tv GBN Tonight GB News October 24, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST
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british workplace gone full woke? plus as they stand disunited over israel, are the cracks beginning to show in keir starmers labour party ? in my big starmers labour party? in my big opinion, find out why a civil war is brewing among the labour benches and after parents were kept in the dark about what's being taught in schools, is it time to keep sex out of education? i'll be asking the former education minister, andrea jenks wins. plus her verdict on the one year anniversary of rishi sunak in number 10. also on the way as arsenal apologise for having an all white female squad is forced to divert city the death of meritocracy in sport. gb news star nana akua gives her unfiltered reaction shortly and here's a troubling story with more than 450,000 children in the uk classified as severely obese, is it ever okay to put your child on a diet? strictly come dancing star christine rihanoff takes on george keywood
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and emma wolf in the clash . as and emma wolf in the clash. as always, you'll get a first look at tomorrow's front pages and tom bower, top journalist , gives tom bower, top journalist, gives the police a dressing down after they turned a blind eye to calls for terror acts on britain's streets. so a big two hours to come with my big opinion next. you won't want to miss it. find out why a labour government means five years of bitter infighting . with starmer on the infighting. with starmer on the ank. infighting. with starmer on the brink. that's infighting. with starmer on the brink . that's straight after the brink. that's straight after the news with polly middlehurst . news with polly middlehurst. >> mark. thank you and good evening. well, the top story tonight is that downing street has confirmed 12 british citizens were killed during the hamas terror attack in israel. another five are still missing and that comes after an 85 year old israeli hostage released by hamas last night described the hell of being taken into a spider web of tunnels under gaza . yakov also said she was
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treated well and seen by a doctor during her ordeal . hamas doctor during her ordeal. hamas says she was returned along with another israeli woman, nurit coopen another israeli woman, nurit cooper, on humanitarian grounds. their husbands, though , are their husbands, though, are still being held hostage . still being held hostage. yakov's daughter, sharon, who's a british citizen, translated her mother's description of the abduction in form of people came through the fence. >> the defence costs 2.5 billion shekels and it didn't help even a little bit . my shekels and it didn't help even a little bit. my mum is saying that she was taken on the back of a motorbike when she first arrived. they told them that they are muslims and they're not going to hurt them and that they share. they ate the same food that their the hamas was eating . that their the hamas was eating. >> and today the israeli security agency released footage of interviews with captured hamas fighters . where one says hamas fighters. where one says he was promised huge rewards for
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capturing hostages as in gaza. >> whoever brings the kidnapped gets a bonus. how much is the bonus they give an apartment and $10,000 for each person captured ? >> yes. who told you this? that's how it works in al—qassam brigade . the commander told you this? >> yes . the company commander. >> yes. the company commander. for each captured, you get an apartment? >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> because they wanted as many kidnapped as possible. the goal of our infiltrate mission for them was to capture and kidnap as many as we could in uk news, the court of appeal has been told the decision to revoke the so—called isis bride, shamima bayegan, of her british citizenship was unlawful. >> the 24 year old was a teenager when she travelled to syria in 2015 and was later deemed a risk to national security. her lawyers say the home office failed to consider legal duties owed to ms begum as a potential victim of trafficking or as a result of state failures. in her case. the
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hearing, which started today, concludes on thursday . and concludes on thursday. and lastly, the met office is warning tonight of more bad weather on the way. a yellow weather on the way. a yellow weather warning is in place. an alert for rain across the south—east of england . it's in south—east of england. it's in force from this evening until 10:00 tomorrow morning. and we already know that two women who died in a crash as a result of the storm have been named by police as cheryl woods and sarah smith from caerphilly in wales . smith from caerphilly in wales. the mother and daughter were involved in a five vehicle collision m4 last friday. collision on the m4 last friday. and a man who died after his car was swept away in floodwater near has also been near aberdeen has also been named pelly . at least named as peter pelly. at least seven people are now known to have lost their lives because of storm babet out on tv online dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel . channel. >> if keir starmer makes it into
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number 10 next year, he may be a victim of the old adage be careful what you wish for. if you think the tories are divided compared to labour in government , they'll look like the von trapp family. in the sound of music. i can see michael gove in a dress made of curtains. there are cracks and fault lines across the entire party of labour's policy agenda , most labour's policy agenda, most recently with starmer's admirable stand on israel defending its right to self defence and condemning hamas . defence and condemning hamas. but soon after we've seen labour mps dilute his message with protests from the green benches about israeli war crimes. here's labour mp zarah sultana , neatly labour mp zarah sultana, neatly illustrating my point yesterday in the chamber palestinians must die before the prime minister condemns israel for violating international law and calls for an immediate ceasefire so much for party unity. as tom harris points out in today's telegraph, many labour mps are afraid to back israel as the only democracy in the middle east and
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the victims of a barbaric attack because they have so many muslim constituents votes now these labour mps talk of ceasefire , labour mps talk of ceasefire, except that's effectively asking israel to be a sitting duck to more terror . a ceasefire is more terror. a ceasefire is snake oil language. it's doublespeak for israel. suck it up . if you thought october the up. if you thought october the 7th was bad, you don't think hamas are planning worse ? they hamas are planning worse? they have only one objective a genocide . and in the face of genocide. and in the face of this rebadged , you'll continue this rebadged, you'll continue to see starmer and his party get themselves into a right old pickle over this issue . a worry pickle over this issue. a worry if starmer gets into number 10, especially for the jewish community in this country. but it goes beyond foreign policy . it goes beyond foreign policy. labour's woke agenda will also split the party if they make it to power for having seen what happened to nicola sturgeon in scotland. starmer wants limit scotland. starmer wants to limit people's self id people's ability to self id their agenda. that means deciding from one day to the
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next that you're now a woman rather than a bloke. a sensible move from starmer but causing unrest among progressive backbenchers who think there are 100 genders. labour is torn on net zero, with starmer tearing up oil and gas licences and ditching petrol and diesel cars by 2030, whilst labour's big union backers at the gmb are absolutely furious . why? because absolutely furious. why? because they're worried about industrial jobs. they're worried about industrial jobs . labour are split on jobs. labour are split on brexit, with many in his flock dreaming of single market access. a customs union or even access. a customs union or even a return to the bloc whilst northern labour voters will be spitting out their cup of yorkshire tea at the very thought of it, as will labour mps representing them . keir mps representing them. keir starmer wants to stop the boats , starmer wants to stop the boats, as do a majority of the british people , but not a majority of people, but not a majority of the labour party, who, if we're honest, don't really believe in borders at all. would labour backbenchers vote for a rwanda style plan under a starmer premiership and elvis presley
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comeback is more likely ? comeback is more likely? meanwhile angela rayner has boasted that she'll boost union power, enabling mick lynch and his pals to further hold the country to ransom . it all points country to ransom. it all points towards a picture of a governing party that will be ungovernable. everyone is expecting a landslide. labour victory, but as the tories have proved, even an 80 seat majority can still get you in trouble. when people rebel. and what if, as is more likely in my view, labour achieve a slim victory next year and win a majority that's tighter than mick jagger's leather trousers. starmer will only be able to deliver his agenda with the support of hard left backbenchers like richard burgon and john mcdonnell, who will have him by the balls. that's if he's got any . labour that's if he's got any. labour is more divided than a pizza express cuatro st giles' ony i predict that starmer will be presiding not over the country , presiding not over the country, but over a civil war in his own
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party. i anticipate that five years of infighting , power years of infighting, power struggles and utter chaos in which starmer could fall only to be replaced by the more popular angela rayner . at which point angela rayner. at which point could the last person to leave britain please switch the lights out now what's your reaction? mark at . out now what's your reaction? mark at. gbnews.com. i'll get the thoughts now of my panel this evening. former cabinet minister and gb news star esther mcvey , banker visiting mcvey, banker and visiting professor derek lord and author and journalist rebecca reid. rebecca what's your thoughts on this labour split vote on israel, split on everything else ? >>i ? >> i think it's perfectly natural that a party that represent a large group of people who have different and diverse views would contain people who different people who have different and diverse a diverse views. it would be a very thing very worrying thing if a political was only able political party was only able to have if they all had have mps if they all had unilateral beliefs and to be honest, this a little honest, i think this is a little bit predict of it. may sure, absolutely. any of this could come but keir starmer come true, but also keir starmer could transition all could transition and ask us all to kirsty. anything could transition and ask us all to happenirsty. anything could transition and ask us all to happen ,sty. anything could transition and ask us all to happen , butanything could transition and ask us all to happen , butathinkg could transition and ask us all to happen , butathink to sit could happen, but i think to sit
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here, think he'd a lovely ki rsty. >> i kirsty. >> i think he's got the eyes for it . it. >> i 5- it. >> i the more important >> i think the more important thing unlikely thing here is that it's unlikely that three prime that we would have three prime ministers within months and that we would have three prime mvoteers within months and that we would have three prime mvote of within months and that we would have three prime mvote of no :hin months and that we would have three prime mvote of no and months and that we would have three prime mvote of no and 25 months and that we would have three prime mvote of no and 25 letterss and that we would have three prime mvote of no and 25 letters of|nd a vote of no and 25 letters of no year into no confidence one year into someone's which is someone's premiership, which is what the last year what we've had in the last year of rishi sunak, liz truss and bofis of rishi sunak, liz truss and boris johnson. i think for boris johnson. so i think for anybody the tory be anybody in the tory party to be looking at the labour party who anybody in the tory party to be looking had1e labour party who anybody in the tory party to be looking had a labour party who anybody in the tory party to be looking had a chance party who anybody in the tory party to be looking had a chance pascrewio anybody in the tory party to be looking had a chance pascrew it haven't had a chance to screw it up well, they're up yet and say, well, they're going is going to have infighting is a little bit hypocritical. >> it would be nice to have a labour that had view labour party that had the view that mps took the view that that all mps took the view that hamas terrorists that hamas were terrorists and that israel defend israel has a right to defend itself. israel has a right to defend itseli. that israel has a right to defend itse i i. that the israel has a right to defend itseli. that the hamas >> i think that the hamas terrorists 100. but terrorists absolutely 100. but i think difficulty is that think the difficulty is that between when keir starmer first made proclamation made his sort of proclamation about now the collective about it to now the collective punishment the geneva punishment aspect of the geneva convention , it complicates it. convention, it complicates it. and i, i believe that israel has a right to exist. 100. i believe that hamas terrorists. but i think like a lot of people, i have felt uncomfortable with how israel has behaved in terms of collective so collective punishment. so therefore can how mps are therefore, i can see how mps are pushing back against keir starmer's original speech.
