tv GBN Tonight GB News October 31, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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up to 9:00. show. it is coming up to 9:00. i'm mark dolan and this is gb news. tonight out and speaking after an emergency cobra meeting today, the home secretary suella braverman , did not mince her braverman, did not mince her words about the pro—palestine marches . marches. >> my mind. there's only one way to describe those marches. they are hate marches . so next, as are hate marches. so next, as the government addressed the accelerate terror threat in the uk, here, in my big opinion, why this should not surprise anyone after all, you reap what you sow, then my panel give their views tonight . views tonight. >> carole malone, benjamin buttennorth and ranil jayawardena . plus, could jayawardena. plus, could ditching net zero when rishi sunakin ditching net zero when rishi sunak in the next election? nigel farage wades into this clear blue water between the tories and labour shortly. plus is nigel planning a stint on i'm a celebrity? i'll be asking also on the way in a bombshell new documentary about the case, it's been revealed that portuguese
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police have apologised to the parents of madeleine mccann, but will matty ever be found out? i'll be speaking to mark williams—thomas, the top cop who has devoted 16 years of his life to get the truth and is a top bbc presenter right that science is now too white. joanna jarjue and alka sehgal cuthbert will debate that in the clash . and as debate that in the clash. and as always, you'll get a first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages. and paul burrell reacts to the king rolling out the red carpet for david beckham. a lively two hours coming up with my big opinion on the way. i'm not pulling my punches. but first, the news headlines and arron armstrong . arron armstrong. >> very good evening to you. our anne armstrong here in the gb newsroom. the israeli prime minister has ruled out a ceasefire in gaza, saying it would be the equivalent of surrendering to hamas. benjamin netanyahu promised to stand against the forces of barbarism
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until victories achieved it, describing hamas as part of an axis of evil being formed by iran. he added even the most just wars can have unintended civilian casualties. more than 8000 palestinians have been killed by israeli bombing, according to the gaza health ministry. mr netanyahu's described hamas's deadly attacks on october 7th as a turning point . point. >> israel will not agree to a cessation of hostilities with hamas after the horrific attacks of october 7th. calls for a ceasefire are calls for israel to surrender to hamas, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to barbarism . that surrender to barbarism. that will not happen . will not happen. >> meanwhile , the israeli >> meanwhile, the israeli military says it's rescued a female soldier taken hostage by hamas private ori megadisc was freed during a ground operation in in gaza and has been reunited with her family. now, earlier , with her family. now, earlier, hamas released a video of three
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women being held hostage . one of women being held hostage. one of them is highly critical of mr netanyahu and has demanded to be released in exchange for palestinian prisoners. their relatives, though, say the proof of life has given them hope. the us vice president, kamala harris, will meet rishi sunak on wednesday to discuss the ongoing situation in the middle east. they'll also hold talks and consult on the next steps that both countries will take in terms of their support for ukraine. a conservative mp has been sacked from his government job after publicly urging rishi sunak to back a permanent ceasefire in gaza downing street, says paul bristow , a street, says paul bristow, a ministerial aide in the department for science, innovation and technology, made comments that are not consistent with the principles of collective responsibility . collective responsibility. meanwhile, labour suspended an macdonald claiming comments he made about the war were deeply offensive . the mp for offensive. the mp for middlesbrough used the controversial phrase between the river and the sea in a speech at a pro—palestinian demonstration at the weekend . well, the home
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at the weekend. well, the home secretary has described the pro—palestinian protests across the uk as hate marches . earlier the uk as hate marches. earlier today the government and police held an emergency cobra meeting to discuss the threat of terrorism linked to the israel—hamas conflict. the israel— hamas conflict. the meeting israel—hamas conflict. the meeting follows a rise in anti—semitic and islamophobic incidents across the country since the start of october . the since the start of october. the covid inquiry has heard that the country's top civil servant had no confidence in boris johnson's leadership at the height of the pandemic in whatsapp messages. simon case, who remains cabinet secretary, said boris johnson cannot lead and accused him of changing his mind on a daily basis . he was added that he was basis. he was added that he was making government impossible and we cannot support him in leading with this approach. the private correspondence which took place as the government grappled with the spread of covid, came during the spread of covid, came during the appearance of this man, former top aide martin reynolds . former top aide martin reynolds. the police officer charged with
