonnell , the boasts of simon mcdonnell, who was the permanent under—secretary at the foreign office, who admitted that grief spread through his department after the brexit vote in eventually prompting him to excuse all impartiality and admit to being a remainer in feeling in the foreign office building was of mourning . building was of mourning. >> people were in tears. people were in shock . on this occasion were in shock. on this occasion , this solitary occasion, i decided to tell my colleagues
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and therefore let ministers know that i had voted to remain in the european union . i felt that the european union. i felt that they would assume that in any case. so i decided to embrace it . so look, it's very easy to try and blame boris and liz or pretty and suella in the home office for failing to enact conservative policies . conservative policies. >> but the blob has has wrestled control of british politics, which i believe puts our democracy under threat. but to respond now, my superstar panel, top daily express columnist carol maloney , the journalist carol maloney, the journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, and the former brexit party mep belinda de lucy . so carole malone if we'd said a few years ago like we did that the civil service were a bunch of remoaners sobbing into their cornflakes about the biggest democrat mandate of all time in this country, we were told that we were being paranoid androids,
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that we just needed to get over it . well, now we have the proof, it. well, now we have the proof, carol. they were doing everything possible to not only undermine brexit, but to undermine brexit, but to undermine tax cuts , to undermine undermine tax cuts, to undermine people like boris when they were trying to stop lockdown, to basically undermine any conservative policy. >> you know, most pms at some point fall foul of the blob. you know, cameron used to talk about enemies of enterprise, even tony blair talked about the scars on his back, having had to deal with the civil service. but it's kind of it's way out of control now. you know, we've seen the people they have done for the blob week. you they blob this week. you know, they have going to give have done for it's going to give me they've done for liz me cold. they've done for liz truss. she's angry already. >> what a start they've done for dominic raab. >> they try to do for priti patel. remember. yeah. yeah, yeah, yeah. and they tried to do for those was the one they accused suella suella tried to get rid of her because of bully. so you know, it's incredible that they, what i find astonishing is and i blame the
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tories partly for this, the tories partly for this, the tories have let this happen. you know, sackings from from the blob now have gone down by a quarter in the past five years. so it's harder to get rid of them than it's been. but them than it's ever been. but them than it's ever been. but the have allowed this the tories have allowed this woke to infiltrate every woke ness to infiltrate every department. you know, we have civil now not just civil servants now not just deaung civil servants now not just dealing government policy dealing with government policy because it offends their moral sensitive cities, because they believe it contravenes their human rights. so we're even going to strike over having to implement the rwanda policy. this not their job. they're this is not their job. they're supposed to implement, you know, in terms of neutral party, they're supposed to implement government policy , not question government policy, not question it, thwart it. but, you it, not thwart it. but, you know, if you have a prime minister who's letting them get away with literally, you know, was running the government, well then then that's a bit, carol, look at what happened when liz truss kwasi kwarteng decided truss and kwasi kwarteng decided we're going to sack this guy tom scholar day one, because he's we're going to sack this guy tom sch ultimate one, because he's we're going to sack this guy tom sch ultimate one, becaofe he's we're going to sack this guy tom sch ultimate one, becaof the's we're going to sack this guy tom sch ultimate one, becaof the blob. the ultimate member of the blob. >> economic >> he's backing this economic orthodoxy at the treasury. he goes organised all of the forces
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to destroy both of them . and we to destroy both of them. and we now learn that simon case was the one that actually reversed the one that actually reversed the corporation tax rise. >> that's said to her as well. you know, you know, you can't cut the high rate of tax from 45 to 40. he told her not to do it. but, you know, he briefed the media, carol. yes. >> which bounced her into it. that's outrageous. >> servants do it all the time. but, you know, if rishi or whoever got to sacking a few of them, not just one, they can galvanise whoever like. galvanise whoever they like. there'll people out there'll be lots of people out there their cushy there would like their cushy jobs plated jobs with a gold plated pensions. you can't just sack one. to sack few. one. you've got to sack a few. i mean, benjamin butterworth, benjamin butterworth, you have been telling me for weeks you have this have been sitting here on this sofa telling me, dan, sofa for weeks telling me, dan, don't about gray. don't worry about sue gray. >> was totally impartial >> she was totally impartial when the cabinet when she was in the cabinet office she wasn't running a witch hunt boris witch hunt against boris johnson. day in the job day johnson. day one in the job day one in the job. and she goes and she tells all the labour faithfuls, you always had my back. so now i'll always have yours. this was a biased, bad
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actor in our cabinet office and you just shrug it off. >> you don't isn't you know, you don't need to listen to me describing what a good civil servant she was because tory cabinet ministers lined up to say that before any news of her joining keir starmer came out, the only reason that they're saying that now is because they're playing usual party politics nothing shows . politics and nothing shows. >> what do you think about what she said? >> what do you think about what shewell,’ >> what do you think about what shewell, i mean, that is her in >> well, i mean, that is her in her and she probably her new job and she probably means know, there's means when, you know, there's the witch hunt that the the sort of witch hunt that the labour party wasn't taking part in nothing shows labour party wasn't taking part in desperate nothing shows labour party wasn't taking part in desperate you hing shows labour party wasn't taking part in desperate you are shows labour party wasn't taking part in desperate you are and ws labour party wasn't taking part in desperate you are and how how desperate you are and how pathetic the cabal of tories that you try to celebrate is that you try to celebrate is that when schools are crumbling , prisoners are leaving, are walking out of prison. the economy is flatlining, growth is terrible. people are waiting years for operations . so you years for operations. so you have to find some pitiful excuse for the tories failure. hilarious to anything . hilarious to anything. >> and what one person walked out of prison ? one person out of prison? one person
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walked. you just said it's very rare. >> how many terrorists do you want to walk out of prison? >> only the one stage, only the stage. is it unacceptable? >> the one. honey, i, belinda de lucy to die. >> if you come in here. >> if you come in here. >> those civil servants who've used their platform of power to push a political agenda or who have the impartiality have rejected the impartiality codes, have dishonoured their office. >> they've dishonoured parliament. this country and they've dishonoured democ cracy and actually that social contract is being broken now because when people go and vote, they're merely voting for what front men are mps to show. >> can i ask you specifically about this case of simon mcdonald, the permanent under—secretary the foreign under—secretary at the foreign office, arch office, because he's an arch remoaner meant be remoaner he's meant to be impartial . remoaner he's meant to be impartial. now he's done this interview with the british bashing corporation, admitting that they morning the day that they were morning the day after election. now after the eu election. now you're someone you were member after the eu election. now yo the someone you were member after the eu election. now yo the someoparty.j were member after the eu election. now yo the someoparty. iwere member after the eu election. now yo the someoparty. i mean, member of the brexit party. i mean, this is your driving fundamental political belief . how do you political belief. how do you feel about the fact that he's now admitted that actually the blob were remaining this whole way?
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>> it comes as no surprise is that the civil service were biased against brexit. >> you know, the mere thought of being pulled away from the apron strings of mothership eu sent them into an emotional lava . i them into an emotional lava. i mean, they're acting like, like they're going through some kind of grief and not capable of doing they're doing their jobs. but it is the problem is , dan, but it is the problem is, dan, do think it was it is. it is do you think it was it is. it is the disdain they hold the british people in. they've shifted elected shifted power away from elected representatives and put them into the hands of experts and technocrats who dislike having . technocrats who dislike having. >> they think we are in the hands of experts. >> benjamin benjamin can i just ask you about dumbos that have been running the country in the last few years? >> i mean, dumbos, you know, the state of how things have been going. utter idiots that going. they're utter idiots that have through government have been through government departments recent years. departments in recent years. you talk civil service talk about the civil service trying liz truss. trying to overrule liz truss. you don't need any civil servant to liz truss. was to undermine liz truss. she was perfectly a bad perfectly capable of doing a bad job her own. job on her own. >> i don't know what liz truss
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was right. >> can i ask you about simon mcdonald? benjamin butterworth, what of his what did you make of his revelation everyone revelation that he told everyone in his department that he was a remainer and he said , oh, by the remainer and he said, oh, by the way, they already all knew. i mean, isn't the whole point of the civil service that they are meant to be politically impartial? what's happened , ed? impartial? what's happened, ed? >> they're meant to be wise . and >> they're meant to be wise. and anybody with an ounce of wisdom would have known that being apart , being a part of the apart, being a part of the european union was far better for our diplomacy and foreign. >> so you admit that they're no longer impartial because longer impartial then? because that's me. that's what it sounds to me. you're basically saying that their your job to stop us theirjob if yourjob to stop us leaving and where did their loyalty with the loyalty was to work with the european union then clearly it's going to be quite shock when going to be quite the shock when those removed. those roles are removed. >> your vote is to >> thank your vote is to implement a government policy and to go on and when they threaten to go on strike they like strike because they don't like a particular government policy, what do you think should happen to them then? >> do you think that's a that's a viable. >> i think they should be sacked. >> i don't think you should go
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on disagreeing with on strike for disagreeing with the unsackable. the policy. they're unsackable. >> civil service >> dan, the civil service are unsackable privilege. unsackable i for the privilege. >> i all of these >> i wish all of these activists, members of the civil service would quit it and go and join a political party. mean, join a political party. i mean, i guess you could maybe sue i guess you could maybe say sue gray the problem is by gray did it. the problem is by the she did it, she'd the time she did it, she'd already depose already managed to depose a prime although she'd go prime minister although she'd go and work for the eu. and i also want us change entire want to us change the entire structure of how the civil service this country is run. service in this country is run. we an american we need to adopt an american system where they can all be booted the moment booted out the moment a new administration power. administration comes into power. >> depose the >> support helped depose the prime and nothing has prime minister and nothing has happened walked happened to her and she's walked into johnson deposed. happened to her and she's walked intcboris johnson deposed. happened to her and she's walked intcboris johnson.son deposed. >> boris johnson. >> boris johnson. >> no, he didn't. >> no, he didn't. >> the context, the facts and the contents of the report that exposed a lie he was. the exposed what a lie he was. the fault the person who wrote exposed what a lie he was. the faulreport. :he person who wrote exposed what a lie he was. the faulreport. ie person who wrote exposed what a lie he was. the faulreport. i believer who wrote exposed what a lie he was. the faulreport. i believe there's'rote the report. i believe there's a frame saying for that which is don't the messenger. don't shoot the messenger. carol. wasn't sue gray. it carol. it wasn't sue gray. it was boris. carol. it wasn't sue gray. it wasisoris. carol. it wasn't sue gray. it wasi don't know what you're >> i don't know what you're going there. you started going to say there. you started to hello, belinda de lucy , to say hello, belinda de lucy, stop battling with me all night. >> but also to come, she's >> but also still to come, she's the reporter of the bbc,