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>> derek lord well in fact where i started and i thought that actually it would come to this because what was really troubling to me about the response from the west and by the west, i mean, mean the united states of america, europe and united kingdom was that and the united kingdom was that everybody prioritised , used the everybody prioritised, used the language that israel was entitled to make a response . entitled to make a response. >> nobody said a proportionate response and a response that was in line with international law. they're now all trying to say that because they realise that we have to get people around the table to agree a settlement , it table to agree a settlement, it will be exactly the same as partition , an indian partition partition, an indian partition in 1947. we're there are all over again. but that's only going to happen if hamas are wiped out . going to happen if hamas are wiped out. but going to happen if hamas are wiped out . but listen, but the wiped out. but listen, but the one thing that one thing that's very clear to me is that for centuries, we've sent men and women to parliament to address our concerns and deal with our grievances. and labour mps are
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raising legitimate concerns within the last two weeks, which is rail has bombed gaza more many more times than the united states of america. bomb bombed afghanistan in a year. is that not cause for concern ? not cause for concern? >> indeed, although we've looked into that figure and we cannot substantiate those numbers. but of course, you're entitled to share that view. the wider issue is that i think that labour and israel is the tip of the iceberg . i think they're split on a range issues and i predict range of issues and i predict five years civil war. if five years of civil war. if starmer in. starmer gets in. >> i think this was probably starmer's biggest test as leader of the labour party and he failed. he shown he's not the leader of the labour party . the leader of the labour party. the labour party are leading him. so far he's never really come under the spotlight, so when he's spun on a sixpence, whether it was student tuition fees, whether it was renationalisation , he's was renationalisation, he's managed to get away from it . managed to get away from it. nobody's really scrutinised that he's changed his mind on every
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opinion this showing opinion. this is now showing that he's weak, weak, weak and people know it. so you'll have the house of lords, the labour members there coming to him and saying, do you know what we want to remain? and he'll on to remain? and he'll buckle on that. brexit decision that. so the brexit decision that. so the brexit decision that he said, i'll follow that, no he won't. he'll buckle. you mentioned gmb coming fonnard over he'll buckle mentioned gmb coming fonnard owthat he'll buckle mentioned gmb coming fonnard owthat trans he'll buckle mentioned gmb coming fonnard owthat trans rights. 5'll buckle mentioned gmb coming fonnard owthat trans rights. he'llickle on that trans rights. he'll buckle that. those buckle on that. and those militant trade unions unison and unite have already said we're going to show him some power. we're going to show him what we're going to do. and he will buckle and they know buckle and they will know he's a soft touch. are you are soft touch. you are you are quite right, especially with the especially with slim especially with the slim majority. or small, especially with the slim majorigot or small, especially with the slim majorigot a or small, especially with the slim majorigot a big or small, especially with the slim majorigot a big majorityill, especially with the slim majorigot a big majority and we've got a big majority and we've got a big majority and we've shown that doesn't always help either. >> so if he's got majority >> but so if he's got a majority in balls, we can't in your crystal balls, we can't sit here what somebody sit here saying what somebody will no sit here saying what somebody wilino , but. >> no, but. >> okay. >> okay. >> we actually already >> but we actually we already know labour, know that know that labour, we know that labour net we labour is split on net zero. we know they're split on the economy and we know they're split woke stuff and split on the woke stuff and they're israel. they're they're split on israel. they're split on everything. years
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they're split on israel. they're sp civil| everything. years they're split on israel. they're sp civil war, rything. years they're split on israel. they're sp civil war, they|g. years they're split on israel. they're sp civil war, they should years they're split on israel. they're sp civil war, they should drink of civil war, they should drink it up. >> but the point, the point i rebecca make a point. you should be split on things the way the tory also split on tory party are also split on things like net zero. you should keep division. you should be representing individual. representing your individual. rebecca let rebecca i'm not looking at let rebecca i'm not looking at let rebecca her point. rebecca finish her point. >> you're >> okay. well, derek, you're going to in. going to come in. >> question to esther >> well, my question to esther is i think that you are too is that i think that you are too flat ring of keir starmer because i don't think he is . because i don't think he is. >> nobody's ever said that he is not as nice as he looks . not as nice as he looks. >> so, for example, your charge is that he's weak now . it cannot is that he's weak now. it cannot really have been a weak man that was prepared to expel jeremy corbyn from the labour party. i thought that showed enormous power. >> it was an easy win . >> it was an easy win. >> it was an easy win. >> hang on, there's two sides evicting that crank was an easy win. >> not easy. all of those momentum people who had given their student who their whole student years who were the next were the feeder for the next generation. no, he's just so far overnight prove two things. >> wants the >> one, he desperately wants the job, but two, he is like a
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lawyer. give him a briefing. he'll say whatever you want to say. and i don't a crystal say. and i don't need a crystal ball to see what he's going to do. i have seen that he's spun his opinion so many things. his opinion on so many things. for many people. it will be for so many people. it will be so you, rebecca, i take on point. >> you're very sincere in your point. i take on what point. i take it on board what you said about debate within parties. completely. every party worth is a broad worth its salt is a broad church. broad church. gb news is a broad church, with some very church. gb news is a broad churpastors. with some very church. gb news is a broad churpastors. butlilith some very church. gb news is a broad churpastors. but the some very church. gb news is a broad churpastors. but the bottom ery church. gb news is a broad churpastors. but the bottom line odd pastors. but the bottom line is, are you comfortable with a labour government in power that is divided on these issues that doesn't have a single voice on net zero? >> absolutely. net zero? >> and ilutely. net zero? >> and)l|also you think >> and i also think you think that think that ends well, that you think that ends well, do you? >> things. firstly >> well, two things. firstly you'd incredibly if >> well, two things. firstly you'are incredibly if >> well, two things. firstly you'are teed'edibly if >> well, two things. firstly you'are teed upbly if >> well, two things. firstly you'are teed up to if >> well, two things. firstly you'are teed up to win if >> well, two things. firstly you'are teed up to win an if you are teed up to win an election by being fairly quiet about you'd be about what you think, you'd be very start nailing very stupid to start nailing your mast. your colours to the mast. he's going people going to win because people don't the tories. don't want the tories. >> it shows to all has to >> it shows to me all he has to do. he argue his finish. do. he can't argue his finish. >> okay. >> okay. >> he can't argue his point. he went with a view and he's went out with a view and he's done a full 360 degrees. what i will tell tony blair will tell you is tony blair never was the best never did that. he was the best leader of the labour party. he
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had a view and he managed to create the narrative and win everybody around. i'm afraid. can ican everybody around. i'm afraid. can i can i is not can i also say to everybody in this studio, everybody at home watching and listening, they the next general election has not yet been lost by the conservatives >> don't write them off. >> don't write them off. >> i find it weird the way that people who do want to win are also willing. when i say when people don't even challenge me on if i were a tory, on it anymore. if i were a tory, the thing be doing is on it anymore. if i were a tory, theand thing be doing is on it anymore. if i were a tory, theand doing be doing is on it anymore. if i were a tory, theand do some be doing is on it anymore. if i were a tory, theand do some good oing is on it anymore. if i were a tory, theand do some good sparkly, try and do some good sparkly, magical pr to pretend it magical pr to pretend that it was this, this was possible. all this, this defeatism what's going to defeatism is what's going to lose them. >> listen, you rebecca, >> listen, do you back, rebecca, do labour do you think that the labour party and it's party is a broad church and it's okay they're debating okay that they're debating net zero energy policy , zero woke issues, energy policy, the economy, and much the economy, israel and much more? let me know your thoughts. mark gbnews.com. this show is all about opinions. i want to hear still after hear yours. still to come, after parents were kept in the dark about being taught in about what's being taught in schools, to keep sex schools, is it time to keep sex out education? i'll be asking out of education? i'll be asking the education minister, the former education minister, dame andrea jenkins . but next in dame andrea jenkins. but next in the clash, with more than
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450,000 children in the uk classified as severely obese, is it ever okay to put your child on a diet strictly come dancing star kristina rihanoff body positivity influencer george keywood and former super size versus super skinny presenter emma wolf. battle it out. you might want to bring popcorn though. that is a bit fattening
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>> labour's divisions on israel , >> labour's divisions on israel, i think, reflect wider divisions on the issues of economy. wokeist energy policy and much more . this from sharon, who more. this from sharon, who says, mark the conservative party will win the next election. never underestimate the power of the silent majority party, but also other views coming in, gordon says. mark, how can anyone vote for a man who believes a woman can have a penis? serious richard. if labour gets in the public purse, will burst. the country will sink into woke dystopia. anyone with a few bob will leave on a jet plane and we'll all sail back into the bosom of europe. with the great brexit reversed , with the great brexit reversed, all can't wait, says richard . i all can't wait, says richard. i think ironically, rod says a labour government, spain looks like a nice place to live at this time of year. keep like a nice place to live at this time of year . keep those this time of year. keep those emails coming. listen i'm sure that you could argue a keir starmer has the last laugh. he's aheadin starmer has the last laugh. he's ahead in the polls. the people are speaking very clearly that britain wants a change. what's your view? margaret gbnews.com now news star nana akua on now gb news star nana akua on arsenal club and an
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arsenal football club and an exploding race row shortly. but first, clash . now what to do first, the clash. now what to do with the issue of fat children? shocking new figures show that more than 450,000 kids in the uk now suffer with severe obesity. almost half a million kids severely obese and another 2 million are classed as clinically ovenneight. that means some 60% of the british population as a whole are ovenneight, despite the terrifying impact it has on the body. now, we all want the for best our children, but it's well known that being fat as a child stacks the odds in favour stacks the odds in your favour of becoming fat adults. with all of becoming fat adults. with all of the constraints and challenges attached . so is it challenges attached. so is it ever to okay put your child on a diet? let me know your thoughts at gb news on twitter and do vote in the poll. but to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome strictly come dancing star kristina rihanoff, actor and body positivity influencer. george keywood and the author and former supersize versus superskinny presenter emma wolf,
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let me start with you , emma. do let me start with you, emma. do you think we should be putting ovenneight kids on a diet? >> absolutely, yes. it feels very , very cruel, i know, to put very, very cruel, i know, to put children on a diet. food is nurture food is love. food is the most basic thing that we give our children . but it's give our children. but it's very, very cruel, far crueller to allow a child or to let a child or to bring up a child ovenneight , as you as you ovenneight, as you as you referred to there, mark, over three quarters of children who are ovenneight as children become ovenneight teenagers and then ovenneight adults. so you're basically condemning children to a lifetime of heart disease, stroke, diet , betis, disease, stroke, diet, betis, everything else that goes with being ovenneight. the mental health issues, the physical limitations, you know , limitations, you know, amputation linked to diabetes . amputation linked to diabetes. it's a terrible terror able legacy to give your children . legacy to give your children. even if a child is malnourished. we would we would treat that as
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a health emergency, wouldn't we? why on earth are we allowing children to grow up ovenneight? it's a terribly, terribly sad thing to see an ovenneight child when i was filming supersize versus super skinny, i interviewed a young man, a teenage boy, 13, 14 years old, and he told me summer is his worst time . and he told me summer is his worst time. he had manboobs. he couldn't swim with his friends because they laughed at him. he couldn't shower with his friends. he couldn't play sport. he was absolutely terrified of summer because he was ovenneight . he was sweaty. he couldn't run around like other children. and look at my three year old and all want to do is all they want to do is be outdoors and play and run and enjoy themselves and when a child ovenneight, that child is ovenneight, that is a health . health emergency. >> george keywood, great to have you on the show. body positive influencer. what do you think about the idea of putting kids on a diet ? on a diet? >> i think it's kind of not a great thing for their body image . you know, i feel like we've got to think about the mental
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health as well. mean , i don't health as well. i mean, i don't think diet is really necessary think a diet is really necessary . i think more down to what . i think it's more down to what the the child. the parent is feeding the child. surely the parents should just do you know, sort of on do this. you know, sort of on the sly, the secret , you the sly, on the secret, you know, make it such know, and don't make it such a big problem then it's big problem because then it's going affect their going to really affect their mental health and just their whole body image. they're going mental health and just their wifeelbody image. they're going mental health and just their wifeel ,de image. they're going mental health and just their wifeel , you mage. they're going mental health and just their wifeel , you know, they're going mental health and just their wifeel , you know, terrible going mental health and just their wifeel , you know, terrible inning to feel, you know, terrible in their self. they're to be their self. they're going to be thinking, do i to thinking, why? why do i have to do a diet? my strange, you know, like going to them like it's going to make them feel and feel like feel uncomfortable and feel like a be person in a parent should be the person in charge of what they eat unless they're know, in they're sort of, you know, in their or whatever. their late teens or whatever. they should be doing their they should be doing this their self. think the self. but i think it's the parents responsibility to correct george george, george, correct george, george, george, george, never heard of george, have you never heard of pester power ? pester power? >> i've got two kids. they want the pringles, they want the haagen—dazs. they want the mars bars . bars. >> i've got a three and a half year old, so know exactly what year old, so i know exactly what you're talking about. but we monitor what he eats. you know, my wife him eat so my wife won't let him eat so much chocolate. you have a little tiny bit as little little tiny bit as a little treat. we are very careful and
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we're cautious and we're treat. we are very careful and we'reyou cautious and we're treat. we are very careful and we'reyou know,ous and we're treat. we are very careful and we'reyou know, justind we're treat. we are very careful and we'reyou know, just we'rez're treat. we are very careful and we'reyou know, just we're just very, you know, just we're just looking after him and we're giving best and we giving him the best life and we want to be healthy. know want him to be healthy. i know i'm the slimmest guy i'm not exactly the slimmest guy around, my wife takes cares around, but my wife takes cares of and she's very good at of that. and she's very good at making sure that he eats healthy. it's it healthy. and i think it's it ultimately from the ultimately comes from the parent. from the parent. it comes from the parent. it comes from the parent. comes what parent. and it comes from what they and what what they feed them. and what what they're shops and they're buying at the shops and that could be down to their financial situation as well. i mean, impact on mean, this can be an impact on why they're buying bad options and they're buying bad and why they're buying bad choices to feed their children. and why they're buying bad choiknow, feed their children. and why they're buying bad choiknow, f(mean,ir children. and why they're buying bad choiknow, f(mean,ir chillbe1. you know, i mean, it can be many factors , but i genuinely believe factors, but i genuinely believe that from where the that it starts from where the parents are really what they're feeding their kids. >> kristina rihanoff, great to have you on the show. your body's a temple. you're a top athlete, dancer, athlete, a top dancer, and performer. after your performer. you look after your health. what you think about health. what do you think about the their the parents who let their kids get it child get ovenneight? is it child neglect? it child abuse ? neglect? is it child abuse? >> i agree there is a too great points. i just heard and i just want to say they both have obviously very valid points there. i have a child . she's
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there. i have a child. she's seven year old girl who is in ballroom dancing world. she's competing every single weekend and she's the dancer. and obviously, she already kind of looked at her body and compares her to others . so it's a very her to others. so it's a very big topic in our family. you know, about healthy foods , which know, about healthy foods, which would give you energy, energy for dancing, energy for being healthy, for being well, especially in winter when you have flus around and all other things. so we don't exactly talk about maybe diet because i think children don't have a concept of a diet and we don't want to maybe say exact that words maybe just say exact that words maybe just say exact that words maybe more like food preferences. this is what i talk with millie about the good food preference where she can have preference is where she can have a treat. she can have a little treat. she can have a little sweet tea because she performed well. a little performed well. it's a little bit of an encouragement. okay, you've done well. let's have a little celebrate . little ice cream to celebrate. but healthy choices. but it is about healthy choices. and i think but if the child already obese, we're talking about shocking figure. and it's absolutely breaks my heart to hear something like that. how
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many children are obese and ovenneight? it is definitely parents duty to explain and introduce your child that there is a healthier choices and better choices. i understand we're in very difficult economic situation and probably a lot of people struggling to actually make the choice to buy organic broccoli, which will be twice the price of the happy meal. yeah. and this is sad. you know, we unfortunately in that situation maybe for some parents it's actually a choice do i feed my all family with a happy meal or actually i buy one broccoli for the whole family too because i can't afford more. it it's a lot to say what we are living through right now. but i think it's about those choices as parents. we must make because we have to explain to the kids this is good foods that give you energy. not exactly bad foods. i don't want to use those words either, but it's about like versus, you know , nurturing versus, you know, nurturing foods versus just fun foods.