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murder following the fatal shooting of chris kaba will be named publicly. the officer's named publicly. the officer's name and date of birth will be made public on the 30th of january. their home address or any image of them, cannot be published. mr kaba died when he was shot through the windscreen of a car in south—east london last year. torfaen line dab plus tunein radio . this is gb news. tunein radio. this is gb news. now it's back to. mark rishi sunak called an emergency cobra meeting today as the terror threat in this country spirals . threat in this country spirals. >> having turned a blind eye to the festering hatred of western values within this country for years now, the revelation that britain is a more dangerous place to live in is tonight's winner of the no sugar sherlock award. you reap what you sow. the batley school teacher still in hiding, having lost his career after showing students an image of prophet mohammed as an educational tool while a
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schoolboy in wakefield hold up in front of a kangaroo court of angry muslim clerics attended by numpty, british police for supposedly defacing the quran. preachers across the country in recent days , calling hamas recent days, calling hamas heroes and calling jewish people guardians of satan and calling for the wiping out of unbelievers. gosh, i hope that's not you and me as well. not only have we seemingly imported an extreme ideology that hates everything we stand for in this country, tolerance, liberal democracy, the rule of law . but democracy, the rule of law. but over the last three weekends, we've given it a sacred platform in the centre of our capital city alongside monuments like the cenotaph , which represents the cenotaph, which represents our historic battle for the values which are now being trashed . the woke left the be trashed. the woke left the be kind crowd who are much better people than you and me have supported these marches, which this week saw some calling for a new intifada . to combat war.
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new intifada. to combat war. what's an intifada? well, from 2000 to 2005, in the middle east, intifada meant terror attacks on buses , in nightclubs attacks on buses, in nightclubs and in restaurants . and the and in restaurants. and the first widespread civilian use of the suicide bomb. this weekend, protesters backed by woke lefties called for that to start in london. the manchester arena bombing in 2017, where 22 mainly children were killed at an ariana grande concert was an intifada. this country has gone mad stating a biological fact and calling a man who thinks he's a lady. a man is hate speech under a labour government . it might get you arrested, but climbing british monuments and calling for the eradication of a group of people based on their religion and race is nothing to see here. i know the bbc have
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struggled to call baby beheadings terrorists, but i don't struggle with such language and fortunately we have a home secretary. brave enough to tell it as it is . to tell it as it is. >> we've seen now tens of thousands of people take to the streets following the massacre of jewish people , all the single of jewish people, all the single largest loss of jewish life since the holocaust, chanting for the erasure of israel from the map . to my mind, there's the map. to my mind, there's only one way to describe those marches. they are hate marches . marches. they are hate marches. i wonder if her comments are too little, too late. >> these mediaeval monsters in hamas are sick, depraved and present an existential threat not just to israel, present an existential threat notjust to israel, but present an existential threat not just to israel, but to the free world. it is rebadged and those calling for a ceasefire, which of course makes you look like a really nice person. and wins you brownie points on social media is akin to appeasing hitler as he rampaged across europe. hamas and ism are