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the star reporter of the bbc, so—called disinformation unit . so—called disinformation unit. but why should we trust controversial fact checker marianna spring or her paymasters after she's exposed for lying on her own cv ? for lying on her own cv? laurence fox. he's investigating that in tonight's fox report. but next in the clash, meddling. king charles does his best to undo his mother's. never complain, never explain mantra by opening the door to royal reparations caribbean reparations in caribbean countries knocking. so countries have come knocking. so should we forking to should we be forking out to nafions should we be forking out to nations who demand we up nations who demand we cough up socialite of the queen, socialite friend of the queen, petronella and 80 petronella wyatt and 80 anti—racism activist femi nylander are going to battle that out in a royal rumble next. but what do you think, dan, at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. the clash
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from three on gb news . from three on gb news. >> laurence fox and my royal mastermind lady colin campbell and phil dampier. coming up. first, though, the clash and the late queen's never complain, never explain mantra continues to be sullied by her son, the king. as caribbean nations officially ready themselves to demand reparations from the royal family, something he stupidly opened the door to in a bold new approach , national bold new approach, national reparations commissions will dramatically bypass the british government and instead pursue individual institutions to secure payments for historic slavery. the royal family, alongside the likes of the lloyds of london bank and church of england , are set to receive of england, are set to receive letters demanding money by the
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end of this year. so it comes as buckingham palace responded to a guardian article saying charles supported research into royals slavery links now woke. charles also told commonwealth heads of state that he continues to deepen his own understanding of slavery enduring impact. so what do you think? do caribbean nafions do you think? do caribbean nations deserve chernihiv reparations directly from the british royal family doing battle on this now socialite journalist friend of the queen, petronella wyatt , and the petronella wyatt, and the anti—racism campaigner femi nylander. now you have very strong views on this, petronella. in fact, despite being one of the biggest monarchists, i know, you say that if the royal family were to pay that if the royal family were to pay reparations, you would become a republican. >> well well, i think there are two points to be made here. again, historical fact has been lost because the wealth of the royal family comes from the crown estate, which is property they hold in this country. and they hold in this country. and the revenues they get from this,
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there is no connection between their wealth and slavery . now, their wealth and slavery. now, someone popped up and claimed to have found an ancestor of charles, who lived in the 70s, 18th century in virginia , and 18th century in virginia, and kept slaves . and to then sort of kept slaves. and to then sort of blame charles as this is ridiculous because he was not a member of the royal family. he was somebody called petraeus and he had a descendant who married a bowes—lyon and then a bowes—lyon elizabeth bowes—lyon, the queen mother, married into the queen mother, married into the royal family. but this man lived 700 years ago. so it is utterly ridiculous and very ridiculous , petronella says. ridiculous, petronella says. >> it's completely ridiculous for the royal family to pay reparations for something that happened hundreds and hundreds of years but they weren't of years ago, but they weren't even for it. even responsible for it. >> i did. >> i did. >> i did. >> i do. i did have a little pop quiz ready for my guests. but as you've said, your opinion is that royal family didn't that the royal family didn't have anything to do with slavery. i'll ask
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slavery. so i'll ask i'll ask a few questions to you, if that's all right. >> just no, i ask the question just to see. no, no, no, no, no, no, no. okay. well, then i'll give the answers. give you the answers. >> give you answer. >> i'll give you the answer. >> i'll give you the answer. >> i've got to you, because >> i've got to tell you, because i that you don't i can assume that you don't know the question, but the answer to the question, but you ahead. you go ahead. >> so one, i'll ask the question to myself and then i'll respond. which a slave which monarch granted a slave ship in the profits ship for a share in the profits to one of the to john hawkins? one of the first from the first slave traders from the united kingdom. ginger united kingdom. she had ginger hair let me hair and it was a queen. let me a the uk, which which a monarch of the uk, which which i'm sorry, can i can i. can i just finish? which monarch was a governor african governor of the royal african company, i.e. company which company, i.e. the company which transports courted the most slaves across atlantic to slaves across the atlantic to the americas than any other company the history of the company in the history of the transatlantic trade? transatlantic slave trade? >> james royal family , the >> not james royal family, the monarchy. james it's a different which monarch agreed ? which which monarch agreed? which monarch agreed, she said . this monarch agreed, she said. this is a family. the uk monarchy. >> it's the uk monarchy . >> it's the uk monarchy. >> it's the uk monarchy. >> that's like saying that every german should pay reparations for hitler. >> well, the point of it is that
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the uk believes that a crown can be inherited from one person to the next person based on nothing apart from their blood or that's not true. it's right . sorry. not true. it's right. sorry. >> being very, very >> you're being very, very invasive right now not invasive right now and not allowing me speak because allowing me to speak because every over each every time we speak over each other, you're every time you're a . and the thing a historian. and the first thing you said royal family you said was the royal family has no links to slavery. so you're very not you're not you're very not you're not you're good historian you're not a very good historian in that way. >> and then you can respond afterwards. >> okay. the point of the matter is large portion of the is that a large portion of the royal family's wealth comes from slavery and colonialism . slavery and colonialism. >> okay. >> okay. >> let petronella respond to that. >> now, am i going to be able to say anything today that's a that's a big that you've made. >> i've made a claim. >> i've made a claim. >> fact, talking about >> in fact, we're talking about giving you witness. >> we're not talking about this. and you understand the and you don't understand the british because british monarchy because there are conquest . so, for are kings by conquest. so, for example, henry tudor , who had no example, henry tudor, who had no blood claim to the throne, defeated richard at bosworth and took the crown you don't understand the heredity monarchy in this country or what gives
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you? >> of course i do. >> it's all shoved down. >> it's all shoved down. >> no, i'll let you finish. i'll let you. >> don't you? actually don't. because you said it's only by blood. that's true . and blood. and that's not true. and secondly, what about other institutions? you think the church of england , lloyd's of london. >> me? >> me? >> answer that question. >> answer that question. >> all of these institutions have a large link to the slave trade. the wealth of britain and the wealth of the royal family and the wealth of private institutions like like. >> so what? so what? so what? because what about the descendants of roman slaves of greeks ? greeks? >> slaves? no, you're talking nonsense. you're talking about events that happened hundreds of years ago. >> and how long ago was the romans? how long ago was the greeks? talking thousands. romans? how long ago was the gre exactly. talking thousands. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> talking about i'm talking >> i'm talking about i'm talking about was prominent about i'm talking was prominent in africa far , far long in africa for far, far long after it was over. >> why don't why don't sold their brothers in slavery. >> why don't you just ask me a question ?
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question? >> so why don't you let me you respond your question to me instead of shouting over instead of just shouting over me, respond . so the point is me, you respond. so the point is that there are records here. yes. if in africa we can have discussions about very wealthy families who are still wealthy because their their descendants sold slaves, i'd be happy, happy to do that. i'd be happy as someone who with nigerian heritage , i'd be happy to do heritage, i'd be happy to do that. i'd be happy to go to nigeria, have discussions. nigeria, have the discussions. i'm we have i'm here in the uk. we have records, have financial records, we have financial records, we have financial records because companies like lloyd's are lloyd's of london are corporations. records, corporations. they take records, they . we can very they account things. we can very clearly show how a lot of their wealth derives from slavery. >> you have admit that king >> you have to admit that king charles has opened the door on this himself, hasn't he? i know you're a big supporter of him and camilla, but hasn't he made and camilla, but hasn't he made a mistake ? a mistake? >> yes, i think he's made a terrible . first all, terrible mistake. first of all, how you calculate out the how do you calculate out the reparations in any case? and secondly , this is all very, very secondly, this is all very, very complicated and there are many,
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many institutions that will be targeted and if he sets a precedent , it targeted and if he sets a precedent, it is targeted and if he sets a precedent , it is utterly targeted and if he sets a precedent, it is utterly absurd. you cannot cannot go on apologising and paying reparations for the sins of distant ancestors. >> i couldn't agree more . >> i couldn't agree more. petronella wyatt. femi nylander , fascinating debate. thank you so much . but who do you agree so much. but who do you agree with on this? do caribbean nafions with on this? do caribbean nations deserve reparations from the british royal family? well, jed on twitter writes, we cannot keep apologising our keep apologising for our historical past. let's focus on our achievements for a change and judged our nation's and be judged on our nation's actions of today, not that of hundreds of years ago. alan writes via the email, like many , i wish that slavery had never occurred . reparations payments occurred. reparations payments could help us atone for could work to help us atone for our past mistakes and the king should consider it. and this from stuart we already give too much money to overseas nations, many of whom are not even in need of it. our reputation as an apologetic charity nation needs to change. your verdict is to change. and your verdict is now in. just 9% of you think that caribbean nations do deserve reparations from the
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royal family. 91% of you say absolutely not. laurence fox, lady c and kwasi kwarteng, all on the way . first, though, the on the way. first, though, the weather looks like things are heating up. >> boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello. very good evening to you. band of rain is going to continue to push southwards through the next 24 hours with some showers both to the north and south of this. whilst in the southeast, we're holding on to that air because here we that humid air because here we are ahead of these fronts are still ahead of these fronts which have something a little bit a more bit cooler, a bit more comfortable following in behind. also on the fronts, there'll be a rain. so a cloudy a fair bit of rain. so a cloudy , wet end the day across many , wet end to the day across many northern parts england into northern parts of england into wales england, two wales and southwest england, two in southeast . we're holding in the southeast. we're holding on those humid conditions and on to those humid conditions and we a few showers we could see a few showers developing . also some in developing. also some showers in the of scotland and the far north of scotland and northern cooler here northern ireland. cooler here whilst in the southeast with that humidity , temperatures that high humidity, temperatures not amount as we
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not dropping a huge amount as we look through tuesday, a damp, wet across many parts of wet start across many parts of england and wales there in the southeast, good deal of southeast, a good deal of brightness there with high brightness there with the high humidity. few humidity. we am expecting a few showers off here and showers to kick off here and they could heavy, perhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery,1eavy, perhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery, whilst3erhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery, whilst a rhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery, whilst a brighter even thundery, whilst a brighter picture across the bulk of scotland northern scotland and northern ireland, a scattering showers and scattering of showers and a little bit of cloud at times too. a bit cooler than it has been recent days, been through some recent days, getting to highs of around 24, perhaps 25 celsius in the south—east on wednesday morning may bit of a chilly may get off to a bit of a chilly start. couldn't rule out a touch may get off to a bit of a chilly stifrostouldn't rule out a touch may get off to a bit of a chilly stifrostouldn't some)ut a touch may get off to a bit of a chilly stifrostouldn't some partstouch may get off to a bit of a chilly stifrostouldn't some parts of ch of frost across some parts of scotland, otherwise scotland, but otherwise a generally day for most generally fine day for most until some wet and windy weather pushesin until some wet and windy weather pushes in from the northwest as we go into the afternoon , that we go into the afternoon, that rain is then going to sweep further southwards later the further southwards later in the week temperatures are going week and temperatures are going to be much closer to average for the year than were the time of year than they were last week . last week. >> looks like things are heating up . a boxt boilers proud up. a boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> coming up , sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> coming up, prince william travels to new york as part of a