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maybe we just very rarely because they just a little bit of like a treat, you know, that's how we explain that to my daughter, emma wolf, you're shaking your head. >> you're not not happy that you're a in sheep's you're a wolf in sheep's clothing. >> well, first of all, christina, goddess . and christina, you're a goddess. and i want to say don't want i don't want to say don't want to disagree with you on anything. i've always thought you let's the truth. stop >> let's hear the truth. stop being polite. being so polite. >> secondly, mark, my body is a temple, too. and you forgot to say that. i just want to say closed its. this is a myth. this is a myth that mcdonald's happy meal is somehow cheaper than buying fruit and veg. that's absolute nonsense. bad food, cheap food, junk food is not always cheaper either. i definitely think the government should make healthy food cheapen should make healthy food cheaper. of course it should. the way to treat young children, the way to bring up healthy children is to treat them like little i my three little doggies. i treat my three year little doggy. year old like a little doggy. they need good food. they need lots and and of lots and lots and lots of physical activity miles and miles walking them miles and miles walking them around running around
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around the park, running around the , outdoor. the park, activity, outdoor. we used live in an used to. we live in an obesogenic society. children are indoors on ipads all day . indoors on ipads all day. >> your kid is very lucky and must be as fit as a butcher's dog. briefly george, if you can. would you like your parents to have put you on a diet when you were a kid? >> i don't think i would have liked them to put me on a diet because feel like that would because i feel like that would have probably affected me quite deeply okay. i feel deeply. okay. um, and i feel like but same time, like but at the same time, i wish that they would have maybe chose better choices me to chose better choices for me to eat, because , you eat, you know, because, you know, a plus size kid when know, i was a plus size kid when i so i know a i was younger. so i know for a fact that that when i was younger they would just go for the cheap, easy option. you know, you've three know, when you've got three kids, to make a kids, you just want to make a meal that means meal quick time. and that means just old kebab shop. just ring up the old kebab shop. yeah, get a kebab in quickly. it's it's quick, you it's easy and it's quick, you know, that's part know, i think that's that's part of problem that people of the problem is that people will for the easy and will just go for the easy and quick don't want quick option and they don't want to to spend to they don't want to spend their an hour making food. >> stuff . brilliant >> brilliant stuff. brilliant stuff. thank stuff. food for thought. thank you brilliant
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you so much to my brilliant guests. brilliant debate guests. what a brilliant debate it was. what's important it was. i think what's important is you've got a kid they is if you've got a kid and they have bit of weight, the have put on a bit of weight, the most that you most important thing is that you love who do agree love them. but who do you agree with? what think about with? what do you think about that? it ever right to put that? is it ever right to put your diet? sam says, your child on a diet? sam says, of it's okay. every child of course it's okay. every child should be on nutritious and should be on a nutritious and appropriate sized it's the appropriate sized diet. it's the responsibility to responsibility of parents to monitor weight. responsibility of parents to mon says weight. responsibility of parents to mon says it weight. responsibility of parents to mon says it can weight. responsibility of parents to mon says it can be weight. responsibility of parents to mon says it can be doneght. responsibility of parents to mon says it can be done gently gail says it can be done gently at the end of the day, the most important thing is for a child to be happy. jen says parents shouldn't their children shouldn't let their children become obese the first place. become obese in the first place. it form of child abuse. it is a form of child abuse. while is in, 86% while your verdict is in, 86% agreed is okay for kids agreed that it is okay for kids to go on a diet, 14% say it is not. coming up as arsenal apologised for having an all white female squad is forced diversity the death of meritocracy in sport ? whatever meritocracy in sport? whatever happened to best player plays gb news star nana akua tackles that one shortly, but next, after parents were kept in the dark about what's being taught in schools, is it time to keep sex out of education? i'll be asking
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dame andrea jenkins and the education secretary, gillian keegan has written to schools demanding that they share their sex education materials with parents in recent times, extreme gender ideology has been infiltrating lessons with our kids, being asked whether they are on planet non—binary as well as being taught about breast binders and a galaxy of genders. but following keegan's announcement, parents will be tipped off before their child receives any more bonkers lectures. so dame andrea, great to have you in the studio . let's to have you in the studio. let's have a look at this planet non—binary breast binders, by the way. that's a device that holds your breasts down so you don't properly go through puberty. in a galaxy puberty. as a woman in a galaxy of genders, is this appropriate for kids? oh, definitely not, mark. >> i mean, what i'm frustrated at, though, is that it was over at, though, is that it was over a year ago i was in the department as a skills minister and then the top civil servants were we're to were saying, we're going to make sure wrote to sure all schools get wrote to ensure that parents can see the material a year later. they're only just doing it. so that's
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what i'm finding frustrating. i mean, conservatives , i just mean, as conservatives, i just don't think we should be allowing this in our primary schools. children should be left to be children. i don't care what people do as adults, but let children be innocent. >> does it surprise you that this woke capture our public this woke capture of our public institute happened on the institute has happened on the watch a tory government? watch of a of a tory government? because for you've got because for example, you've got the about pregnant the nhs talking about pregnant people the word people and removing the word woman to the woman from references to the menopause . are you surprised menopause. are you surprised that this has happened the that this has happened on the tory think it's think it's >> i think it's i think it's been a long time coming. external influences . i remember external influences. i remember when i was first a candidate in 2013 and, you know, been lobbied with these mass campaigns, saying about having no gender on passports , which i disagreed passports, which i disagreed with. and so i think this lobby years ago, you were being lobbied about it. so this has been coming a while. i think. and i don't think it helps because civil servants predominantly are quite lefty, aren't we've aren't they? and i think we've had in over
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had so many ministers in over the years who weren't necessarily challenged just looking at the next step on the ladden looking at the next step on the ladder. right. and when i was in the department. >> so you think ministers have bottled it? they fold it a bit to the blob, is what you're suggesting? >> i think so. and also, >> i think so. and but also, when was in the department for when i was in the department for those short four months under bofis those short four months under boris and liz, a glorious four months, the way , i think we months, by the way, i think we should have a word with rishi. >> what was he thinking? >> what was he thinking? >> well, you know, it's. he got to his allies in, isn't to having his allies in, isn't he? yeah back the he? yeah so. but back to the department. they try and keep you busy purposely and they just fill you with information. but not the information that you're necessarily asking for. so. and look, we've got a schools minister in there who was in the department for years. even when the legislation first went through. so i think rishi needs to do a major reshuffle and get new people in there with fresh eyes because, look, the secretary of state and the schools minister was in there when this legislation went through . so i think we need
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through. so i think we need fresh eyes in there. >> yeah, i mean, i'm not sure everyone will accept your defence that the tories have been hoodwinked woke civil been hoodwinked by woke civil servants. you know, they'll argue it's a conservative government. 13 years government. it's been 13 years and is more woke and our country is more woke than ever and there is no evidence, course, that civil evidence, of course, that civil servants are necessarily left leaning. entitled to leaning. but you're entitled to your leaning. but you're entitled to youabsolutely. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> let's talk some of >> let's talk about some of these books that children are being shown at school about sex and sexuality and gender and sexual positions and stuff. it's awful. i wouldn't fully comprehend if teachers are trying to keep parents out of the picture. does this border on grooming? >> i think it does. i think it's appalling, to be honest. mark and i mean, i've got constituents who are keeping their children out of school and homeschooling now because they don't want the great personal expense in terms of time and resources. exactly. and it's just so wrong . i just think as just so wrong. i just think as adults, what people want to be i've got no problem with be happy. life is short. but children are children. don't
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confuse them. let them be children. >> indeed, i mean, that question about grooming is more just the issue that why are parents being frozen out? what is because many would say that's nonsense . would say that's nonsense. there's no grooming involved. it's kids are being it's just that kids are being taught about what very taught about what is a very changing society . you changing modern society. you know, educators would just want to look, identified to say, look, people identified by different genders, different sexualities . and it's important sexualities. and it's important that when kids leave school , that when kids leave school, they that's what they understand that that's what schools are for. what's schools are for. so what's wrong? primary school? schools are for. so what's wrong? primary school ? well, you >> why primary school? well, you know, why primary school know, it's why primary school children i've got six year children i've got a six year old. got you've got 14 old. you've got you've got 14 and 18 now. >> and mean , i'll be honest, >> and i mean, i'll be honest, they're it's late. they're ruined. it's too late. yeah, issue is that, you yeah, but the issue is that, you know, perhaps they would argue that even a six year old should know that a man can in love know that a man can fall in love with man that a woman with a man or that a woman identifies as a bloke. >> i mean, ijust identifies as a bloke. >> i mean, i just think, why confuse mean, my confuse things? i mean, my little clifford, you know, he loves dogs . he used to want to loves dogs. he used to want to be a puppy when we got a puppy. so children change, don't they? and they . they just get excited and they. they just get excited about their environment . let
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about their environment. let them i mean, if them be children. i mean, if it's they it's primary when they go to secondary it's secondary school, it's different, secondary school, it's differe what would you have no sex >> so what would you have no sex ed? >> not primary school, >> not in primary school, definitely not. >> then and then >> all right. and then and then what or 15 olds? what about 14 or 15 year olds? >> think that's >> i think. i think that's different. yeah. yeah. oh, definitely. prepare definitely. i've got to prepare them world but them for the world and but again, think, know, if again, i think, you know, if people to gender, people want to change gender, that's that's up to them. but as an adult and breast binders and all this stuff you know young infant children and primary school children should not know about. >> you know the word grooming is a very loaded word. and i certainly would imply that teachers are actually sort of indulged some kind of. indulged in some kind of. >> let's not forget. >> but let's not forget. >> but let's not forget. >> you know, what is your >> but, you know, what is your word is it brainwashing, grooming, social engineering? it's happening. >> think that that >> i really think that that sorry, teachers need to remember that actually they're the servants of the people and that's the parents. and this should be transparency and as a parent, i don't think believe in you know, i think a parent should be able to parent and a
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parent should choose. really? when's the right time for emotionally for them to learn about other things like this? >> sex. >> now we've dealt with sex. there's other very there's this other very debateable and contested ideology, which is called critical race theory. now, racism is we can both agree the most evil stain on humanity. yes. and a scourge and an ongoing problem. but critical race theory says that you are racist based upon your skin colour . so if racist based upon your skin colour. so if you're if you're white, you have unconscious bias, white privilege. bias, you have white privilege. even if you live in a trailer park and have no money, it's still white privilege. and it's the martin luther the opposite of martin luther king's aspirations for a colour—blind society. this critical race theory is also seeping into schools , isn't it? seeping into schools, isn't it? yes, absolutely . yes, absolutely. >> i mean, i know even when i go into my local schools, some of the books they have there and the books they have there and the greta books as well, and it's i think, really , you know , it's i think, really, you know, people's race, gender, it shouldn't come into it. people are people . and i think really are people. and i think really it's about children being taught
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that to be a kind of human being. i think that's that's the most important thing. i absolutely a message we can unite behind . unite behind. >> listen, it's a year anniversary that rishi sunak is in number 10. what's your verdict? in number 10. what's your verdict ? what's in number 10. what's your verdict? what's your appraisal? does he deserve another five? >> well , look, i've made no >> well, look, i've made no secret fact i didn't want secret of the fact i didn't want him 10. and what him in number 10. and what happened boris and liz , i happened to boris and liz, i think was absolutely awful. and i day believe that i still to this day believe that l, i still to this day believe that i, after these disastrous by elections. but let's look at the by elections, though. if you look at mid beds labour vote went down. so turnout was shocking. yes. but our vote just the stayed at home. and so i actually messaged rishi the next day and i was i was quite message him does he like email he likes a whatsapp i did whatsapp does he like a twitter dm i haven't done twitter. dm no. so does the prime minister reply your whatsapp this one reply to your whatsapp this one not, he has the previous not, but he has the previous two. that's good. yeah >> does he like an emoji? do you get face or a thumbs up