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not historic parallels . they are not historic parallels. they are a mirror image. not historic parallels. they are a mirror image . and the proof is a mirror image. and the proof is that the 300,000 jewish people who live in this country are no longer safe, nor are they anywhere in the world. take a look at this terrifying footage of an airport in russia where hundreds of pro—palestinian protesters descended on dagestan airport looking for jewish arrivals for retribution . russia arrivals for retribution. russia today , britain tomorrow . amid today, britain tomorrow. amid all the noise here are some things which are true. britain is a successful and brilliantly diverse society . be the most diverse society. be the most integrated national population on planet earth . most marchers on planet earth. most marchers in this country are . most in this country are. most palestinians abhor the violence, violence and want a two state solution. and israel likely has a case to answer for its treatment of palestinian jews over several decades . taking over several decades. taking sides is a fool's errand in the
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middle east. but how can we live in a society where posters have kidnapped jewish children are being torn down from lampposts around the uk by the woke left find hate and racism everywhere except where it actually is? everyone is a except actual . the everyone is a except actual. the middle east feels very far away, but the enemy is now within a country famous for importing tea leaves , spices and tropical leaves, spices and tropical fruits has also imported an ideology of hate. and over the last three weekends has allowed some to platform a death cult on our streets. neither the world nor britain are now a safe place to live and may never be again . to live and may never be again. in your reaction market gbnews.com. let's get the thoughts of my panel. daily express columnist carole malone , express columnist carole malone, former labour party adviser and official benjamin buttennorth . official benjamin buttennorth. tribute act matthew laza and former environment secretary ,
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former environment secretary, conservative mp ranil jayawardene . dina. well ladies jayawardene. dina. well ladies and gentlemen, great to have you with me tonight. your thoughts on this particular spectacle of people chanting for hate in the streets of london. you know what i don't understand, mark? >> you know, this is the third week in a row now that 100,000 people have descended upon london in you quite rightly london in what you quite rightly described. not not described. it's not a it's not a peaceful protest. it's a hate march. >> and i don't understand why we've allowed it. there are countries in europe who have banned these marches , who was banned these marches, who was forbidden them on the basis that they're likely to cause extreme behaviour, that people are likely to get hurt. tensions are going to be be ignited and they've said, no, we're just not having it. and yet we are doing that. but not only are we allowing them to happen, we're allowing them to happen, we're allowing them to happen, we're allowing the hate to carry on. we're almost fanning the flames. we're almost fanning the flames. we policemen who stand we have policemen who stand impotently by while while the chants of jihad allah allahu akbar were ringing through the streets this week. that is a hate crime. mark rowley, the
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head of the met police when he took this job a year ago, he promised he was to going do a root and branch reform of cops and change the way they behaved. it wasn't going to be a woke force him. it is work force under him. it is a work force under him. it is a work force under him and he has the nerve today to say that the powers there is confusion among his because there's his officers because there's too looser of looser a legal definition of what extremism is . when somebody what extremism is. when somebody is shouting allahu is shouting, shouting allahu akbar, when they're shouting akbar, and when they're shouting jihad confusion as jihad, there's no confusion as to what they mean by that. so those people should have been lifted and i don't know lifted now. and i don't know whether you know this. cps whether you know this. the cps last week, crown prosecution last week, the crown prosecution service decided not to prosecute people who'd been arrested for shouting jihad on advice. now, guess who they take advice from? they take advice from the chair of the finsbury park mosque. now, this is to me, this is a joke. they're taking advice from someone from from from a preacher or the chairman of the mosque . anyway, at the very mosque. anyway, at the very least. and at the same time, we're hearing and you just
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mentioned this is a very important point , imams all over important point, imams all over this country are praising hamas as heroes . we, you know, our as heroes. we, you know, our so—called tolerance, this country's tolerance of other religions is literally we going to be the death of us literally. >> ranil look , the home >> ranil look, the home secretary spoke well today, and i heard you nodding along. understandable so but this hateful ideology has germinated under a conservative government are you concerned that we've turned a blind eye to these hateful views for a long, long time now, perhaps in the face in the name of political correctness? yeah i mean, i think this has been going on actually much longer than the conservatives have been government. >> think all started >> i think this all started under blair and brown. and, you know, really know, i think it's really important, as said, that we important, as you said, that we are a very successful country with religions, faith being with many religions, faith being practised and fundamentally, islam is a peaceful religion. the trouble is , is that it is the trouble is, is that it is used used by some extremist preachers to brainwash people in