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plot to transform into a global statesman. while he, kate and princess anne, make a shock appearance on a riotous rugby podcast. so does this all put his political neutrality at risk or is it a necessary step in his new role as prince of wales ? my new role as prince of wales? my royal master, my lady colin campbell and phil dampier give their analysis shortly. their expert analysis shortly. but first in the fox report, the bbc's so—called disinformation reporter marianna spring has rumbled for telling porky pies on her own cv. so does this prove the beeb's fact checking service is actually a big fat joke? meanwhile, should the beeb apologise for allowing a sea of bitter to wave eu bitter remoaners to wave eu flags last night of the flags at its last night of the proms? well, laurence fox, he's bright eyed and bushy tailed with on both with his unmissable take on both of those stories
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isabel a monday to thursdays from . six till 930 . from. six till 930. >> lady colin campbell and kwasi kwarteng coming up. but first, it's kwarteng coming up. but first, wsfime kwarteng coming up. but first, it's time for the fox report with the actor turned activist laurence fox and the bbc's disinformation correspondent in chief fact checker marianna spnng chief fact checker marianna spring has been exposed for disseminating disinformation on her own cv. the 27 year old award winning journalist became the beeb's first ever disinformation correspondent in august last year, tasked with sorting out the facts from the fiction and the point of the team, as you said, is to verify video, to fact check, to counter disinformation and to analyse really complex stories. >> so we can get to the truth of
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what's going on. why does this matter? well, mistruths can cause really serious harm to society to the people in society and to the people in them. and so we want to show you our really help you our workings and really help you understand the understand how we get to the bottom happening . i bottom of what's happening. i ain't trusting the bbc, let me tell you . tell you. >> but evidence has now emerged of spring falsifying information on her own cv when back in 2018 she applied for a role in moscow with the us based news outlet code. her story, her cv reportedly boasted june 2018 reportedly boasted june 2018 report on international news dunng report on international news during the world cup. specifically the perception of russia, with bbc correspondent sarah rainsford. but the hiring manager herself a former bbc journalist, called out the claims for the lies that they were with marianna. spring then backtracking and even admitting . i've only bumped into sarah while she's working and chatted to her at various points, but nothing everything on to her at various points, but noticvg everything on to her at various points, but noticv is everything on to her at various points, but noticv is entirelyerything on to her at various points, but noticv is entirely true. ng on to her at various points, but noticv is entirely true. the onlyn my cv is entirely true. the only explanation at all is my desperation to report out in moscow and thinking that it wouldn't be a big deal, which
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was totally naive and stupid of me. so lawrence, firstly, great to have you back. we've missed you on your global boiling holiday. it looked very , very holiday. it looked very, very beautiful and i was very, very jealous the whole time. but look on this, marianna spring issue, i know that neither of us think the particular crime she's accused of is a big deal. like whatever . she was a accused of is a big deal. like whatever. she was a young journalist. she maybe was slightly she slightly inflated the truth on her cv. but it's not really the point, is it the point is, is that this woman is in charge of trying to tell us what's true or not. and time and time again, the bbc have got those facts wrong, especially over brexit and covid. >> yeah, i think you're right. i think putting aside the fact that my acting cv , if you were that my acting cv, if you were to believe it when i put it in, has me speaking about five different languages fluently and also being ride like dressage
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horses and um, and i don't hold it against marianna for lying her off on the old cv. >> but the point really here, the most important one is the fact that we've reinvented the lazarus like word from the death, which is this word mis and disinformation in a that should be a big red flag to you. you should go this is not good that we're starting to talk about these communist terms anymore. b, the fact that anymore. and b, the fact that it's the of the it's put in the hands of the bbc, the world's most unreliable propaganda unit from the people's republic of great britain to arbitrage arbitrate as to whether what is and isn't true is just beyond laughable. so, i mean, look, i turn the bbc on once a month out of a sense of duty to find out if it's still as bad as it was last month. and it always is. and worse. marianna, spring, good worse. so marianna, spring, good luck with it. you keep lying and we'll keep not believing you. that's simple. >> yeah . no, very point. >> yeah. no, very good point. very good point . it is so ironic very good point. it is so ironic given that the bbc let me tell
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you, has been the media organisation that has spread the most disinformation over the past few years. we contacted the beeb, by the way, for a statement earlier today. they refused to provide one, but sticking with the bbc, lawrence, their coverage of last night of their coverage of last night of the proms has triggered a flurry of complaints after a sea of eu flags were broadcast waving dunng flags were broadcast waving during the final performance . during the final performance. what do you make of this, lawrence well, i'm not down the richard tice world of going. >> they should be banned. we must bans the bbc flag or whatever flag it is. it's the same thing. flag represents the same thing. flag represents the same thing. flag represents the same thing. the blue flag . and same thing. the blue flag. and the is, again, it's the the point is, again, it's the bbc. so it's trying to convince the 52% of the country that they were wrong. and you know, brexit is a bad thing and we must rejoin and again, i don't know how many people have turned off the i'd be interested to know what the figures are for viewing of night at the proms of last night at the proms because remember a big because i remember i had a big fight about it two years ago because i remember i had a big fight 61 out it two years ago
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because i remember i had a big fight {i campaigned ars ago because i remember i had a big fight {i campaigned toy ago because i remember i had a big fight {i campaigned to get) because i remember i had a big fight {i campaigned to get for where i campaigned to get for them to actually sing land of hope and glory and rule britannia and rule britannia went to one 220 in the amazon charts in the uk , so i've just charts in the uk, so i've just kind of given up on that one. now we're basically just giving up all our national up on all all our national institutions. we're giving institutions. we're just giving up on so night up on them. so last night the proms remainer fest and up on them. so last night the pr0|like, remainer fest and up on them. so last night the pr0|like, well, remainer fest and up on them. so last night the pr0|like, well, halfainer fest and up on them. so last night the pr0|like, well, half the' fest and it's like, well, half the country don't believe that country don't believe in that stuff. if you're, stuff. so why can't if you're, if genuinely interested stuff. so why can't if you're, if inclusivey interested stuff. so why can't if you're, if inclusive ,interested stuff. so why can't if you're, if inclusive , whyested stuff. so why can't if you're, if inclusive , why don't in being inclusive, why don't you include us? because otherwise we have to be on gb news you know, it's like include everybody. they don't do it. they're interested. this they're not interested. this is what say. what they had to say. >> audiences >> lawrence audiences choose to bnng >> lawrence audiences choose to bring flags , and the bring their own flags, and the royal albert hall specifies size limitations within their guidelines for safety reasons. but look, finally, lawrence liz truss has become the latest voice to speak out against the extreme gender ideology sweeping britain's schools. i know you're very passionate about this. she has called for a ban on letting schoolkids socially transition by changing their name and pronouns. this is after her sunak speech seemed to backtrack. lawrence yeah, well ,
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backtrack. lawrence yeah, well, sunak was replaced. >> truss in a coup, didn't he? so that's what happened there. he's an unelected leader, globalist shill leader of a socialist party calling itself the conservative party. but the question here is why did liz truss not say that when she walked into number 10, along with some sensible economics like estate, less taxes ? like small estate, less taxes? um, it's a shame that she didn't bnng um, it's a shame that she didn't bring the cultural element in because essentially what we've got in this country, which is i've reflected on this over the holidays, i've got a brain cell and there's no and i've decided that there's no political solution to this cultural problem. what's the solution then? the cultural problem that we have in the country can only be cured by the people of the country, and they can only do that in their own little family. can't you little family. they can't you can't electorally . you can't do it electorally. you know, obviously my we know, i mean, obviously my we haven't discussed my resounding victory ruislip and victory in south ruislip and uxbndge victory in south ruislip and uxbridge , but there's no uxbridge, but there's no political solution. they're going to vote, vote. and going to vote, vote, vote. and for us that don't for those of us that don't imply, you in the ulez, imply, as you see in the ulez,
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people, just remove what people, they just remove what they in their lives. they don't want in their lives. and what we don't are and what we don't want are teachers, political activists, educating our children that there could could there could be, could or couldn't be born in the wrong body. that's sort of body. that's that's sort of pretty satanism pretty close to cultish satanism for me. >> indeed . much to explore. >> no, indeed. much to explore. lawrence in the weeks to come, and especially leading up to the election next year. thank you so much. great have you back. much. great to have you back. but up, as rishi sunak but coming up, as rishi sunak joins forces with the italian premier to crack premier giorgia meloni to crack down on illegal migration and more eu countries show interest in rwanda style policies is lord sumption right that leaving the echr is now the only way to solve the small boats crisis? well, my superstar panel will return to debate that soon, but next, prince william travels to new york. the big apple , as part new york. the big apple, as part of a bold new campaign to transform it into a global statesman . that's afterjoining statesman. that's after joining forces with princess anne and his wife, kate for a surprise appearance on a raucous rugby podcast . but does he rest, podcast. but does he rest, shattering his political neutrality, meanwhile, has prince harry saved his dwindling
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next time now for our royal milestones. lady colin campbell and phil dampier and prince william will embark on a diplomatic voyage to new york next week as part of a plot to transform into a global statesman. but does it overstep the boundaries of political impartiality ? he's preparing to impartiality? he's preparing to meet with the un secretary general, antonio guterres, and hold bilateral meetings with delegations from ecuador and vanuatu . however, he has refused vanuatu. however, he has refused to do any tell all tv interviews stateside to dodge potential questions about his estranged brother, harry. so ladies, see do you have any concerns about this trip or is it a completely
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necessary step for the prince of wales to carve out his new role as . as. >> well , um, as. >> well, um, sorry , i can barely >> well, um, sorry, i can barely hear you. >> dan oh, no. >> dan oh, no. >> so i'm going to refer to my notes , please. um, no, not notes, please. um, no, not really. no concerns at all. the reality is that there is a huge difference between party politics and global representation of heads of state and. and people who will become heads of state. william has a political role. it's not a party. political role, but it is a political role. and he needs to fulfil it. and and, uh, you know , the fact that he is being know, the fact that he is being going to be a global statesman doesn't mean that he shouldn't get involved in political issues . it means he shouldn't get