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? >>i ? >> i don't think. i don't think he's that kind of person to use the. but good. maybe he's that kind of person to use the.with but good. maybe he's that kind of person to use the.with met good. maybe he's that kind of person to use the.with me but good. maybe he's that kind of person to use the.with me but butod. maybe he's that kind of person to use the.with me but but it's maybe not with me but but it's encouraging to encouraging that he's talking to backbenchers. and so i backbenchers. yeah. and so i mean message me when mean it didn't message me when i was sps so but it responded to my other two messages. but, but i was quite brutal about it, about the by—election results. and i said that, you know, quite frankly, prime minister, you're not called him rishi. you're not cutting through to the electorate and we need to be bold. you need a major reshuffle and we need to be conservative again , you know, when we're not again, you know, when we're not trusted on the economy and what i find really worrying, mark, is on the doorstep. people say that they don't feel labour anymore. and that's a dangerous place to be in. let's not forget that. keir starmer , he was the one who keir starmer, he was the one who twice backed corbyn to him twice backed corbyn to put him in number 10 and he was friends of hamas. where would the people of hamas. where would the people of israel be now if that had happened? so, you know, where's his scruples ? where's his his scruples? where's his convictions? he you know, he
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wants more eco taxes, but then the just stop oil have been supporting labour and donating to them. they wanted stricter lockdowns and so, you know, do we really want these in government? they don't even know what a woman is, for god's sake. >> now, labour would argue, of course, they're streets course, that they're streets ahead polls because ahead in the polls because britain and that britain wants a change and that the tories have made horlicks the tories have made a horlicks of country of the economy and the country last thought then briefly, if you can, what do you want to see from rishi in the next 12 months? got his months? i mean, he's got his list things. the list of five things. stop the boats, halve inflation. but what are what are the particular are the what are the particular levers that can pull that levers that he can pull that would catch your eye would really catch your eye and of voters that you of the voters that you represent? want a leader represent? well, i want a leader who's going to connect through to the people at and i want somebody who's to going be true conservative to be controlling immigration. >> yep. to actually be strong on crime . i >> yep. to actually be strong on crime. i mean, i believe in the 80s model where you drag people off the street when they're vandalising something and i just
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really think it's a strong on crime , good on the economy and crime, good on the economy and low tax conservatives. we've got to lower taxes. >> it's not too much to ask thrilled to have you in the studio and i look fonnard to our next encounter. best wishes to your son, by the way. i think he's sort of with you at work a little bit week. little bit this week. >> yes. yeah he came and voted with me. there you go. >> teach teach the >> teach him. teach him the tncks tricks of the trade. >> i'm trying. >> i'm trying. >> future prime minister, maybe. brilliant stuff. dame andrea jenkins. joining brilliant stuff. dame andrea jen coming joining brilliant stuff. dame andrea jen coming up, joining brilliant stuff. dame andrea jen coming up, as joining brilliant stuff. dame andrea jen coming up, as moreoining brilliant stuff. dame andrea jen coming up, as more shocking us. coming up, as more shocking revelations nigel revelations about the nigel farage come farage de—banking scandal come to a crime to to light, is it now a crime to be a small conservative and be a small c conservative and has workplace gone has the british workplace gone full woke? panel discuss that full woke? my panel discuss that later. arsenal later. but next, as arsenal apologised for having all apologised for having an all white female squad is forced diversity, the death of meritocracy in sport gb news star nana akua tackles the gunners
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journalists, tom bower. our officers now failing to police british values as they turn a blind eye to calls for terror on the streets. but it's time now for gb news star nana akua , an for gb news star nana akua, an arsenal football club have made headunes arsenal football club have made headlines for all the wrong reasons. after publicly headlines for all the wrong reasons. aftits)ublicly headlines for all the wrong reasons. aftits)ubli|women's team denouncing its own women's team for being filled with all white players in a self—defeating statement, the gunners admitted it had a diversity problem and insisted it was a priority to continue to drive, quote, greater diversity and inclusion fans slammed the club for the own goal, insisting arsenal should select the best players regardless of their skin colour. it comes a year after the london football side boasted about becoming the first premier league team to field a team of nine black players for the first time in 2002, arsenal called it a moment of footballing history . a moment of footballing history. so let's talk to the brilliant nana akua about this and nana. it's pretty simple, isn't it? you either go for the best players or you tick a box. you can't have both . well i just
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can't have both. well i just don't see why they have to have it. >> has to be that there has to be a black player on the squad. now, look, i get it that people want diversity, and i agree that it's nice to have a mix of people. >> but when it comes to a game and you're wanting to win, you pick the best players. >> it's really that straightfonnard and it's actually as simple as it actually not as simple as it sounds when you're talking about getting more black people to do certain things. i mean, it's not that easy getting more black people force . people in the police force. they're it's not they're not applying. it's not that easy getting more black people to be, say, head teachers. one of my friends, she is a deputy head teacher. and there's the job going. she there's the job going. and she pointed boss that pointed out to her boss that there women in there were no black women in this sort of role. and he goes, well, have applied? she well, have you applied? and she said, . and he went, well, said, no. and he went, well, then, mean, it's not always then, i mean, it's not always then, i mean, it's not always the they're not trying the case that they're not trying to black people, but to get black people, but sometimes might sometimes sometimes it might just be that the people around you don't particularly want to be but ultimately it's
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be in there. but ultimately it's a meritocracy. how good are you? you know, just don't just put somebody black in there because they're black. they actually need be good. need to be good. >> however, there is another side to it, isn't there? nana i wonder whether being able to see more players of colour on the pitch would young girls pitch would inspire young girls to the game from ethnic to join the game from ethnic communities ? communities? >> well, if that's what works for you. but it depends how good they are. i mean, they might be out there and they might be on their because they're black and then they're rubbish and then that's and then that's embarrassing. so and then it got token it looks like you've got a token black i think black person. you know, i think we need to sort of start moving away now from this notion that you one black away now from this notion that you or one black away now from this notion that you or one one black away now from this notion that you or one thisyne black away now from this notion that you or one this person:k away now from this notion that you or one this person or person or one this person or one, because doesn't doesn't one, because it doesn't doesn't necessarily up. mean, necessarily add up. i mean, there person wrote necessarily add up. i mean, theprofessionalyerson wrote necessarily add up. i mean, theprofessional team, wrote necessarily add up. i mean, theprofessional team, voryte no professional team, men or women should be able have women should be able to have a team that comprises of all white players in 2023. and this is a quote that i read from the daily mail that somebody down mail that somebody had put down with this i just with regard to this. i just think, no, we need to stop seeing colour. martin luther king spot on. the content of king was spot on. the content of their character, not the colour
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of skin. yes, course. of their skin. yes, of course. if you have , you know, what if you have, you know, what about the what about, for example, the running the races, you know, like the athletics . a you know, like the athletics. a lot of those players are all black holac do you have to have a person in there? of a white person in there? of course, i hear people a white person in there? of course, for hear people a white person in there? of course, for that. fear people a white person in there? of course, for that. i�*ar people a white person in there? of course, for that. i justeople a white person in there? of course, for that. i just think a white person in there? of course,for that. i just think i falling for that. i just think i think we've moved from there. think we've moved on from there. we start looking at what we need to start looking at what people deliver. people can deliver. >> british athletes to >> i want british athletes to win medals. i don't care what colour their skin is, but that's the thing about wokeism, isn't it against that it? it's against merit. and that doesn't end well if we get rid of merit altogether either. i mean, nana imagine if you had a choice about open heart surgery and you're to have a and you're going to have a surgeon was selected by surgeon that was selected by ability diversity , which ability or diversity, which would go for ? would you go for? >> i just want the best person for the job, you know what i mean? and that's what we all want. so i think we need to start looking for that now instead of just going colour instead of just going for colour because that works because that that never works out just out well. i mean, it's just like, like a snake that like, like a, like a snake that eats its own head the end. eats its own head in the end. >> listen, nana quickly before you you'll be back on
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you go, you'll be back on saturday are the saturday at three. you are the most well most most glamorous as well as most professional and talented journalist at gb i don't journalist at gb news. i don't know if you wear much bling, but alison hammond had to apologise for wearing a posh posh watch that viewers thought was worth an absolute fortune. did you see that story? what's your reaction to that? she said, i'm so sorry that i wore a nice watch. >> well, i did, and it was silly that she apologised and it wasn't actually that expensive. in end, like in the end, it was like a michael kors that her mum, in the end, it was like a mic late kors that her mum, in the end, it was like a mic late mother that her mum, in the end, it was like a mic late mother had:hat her mum, in the end, it was like a mic late mother had given er mum, in the end, it was like a miclate mother had given her,jm, her late mother had given her, which fact people which but the fact that people are looking and then are even looking and then critiquing of critiquing her because of the cost crisis. i think cost of living crisis. i think this is all sort of this is all linking with the fact that if you this sort of woke you look at this sort of woke ideology, a politics ideology, they it's a politics of envy. i mean, sir keir starmer most of his policies, a lot of them are about, you know, taking from rich students to pay for poorer students . it's for poorer students. it's getting rid of, you know, the charitable status of private schools and charging to schools and charging them vat to pay schools and charging them vat to pay poorer schools or state pay for poorer schools or state schools because it's in such a mess. the non—dom mess. and then the non—dom status, to be paying
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status, which seems to be paying for his manifesto, for everything in his manifesto, paying for everything in his manifesto, paying for other it's just like no , stop it. alison should be no, stop it. alison should be able to wear whatever what she wants and it shouldn't be that she should be questioned or people's targeting because people's targeting her because she's because it she's wearing it and because it appears expensive. but appears to be expensive. but it's sad and it's indicative of the people look on others the way people look on others now want successful because now who want successful because there dirge there seems to be this dirge where is this this race to where there is this this race to the bottom. if someone's successful, pull them down. let's get all their money. let's tax them to the hilt. let's it's i'm just i'm not liking the way this is going. you should be aspiring to people who are doing well and thinking wonderful. well, how i be that good and well, how can i be that good and achieve that gb news is own sparkler. >> the priceless nana akua back on saturday at six. thank you, nana. coming up, following hysteria about storm babet is eco campaigner dale. vince right that the climate change denial should be against the law? toby young and jenny barnett debate that. but next, there's more shocking revelations about the nigel farage de—banking scandal. come does it reflect
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come to light. does it reflect a wider british problem? that's next. >> hello again. it's alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather update. for some, it will be a little bit chilly overnight, but in the south we have some heavy rain arriving that's association with an that's in association with an area of low pressure. currently just to the southwest. but this is going skirt way is going to skirt its way eastwards along the english channel as we go through the night into wednesday. that will then significant amount then bring a significant amount of southern parts . of rain across southern parts. the heaviest rain likely to be in the south southeast. and here we disruption to we could see some disruption to travel, some localised travel, perhaps some localised flooding to elsewhere towards travel, perhaps some localised flooeast to elsewhere towards travel, perhaps some localised floo east of elsewhere towards travel, perhaps some localised floo east of scotland e towards travel, perhaps some localised flooeast of scotland , towards travel, perhaps some localised flooeast of scotland , anwards travel, perhaps some localised flooeast of scotland , a bit'ds travel, perhaps some localised flooeast of scotland , a bit wet the east of scotland, a bit wet and quite cloudy, but further west some clear west northwest, some clear skies, so turning a little bit chilly. a touch of frost possible across parts of possible across some parts of western scotland. a very wet start. then in the southeast on wednesday could cause wednesday morning could cause some during morning some problems during the morning rush the rain should rush hour. but the rain should clear away and then it's a drier picture many parts of picture across many parts of england, wales, into northern ireland as we go into the afternoon. but cloudy and wet across eastern parts of
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scotland. significant scotland. some significant rainfall possible here. temperatures near normal for the time of year. highs around 14, possibly 15 celsius as as we look towards thursday, it's to going be quite an unsettled, wet day. we have a band of rain that will north will push its way north eastwards we go through the eastwards as we go through the morning it. then some morning behind it. then some hefty quite likely. hefty showers are quite likely. nofice hefty showers are quite likely. notice south notice some towards the south coast and perhaps in the far east and it's going to east as well. and it's going to be blustery to the be quite blustery to the unsettled theme continues as we go friday into saturday.
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>> it's10:00. i'm mark dolan and this is gb news tonight. they called him a crackpot and celebrated de—banking him for thought following the thought crimes. so following the latest revelations latest shocking revelations about natwest about nigel farage, natwest banking scandal and the comments unearthed from a company, whatsapp group , is it now a whatsapp group, is it now a crime to be a small c conservative in britain and have our workplaces gone full woke?