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this country and elsewhere in the world. and part of it is, you know, when i stand up in church and say, i believe in the book of common prayer in islam, it it is so and so. it allows the preachers a huge amount of power over their congregation in mosques and the madrassas that exist in some parts of the world. and that is what we've really got to clamp down on. so it's much more targeted, but we're not going to are we? >> that's the point. well, there's no sign that we're going to do that. >> well. well i think we need to also have a police force. to your point, i totally agree with you. this idea you. you you know, this idea that have a police that we should have a police service in this country has been part the problem that, again, part of the problem that, again, started under blair. i accept the we have been in the fact that we have been in power a long time. i accept the fact that we're in fact that we're being in government, now time government, but it is now time we're seeing the consequences of it. time have a police it. it is time to have a police force in this country is force in this country that is here uphold and enforce the here to uphold and enforce the law upon everyone. and law equally upon everyone. and if i or anyone else was saying
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that should have, know, that we should have, you know, a jihad or an equivalent from a christian perspective, you'd be lifted. we would be rightly locked up. and i do worry that, you know, when you've got people carrying baby dolls covered in fake blood, that's just horrible . well, yeah, something needs to be done. as with the grooming gangs, matthew, i just wonder whether political whether it is political correctness fear of correctness and the fear of being racist that has being called racist that has caused authorities and caused the authorities and government of government after government of all to ignore the all colours to ignore the growing levels of hate in this country. >> what do you think we'd have learned the lessons both from the gangs, but even the grooming gangs, but even earlier race earlier when we had the race riots in northern towns in the mid—noughties, labour commissioned the labour government commissioned a big review which talked about separate and isolated communities, that in communities, effectively that in too of our towns and areas too many of our towns and areas of our cities, people were living effectively. there was a sort of self—imposed apartheid that basically that people were basically i mean, remember documentary mean, i remember one documentary that did a sort of heat map that that did a sort of heat map of where people where people lived. and it literally two lived. and it was literally two separate communities . and i separate communities. and i think, you know, i think we do
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need to be tougher. i mean, some of over the weekend of the examples over the weekend are appalling. but are absolutely appalling. but that have emerged not just from the issues the march, but other issues like the march, but other issues like the zahawi, which the channel zahawi, which is ofcom allowed but regularly features a guy on the hamas watch list, for example , or the watch list, for example, or the leader of his book tahrir, which is banned in germany , which is is banned in germany, which is an extreme islamist group. i remember campaigning as a student to get it banned because on campuses it was causing a lot of problems. but yet the leader of problems. but yet the leader of that in britain guess who employs him? yeah, the nhs. he's a well, that's right. now a family in harrow was family doctor in harrow was suella right call suella braverman right to call what over the weekend what we've seen over the weekend hate i think there was hate marches. i think there was hateful behaviour on the march. i everybody on the i don't think everybody on the march full of but march was full of hate, but i think that we look, if you believe that more aid should go into that is the way into gaza, that is not the way to it carrying socialist to go. it carrying socialist workers placards or associating to go. it carrying socialist work people:ards or associating to go. it carrying socialist work people carryingrssociating to go. it carrying socialist work people carrying baby ating to go. it carrying socialist work people carrying baby dolls with people carrying baby dolls covered blood . it's not the covered in blood. it's not the way to do it. having holding placards that say more aid to gaza and not singing from the river to the sea.