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involved in party political issues. >> phil , do issues. >> phil, do you think this trip sounds like a sensible idea ? sounds like a sensible idea? >> yeah. good evening. dan well, i mean, he's already topped polls, hasn't he, in america, for being the most respected figure in the world, even above president zelenskyy. >> mean, already got >> so, i mean, he's already got this status and i think it's great there great that he's out there projecting power projecting a bit of soft power for uk plc because let's for the for uk plc because let's be honest about it, we haven't really any politicians really got any politicians with any quality . any star quality. >> so i think it's great that he's out there, represent ing the and lady c says, the country. and as lady c says, as as he doesn't stray into as long as he doesn't stray into into mean, into direct politics, i mean, obviously couldn't make obviously he couldn't make any comment us election . comment about the us election. but people he's but most of these people he's meeting next week, the un general secretary and general secretary general and others, do with his others, it's all to do with his earthshot prize and his environmental work. and he's basically carrying on the basically just carrying on the work that his father did . and i work that his father did. and i think father will be pleased think his father will be pleased that that. he's he's that he's doing that. he's he's he's to speak out as the he's able to speak out as the prince these issues, prince of wales on these issues, whereas can't that. whereas the king can't do that. now what, ten, 15 now so he's got, what, ten, 15 years to make a difference on these things before he'll have
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these things before he'll have the problem. won't be the same problem. he won't be able to speak out when he's king. say him get on king. so i say let him get on with king. so i say let him get on witiso look, it was a big weekend >> so look, it was a big weekend in the pr battle between the prince wales and his brother, prince of wales and his brother, prince of wales and his brother, prince kick off prince harry. so let's kick off with william because the former england rugby ace, mike tindall , who hosts the rugby podcast the good, the bad and the rugby managed to rope in possibly the best guest line up ever because he was joined, of course, by william kate and his mother in law, princess anne. they are the patrons of the scottish welsh and english rugby unions. the sit down proved to be a real hoot. watch this . hoot. watch this. >> prince and princess of wales and the princess royal, thank you so much forjoining us on the good, the bad and the rugby. >> i'm not going to say your rugby competitive. >> where? >> where? >> yeah, i've seen that. i've seen. i've seen . i've seen you seen. i've seen. i've seen you play seen. i've seen. i've seen you play beer pong. >> really that's coming out swimming. >> personally, i love swimming. >> personally, i love swimming. >> cold swimming, >> personally, i love swimming. >> cold swimming , cold >> personally, i love swimming. >> cold swimming, cold swimming, the cold of the batus the cold
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of the batus absolutely, absolutely. >> love. >> love. >> but no, i love rugby. you know, i played at school. i loved it. >> and did you so did i started. >> and did you so did i started. >> yeah. i started on the on the wing. but while that was wing. sorry but while that was going on, prince harry kicked off the invictus games in dusseldorf in germany with a rousing opening ceremony , speech rousing opening ceremony, speech and appearance on german tv. >> watch. >> watch. >> good husband zusammen und heretics. we willkommen zungen invictus games 2023 here in dusseldorf . now invictus games 2023 here in dusseldorf. now i'm invictus games 2023 here in dusseldorf . now i'm not saying dusseldorf. now i'm not saying we play favourites in our home, but since my wife discovered that she is of nigerian descent , it's likely to get a little bit more competitive this year. i said, are you ready ? let's do i said, are you ready? let's do this . thank i said, are you ready? let's do this. thank you . this. thank you. >> so ladies, see who won the pr battle? prince william or prince . harry >> i have to say , i think prince >> i have to say, i think prince william . uh, catherine and william. uh, catherine and
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princess anne and mike tindall won it hands down. of course, there were not. we do not seem to understand here is that in germany , not all of this has germany, not all of this has gone down as well as is being reported in this country. i have got , uh, reports reported in this country. i have got, uh, reports and reported in this country. i have got , uh, reports and letters reported in this country. i have got, uh, reports and letters and messages from people in germany , uh, that say that they are extremely upset about, first of all, the demands that were made by harry and meghan and that were actually that caused over 2000 petitions to be sent to the government. that's one thing. and secondly , that our, you know and secondly, that our, you know , germany does not appreciate you playing the race card of all the countries in the world to play the countries in the world to play a race card . harry has play a race card. harry has chosen germany. i mean, what does meghan's putative of descent from , um, a nigerian
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descent from, um, a nigerian heritage have to do? with who they would be supporting? i mean, i've never heard such rubbish in my life and i come from a multinational background . mean people do not support teams because they have many times great and grandparents who was a member of the country and people in germany don't like it because it's playing the race card and there are tremendous sensitivities in germany , not sensitivities in germany, not only for the new hamburg race laws in of the 1930, but of all sorts of issues regarding angela merkel and her policies with regard to immigration. >> an interesting phil, because it has been reported as a bit of a triumph. harry, at the invictus games in germany. that's the other side of the argument. who do you think won the pr battle? because i have to say it was lovely to see william and kate relaxed with anne and
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mike like that, wasn't it ? mike like that, wasn't it? >> yeah, it was nice to see them all. i think they got away with it it was to do with the it because it was to do with the rugby world cup. i think those, those sort of only work those sort of things only work when occasionally. those sort of things only work vllhink occasionally. those sort of things only work vllhink they occasionally. those sort of things only work vllhink they did occasionally. those sort of things only work vllhink they did occastoo ally. i think if they did them too often also strayed often and also if it strayed into commercial field into sort of commercial field that. i don't know that. mike tindall i don't know whether tindall gets make whether mike tindall gets make some from podcast. some money from that podcast. not be a little not so you've got to be a little bit i was quite bit careful. i was quite surprised anne surprised to see princess anne doing but i suppose in the doing it, but i suppose in the wake the doing wake of the queen doing paddington know, paddington bear, you know, why not? harry, not? but certainly, harry, i think i'm not to criticise think i'm not going to criticise him the invictus games. i him for the invictus games. i mean, trouble, mean, meghan's causing trouble, according even before according to lady c, even before she's did make she's arrived. but he did make the didn't he, the cardinal sin, didn't he, of losing a penalty to losing a penalty shoot out to the germans. was on the germans. he was on a programme he didn't manage to get and even get a penalty. and even the german sports german was it. the sports minister managed to get 2 or 3. so should concentrate so i think he should concentrate on what lionel messi and not trying to be lionel messi . trying to be lionel messi. >> yeah, indeed. >> yeah, indeed. >> that was that was a bit of a funny moment, wasn't it? phil dampier , lady colin campbell. my dampier, lady colin campbell. my royal masterminds are the best
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royal masterminds are the best royal analysis in the business. thank you both so much. but coming up, sinister revelations expose how liz truss was put under pressure by the most powerful civil servant in the land. simon case to cancel the rise in corporation tax, so will the public soon see that the best pm we weren't really allowed to have was forced out of office by nefarious, dark forces of the blob ? well, the forces of the blob? well, the man close to ciller's premiership, her chancellor, kwasi kwarteng, joins me live for his explode of reaction. but in the media, rishi rishi sunak and italian premier giorgia meloni join forces to plot a solution to the migrant crisis . solution to the migrant crisis. but is the brilliant former supreme court judge lord sumption, right that the only way of solving the small boats crisis is to leave the echr my superstar panel do battle on that. i'll have the first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages and paul burrell reacts to an explosive new column in the daily mail, which says that we shouldn't be forgiving king
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charles back in just a few minutes . minutes. >> the temperature's rising in boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello. very good evening to you. band of rain is going to continue to push southwards through the next 24 hours with some showers both to the north and south of this whilst in the south—east, we're holding to on that humid air because here we are still ahead of these fronts which have something a little bit , a bit more bit cooler, a bit more comfortable following in behind. also fronts. there'll be also in the fronts. there'll be a rain. so a cloudy a fair bit of rain. so a cloudy , end the day across many , wet end to the day across many northern parts of england into wales england too. wales and southwest england too. in south—east, we're holding in the south—east, we're holding onto those humid conditions and we see few showers we could see a few showers developing. some showers in developing. also some showers in the far north of scotland and northern ireland. cooler here whilst in the southeast with that temperature that high humidity temperature is a huge amount as is not dropping a huge amount as we look through tuesday, a damp , across parts of , wet start across many parts of england and wales, though in the southeast, a deal of
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southeast, a good deal of brightness high brightness as that with the high humidity. expecting a few humidity. i am expecting a few showers to kick off here and they could be heavy, perhaps even thundery brighter even thundery whilst a brighter picture and northern ireland, a scotland and northern ireland, a scattering a scattering of showers and a little cloud at times little bit of cloud at times too. a bit cooler than it has been through some recent days . been through some recent days. getting around 24, getting to highs around 24, perhaps 25 celsius in the south—east a wednesday morning may get off to a bit of a chilly start. couldn't rule out a touch of frost across some parts of scotland, otherwise scotland, but otherwise a generally for most generally fine day for most until some wet and windy weather pushes from the northwest as pushes in from the northwest as we go into the afternoon , that we go into the afternoon, that rain going to sweep rain is then going to sweep further later in the further southwards later in the week temperatures are going week and temperatures are going to closer average for to be much closer to average for the time year than they were the time of year than they were last week . last week. >> the temperatures rising , a >> the temperatures rising, a boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton. tonight the invasion of the channel gets worse by the day , channel gets worse by the day, so rishi sunak attended a spring summit with his italian counterpart, giorgia meloni, at the g20 with both leaders. despot threat to stop the boats as they've promised . but his as they've promised. but his escaping the echr the only way to truly get a grip on the worsening migrant crisis as outlined by a former supreme court justice. that's the big debate with my superstar panel next. and tonight, i'm joined by carole malone, benjamin butterworth and belinda deluise. plus, as permanent under—secretary at the foreign office , simon mcdonald makes office, simon mcdonald makes this shocking admission of the brexit bias at the heart of westminster in feeling in the foreign office building was of mourning . mourning. >> people were in tears. people were in shock . were in shock. >> and with further revelations of the extraordinary pressure put on the former pm liz truss by the left wing civil service
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was she tragically beaten out of office by the out of control woke blob? her former chancellor kwasi kwarteng will join me live in the studio to give a first hand account of the anti—growth coalition that they faced in the treasury . also coming up tonight treasury. also coming up tonight after last night at the proms is by rabid ramona's flying eu flags during the closing performance of rule britannia. is this another example of blatant bias by the british bashing corporation ? is my bashing corporation? is my verdict in the media buzz. and later this hour, with diana's former private secretary, patrick jephson , hitting out at patrick jephson, hitting out at the sins king charles still has to atone for. in a bombshell new daily mail column, how do those who were closest to the late princess truly feel about our new monarch ? i'm joined by new monarch? i'm joined by diana's former butler and the man she described as her rock, paul burrell, to ask if it's time we moved on from the acrimony that continues to surround life and death of surround the life and death of the people's princess. there