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that's the big debate next with tonight's top panel this evening. esther mcvey day , derek evening. esther mcvey day, derek lord and rebecca reed . also lord and rebecca reed. also tonight, as shamima begum begs the court of appeal to return to the court of appeal to return to the uk, should we tell the runaway isis bride that she's no longer britain's problem ? begum longer britain's problem? begum on trial with my panel shortly. meanwhile, following hysteria about storm babet is eco campaigner dale vince right on the so—called climate change denial should be against the law . general secretary of the free speech union toby young takes on actress and broadcaster jenny barnett on that one. expect sparks to fly. what do you think? should it be against the law to deny climate change? and as they turn a blind eye to calls for terror on our streets, are the police neglecting british values and our democracy? one of britain's finest journalists, tom bower , finest journalists, tom bower, joins me live in the studio for his forensic analysis on that. plus what the nigel farage de—banking scandal means for ordinary brits. plus, tonight's
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greatest britain union, jack. and tomorrow's newspaper. front pages, lots to get through. but first, here are the news headunes first, here are the news headlines and polly middlehurst. >> good evening to you. well, our top story tonight is that downing street has confirmed 12 british citizens were killed dunng british citizens were killed during the hamas terror attack in israel. another five remain missing. it comes after an 85 year old israeli hostage released by hamas last night described the hell of being taken into a spider web of tunnels under gaza. yakov also said she was treated well and seen by a doctor during her ordeal. hamas says she was returned along with another israeli woman, nurit cooper, on humanitarian grounds. there husbands, though, are still being held hostage. yakov's daughter, sharon , who's a daughter, sharon, who's a british citizen, trans related her mother's description of the abduction .
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abduction. >> almost people came through the fence. >> the defence costs 2.5 billion shekels and it didn't help even a little bit . my shekels and it didn't help even a little bit. my mum is saying that she was taken on the back of a motorbike when she first arrived. they told them that they are muslims and they're not going to hurt them and that they share. they ate the same food that their . the hamas was eating i >> well, the israeli security agency released footage today of interviews with captured hamas fighters where one says they were promised huge rewards for capturing hostages in gaza. >> whoever brings the kidnapped gets a bonus . gets a bonus. >> how much is the bonus they give an apartment and $10,000 for each person captured? >> yes. >> yes. >> who told you this? >> who told you this? >> that's how it works in al—qassam brigade. the commander
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told you this? >> yes. >> yes. >> the company commander for each you get an each captured you get an apartment? yes. because they wanted as many kidnapped as possible . well, the goal of our possible. well, the goal of our infiltration for them was to capture and kidnap as many as we could . could. >> what a news here at home. the cap on bankers bonuses is to be scrapped. currently rules limit most bonuses . to 100% of the most bonuses. to 100% of the salary for employees of banks and building societies. financial regulators say the new move will make the uk a more attractive financial hub. but the decision is being criticised with the trade unions council box paul novak calling it obscene and an insult to working people . and the met office has people. and the met office has issued a yellow weather alert for rain across southern england and south wales and it's in force until 10:00 tomorrow morning. flooding is likely in areas are people are being told to prepare for potential disruption that comes as two women who died in a crash have
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been named by police as cheryl woods and sarah smith from caerphilly in wales. the mother and daughter were in a crash on the m4 last friday and a man who died after his car was swept away in flood water near aberdeen has also been named today as peter pelling. at least seven people across the uk are now thought to have lost their lives because of storm barbette. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on digital tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> my thanks to polly middlehurst. she's back in an hours middlehurst. she's back in an hour's time. welcome to gb news tonight. i'm mark dolan and the first of tomorrow's front pages are in and we start with the independent's mass migration taunt. a new low for tory dog whistle politics, say the independent housing minister robert jenrick says labour's new towns will be filled with illegal immigrants as he
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announces the closure of 50 hotels for refugees . metro is hotels for refugees. metro is the other paper hope for british hostages is the front page story. i was beaten with sticks, but hamas captors took care of our needs, says freed gran. and fears for crew in north sea tragedy. british cargo ship sinks in collision . a very sinks in collision. a very worrying story that one. we'll bnng worrying story that one. we'll bring you more front pages shortly. but for reaction to the big stories of the day, my top panel this evening, former cabinet minister and gb news star esther mcvey, mp, banker and visiting professor derek lord and author and journalist rebecca reid . now sketchy , rebecca reid. now sketchy, dodgy, vile, just three of the words used to describe nigel farage by natwest staff members who de—banking him after coots, a subsidiary of natwest group, slammed his account shut over the summer. a subject access request has now unveiled a host of sickening messages sent between various employees of the
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bank. at the time some. and tonight on his show , nigel tonight on his show, nigel revealed more from the natwest files, including that he was a complex customer beyond their commercial risk and even accusations that he was a russian spy. former natwest group ceo dame alison rose resigned in disgrace back in july after a grovelling apology to nigel. but is now due to receive a payout of more than £11 million. despite presiding over the de—banking scandal that rocked the nation. so in the light of these shocking messages at natwest, is it a crime to be at natwest, is it a crime to be a small c conservative? and does this go beyond banks ? has the this go beyond banks? has the british workforce become fully woke? derek what do you think about this? do you think it's a crime to be a small c conservative? >> britain is comprised of small c conservatives, so is the financial services sector . i financial services sector. i have something to declare. i have something to declare. i have an interest in a private
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bank and we should actually make a distinction between retail banking and private banking . banking and private banking. it's that the retail end where there is the problem and why we should be particularly interested in this story is that we as taxpayers own 39% of natwest and we should be very concerned that this person who led natwest to a shameful episode that related to the way in which they broadly interpreted the politically exposed rules is should be getting a payout of any kind . getting a payout of any kind. this is absolutely scandalous . this is absolutely scandalous. >> well, the shares in the company went down after this drama, didn't it? >> and the chancellor of the exchequer has it within his power to veto that. and the question tonight is why are they not doing that? >> do you think the chancellor should dock her wages as she leaves the company in disgrace? >> i think if >> no, i think if i if i contract said that if she leaves, she gets the payout, then contracts, £11 million then the contracts, £11 million for her
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for failure, if that's what her contract it's what happens contract said. it's what happens in every when mps resign they get get like nice big get they get like a nice big cheque £11 million, cheque for saying £11 million, not million, but not £11 not £1 million, but not £11 million. free money. i million. but still free money. i think there's probably an issue with people's contracts with how people's contracts are set first place, but set up in the first place, but in this specific case, the piece of paper has been signed that says that gets money if she says that she gets money if she is rid and what is got rid of. and that is what happened. is got rid of. and that is what happenedi'm very comfortable taxpayer, i'm very comfortable with my portion of the £11 million for her being for her making makes me happy. >> that's a very unkind >> really. that's a very unkind and say. and vengeful thing to say. >> person. >> person. >> mean, nigel farage was >> i mean, nigel farage was was he lost bank account. was >> i mean, nigel farage was was he lcan't bank account. was >> i mean, nigel farage was was he lcan't operaterccount. was >> i mean, nigel farage was was he lcan't operate in ount. was >> i mean, nigel farage was was he lcan't operate in this. was you can't operate in this society without a bank account . society without a bank account. that's just that's immoral, isn't it? >> he does have a bank account. he has managed to be fine. >> but he was threatened with having account. that having no bank account. is that acceptable view? it's acceptable in your view? it's just so low on the list just so, so, so low on the list of care about. of things i care about. >> like, why is so on the >> like, why is it so low on the list of things you care about, given the fact that you or somebody else, a friend of yours, for yours, could be de—banking for their acceptable by 2023? yours, could be de—banking for the biologic cceptable by 2023? yours, could be de—banking for the biologic c(wouldn't)y 2023? yours, could be de—banking for the biologic c(wouldn't be e023? >> biologic i wouldn't be because woke mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be be(be;e woke mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be be(be the woke mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be be(be the kind woke mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be be(be the kind of woke mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be
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be(be the kind of person mad so >> biologic i wouldn't be be(be the kind of person whoi so i'd be the kind of person who was allowed to. you're not answering my question. >> it's acceptable answering my question. >> someone it's acceptable answering my question. >> someone could. acceptable answering my question. >> someone could loseeptable answering my question. >> someone could lose their e answering my question. >> saccount could lose theire answering my question. >> saccount foi'jld lose their e answering my question. >> saccount for their se their e answering my question. >> saccount for their politicale bank account for their political views, which is what these whatsapp prove that whatsapp messages prove is that that's debunked, that's why he was debunked, because brexit he that's why he was debunked, bece a se brexit he that's why he was debunked, becea conservative. brexit he was a conservative. >> whatsapp messages >> all the whatsapp messages prove is that a lot people in prove is that a lot of people in this that nigel is this country think that nigel is a. that is, we knew that a. that is, we all knew that he's butt of a if you he's the butt of a joke. if you watch political satire, watch any political satire, everybody piss of him. >> derek i'm really shocked by rebecca's reaction. what you rebecca's reaction. what do you think? rebecca's reaction? think? by rebecca's reaction? >> take the >> because would you take the same denied a bank same view if i was denied a bank account was black? account because i was black? >> i like you so a, i'd be >> well, i like you so a, i'd be anti and i think anti racism and b, i think you're man. so on you're a nice man. so on a personal level, yes, would personal level, yes, i would be bothered. believe bothered. however, i do believe that are a business, you that if you are a business, you should allowed to decide if should be allowed to decide if it's not a protected characteristic. and being a small is not small c conservative is not a protected characteristic. who you give your business. you want to give your business. >> take >> why would a bank take a judgement position on b rexit? >> brexit? >> farage. what was that? >> farage. what was that? >> do with the bank? >> anything to do with the bank? >> anything to do with the bank? >> most anti cancel >> he's the most anti cancel culture person, the most vocal anti cancel culture person. and then in any then the second he was in any way by people wanting way impacted by people wanting to be cancelled, he was there being your
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being like you should lose your job, you should lose your job. he calling for to he was calling for heads to roll. right and centre. roll. left right and centre. what people what happened to people being able their able to freely express their views, apparently views, which he apparently believes views, which he apparently bel esther not much me, >> esther not much shocks me, but comments now but rebecca's comments just now have. absolutely. have. oh, absolutely. >> such >> i've never heard such nonsense life. of course, nonsense in my life. of course, you this you can't say i like this person. can a banker. person. you can have a banker. i don't like you. you can't. and by the way, the ceo, would say by the way, the ceo, i would say she breached client confidentiality , but that's the confidentiality, but that's the reason she lost her job. yeah, but shouldn't 11 but she shouldn't get the 11 million. i think you could quite look but i think what look into that. but i think what is outrageous you can is so outrageous is that you can think lowly customers think so lowly of your customers and think you can talk about them like that. these are the people paying your wages. and there's another small there's another not just a small c but the word c for conservative, but the word culture. this culture. the culture in this organisation so bad that organisation must be so bad that you think you can just talk about, like i said, your clients and customers like this and you know you can do it because know that you can do it because the people at very top are the people at the very top are pretty allowing do pretty much allowing you to do it. think there's a he's a it. so i think there's a he's a celebrity, he's a a celebrity, he's a he's a national figure of fun. >> laugh him every day. >> and customer service with the bank. it shows little bank. it just shows how little they of their customers.
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they think of their customers. so closing banks on high so closing banks on the high street, care about street, they don't care about them and they talk about banks disregarded the high street. >> absolutely . rebecca, the >> absolutely. rebecca, the banks the high street, banks on the high street, absolutely. there is a complete lack of accessibility, particularly for elderly people, the treat their the way that they treat their customers. sense, customers. in that sense, i agree i also at the agree with you. i also at the time agreed with and continue to agree with. you can't go to a dinner party and start talking about internal affairs at a bank, are private bank, but these are private messages people are messages where people are discussing figure. messages where people are discjustng figure. messages where people are discjustng if figure. messages where people are discjustng if they figure. messages where people are discjustng if they had|ure. messages where people are discjustng if they had been it's just like if they had been saying david beckham, you saying david beckham, do you think been you saying david beckham, do you think he been you saying david beckham, do you think he should been you saying david beckham, do you think he should have been you saying david beckham, do you think he should have been cutyou think he should have been cut off electricity board or off by the electricity board or lost his gas supply? it's an odd thing that people coming thing that people keep coming back to that because that's, you can't question. back to that because that's, you canit's question. back to that because that's, you can it's very question. back to that because that's, you canit's very easy uestion. back to that because that's, you canit's very easy one.on. >> it's a very easy one. >> it's a very easy one. >> if you talk to about water, should, should, should. >> deprived of a >> nigel farage be deprived of a gas a phone line? gas supply or a phone line? >> would that more >> i would say that i'd be more concerned number concerned about the number of children country are children in this country who are in houses because in freezing cold houses because of the cost of living crisis, who can't in their who can't have gas in their houses because people don't have any that problem. houses because people don't have any man that problem. houses because people don't have any man wh0|at problem. houses because people don't have any man wh0|at pshowm. houses because people don't have any man wh0|at pshow off, one man who is a big show off, getting some some kind of repercussions for his behaviour is the biggest problem. is not the biggest problem. >> empathy man
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>> zero empathy for a man whose life destroyed. life could have been destroyed. >> empathy >> sorry, zero. empathy for a man can't bank with. man who can't bank with. >> not millionaire if >> you're not a millionaire if you a bank account. you don't have a bank account. >> can't you can't >> you can't because you can't have a cash account. >> upside in is that >> the upside in this is that nigel farage actually performed a huge service by a huge public service by exposing millions people a huge public service by expandg millions people a huge public service by expand down millions people a huge public service by expand down thelions people a huge public service by expand down the country people a huge public service by expand down the country nowle a huge public service by expand down the country now know up and down the country now know that not to make that banks are not there to make moral judgements . they're there moral judgements. they're there to us, the consumer with to deliver us, the consumer with the service and the contract, which i think is the real issue here. that's going to give. alison rose £11 million of taxpayers money. it's probably something that was drafted , something that was drafted, outed by public sector employees because when john brown had to leave bp , he forfeited owed more leave bp, he forfeited owed more than £5 million. >> okay . i'll give you the final word. >> there was also a question, is it true to say that natwest offered a different bank account to nigel farage? did they not offer him? can i just say, after enormous public pressure? >> no, no. >> no, no. >> before i do ahead, you can't bakhmut anymore. can be with
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bakhmut anymore. you can be with natwest. is that what happened? >> understand >> no, i don't understand that to rebecca you to be the case. rebecca you never get to run a country or a big organisation you know, big organisation that you know, whimsical. won't big organisation that you know, whinwho l. won't big organisation that you know, whinwho l. would won't big organisation that you know, whinwhol. would actually with who you would actually allow have a account or allow to have a bank account or allowed to have gas. >> going put me in >> nobody is going to put me in charge anything. do not charge of anything. do not worry, nobody's going to put me in charge. >> okay. brilliant stuff. well, look, group look, a natwest group spokesperson we've spokesperson has said, we've written to mr farage to apologise. written to mr farage to apologiinappropriate comments deeply inappropriate comments made the poor made about him and the poor behaviours neither made about him and the poor behconsistent neither made about him and the poor beh consistent with neither made about him and the poor beh consistent with the neither are consistent with the standards our standards of service that our clients expect. we're clients should expect. we're determined the determined to learn the necessary lessons from this so that future live up to that in the future we live up to the high expectations. our customers, clients customers, customers and clients rightly upon us. now, next rightly place upon us. now, next years rightly place upon us. now, next year's us election is looking like a rematch between joe biden and donald trump. the battle of the sceptre denarians. and in it? well, actually , you know, it? well, actually, you know, octo in in joe biden's point of view. okay. in a taster of the battle to come, the donald has sent supporters at a new hampshire rally into a spin by saying exactly what he'd like to do and he's not do to sleepy joe. and he's not pulling his punches. >> remember when biden i'd
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>> and remember when biden i'd like to take him to the back of the barn. dream of that. you the barn. i dream of that. you know with him? oh i do know what i do with him? oh i do it . it. >> i'd hit him right in that fake nose . that fake nose. fake nose. that fake nose. they'd have plastic lying all over the floor. >> is it just over the floor. >> is itjust my imagination , or >> is itjust my imagination, or is the donald's face getting redder by the day? i think we can all agree trump would get the better of biden in the ring. but will he get the knockout blow at the ballot coming blow at the ballot box? coming up shamima begum begs the up as shamima begum begs the court the court of appeal to return to the uk, should tell the runaway uk, should we tell the runaway isis bride that she's no longer britain's isis bride that she's no longer britainlater isis bride that she's no longer britain later to isis bride that she's no longer britainlater to debate that and return later to debate that and next, following hysteria about scotland's storm babet is eco campaigner dale vince right that so—called climate change denial should be against the law. free speech campaigner toby young and tv legend jenny barnet argue that one out expect sparks to
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pm. on gb news, the people's channel. britain's news channel . channel. britain's news channel. >> well, there's been an explosive reaction to the comments of my brilliant panellist , rebecca comments of my brilliant panellist, rebecca reid, about nigel farage. she laughed and guffawed about the fact that he was de—banking and more or less celebrated it. she revelled in it . well, a strong reaction on it. well, a strong reaction on email, got to say. you're email, i've got to say. you're not happy, alexandra speaks for many. says, mark, i'm many. she says, mark, i'm absolutely disgusted with the comments made by rebecca reid about nigel farage. really terrible. should definitely
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about nigel farage. really terpulled should definitely about nigel farage. really terpulled upshould definitely about nigel farage. really terpulled up abouti definitely about nigel farage. really ter pulled up about that nitely about nigel farage. really terpulled up about that orely about nigel farage. really terpulled up about that or be be pulled up about that or be suspended or sacked. really nasty stuff, says alexandra. listen alexandra, i understand your anger and i was really shocked by rebecca, said . but shocked by rebecca, said. but listen, the bottom line is that this show is the home of diverse opinion. that's why we love derek. we love esther and we love rebecca it's all love rebecca as well. it's all about so what is about opinions. so what is yours? margaret gbnews.com now, lots more to come . eco hysteria lots more to come. eco hysteria is plaguing the nation as storm babet triggers a raft of fears that man made climate change is behind the destruction . so far, behind the destruction. so far, six people have very sadly died as 130 mile an hour winds and torrential rain swept across the country, causing significant disruption. but is the creeping demand for climate authoritarian ism a proportionate response to what some would simply call bad weather? the man shouting loudest is top football chairman dale vince, the just stop oil donor , posted this video of donor, posted this video of flooding at mansfield's football ground claiming that, quote, climate denial is dangerous and
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should be illegal. well, joining me to debate this is the general secretary of the free speech union, toby young and legendary broadcaster and actress jenny barnet. toby, let me start with you. to make climate change denial illegal, feels like compelled speech, doesn't it? in a free society, you've got to let people say things even if they're not true . they're not true. >> yeah, that's right . they're not true. >> yeah, that's right. mark. and the ridiculous thing i think about this suggestion is that it's not people on my side of this debate, the climate contrarians , not climate contrarians, not climate denialists, by the way , climate denialists, by the way, climate contrarians, we on this side of the debate, we are much more likely to make accurate predictions about the climate than climate hysterics. i'll give you a couple of examples. so in in what in 2002, george monbiot said that britain would suffer from a famine within ten years. prince charles warned that we had eight years left to
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save the planet . that was in save the planet. that was in 2009. al gore said that we would suffer from ice and ice free arctic by 2013. what about jailing all these people that make these alarmist, completely inaccurate , hysterical inaccurate, hysterical predictions about the climate journey instead of people who are just trying to exercise a bit of sceptic ism to make sure we're not emitting operated for the sake of what is clearly be an ideological agenda . an ideological agenda. >> jenny, i've been watching you for years. nice to meet you for the first time. isn't it better to let people have the freedom to let people have the freedom to say which or to say things which may or not may not be and have may or may not be true and have it the open so that their it out in the open so that their arguments can be debunked? yes >> yes. >> yes. >> i think that there should be free speech. >> i agree with toby. >> i agree with toby. >> but knew there >> where's the. but i knew there was a but coming . was a but coming. >> there is a but a criminal. >> there is a but a criminal. >> sanctions are potent tools to mark out a conduct amazingness that lies beyond all limits of toleration destroys human security. the fact is that we
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are not being given the truth. people are confused , used, and people are confused, used, and as long as long as you're in a situation where people are being affected in countries that have no , you know, aren't burning no, you know, aren't burning forests and doing all sorts of stuff, forests and doing all sorts of stuff , there has to be stuff, there has to be aggressive mitigation . zero aggressive mitigation. zero emissions. let me finish the existential threat becomes more real and it's not individuals who should be denied freedom of speech. who should be denied freedom of speech . it's people of power. speech. it's people of power. people in corporation, people in governments who lie to us that there isn't climate change. we're part of the problem. and we are frightened. and the people who've got the access to making things better are lying to us. >> toby answer me. >> toby answer me. >> toby. >> toby. >> i think it's symptomatic of the fact. jenny that people on your side of this discussion simply never listen to the arguments of people on the other side that you think that we are
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climate change denialists. no one no one on my side of the debate claims that climate change isn't happening . we all change isn't happening. we all acknowledge that climate change has happened. average global temperatures have increased since 1850, since the industrial revolution, no one, but no one is denying that. the argument is about, well, what's the cause of that? is it human activity ? is that? is it human activity? is it carbon emissions? and if they are, of course, how great a cause are they? and can we actually reduce the amount by which the climate average global temperatures are increasing by reducing carbon emissions? that's what the argument is about. and to accuse us of climate denialism, i'm afraid just suggests that you aren't listening. you don't want a debate. you don't want a discussion . you just want to discussion. you just want to dogmatically impose your views and else. and is and everyone else. and this is the latest example of we're the latest example of it. we're throwing you in if you don't agree with it, people go to bed at night frightened about melting ice caps. >> people go to bed at night griping about get over yourself,
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people. >> jenny barnet, you've been in woke east sussex for too long now . it's not the it's not to now. it's not the it's not to going blow up by next tuesday . going blow up by next tuesday. >> no, but there is an analogy thatis >> no, but there is an analogy that is being used. people are sitting in a theatre there is a fire, people in the good seats can't see it, can't smell it. other people are trying to put out the fire that they can see the people in the cheap seats are going to go up first. now i'm not suggesting that this is a class issue . i am suggesting a class issue. i am suggesting that i want to listen to you. but you also need to listen to the fear of humanity and by making a potent tool of criminal sanctions, you get people in corporations that will have to listen. they represent us and they're doing all. >> sorry . barnet. jenny barnet >> sorry. barnet. jenny barnet i think that that toby raises a good point. he says language about being a sort of a sceptic , about being a sort of a sceptic, if you like, a contrarian about something such as climate change, people that were concerned about the impact of
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lockdowns or questioned the origins of the covid 19 virus were cancelled . they were were cancelled. they were heavily censored . they were heavily censored. they were subjected to this kind of tyranny. and we're going to do it all again with net zero. it's not tyranny. >> we had a government who had partygate at the basis of who they were and the and the rest and the wrestler. be quiet and the rest of us were doing the right thing, playing by the rules with climate change. what is a contrarian? i've never heard of this. >> it's somebody that questions things and doesn't take any narrative spoon fed to them by the mainstream media. isn't that right, toby young yes, and i think you're exactly right, mark. >> the fact that there isn't allowed to be a proper public debate about this issue means we are rushing headlong towards an absolutely deserve monstrous future net zero, we learn, is going to mean power cut, possibly power cuts . possibly power cuts. >> jenny, jenny, i'll give you
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the last word briefly. toby if you can. >> we had the head of the national gas network this week, mark, warning us that if we if we if we get rid of natural gas, wind and solar power are not going to do the job of replacing it. so we're going to have to learn to live with much less power days at a time with no power. that's what people should be about. jenny, be frightened about. jenny, not these , alarmist predictions. >> okay, jenny, last word to you. >> come through . >> come through. >> come through. >> look, as long as we have migration , as long as we have migration, as long as we have a world which is drying up and flooding the people should be making decisions for humanity, not for corporate interests. and not for corporate interests. and not for corporate interests. and not for making money. we rishi sunak has just stop zero net zero, he doesn't care. he wants to have coal mines . who do you to have coal mines. who do you believe i'm an innocent layperson in this . i want to layperson in this. i want to believe you, toby. i want to
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trust you. but i can't. >> jenny barnet, brilliant to have you on the show. delightful. first encounter, the first of many. i sincerely hope. also my thanks to free speech champion toby young. your reaction, mark at cbnnews.com . reaction, mark at cbnnews.com. coming up in uncanceled, as the police turn a blind eye to calls for terror on british streets , for terror on british streets, are they neglecting our values and our democracy? one of britain's finest journalists, tom bower , joins me live in the tom bower, joins me live in the studio for his forensic analysis on that. plus, what the nigel farage de—banking scandal means for ordinary brits . but next in for ordinary brits. but next in the media buzz as shamima begum begs the court of appeal to return to the uk, should we tell the runaway isis bride that she is no longer britain's problem? my debate that alongside my panel debate that alongside more papers hot more of tomorrow's papers hot off the press see