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will also be a new greatest britain and union. jack has revealed before the night is out and the first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages the way and the first of tomorrow's neright3er front pages the way and the first of tomorrow's ne right afteront pages the way and the first of tomorrow's ne right after the 3ages the way and the first of tomorrow's ne right after the news the way and the first of tomorrow's ne right after the news with 1e way to right after the news with tatiana sanchez . dan thank you tatiana sanchez. dan thank you very much and good evening. >> the latest from the newsroom. the prime minister has told the house of commons the sanctity of westminster must be protected following chinese spy allegations. it comes after an unnamed parliamentary research teacher who was arrested in march issued a statement saying he is completely innocent. rishi sunak , who's been facing calls sunak, who's been facing calls to designate china as a national security threat, told mps such actions will not be tolerated . actions will not be tolerated. >> and the whole house is rightly appalled about reports of espionage in this building. the sanctity of this place must be protected and the right of members to speak their minds without fear or sanction must be maintained. we will defend our
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democracy and our security . so democracy and our security. so i was emphatic with premier li that actions which seek to undermine british democracy are completely unacceptable and will never be tolerated . never be tolerated. >> labour leader sir keir starmer has called on the prime minister to reveal what he knew and when . and when. >> china is a strategic challenge , that's for sure. and challenge, that's for sure. and what we need is a policy that is clear and is settled . now. we clear and is settled. now. we haven't had that for the last ten years. we've had division and inconsistency from this government . but i think this government. but i think this morning there's a very big question now for the prime minister which is, was this raised when these arrests took place back in march or has it only been raised now that it's come into the public domain? i think that's the central question needs to be question that needs to be answered minister answered by the prime minister today. >> a woman has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of a two year old girl who was found in a pond in hampshire. the was
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hampshire. the child was reported from her home reported missing from her home in kingsley, near bordon shortly after 5:00 afternoon . after 5:00 yesterday afternoon. following a search. she was found in kingsley pond and taken to hospital in a serious condition where she died today . condition where she died today. now, gb news sources have confirmed terror suspect daniel khalife has been taken to belmarsh high security prison. the 21 year old appeared in court today, charged after escaping from wandsworth prison last week. he was arrested on saturday after a four day manhunt . a westminster manhunt. a westminster magistrates court was told the former soldier allegedly escaped by strapping himself to a food delivery vehicle used material which may have been bedsheets as khalife disappeared while awaiting trial after being charged with terror offences in january . the charged with terror offences in january. the number of people killed during the earthquake in morocco has climbed to over 2800. british search and rescue teams have been deployed to help with the rescue efforts, with 60 specialists, search dogs and
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equipment sent to the country. more than 2500 people were also injured when the 6.8 magnitude quake hit on . friday this is gb quake hit on. friday 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 us. now it's back to dan . to dan. tomorrow's news tonight . tomorrow's news tonight. >> now in our mediabuzz first front pages are in a it's a lie i'm no china spy that's the headune i'm no china spy that's the headline in the metro with the papers saying the parliamentary aide arrest and has denied any wrongdoing . the i reports that wrongdoing. the i reports that millions of folk will see their pension increase by £220 a week under the triple lock deal to match wage growth, leaving
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chancellor jeremy match wage growth, leaving chancellorjeremy hunt match wage growth, leaving chancellor jeremy hunt with match wage growth, leaving chancellorjeremy hunt with an extra £2 billion black hole in the budget . i can imagine how the budget. i can imagine how angry that's making one of my superstar panellists who are back with me now, top daily express columnist carole malone, the journalist and broadcaster. benjamin butterworth. yes he's not a fan of pensioners, is he? you know that. and the former brexit party mep belinda de lucy . now in his latest attempt to crack down on the illegal migration plaguing britain, rishi sunak is trying to align himself with the tough talking giorgia meloni over an aperol spritz at the g20 summit in india. the italian premier agreed to rally european support for sunak's plan to send illegals to rwanda , with illegals to rwanda, with countries like austria already breaking ranks to demand the eu implement its own rwanda style policy. well, the italian firebrand meloni and globalist sunak might seem like political , sort of like an odd political couple. i'd say they've actually both been talking tough when it
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comes to illegal migration. however however, they have thus far failed to secure their respective borders . so with respective borders. so with their political careers hinged on stopping the boats, perhaps they should listen to the former supreme court judge , a man i supreme court judge, a man i have great respect for, lord sumption, who told labour broadcasting companies andrew marr, why decisive action on the echr is the key to ending this current migrant invasion? watch to put it bluntly, would you advocate us getting out? >> i would . now i've come rather >> i would. now i've come rather reluctantly and rather slowly to that conclusion because i hoped for a number of years that the strasbourg court would become more sensitive to the implications of its decisions on democratic societies like ours . democratic societies like ours. there is no sign of that happening. so rather reluctantly , i think we should leave . , i think we should leave. >> sir carol, look , rishi can >> sir carol, look, rishi can chat to george maloney all he wants, but isn't lord sumption
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right? >> and he's reluctantly come to the conclusion , he says, that the conclusion, he says, that that leaves the echr is now the only way to gain control of our borders. >> you said recently, dan, he said that the strasbourg court had invented rights and interfered with national political processes in a manner which undermined democracy . and which undermined democracy. and that's exactly right, you know, because what happened when the strasbourg the intervention over rwanda that that they civil nearly over stepped on rwanda . nearly over stepped on rwanda. you know, they woke up a judge in the middle of the night at midnight to overturn a judgement made by a judge in this country. you consistently you know, we're consistently being country that being told in this country that we respect our judges we have to respect our judges in this country the judiciary. this country and the judiciary. what that show that what respect does that show that when decisions when you take their decisions to the which the european court, which there's the there's nothing about the particular case that's been taken to them, they've just decided know, this decided it's, you know, this throws question the throws into question the legitimacy of the strasbourg judges and their interference in government . it shouldn't be government. it shouldn't be allowed to happen. you know , we
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allowed to happen. you know, we you know, we left the eu to take back sovereignty and this is preventing us from doing that. you know, really stopping leaving the hcr is the only lever rishi has left to win the next election. and i fear he doesn't have the guts to pull that lever. i don't think he's ever going to leave. you know, we could be six months we could be gone in six months if to. the if we wanted to. that's the process that only takes six months. but i don't believe he's got guts it. i think got the guts to do it. i think he this whole he should fight this whole election on stopping he should fight this whole ele
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powers of the european court fell completely flat . fell completely flat. >> nothing was ever delivered. so i actually think if rishi promised to do something in his next manifesto, no one would believe it. maloney has got a real here because she's real problem here because she's already had 100,000 land in italy and the top three nations that are represented by these illegal migrants are guinea , illegal migrants are guinea, tunisia, ivory coast. none are at war whatsoever . very few get at war whatsoever. very few get deported and they all disappear into the eu because of the shingon and the problem is we can't continue having foreign courts veto no government policy that has a democratic mandate . that has a democratic mandate. it squashes the agency of the british people. these foreign judges are not elected . i'm judges are not elected. i'm sorry, but the echr is a totally different beast to the one we signed up to in 1949, which was set up to stop us slipping back into fascist state. >> we've got to protects criminals. >> we've got to leave the echr benjamin, do you agree? no. >> and i mean, you know, the italian prime minister, giorgia baloney , as i her, she baloney, as i call her, she can't .
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can't. >> george i'm a lovely maloney. >> george i'm a lovely maloney. >> she can't stop the boat. she's not cutting immigration illegal otherwise. just like illegal or otherwise. just like rishi they've lot rishi sunaks. they've got a lot in they talk a lot in common that they talk a lot and much done. now, and don't get much done. now, one you've often one thing that you've often mentioned past is that mentioned in the past is that other countries accept at a other eu countries accept at a much lower percentage of migrant applications than we do here. so it's you're wrong to say that the echr is what's in the way, what's in the way is a hapless government. i actually the way the echr stopped the rwanda flights , you know one judge and flights, you know one judge and is a deterrent now for the last 18 months that decision has had to go back to the court in this country and it is currently with the highest court in the land that cannot right for that it cannot be right for a country that is independent. i mean, it actually mean, i think what it actually stopped was it said that the people on flight had people on that flight hadn't had sufficient people on that flight hadn't had sufficiythan policy itself. rather than policy itself. >> the point is, benjamin is actually good actually making quite a good point isn't the only point because it isn't the only solution. echr we solution. leaving the echr we need of need to cap the number of refugees that are allowed to resettle in this country at a much, smaller so that much, much smaller level so that we a sustainable way. we can have a sustainable way. >> the way , be women and
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children. >> never said leaving the echr is the only thing we should be doing. you know, believe doing. you know, i believe in a turn policy , for example, turn back policy, for example, there's of we there's lots of things we need to doing, i think leaving to be doing, but i think leaving the is the only way that we the echr is the only way that we can gain proper sovereignty of the echr is the only way that we can borders.yper sovereignty of the echr is the only way that we can borders. andsovereignty of the echr is the only way that we can borders. and thateignty of the echr is the only way that we can borders. and thateignta of our borders. and that was a critical they won't do it if he was going to do it, he would have now. have done it by now. >> not. he doesn't. >> he's not. he doesn't. >> isn't it disappointing >> and isn't it disappointing that all these tough talkers that all of these tough talkers are lose all of their zest to actually difficult actually make difficult decisions they're in power? decisions once they're in power? >> making himself >> he's making himself look increasingly . no one increasingly ridiculous. no one is going to believe no one believes a word they say. >> he is. trevor kavanagh in the sun today, describing him as doctor dolittle. now, look, former reeves former chancellor rachel reeves appearance on lbc or should i say broadcasting say the labour broadcasting company go to plan, company never quite go to plan, do they? you remember do they? do you remember this unforgettable where unforgettable interview where she answer a very she couldn't answer a very straightforward question ? straightforward question? >> it transphobic to say only women have a cervix? good morning. >> good morning, nick. >> good morning, nick. >> and it's great to talk to you. >> good to have you. >> good to have you. >> i just think that this issue has just become so divisive.
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>> is it transphobic, yes or no ? >> 7- >> look, i 7_ >> look, i is it is imam >> look, i is it is it transphobic ? look, i just i transphobic? look, i just i don't even know how to start answering these questions . answering these questions. >> our future chancellor ladies and gentlemen, it's terrifying if that wasn't bad enough, on a recent phone in with presenter iain dale reeves was ambushed by her own quote . her own quote. >> watch this quote here from a pretty prominent economist. and they say that labour needs to provide an alternative to progressive policies being prioritised by the conservatives, the banks and those earning more than £100,000 could quite easily contribute a little more. and they do, little more. and unless they do, inequality poverty will inequality and poverty will inevitably the months inevitably soar in the months and years ahead. >> the economist >> do you know the economist that quoted was that she quoted that was actually, practical thing actually, you practical thing you're suggesting in that quote was to tax the banks more and those earning more than £100,000 more. >> but you've gone back on that the way that i think that we can lift people out of poverty and reduce inequality.
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lift people out of poverty and reducei nequality. lift people out of poverty and reducei say,|ality. lift people out of poverty and reducei say,|alito get the >> as i say, is to get the economy growing awkward now. economy growing so awkward now. >> reeves insists labour won't introduce a wealth tax, which means we can expect one to become party policy in the next few months, i guess. >> lynda lucy benjamin >> but lynda day lucy benjamin butterworth , carole malone do butterworth, carole malone do stand by because coming up, as demands grow for an inquiry into the bbc broadcasting a sea of eu flags during rule britannia at the last night of the proms. >> does the beeb owe the british pubuc >> does the beeb owe the british public an apology ? my superstar public an apology? my superstar panel have plenty to this panel have plenty to say on this and we'll have more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages for you, too. but next, amidst bombshell of the bombshell revelations of the pressures put on liz truss by the most powerful civil servant in the land to cancel her rise in the land to cancel her rise in corporation tax. do we now have proof that our shortest serving prime minister was hounded out of downing street by the dark forces of the blob? will her former chancellor once trusted political kwasi trusted political ally kwasi kwarteng, live in the studio to give his unique insight on these devastating revelations over the weekend, proving that the blob
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gb news radio . gb news radio. >> welcome back . paul burrell on >> welcome back. paul burrell on the way. but first, a new bbc documentary that aired earlier this evening has thrown light on the shadowy forces that make up the shadowy forces that make up the civil service. in particular their repulsion for brexit, the biggest democratic mandate in british history . biggest democratic mandate in british history. sir simon mcdonald he was the permanent under—secretary at the foreign
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office and he was full boasts office and he was full of boasts about banging the remoaner jam when he should have been meeting the highest standards of impartiality. watch this in feeling in the foreign office building was of morning . building was of morning. >> people were in tears . people >> people were in tears. people were in shock . on this occasion. were in shock. on this occasion. this solitary occasion, i decided to tell my colleagues and therefore let ministers know that i had voted to remain in the european union . i felt that the european union. i felt that they would assume that in any case, so i decided to embrace it . now this follows former prime minister liz truss condemning the left wing orthodoxy that destroyed her premiership, which has been corroborated by the daily mail. >> so the paper has revealed that cabinet secretary simon case, britain's powerful case, britain's most powerful civil bounced liz truss civil servant, bounced liz truss into axing her cuts to corporation tax and the most vexed , cautious manner possible vexed, cautious manner possible by briefing that she had already made the decision to the press for , ex—chancellor kwasi for a time, ex—chancellor kwasi kwarteng was with truss to
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dismantle the anti—growth coalition and he joins me live now to share his experiences of going up against the westminster blob. so kwasi , a series of blob. so kwasi, a series of extraordinary revelations over the weekend , but not surprising the weekend, but not surprising in some ways. we knew this, didn't we? so let's go through them. let's talk first about what we saw from simon mcdonald. sure. so this is one of the most senior civil servants. >> well, he was the head of the foreign office say, at the time that he was in mourning along with his staff the day after the brexit referendum. >> then told them that he was >> then he told them that he was a remainer. i mean, what was going a remainer. i mean, what was goiiso that's pretty crazy, >> so that's pretty crazy, because he not only told them that he voted remain, but if you followed the interview , he said followed the interview, he said he told them to boost their morale. >> so they were all down because of what had happened. and he thought as head of the department that that he would cheer them up by reminding them and telling them what they all knew that he'd voted remain . and
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knew that he'd voted remain. and we talk about the impartiality of the civil service, but that seems pretty extraordinary. and as you say in the brexit vote, something like 33 million people, it was 17 million, 16 million roughly, which was the biggest democratic mandate vote in our country's history. biggest democratic mandate vote in our country's history . and he in our country's history. and he was of the side that lost. and he felt he had to tell his civil service colleagues that he'd voted remain in order to boost their morale. so i mean, anyone who suggests that they weren't biased or they they weren't, you know, wholeheartedly almost behind remain, i think is wrong. >> and then it comes to the machinations of your mini—budget and look, you've admitted maybe you i think it was too much too fast. >> i've always said that. how eve r. >> even >> yeah, we cannot get away from the fact kwasi that there was a campaign . oh, certainly there campaign. oh, certainly there was a campaign by the blob to overturn virtually every decision that you made . ed and
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decision that you made. ed and it comes to this extraordinary moment where simon case , the moment where simon case, the cabinet secretary, effectively bounces the prime minister into reversing your corporation tax cut by telling her, oh, this has already been leaked to the media. so if you go against what i'm telling you, the markets will crash. did that happen ? will crash. did that happen? >> so my memory of it was is quite to that . so it quite similar to that. so it wasn't a cut. it was what it was, was that we wanted to stop the increase. yes. you know, we felt that the 19% was fair and that if we went to 25, we'd make the country a lot less attractive to invest . and this attractive to invest. and this is what sunak had planned and has done. >> exactly. and she she's been reversing that. >> she'd been very clear about that. the mandate. that. she'd won the mandate. she'd leadership on that she'd won the leadership on that policy . and essentially, as policy. and then essentially, as you , there was there was you say, there was there was market turbulence. accept market turbulence. i accept that. but when i was away in washington, that they washington, i felt that they were they were really getting at her. and i think in that kind of slightly insidious way , they
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slightly insidious way, they were undermining my position on. and she summoned me back and i thought i was going to be summoned to front the u—turn because we'd already done a u—turn on the £0.45 rate, getting rid of that and she said, and this is where i agree with liz up to a point, the blob worked against her to an extent, but then she , she, she, she she but then she, she, she, she she freaked out and panicked. so i was called back, summoned to downing street, told that i was going to be dismissed. and i think she thought that that would save her. maybe people had told her, well, if you get rid of the chancellor, you've got a chance to recover her. and it was as clear as day to me that oncei was as clear as day to me that once i was out, she would have i said three weeks. i said to her, as i'm speaking to you, i said, you've got three weeks. and in the i it was six days. the end i think it was six days. so she resigned days after. so she resigned six days after. >> they knew she >> yes. because they knew she was time. >> yes. because they knew she wasthat's time. >> yes. because they knew she wasthat's right. time. >> that's right. >> that's right. >> that's right. >> that's exactly right. >> that's exactly right. >> had conquered her. >> they had conquered her. >> they had conquered her. >> exactly right. >> that's exactly right. >> that's exactly right. >> but what i really can't >> but but what i really can't understand , kwasi is whether understand, kwasi is whether it's the of simon case , an
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it's the role of simon case, an apparently impartial person to tell the prime minister to get rid of a policy which , as you rid of a policy which, as you say, they have just been elected on a mandate from their party to enact. >> so what they would say is that the markets had wobbled. >> there was enough international crisis. and actually what the interesting bit is, the extent to which and this is what i think andrew pierce was suggesting in his piece, extent to which piece, the extent to which the imf and other international bodies were in collusion with the treasury. of course, they were a of a sort of network. >> so it's the globalist economic orthodoxy coming to play economic orthodoxy coming to play . play. >> there was there was that there was an element of that. and remember going to and i remember going to washington and people saying, you outrageous. washington and people saying, you is outrageous. washington and people saying, you is is outrageous. washington and people saying, you is is wrong.rageous. washington and people saying, you is is wrong. andyus. washington and people saying, you is is wrong. and i s. this is this is wrong. and i just think at centre in just think we at the centre in whitehall, i think there whitehall, i think i think there was panic. >> and then have sue gray. >> and then you have sue gray. so this is sue gray. simon casey's deputy, again, a member of civil service. we're of the civil service. we're told, impartially, even though she was witch hunter in she was the witch hunter in chief against boris johnson . she chief against boris johnson. she has joined the labour party
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has now joined the labour party . he's the chief of staff day one kwasi day one, she goes and address the labour staff members and referring to her and she says, referring to her time the cabinet office, you time in the cabinet office, you had my back, she says . i'll had my back, she says. i'll always have yours. >> i mean, was she ever impartial? >> this woman said, look, i mean, i found it extraordinary that of all the things that's happened with regard to the civil service, the fact that this lady and she's very professional, well thought of within the civil service, who she was , or the fact that she she was, or the fact that she did the boris you know, the inquiry, the grey report inquiry into what happened. >> and then literally within what, a few months was then working in keir starmers office and is now working there as the chief of staff, that seems pretty extraordinary. >> she was doing starmer's bidding, well paid for by the public, wasn't she? >> i mean, at what point did she stop impartial stop being impartial and become part team ? part of starmer's team? >> kwasi people like me >> so kwasi when people like me say, look , the blob is taking say, look, the blob is taking over , this is a big threat to over, this is a big threat to democracy in the uk . people like
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democracy in the uk. people like to say that i'm some sort of conspiracy theorist, but actually this is a huge amount of evidence that we've just found from the last couple of days. >> sue gray situation to me was extraordinary because is she here? was someone until last year us who had a very senior role in the civil service this was judging boris johnson was looking at the report, looking at that, and then all of a sudden she she becomes the civil service want a labour government, don't they? >> that's what this about. >> that's what this is about. >> that's what this is about. >> well there obviously >> well i mean there obviously pro—remain i think sue gray is transformation from civil servant, top civil servant to head of keir starmer's staff . i head of keir starmer's staff. i mean, she's right at the centre of his operation. yeah. and she's not the only labour supporting . no. and she's come supporting. no. and she's come out as a labour. she's, she's not made. no she hasn't hidden her allegiance very worrying times. >> kwasi kwarteng former chancellor, thank you so much . chancellor, thank you so much. now paul burrell, more of tomorrow's news papers coming up just a moment. first, though,
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the weather, that warm feeling inside made from boxt boilers is proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello. very good evening to you . band of >> hello. very good evening to you. band of rain is going to continue to push southwards through the next 24 hours with some showers both to the north and south of this. whilst in the south—east, holding on to south—east, we're holding on to that air because here we that humid air because here we are still ahead of these fronts which have something a little bit bit more bit cooler, a bit more comfortable behind comfortable following in behind . also on the fronts, there'll be a bit of rain. so a be a fair bit of rain. so a cloudy, wet the day cloudy, wet end to the day across many northern parts of england and southwest england into wales and southwest england, the south—east, england, too, in the south—east, we're holding onto those humid conditions and we could a conditions and we could see a few showers developing . also conditions and we could see a few sishowerseveloping . also conditions and we could see a few sishowersevetheing . also conditions and we could see a few sishowersevethe far. also conditions and we could see a few sishowersevethe far north of some showers in the far north of scotland and northern ireland. cooler here whilst the cooler here whilst in the southeast that southeast with that high humidity and temperatures not dropping amount . but as dropping a huge amount. but as we through tuesday, a damp we look through tuesday, a damp , across many parts of , wet start across many parts of england wales. in the england and wales. there in the southeast, good deal of southeast, a good deal of brightener with the high brightener is that with the high humidity, few
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humidity, i am expecting a few showers off and showers to kick off here and they heavy, perhaps showers to kick off here and they thunderyheavy, perhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery whilst perhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery whilst aerhaps showers to kick off here and they thundery whilst a brighter even thundery whilst a brighter picture across the bulk of scotland and northern ireland, a scattering of showers and a little cloud at times little bit of cloud at times too. cooler than has too. a bit cooler than it has been some recent days . been through some recent days. getting to highs of around 24, perhaps 25 celsius in the south—east wednesday morning may get off to a of a chilly get off to a bit of a chilly start. couldn't rule out touch start. couldn't rule out a touch of some parts of of frost across some parts of scotland, but otherwise a generally for most . but generally fine day for most. but until some wet and windy weather pushesin until some wet and windy weather pushes in from the northwest as we go into the afternoon , that we go into the afternoon, that rain's then going to sweep further southwards later in the week and temperatures are going to closer to average to be much closer to average for the year they were the time of year than they were last . last week. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news coming up with princess diana's former private secretary patrick jepson insisting king charles still has sins to atone for. >> in a bombshell new mail column. is it time to move past