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bower live in the studio . bower live in the studio. >> but let's get more front pages. >> but let's get more front pages . and they've been pages. and they've been delivered. let's have a look . we delivered. let's have a look. we start with the guardian . shalom start with the guardian. shalom hostage offers hand to militants and un calls for immediate ceasefire to end epic suffering in gaza. the eye newspaper next. un chief warns of violations in gaza , provoking fury from israel gaza, provoking fury from israel . the daily mail the hand of peace from israeli hostage 85 years of age that shames hamas killers . it's interesting, isn't killers. it's interesting, isn't it? the mail call them hamas killers or the guardian can manage is militant. how about this from the daily mail? united nafions this from the daily mail? united nations chief says hamas raid didn't happen in a vacuum. anger as un boss attacks israel over gaza. as un boss attacks israel over gaza . crisis okay, those are gaza. crisis okay, those are your front pages . getting to your front pages. getting to that age now where i've got to take the glasses off to read the print out. welcome to 49. can you believe it? listen, i'm
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delighted to get the reaction of the big stories of the day from my top pundits. tonight, former cabinet minister, no less. gb news star esther mcvey, mp , a news star esther mcvey, mp, a banken news star esther mcvey, mp, a banker, and visiting professor derek lord. and author and journalist and left wing shock jock kyrees on the naughty step, rebecca reid. that's where we want you. and now the isis bride, shamima begum , spent a bride, shamima begum, spent a bit of time on the naughty step lately she's battling to lately she's been battling to regain her british citizenship as her lawyers today went to the court of appeal to overturn a previous ruling that barred her from ever returning to britain in 2015, begum travelled to syria to join isis and married a jihadi . but when she resurfaced jihadi. but when she resurfaced four years later, the then home secretary, sajid javid, slammed the door shut on her return. but now she'll argue that she should be allowed back because the government failed to protect her from being sexually exploited by isis . should tell shamima isis. so should we tell shamima begum that she is no longer britain's problem ? esther? britain's problem? esther? >> why >> yes. why >> yes. why >> where's your empathy? well i think we have this is a young
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woman. she was groomed. she was tricked. she was naive. >> i think when she said national security should not be the trump card. i think it should . you saw what she did. should. you saw what she did. she planned to leave the country. she didn't want anything to do with democracy . anything to do with democracy. she wanted to become an islamic state wife . that's what she did. state wife. that's what she did. and now she's decided she wants to come back home after the terror that she's seen , that terror that she's seen, that she's brought upon other people . she's brought upon other people. and i don't think she should be. and i don't think she should be. and i don't think she should be. and i think she's quite outrageous . and i'm taking it outrageous. and i'm taking it that she's got legal aid to bnng that she's got legal aid to bring her back into the country. she's found lawyers who are quite happy to be paid legal aid . and she's had appeal after appeal after appeal. and she wants to come back here now. and i say no for the national security of this country . security of this country. >> is the national security argument a strong one, derek? is this woman really going to plot terror attacks in the future ? terror attacks in the future? >> well, it's one of the arguments, but it's not the only
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arguments, but it's not the only argument . i arguments, but it's not the only argument. i think. let me first say that i am as appalled as everybody else that this person was potentially groomed and that she was radicalised and i am very concerned about national security . so in the end , security. so in the end, national security missed out trump everything. but there must be due process and due process. i feel much more comfortable with if it happens through the courts , it's not taken by my courts, it's not taken by my ministers. it should never be a political decision. and there's one further thing we have the best courts in the world. i think there should be in in the interest of de—radicalizing people , there should be a major people, there should be a major show trial. this should be televised . we should be able to televised. we should be able to see what's happening in our name and i think that we are best placed to do that here in the united kingdom . united kingdom. >> now, rebecca, i'm torn on this. i think many in the country are the bottom line is that she's a young woman. she's
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essentially said that what she did was a mistake. she essentially said that what she did was a mistake . she regrets did was a mistake. she regrets it all. the rest of it. on the other hand, if she were stay, other hand, if she were to stay, what message that send to what message does that send to other terrorists ? other would be terrorists? >> well, it's things. >> well, it's two things. firstly the most powerful thing you do for the terrorists you could do for the terrorists is to have her here eating big is to have her here eating a big mac, how much she loves mac, saying how much she loves living uk because she's living in the uk because she's been there. shouldn't it be like , does it have to be? it can be. neck is american, it can be anything but the greggs vegan sausage roll. seen what happens when and it is not nice when you go and it is not nice and fun. and she got and it's not fun. and she got there my god, there and she went, oh my god, what done? but if they what have i done? but if they see eating greggs vegan see her eating a greggs vegan sausage roll, don't they think, oh got away with it. oh she got away with it. no, they tried it. it they think she tried it. it didn't couldn't stick they think she tried it. it didn'was couldn't stick they think she tried it. it didn'was awful. couldn't stick they think she tried it. it didn'was awful. she.dn't stick they think she tried it. it didn'was awful. she wentstick they think she tried it. it didn'was awful. she went home. it. it was awful. she went home. she is a very useful tool. there is also are other is also there are two other things one, groomed things here. one, being groomed is not good times. and she was she very impressionable she was a very impressionable teenager. i used to get recreationally groomed by all the internet the time on the internet as a teenager. it's very normal for that early, days that kind of early, early days of the internet, not of early days the internet, like days of the internet, like teenagers recreationally like in
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chat would to chat rooms, like i would talk to old on internet old men on the internet and occasionally go meet old men on the internet and occwithlally go meet old men on the internet and occwith them. go meet old men on the internet and occwith them. no go meet old men on the internet and occwith them. no yeah, meet up with them. no yeah, absolutely. 100% it is. by the grace of god didn't get grace of god that didn't get murdered. if them had murdered. and if any of them had been seem like you'd been like, you seem like you'd been like, you seem like you'd be really good at a death cult. i did your family knows you i was. did your family knows you did not did your mother and father not told was going town did your mother and father not told then was going town did your mother and father not told then i was going town did your mother and father not told then i went going town did your mother and father not told then i went toing town did your mother and father not told then i went to london.town did your mother and father not told then i went to london. when and then i went to london. when did this stop this? now did when did this stop this? now well, probably when got to well, probably when i got to about interest. but about 18. and lost interest. but is . anyway. sorry. is true. anyway. sorry. >> what's got into you tonight? >> what's got into you tonight? >> oh, no, this is. this is actually happened to anybody of my will have been my age. they will have been a little groomed on websites little bit groomed on websites like hotel pre—teen like habbo hotel and pre—teen chat. you're like habbo hotel and pre—teen chithe you're like habbo hotel and pre—teen chithe internet. you're like habbo hotel and pre—teen chithe internet. it you're like habbo hotel and pre—teen chithe internet. it was you're like habbo hotel and pre—teen chithe internet. it was badly on the internet. it was badly supervised. better supervised. parents do a better job now, i understand how job now, so i understand how easy to be be groomed. easy it would to be be groomed. but important thing is but the more important thing is to come off grooming for a second if you're second is that you if you're born here, if are born here, born here, if you are born here, you not be able to be you should not be able to be stripped of your citizenship. anybody terrified anybody should be terrified of that. find out that that. if they can find out that i might have one french grandparent and i do something that makes the government cross suddenly. frances problem. suddenly. i'm frances problem. that system. suddenly. i'm frances problem. thai system. suddenly. i'm frances problem. thai i system. suddenly. i'm frances problem. thai i think, system. suddenly. i'm frances problem. thai i think, you system. suddenly. i'm frances problem. thai i think, you know, . >> i think. i think, you know, you might have been groomed as
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you might have been groomed as you you have met you said, you might have met somebody. were . but where somebody. we all were. but where you what going you thinking what i'm going to be become an isis wife? be doing is become an isis wife? what i'm going to do is i'm going innocent westerners. >> honestly, i can see how it happens. >> and what i don't understand also is how you can be so sure that, yes, she was groomed there, but she's fine now. i know. she's fine. you know. think she's fine. now, you don't know? don't think she is don't know? i don't think she is fine to back be fine to come back to be a sleeper terrorist. >> would have all of >> i think she would have all of it. >> another thing to say, where is the evidence she was is the evidence that she was groomed? just groomed? perhaps she's just a nasty individual. >> at with bloodlust. i >> at 15 with a bloodlust. i mean, all all year olds are mean, all all 15 year olds are awful. she was she was awful. but she was 15. she was not the age of majority. she not at the age of majority. she was she might have been was she might have just been a nasty, twisted child child i >> but it isn't just it is just it's not just about stripping somebody of their citizenship. the implication of that is making somebody stateless. yeah. >> which shouldn't be possible , right? >> almost. all right. so >> almost. all right. so >> so, so, so, rebecca, she. she stays. she >> she's all problem. we create her stay or should she go? >> derek it's for the courts to
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decide. >> not should she stay or should she go. >> national security. she should go . you go. >> national security. she should go look. you go. >> national security. she should go look. you do think, >> look. what do you think, folks? margaret news.com, we'll get to your thoughts shortly after being mercilessly mocked in series south in the hit us tv series south park, the sussexes have found themselves once again a laughing stock, time in the latest stock, this time in the latest series american cartoon series of the american cartoon family guy. take a watch your millions from netflix for no one knows what put it with the rest of them babe time to do our daily $250,000 sponsored instagram post for del taco . instagram post for del taco. >> oh, i shouldn't have left the made up nonsense . made up nonsense. >> made up nonsense. >> there you go, harry and meghan, once again responsible for a bit of light relief. coming up, nicola sturgeon passed her driving test on her first attempt, aged 53, but has she the snp down the road she sent the snp down the road to electoral alienation? my panel will debate that at the end of the show. in tonight's greatest and jack greatest britain and union, jack . stay but next in . stay tuned. but next in uncancelled looking fonnard to this. saved our till this. we've saved our best till last as police turn a blind
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last as the police turn a blind eye to for terror on our eye to calls for terror on our streets, neglecting streets, are they neglecting british values and democracy ? british values and democracy? one of britain's finest journalists, tom bower , joins me journalists, tom bower, joins me live in the studio for his forensic analysis that forensic analysis on that and what the nigel farage de—banking scandal means for ordinary brits. the unmissable tom bower , brits. the unmissable tom bower, king of the truth bomb is
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n ext next time now for uncanceled and the brilliant journalist and author tom bower . brilliant journalist and author tom bower. and brilliant journalist and author tom bower . and the brilliant journalist and author tom bower. and the nation was left reeling this weekend after chilling chants of jihad were heard at a pro—palestine rally in london, but not acted upon by police who were present . the police who were present. the prime minister says the government will now clarify guidance given to police, ensuring arrests are made at future rallies if protesters call for jihad, which is widely accepted to mean an islamic holy war. here's what sunak told the commons yesterday . commons yesterday. >> these are not marches for
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peace , mr speaker. these are peace, mr speaker. these are marches for hate. >> they are glorifying the murder of the worst murder of jews since the holocaust , murder of the worst murder of jews since the holocaust, and they have to stop. >> mr speaker , prime minister , >> mr speaker, prime minister, mr speaker, hateful extremism has no place in our society. >> calls for jihad has no place in our society. >> calls forjihad and for >> calls for jihad and for muslim armies to rise up and not only a threat to the jewish community, but also a threat to our democratic values . anyone our democratic values. anyone who commits a crime, whether that be inciting racial hatred , that be inciting racial hatred, glorifying terrorism, or violating public order, should expect to face the full force of the law . the law. >> now , tom bower, whether it's >> now, tom bower, whether it's taking the knee to the black lives movement , which is a black lives movement, which is a black lives movement, which is a black lives matter movement now highly discredited, whether it's dancing with extinction rebellion, protesters , rebellion, eco protesters, whether it's asking extinction rebellion nutjobs who have glued themselves to the motonnay, whether they'd like sandwich whether they'd like a sandwich or a drink. does british policing have a cultural problem now? >> oh , certainly. i mean, rowley >> oh, certainly. i mean, rowley is just the latest of the
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political commissioners of scotland yard who is letting down the public. i mean, i'm not sure whether he understands this mixture of cowardice and prejudice , but in the end, he prejudice, but in the end, he protected people chanting violence on saturday. and he not only protected those advocates of violence, but denied those the jews who were pleading for peace, their right to demonstrate right. and he hides behind this idea that he hasn't got the law on his side. but when he said he couldn't stop the just oil, just stop oil demonstrators because the law wasn't tough enough , the wasn't tough enough, the government changed the law to give him the powers and he didn't use them. he said, again, the law isn't strong enough. and what's that what's really worrying is that he had been he said that he had been watching demonstration with watching the demonstration with lawyers cps , the same lawyers from the cps, the same cps that can only manage 1% of all rape cases is being prosecute looted. these aren't proper lawyers . these are all proper lawyers. these are all prejudiced culture works. these are people politically correct who are too terrified to take on the muslim extremists and think to themselves, unfortunate shaun
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bailey historically, which is quite consistent, doesn't matter about the jews . about the jews. >> well, indeed. and the safety and security of the jewish people living in this country should be a priority for the police as well. but that seems to have been glossed over in the last two even though it's last two weeks, even though it's israel that attacked on the israel that was attacked on the 7th of october. >> absolutely. not glossed >> absolutely. it's not glossed oven over. it's the problem is that the and the police have a prejudice and the police have a prejudice and the is to support the the prejudice is to support the muslims because their own reasons, they don't want to antagonise size the large potentially very violent muslim community. and they know that the jews won't cause them any trouble. unfortunately, that's historically what has happened in occasions over the in so many occasions over the last thousand years. but the real problem is i don't think rowley is a courageous rowley himself is a courageous man. think he's a man man. i don't think he's a man with insight. what actually is the challenge to the state? and unfortunately, that has something that's grown up for years that the years in britain that the government and all the institutions have allowed militant muslims, not the general mass, but the islamic militants, to become an absolutely protected from the
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law. and that in the end ended in the terrible bombing in manchester. and i just tell you, remember the horror in britain when the manchester bombing happened and the anger look at israel is the equivalent of about 10,000 britons being murdered . what happened in murdered. what happened in israel? are they why should anyone be surprised about their angen anyone be surprised about their anger, about what happened ? anger, about what happened? >> most definitely. and we also have the case batley in which have the case of batley in which a teacher is still on the a school teacher is still on the run, lost his career in hiding with his family for showing some materials that related to the prophet mohammed in a media studies class, this guy hounded out of his job and home and home and on the run and on the run in britain. exactly. >> and nothing happened to the muslims who who terrorised him . muslims who who terrorised him. nothing ever happens. i mean , nothing ever happens. i mean, look, in tower hamlets, the mayor of tower hamlets convicted for corruption, and he is actually allowed to be re—elected as mayor and is imposing all sorts of restraints on on people in tower hamlets.