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the acrimony surrounding the life and death of the people's princess? well, diana's former butler, the man she described as her rock. paul burrell, joins me live to give his honest opinion on our king later in the show. but next in the media, buzz with the bbc's the last night of the proms embarrassingly by eu flag waving ramona's on its landmark closing night is the beeb to blame for broadcasting the brexit bashing scenes to the nafion? brexit bashing scenes to the nation? my superstar panel tackle this, plus we'll have more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages
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outlook on life. how can we trust labour? you're listening to gb news radio . to gb news radio. >> let's return to tomorrow's news tonight in our media buzz. more front pages are in sensational exclusive live on the front page of the daily express. we're going to be talking about this. much more on tomorrow night show. it really talking about this. much more on to aorrow night show. it really talking about this. much more on to a bombshell show. it really talking about this. much more on to a bombshell .how. it really talking about this. much more on to a bombshell . why it really talking about this. much more on to a bombshell . why theeally talking about this. much more on to a bombshell . why the uk's is a bombshell. why the uk's £480 million deal to stop the boats is doomed. this is a special investigate station that
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the newspaper's zac garner purkiss has conducted into the french police officers employed to stop the small boats leaving france for the uk and the paper says that britain's deal with france won't work because the officers prefer to party rather than stop the boats. i've read some of the quotes from what these french police officers say. they say it's not our job to stop the families going over. i feel sorry for some of these people. honestly complete outrage. remember, we are sending this lot nearly £500 million. absolutely brilliant investigation. the daily mail leads with the fury of mps as they are told not to name the alleged china spy in the house of commons. mps will warn to not say who the parliamentary aide is by the speaker, sir lindsay hoyle , with one tory mp telling hoyle, with one tory mp telling the paper that made a mockery of parliament's reputation as a bastion of free speech. of course they do have parliamentary privilege. none of the decided to break it, the mps decided to break it, decided to use it. sorry to break the name . more in the break the name. more in the media buzz now with tonight's
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superstar panel, top daily express carol maloney, express columnist carol maloney, the journalist broadcaster the journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth, and former brexit party mep and political commentator belinda de lucy . commentator belinda de lucy. now, it's been seven long years since we voted to cut free from the shackles of our eu masters. but the tears of bitter remoaners continue to stream there . latest display of there. latest display of servitude came , aided and servitude came, aided and abetted by the british bashing corporation and its last night of the proms, where a patriotic rendition of rule britannia was by a mob of eu flag waving brussels disciples . the aneurin brussels disciples. the aneurin bevan. have brussels disciples. the aneurin bevan . have . now bevan. have. now former tory mp harvey proctor called the stunt a disgrace and called for the bbc to hold an inquiry. meanwhile, the beeb said in a statement audiences choose to bnng
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statement audiences choose to bring their own flags and the royal albert hall specifies size limitations within their guidelines for safety reasons . i guidelines for safety reasons. i mean, look, i know the bbc thinks brexit voters are thick, but pull the other one for the second year in a row. it's subject to the proms to a blatantly political campaign led by westminster pest steve bray and his ilk, who parked vans us stuffed with flags outside the royal albert hall to be dished out to attendees. i believe in freedom of expression, but the woke riddled corporation would absolutely allow itself to absolutely not allow itself to be any other political be by any other political campaign in such an embarrassing fashion, would it? belinda? oh my god . my god. >> it was such a cringe worthy , >> it was such a cringe worthy, vom festive eu submission. >> i mean, this isn't even a flag of a country . >> i mean, this isn't even a flag of a country. this is >> i mean, this isn't even a flag of a country . this is a flag of a country. this is a flag of a country. this is a flag that represents the political union in that that is nothing to do with us anymore. >> but do you know what it represents to me? that flag oppression ? oppression? >> oh, it is. do you know what else , empire? the ones that are
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else, empire? the ones that are nostalgic for empire are the eu minions. flag waving. it minions. this flag waving. it was it was was cringeworthy. it was hysterical. just feel hysterical. and i just feel there's no length. they won't go to stop the uk from making its own laws. what a weird to hill die on. but the flags it's not a country. it's political. it's ridiculous. bbc probably loved it . they just look like complete it. they just look like complete wallies and of course anything to with britain loathing and to do with britain loathing and oh how the eu can save us all from ourselves is very orwellian, he said himself that the left wingers are more likely to steal from the poor box than the left wingers are more likely to steyup rom the poor box than the left wingers are more likely to steyup for| the poor box than the left wingers are more likely to steyup for the poor box than the left wingers are more likely to steyup for the nationalx than stand up for the national anthem. and there we had them in their at last night their droves at the last night of proms. of the proms. >> hate country, don't >> they hate our country, don't don't they? >> benjamin these remoaners, i mean, not go and mean, why on earth not go and wave flag? the union jack wave our flag? the union jack why waving flag of oppression? >> well, clearly you hate what our country stands for because if you really understood britishness, you would know that celebrating democracy , celebrating democracy, celebrating democracy, celebrating freedom of expression is essential to that. >> did you use the same sentence as democracy? >> you should have people at the
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doors from the bbc judging whether you have the right colour flag to go into the main hall. that's a praepostor situation. now look, i've been to the last night of the proms several times. i love it. i think it was before the eu referendum. the two occasions i went and if i went now, i would probably, you know, i'd wave the union right ? probably, you know, i'd wave the union right? because it's union flag right? because it's the go i think the one i'd go for. i think seven the seven years after the referendum. i'm sure why referendum. i'm not sure why either quite so obsessed either side is quite so obsessed . the idea that the bbc . but the idea that the bbc should be telling stewards at the royal albert hall what's allowed for which that's allowed for which flag, that's not freedom because the cat is supposed to be neutral . supposed to be neutral. >> why, know, this >> that's why, you know, this is the time has happened the third time this has happened since the vote. but since 2016, since the vote. but you know, you talk about democracy . you know, the democracy. you know, the democratic vote in 2016 was to leave the eu so that that was democracy in action. this is not this is a bunch of zealots, a very bitter , very angry people very bitter, very angry people who cannot accept the will of the british people while still protesting. you know, the proms are supposed to be an event
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about britain and britishness. it's supposed to be about the music instead. it was yet again by these idiots championing the eu , which we are never going eu, which we are never going back to. benjamin why can't they accept that the problems celebrates classical music in its most celebrate its uniquely british, britain and britishness? >> first of all, it's a bbc invention. i'd love to hear you. actually praise the bbc for running this for however many decades. well run it properly then. >> are you going to. don't. don't allow it to be. >> silence you >> no weird silence because you can't to can't bring yourself to acknowledge bbc acknowledge the good the bbc does. you just lectured does. and you just lectured about do know about oppression. do you know what saying that these people should oppressed should be oppressed from expressing political being. they shouldn't have. they >> they shouldn't have. they shouldn't allowed to bring in shouldn't be allowed to bring in what should not be what somebody should not be allowed whole load of allowed to bring a whole load of eu which are totally eu flags which are totally irrelevant into the hall to irrelevant now into the hall to cause. know what what cause. and do you know what what they bbc anybody they did the bbc disrupt anybody other than snowflake leavers like did? other than snowflake leavers like but did? other than snowflake leavers like but you ? other than snowflake leavers like but you know what benjamin? >> but you know what benjamin? the be a patriotic, the bbc used to be a patriotic, patriotic organisation. >> i just you just >> can i just say you just called me a snowflake there and
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you that's i've you think that's ironic i've ever a ridiculous in ever heard of is a ridiculous in your life. >> em e so scared em— e so scared of a >> why are you so scared of a little little caution flag? little a little caution flag? >> i'm angry at what they're doing. know what's funny? doing. do you know what's funny? because of the remainers because a lot of the remainers were shouting jingoism were shouting about the jingoism of there they of the brits. and there they are, waving the flag jingoist. >> why are you so afraid? just say i would say i was afraid. i was terrified . was terrified. >> i will just say, to answer your question about the bbc, the bbc on the whole, it used to bbc did on the whole, it used to be a more patriotic be a much more patriotic organisation. you know what organisation. do you know what i know internally the bbc? know from internally at the bbc? they are now embarrassed the they are now embarrassed of the last night of the proms. it's everything that they hate and that's why they tried to get songs like rule britannia banned and think unfortunately what and i think unfortunately what we're going to see over the next few bbc trying to few years is the bbc trying to turn into a massive turn the proms into a massive woke fest. >> yeah, what we used to joe biden embarrassing himself with a never ending stream of gaffes, but having his speech cut short dunng but having his speech cut short during a historical visit to vietnam marks a new low for the senile us president. >> this is the moment sleepy joe
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was abruptly interrupted mid—sentence by his own press secretary and had his microphone muted after embarking on a rambling monologue , including rambling monologue, including calling vietnam a third world country that left the audience more than puzzled . more than puzzled. >> and we talked about we talked about at the conference overall , we talked about stability . we , we talked about stability. we talked about making sure that the third world, the excuse me , the third world, the excuse me, the third world, the excuse me, the third world, the excuse me, the third world, the southern hemisphere had access to changes , had access. it wasn't confrontational at all. >> thank you, everybody. this ends the press conference. thanks, everyone. thank you . thanks, everyone. thank you. >> thank you . i've raised with >> thank you. i've raised with every person i've met with. >> mr president, are you worried about your son being indicted ? about your son being indicted? >> biden's geriatric performance soured his vietnam trip , which soured his vietnam trip, which was the first by an american president to the communist country since the end of the war in by the looks of things, in 1975. by the looks of things, it will also be his last with joe not only trailing donald
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trump general election trump and general election polls, his own party's own polls, but his own party's own voters also saying he shouldn't even be the nominee for the democratic party for the 2024 white house race. i never cut off the microphone of belinda deluise, benjamin butterworth or carmelo. no matter how much i might try sometimes, but do stand by, because after our very own alastair stewart bravely revealed his diagnosis of early onset vascular dementia on this channel yesterday, i'll share with you the tear jerking moment . we told him our new westminster studio would be named after him. so we'll pay tribute to an undisputed legend of broadcasting as we crown tonight's greatest briton in union, jack acas . but next in union, jack acas. but next in uncanceled princess diana's uncanceled is princess diana's former private secretary, patrick jephson writes an explosive claiming king explosive column claiming king charles still has sins to atone for. is it time to move on from the 26 years of ill feeling that continues surround diana's the 26 years of ill feeling that contand�*s surround diana's the 26 years of ill feeling that contand death?rround diana's the 26 years of ill feeling that contand death? her1d diana's the 26 years of ill feeling that contand death? her formera's life and death? her former butler and the man she described as rock, paul burrell, as her rock, paul burrell, beamed his honest as her rock, paul burrell, beamedon his honest as her rock, paul burrell, beamedon how his honest as her rock, paul burrell, beamedon how he his honest as her rock, paul burrell, beamedon how he dealsionest as her rock, paul burrell,
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time now for uncanceled . and time now for uncanceled. and this is where britain's top commentator does speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture. so sweeping the rest of the media and princess diana's former private secretary, patrick jephson, has made a dramatic intervention into the reign of king charles, powerfully arguing in the mail that the king still has sins to atone for, hinting at his behaviour during his marriage to diana and following the passing of queen elizabeth last year, jephson admits that the words god save the king came to his lips reluctantly. now one man who witnessed first hand, king charles's strange relationship with the princess is her former butler and the man she famously described her she famously described as her rock, burrell . so paul , rock, paul burrell. so paul, this was sort of patrick jephson