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and that's the problem in the end, i think in europe , people end, i think in europe, people are far more conscious of the challenge by the militant muslims, by the extremists , and muslims, by the extremists, and that here there's far too much tolerance. and unfortunately, the tolerance starts with the police . and rowley just showed police. and rowley just showed in black and white on saturday that he's too scared to enforce the law and impose our cultural values. liberal, democratic values. liberal, democratic values on 100,000 people screamed for the murder of 7 million jews in israel. that's right. the rule of law, democracy , values of tolerance democracy, values of tolerance and acceptance were all discarded this weekend in britain, in our capital city. >> we've seen, haven't we, tom? people arrest someone for praying outside an abortion centre , a preacher, a lay centre, a preacher, a lay preacher spoken to by cops for preaching the bible in london and six officers attending an arrest attending an address where an autistic child had said a policewoman looked like a lesbian. the police risk bringing themselves into
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disrepute , don't they? public disrepute, don't they? public confidence is critical at the moment. it's on a knife edge. >> well, i think they have brought themselves into disrepute for those very reasons. really just put reasons. and really just put himself into the dock for all this. when that there this. when he said that there wasn't 100,000 wasn't a hate crime, 100,000 people for the people screaming for the eradication of a nation, the pushing 7 million jews into the sea to their death and he doesn't think there's a hate crime, but when one man says that, he doesn't think that a woman can have a penis, he to be prosecuted for hate crime. i mean, it's just absolutely ridiculous. problem is ridiculous. and the problem is that no one is telling the police this won't do. but it's the culture of the police that really we're dealing with a terrible problem which terrible cultural problem which doesn't really need the police. but the civil service so but in the civil service and so in many public institutions. in so many public institutions. >> indeed . which brings us >> well, indeed. which brings us to the nigel farage de—banking scandal. to the nigel farage de—banking scandal . first of all, why did scandal. first of all, why did the establishment have in for farage? >> well, because he championed brexit. and one and because he is the person who brought immigration into the issue. they loathe that they want endless
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immigration and because they wanted their cleaners and things and all the rest of it. but i think they just see him as a hate figure from the downside of it. yeah, but they hate him because he he brought he succeeded with brexit, beat the establishment love europe. establishment love of europe. and articulate and he's and he is so articulate and he's such politician and such a clever politician and they don't like being beaten at their own game. but they talked about extreme views and i can't find any extreme. >> no, no. >> no, no. >> but the whole point of the extreme is, is the brexit and not saying multiculturalism. 17.4 million people. i know, but but the whole thing is that he excites the majority of brits want to stop the boats. it is it is. it is the majority don't count. is. it is the majority don't count . it is is. it is the majority don't count. it is the small is. it is the majority don't count . it is the small elite count. it is the small elite that counts . that counts. >> there are wider >> and there are wider implications. nigel is a high profile case regarding de—banking, but does it speak of a bigger story about, oh, gosh, yes, sort of woke capture the progressive left of our prime and public institutions. >> the real problem is, in nigel's case, that none of those
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people below alison rose will be fired. i mean, the 3—2 people have gone, three have gone at the top. but the culture of the bank won't change. >> same as the bbc, isn't it? you can change the director general, not all the producers. >> well, we had that last week and happened? the and what's happened? there's the bbc absolutely destroyed bbc who absolutely destroyed britain's credibility and israel's credibility by saying, as we discussed last week, that it was an israeli strike in the hospital. they set the tone, the bbc, but they won't admit it. and it'd be a catastrophe. what they did possibly cost lives as well. cost lives, costs and costs. biden's trip , everything. costs. biden's trip, everything. the bbc is erect. this description of that explosion . description of that explosion. >> so we've seen this cultural capture of our police force. you've seen it in the nhs where they talk about birthing people rather than pregnant women. no reference to females in literature the menopause . literature about the menopause. you've got corporations who don't like nigel farage for his political views . it's across the political views. it's across the pubuc political views. it's across the public and private sector. is there any rowing back on this or
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has woke one? well in my view, the tragedy is woke. >> could have been defeated, if only cameron osborne had absolute reversed everything that happened under blair. but they're the ones, in my view , they're the ones, in my view, who are the guilty men because if only they had taken an ideological stance against blairism, against the woke culture, we would have by now eradicated it. but they pandered to it. and that was the great error. and then of course happened brexit and it was all too late. and unfortunately, even the blessed boris johnson , even the blessed boris johnson, your view? blessed didn't grasp it properly. i mean, he went along with it well. and it along with it as well. and it was a great tragedy. and now we're reaping the poison of this terrible, terrible militant sea weather on our streets against israel or whether in the hospitals or anywhere else. >> okay, brilliant. briefly a short few seconds, if you can, tom. it's a year in number 10 for rishi sunak. so you've got anything to celebrate? >> i think he did as well as you predicted because i remember a
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year ago you said, why is everyone against rishi? and you were done were right. yeah, he's done better would . better than i thought he would. and i don't think that he's actually ruled out yet. >> you go, tom. >> there you go, tom. >> there you go, tom. >> look fonnard to seeing you. hopefully my hopefully in a week's time. my thanks brilliant thanks to the brilliant journalist and best selling biographer, tom bower. okay. well, speaking reporters well, speaking to reporters yesterday, police's yesterday, the met police's commissioner, sir mark rowley, said the conversation with the home secretary and ministers finished of the finished around the line of the law. it's our job to enforce that . it's parliament's job that line. it's parliament's job to that line and the to draw that line and the thought it may events thought is that it may be events are illustrating some of the lines are in the right place lines are not in the right place . there you go. brilliant stuff. okay. well, look, thank you to tom bower. it's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass and let's start with our brilliant, brilliant estimate with your greatest britain >> okay, my greatest britain. it's an honorary, greatest britain and that is the creative team behind the cartoon family guy and their episode portraying meghan and harry as grifters, mocking their earnings as the
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butler hands them millions for money from no one knows what. it's a bit like the south park. how they mock meghan and harry with the privacy world tour. marvellous. >> what a great nomination. how about you, derek ? your greatest britain. >> it's got to be paul gilbert . >> it's got to be paul gilbert. he's from chesterfield , as was he's from chesterfield, as was his mother. late mother, 82. she was found dead by him floating in her own home in the street where she's lived all her life. and when he came on the television to talk about this, he did so in a very british way. i thought calm, cool and collected. and i felt a deep sense of compassion for him. >> that's a lovely, lovely nomination and may god rest his soul. rebecca you're you're a brilliant hero of the day. >> mine's also honorary. it's britney spears, whose book the woman in me has come out where she talks about her conservatorship and her experience of fame and everything from the head shaving incident to the abortion that she had when she was the justin timberlake. a very, very
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timberlake. it's a very, very brave of writing. brave piece of writing. >> okay. well, look, i do sympathise very much with derek's nomination, i'm derek's nomination, but i'm striking all of those nominations because my greatest britain is esther mcvey birthday . happy birthday to you. >> happy birthday to you. >> happy birthday to you. >> happy birthday to you. >> happy birthday, dear esther . >> happy birthday, dear esther. happy birthday. >> let me just say that estimate is brilliant. broadcaster she's a really principled politician . a really principled politician. anne she had an amazing career and she's a fabulous person. so we love you loads . esther yeah, we love you loads. esther yeah, yeah, yeah , yeah, yeah. yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> eric i've only got a couple of seconds for your, uh, for youn >> well, actually, no, i'll start with you, esther. it's going to be your. start with you, esther. it's going to be your . your jackass. start with you, esther. it's g(couple be your . your jackass. start with you, esther. it's g(couple of your . your jackass. start with you, esther. it's g(couple of seconds,ur jackass. start with you, esther. it's g(couple of seconds,ur you ass. a couple of seconds, if you could . could. >> utterly shameless. megan bacon thinking she bacon for thinking that she could come back to this country . could come back to this country. having joined islamic state and getting the taxpayer to pay for her legal bills . her legal bills. >> who's she kidding? derek, briefly , if you can. briefly, if you can. >> your jackass. it's got to be nicola sturgeon. she took to twitter to tell us all that she can drive. let's hope that
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can now drive. let's hope that she reverses out of scotland like all other people trying she reverses out of scotland likleave. other people trying she reverses out of scotland likleave. since er people trying she reverses out of scotland likleave. since sheeople trying she reverses out of scotland likleave. since she wase trying she reverses out of scotland likleave. since she was sinceig she reverses out of scotland lilenp since she was sinceig she reverses out of scotland lilenp started ihe was sinceig she reverses out of scotland lilenp started governing.:eig the snp started governing. >> she drives me round the bend. rebecca you're a jackass. >> poke this hornet's >> not to poke this hornet's nest again, but nigel farage not only because in only because. nigel because in fairness, i'm sure he's a perfectly nice man, but he is anti cancel culture and he is trying to get people cancelled. and the hypocrisy and i don't like the hypocrisy of that. >> today's jackass is shamima begum . thank you much to the begum. thank you so much to the team for working hard today. team for working so hard today. you for your company at home. my brilliant . patrick's brilliant pundits. patrick's looking after tomorrow. looking after 9:00 tomorrow. i'll see you friday at nine on. >> again . it's alex >> hello again. it's alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather update for some, it will be a little bit chilly overnight, but south we overnight, but in the south we have heavy rain arriving have some heavy rain arriving that's association with an that's in association with an area of low pressure. currently just to the southwest. but this is going skirt its way is to going skirt its way eastwards along the english channel we go through channel as we go through the night into wednesday. that will then bring a significant amount of parts. of rain across southern parts. the heaviest rain likely to be in the southeast . and here
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in the south southeast. and here we some disruption to we could see some disruption to travel, perhaps some localised flooding elsewhere towards flooding to elsewhere towards the scotland . bit wet flooding to elsewhere towards the quite scotland . bit wet flooding to elsewhere towards the quite cloudy, nd . bit wet flooding to elsewhere towards the quite cloudy, but bit wet flooding to elsewhere towards the quite cloudy, but further. and quite cloudy, but further west northwest, some clear skies, so turning a little bit chilly . a touch of frost chilly. a touch of frost possible across some parts of western a very wet western scotland. a very wet start. then the southeast on start. then in the southeast on wednesday morning could cause some during the morning some problems during the morning rush but the rain should rush hour. but the rain should clear then it's a drier clear away and then it's a drier picture across many parts of england, into northern england, wales, into northern ireland as we go into the afternoon. but cloudy and wet across parts scotland across eastern parts of scotland . significant rainfall . some significant rainfall possible here. temperatures near normal for the time of year, highs around 14, possibly 15 celsius as we look towards thursday, it's going to be quite an unsettled, wet day. we have a band of rain that will push its way north eastwards as we go through the morning behind it. then some hefty showers are quite likely. notice some towards south coast and towards the south coast and perhaps in the far east as well. and it's going to be quite blustery unsettled theme blustery to the unsettled theme continues go through continues as we go through friday into
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ulez gb news. >> in our top story tonight, the united nations secretary—general says hamas's attacks on israel didn't happen in a vacuum. antonio guterres says there are now clear violations of international humanitarian law international humanitarian law in gaza . but israel's foreign in gaza. but israel's foreign minister eli cohen says there's only one side to support in the
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conflict. he's calling for mr guterres to resign, saying he's lost all morality and impartiality. the secretary—general says the appalling attacks by the terrorist group cannot justify the collective punishment of the palestinian people . palestinian people. >> all the palestinian people have been subjected to 56 years of suffocating occupation when they have seen their land steadily devoured by settlements and plagued by violence. there the economy is stifled. there people displaced and their homes demolished, their hopes for a political solution to their plight have been vanishing . but plight have been vanishing. but the grievances of the palestinian people cannot justify the appalling attacks by hamas and those appalling attacks cannot justify the collective punishment of the palestinian people . palestinian people. >> well, today, downing street confirmed 12 british citizens were killed during the hamas terror attack on israel . another
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