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expressing the feelings of many who still do feel a sense of unease about the reign of king charles has for some time . paul, charles has for some time. paul, you were very angry with charles. but is it time we move on from the acrimony over the life and death of your friend , life and death of your friend, the people's . princess the people's. princess >> well done , you know, and >> well done, you know, and everyone listening to this show knows that diana's colours are nailed to my mast. they always will be. she's very close to my heart , and she will be the heart, and she will be the person that forever haunts the house of windsor. we cannot forget what she's struggled through , what she achieved in through, what she achieved in her short lifetime and how she suffered it was an ugly situation. i was there . i heard situation. i was there. i heard it. i saw it. i was part of it. >> um, but despite the broken china and the rouse, the tears , china and the rouse, the tears, everything else, i believe that
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we must move on for the sake of the monarchy. >> i'm a monarchist, but i do find it so difficult to sing. god save our gracious king after the passing of our dear late queen. it's too fresh and too for new me. but i know i have to join this this gang of people for a short time across this bndge for a short time across this bridge to get to william and kate, who are waiting on the other side. >> could be 20 years. >> could be 20 years. >> diana would want. she'd want me to do that. ten years. ten years. i think we'll have to wait for king william and queen catherine. and i know that diana would want me to stay true. she'd want me to stand close to william and kate and help them over that bridge. um i'm not saying that i'm. >> because, of course, diana never wanted charles to be king, but do you think if she was still alive today, she would have changed her view ? have changed her view? >> she would support him because she was a monarchist and i
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believe she was gracious enough to actually hold his hand and help him along the way. she would have been an incredible asset to the royal family alongside kate and william. but that's not to be. but we can't forget what happened. dan um, but we must cross the bridge to help the monarchy survive. >> okay? now, paul , prince harry >> okay? now, paul, prince harry kicked off the invictus games in dusseldorf this weekend with an assured opening ceremony speech, while also appearing on german national tv watch this. paul could not bond zusammen , an could not bond zusammen, an underdog . underdog. >> ms val coleman zenden invictus games 2023 here in dusseldorf . now, i'm not saying dusseldorf. now, i'm not saying we play favourites in our home, but since my wife discovered that she is of nigerian descent, it's likely to get a little bit more competitive this year. i said, are you ready . let's do said, are you ready. let's do this. thank you so , paul, i
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this. thank you so, paul, i really do feel even as a critic of prince harry, that the invictus games is his big achievement in life. >> it's what all of his focus should really be on. do you think the duke has salvaged his damaged reputation at all over the past couple of days ? the past couple of days? >> i think the invictus games is a wonderful vehicle for harry to showcase our wounded servicemen and servicewomen . he's doing an and servicewomen. he's doing an excellent job there. of course he is. and praise to him. but, you know , don't forget what's you know, don't forget what's happened. you know, don't forget what's happened . he's he's thrown his happened. he's he's thrown his family under the bus. he's he's washed dirty linen, dirty laundry in public. he's turned his back on this country, on the people of this country. and he deeply upset his grandmother , deeply upset his grandmother, our queen, on her deathbed . and our queen, on her deathbed. and recent history is very difficult to forgive. i think it will take a very long time before harry is embraced again here in this country . but it's interesting,
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country. but it's interesting, isn't it, that meghan wasn't standing by his side on this occasion. apparently she's going to be there later on because they're keeping their brands very separate. this is a this is a power couple in hollywood and who are making millions whilst people in this country are suffering a cost of living crisis. now, think about it. and they continue to whinge and whine about their lot. i can't. i just can't. i just can't deal with it. dan, i can't. i just can't. i just can't deal with it. dan, i can't . and if with it. dan, i can't. and if i was a schoolteacher , i'd give was a schoolteacher, i'd give him six out of ten for trying. but he must try harder. >> i think a lot of people share your view. paul burrell , thank your view. paul burrell, thank your view. paul burrell, thank you so paul. we'll speak you so much, paul. we'll speak very but it's time now to very soon. but it's time now to reveal tonight's greatest britain union. has my britain and union. jack has my superstar panel returned . carole superstar panel returned. carole malone, who is your greatest britain nominee ? britain nominee? >> a fantastic a—lister >> mine is a fantastic a—lister . stewart, admitted on . stewart, who admitted on camilla tominey show this weekend that he's suffering from vascular dementia . he returned vascular dementia. he returned to gb news sorry, he retired
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from gb news earlier this year after five decades on air. he is the most talented and charming of men i've known alastair for decades. of men i've known alastair for decades . i of men i've known alastair for decades. i used of men i've known alastair for decades . i used to. of men i've known alastair for decades. i used to. i used to dnnk decades. i used to. i used to drink with him in the itv bar years ago and we've seen each other down the years. you know, there's literally an army of us in journalism who are sending him our love. and thanks for sharing how news is done . sharing how news is done. >> beautifully put. this was the moment when camilla delivered that news to him . that news to him. >> we are going to be naming our main westminster studio , the main westminster studio, the alastair stewart. westminster studio in your honour. and we wanted to tell you that this morning did you also want to reduce me to tears because you have just done so well, you reduced all of us to tears. >> alastair there. benjamin butterworth, your nominee? >> well, i must confess mine would be alastair stewart. but carol's with it. so carol's already gone with it. so instead, i'm going to annoy the viewers mine is rory viewers because mine is rory stewart, who has written a new book exposing the farce a book exposing the farce of a government that he experienced while he was there and
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while he was in there and talking about why ministers should do job several should do the job for several years. so they actually get something think rory something done. i think rory stewart should be prime minister, not sunak minister, not rishi sunak beunda minister, not rishi sunak belinda lucy , your nominee. belinda de lucy, your nominee. >> suggest that. >> don't even suggest that. >> don't even suggest that. >> my nominee is lord >> yes, my nominee is lord mervyn, former governor of the bank of england. he was governor for about ten for calling for about ten years for calling out rishi sunak's decision to add climate change. considering opfions add climate change. considering options into the bank of england mandate. he said it makes absolutely no sense. and what on earth has the bank of england got to do with with climate change? and what i really respect is people with power and platform out some the platform calling out some of the absolute climate change nonsense that's our that's that's hampering our institutions like the bank of england . england. >> well, look, of course , our >> well, look, of course, our greatest britain, greatest britain. i think for everyone here at gb news is the great alastair stewart. alastair, we love you . you were here on this love you. you were here on this very , very complicated and very, very complicated and special journey from the start . special journey from the start. and actually, i think without
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the gravitas and the weight and journalism that alastair brought to gb news from day one, we wouldn't be here today. so it's so special that the main westminster studio for gb news is going to be named in his honoun is going to be named in his honour. carole malone, your uni in jackass nominee . in jackass nominee. >> okay, mine is sir keir starmer, who made a staggering admission this week that he preferred davos to westminster because he thought parliament is nothing but a tribal shouting place. a tribal shouting place which which a lot of his mps and himself has added to. so we have a little look at this. yeah, let's have a look. you have to choose now between davos or westminster. >> davos . why? >> davos. why? >> davos. why? >> because westminster is too constrained . constrained. >> benjamin butterworth, your nominee. i'm not finished. hello. i'm just i'm actually not finished. >> we don't have much time, carol. >> oh, come on, then. >> crack on. >> crack on. >> that was actually filmed months ago, but it went viral over weekend, it?
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over the weekend, didn't it? >> maitlis that viral today. >> yes. >> yes. >> my news. benjamin yeah. and it's not news. it was months ago. >> oh, get on with it. >> oh, get on with it. >> my union jackass is the work experience. prime minister liz truss dodi. >> what are you trying to annoy me before you go on holiday? >> because he couldn't nominate why? to mess it all up. >> this woman who couldn't convince her own toy cabinet members that she could run the country writing a book about country is writing a book about how to run the world. did you choose this before you listened to my brilliant digest tonight explaining destroyed explaining how she was destroyed by has taken by the blob, which has taken over country. over the country. >> lucy , your nominee. >> i'm excited about this one >> i'm so excited about this one because deserves a stephen because he deserves a stephen fry my jackass. the fry is my jackass. over the weekend said brexit is weekend he said brexit is a catastrophe and everyone knows it to their bones . it to their bones. >> this was the british bashing corporation. >> let's take a look. >> let's take a look. >> we must mention brexit. >> we must mention brexit. >> the labour party is afraid to mention it. it was a catastrophe and everybody knows it deep in their bones. >> everybody >> well, not everybody would agree >> well, not everybody would anghey >> well, not everybody would agr they it. >> well, not everybody would anghey it. of course they do. >> yeah . literally. >> yeah. literally. >> yeah. literally. >> the perfect example of the
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arrogance and also dismissing millions of votes. he's the typical eu luvvie who can't seems to not be able to like the british people for voting choices. >> tough choices. >> tough choices. >> but despite the objections of benjamin butterworth, i'm going to go with carole malone for the double because it's slippery starmer for choosing davos over westminster. i never got the chance to say why . chance to say why. >> thank you so much. carole malone. benjamin butterworth and beunda malone. benjamin butterworth and belinda lucy. i'm back tomorrow from 9 next up though, as from 9 pm. next up though, as headliners. good night. >> the temperature's rising . >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proudly sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello very good evening to you. band of rain is going to continue to push southwards through the next 24 hours with some showers both to the north and south of this. whilst in the south—east, we're holding on to that humid air because here we are still ahead of these fronts which have something a little bit cooler, more bit cooler, a bit more comfortable following in behind.
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also in the fronts, there'll be a of rain. so a cloudy, a fair bit of rain. so a cloudy, wet end to the day across many northern parts of england into wales too, wales and southwest england too, in south—east, we're holding in the south—east, we're holding on to those conditions and on to those humid conditions and we could see a few showers developing also showers in developing. also some showers in the of scotland and the far north of scotland and northern cooler here northern ireland. cooler here whilst in the south—east with that humidity and that high humidity and temperatures dropping temperatures not dropping a huge amount . but temperatures not dropping a huge amount. but as look through amount. but as we look through tuesday, , wet start tuesday, a damp, wet start across many parts of england and wales. the south—east, wales. though in the south—east, a of brightened. a good deal of brightened. is that with high humidity, that with the high humidity, i am a few showers to am expecting a few showers to kick off here and could be kick off here and they could be heavy, even thundery heavy, perhaps even thundery whilst picture across heavy, perhaps even thundery whi bulk picture across heavy, perhaps even thundery whi bulk of picture across heavy, perhaps even thundery whi bulk of scotland ure across heavy, perhaps even thundery whi bulk of scotland andacross the bulk of scotland and northern are scattering northern ireland are scattering of a little of of showers and a little bit of cloud too a bit cooler cloud at times too a bit cooler than been some than it has been through some recent days . getting to highs of recent days. getting to highs of around 24, perhaps 25 celsius in the south—east wednesday morning may get off to bit of a chilly may get off to a bit of a chilly start. rule out touch start. couldn't rule out a touch of parts of of frost across some parts of scotland, otherwise scotland, but otherwise a generally for most . but generally fine day for most. but until some wet and windy weather pushesin until some wet and windy weather pushes in from the northwest as
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we go into the afternoon, that rain is then going to sweep further southwards later in the week and temperatures going week and temperatures are going to closer to average for week and temperatures are going to time closer to average for week and temperatures are going to time of closer to average for week and temperatures are going to time of yearer to average for week and temperatures are going to time of year than average for week and temperatures are going to time of year than they ge for week and temperatures are going to time of year than they were' the time of year than they were last week . last week. >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm gb news. >> good evening . i'm tatiana >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez. this is the latest from the newsroom. the prime minister has told the house of commons the sanctity of westminster must be protected following chinese spy be protected following chinese spy allegations . it comes after spy allegations. it comes after an unnamed parliamentary researcher who was arrested in march issued a statement saying he's completely innocent. rishi sunak, who's been facing calls to designate china as a national security threat, told mps such actions will not be tolerated. >> the whole house is rightly appalled about reports of espionage in this building. the sanctity of this place must be protected and the right of members to speak their minds without fear or sanction must be maintained. we will defend our democracy and our security. so i was emphatic with premier li that actions which seek to undermine british democracy are completely unacceptable and will never be tolerated . never be tolerated. >> while labour leader sir keir starmer has called on the prime
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