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>> okay, okay. well, listen , >> okay, okay. well, listen, carol, back to your carol, we'll come back to your thoughts we've got a lot thoughts because we've got a lot to get through. but coming up, could ditching net win? could ditching net zero win? rishi election? rishi sunak, the next election? nigel has his say on nigel farage has his say on that. plus, he will reveal all about whether he's going into the jungle. i'm celebrity for the jungle. i'm a celebrity for nigel. he do it? what do nigel. should he do it? what do you think, mark at cbnnews.com. but first in the clash is a top bbc presenter, right to suggest that is too white? that science is too white? social commentator joanna jarjue takes on the director of don't divide us, alka sehgal cuthbert next. and let me tell you , next. and let me tell you, sparks
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britain's news channel. >> so we have import hate onto britain's streets. we've seen that three weekends in a row now . big reaction to my big opinion on email marketing. cbnnews.com pauune on email marketing. cbnnews.com pauline says mark, i'm sick and tired of this conservative government just talking. that's all they ever do. when will they take action? so ashamed of the tories sitting on their hands and hoping that the problems will disappear. they and hoping that the problems will disappear . they keep those will disappear. they keep those emails mark at emails coming. mark at gbnews.com. farage is gbnews.com. nigel farage is waiting in the wings. but first, the clash . and the deranged the clash. and the deranged diversity drive sweeping the western world now looks to be coming for the world of science, with a leading bbc presenter and scientist claiming that science is well , too white. dr. maggie is well, too white. dr. maggie aderin—pocock, a physicist and space scientist who has presented the hit bbc four show
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the sky at night since 2014, told the observer . when i grew told the observer. when i grew up, there were many kids who looked at science and thought , looked at science and thought, well, someone like me doesn't do that because it's not my culture. it's not for me. i don't have a history of this diversity is about bringing different ideas and people into science, she says. because cause if it's all just done by the european white guys, we get a very blinkered view of the world. so tonight i'm asking, is a top bbc presenter right? that science is now too white? let me know your thoughts at gb news on twitter or mark at gbnews.com. i'll bring you the results of our poll shortly. but to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome social commentator joanna jarjue and director of don't divide and the director of don't divide us, alka sehgal. cuthbert great to have both of you with me . can to have both of you with me. can i start with you, joanna? do you think that science is now too white? >> i don't and i don't actually think that this is what this scientist was talking about. i think that what she was referring to is that we're accustomed to a certain profile
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of person being the famous scientist. and when we talk about diversity, we talk about, yes, diverse city of culture, but there's also diversity of thought and diversity of thought comes from people with different experiences . and when she experiences. and when she references, you know , children references, you know, children who don't see science as part of their culture, you know , it is their culture, you know, it is actually known that so many different countries in ancient history, whether it's the egyptian ones that were pioneers in astronomy , we have had such, in astronomy, we have had such, you know , a big contribution to you know, a big contribution to science as we know it today. but actually, what we see is that the people who are the most famous scientists and have been promoted, most tended promoted, the most have tended to be european white men . to be european white men. >> indeed, listen , alka sehgal, >> indeed, listen, alka sehgal, cuthbert great to have you with us. do you think that this presenter is right that science is dominated by white europeans? is she right to use that language ? language? >> no, she isn't. i think it's actually quite ignorant, silly and actually quite dangerous . and actually quite dangerous. um, for a start, there's a
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difference between the history of science and science itself . of science and science itself. now, the history of science is a history of anything is a kind of subject where there can be a genuine and legitimate need for excavation of voices or works that have kind of been, you know, overlooked, but that that could include other white scientists as well . right. or scientists as well. right. or other women scientists . it other women scientists. it doesn't it's not necessarily just black scientists. i think it's silly to think that you get diversity of thought as if that's distributed according to skin colour, right? you get diversity of thought depending on the kind of thinking people have done, the books that they've read, their own personal experiences, their intellectual expen experiences, their intellectual experi senses, their own educational background in maths and science . yes, those are the and science. yes, those are the kinds of things that will get you diversity of thought , not you diversity of thought, not not skin colour or cultural background. and i think, you know the point. you say, you know, i think most people might think science isn't for me
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because it's so hard and that's largely because it depends a lot on maths. and we know that there's for a long time there's been a huge maths problem. um, right. but i think apart from this, the really dangerous bit thatis this, the really dangerous bit that is not really often talked aboutis that is not really often talked about is that today we have this very casual talk of skin colour being a problem by people in public, you know, in positions of public authority and i think this is a customising us to see the world in terms of very simplistic, reductive , preferred simplistic, reductive, preferred oppressed groups , preferred oppressed groups, preferred oppressor groups . and it's oppressor groups. and it's dangerous, right? it's really divisive. it eventually encourages us to just sort of accept that, oh, if you're in the wrong group, you might not you know, you might need to be shoved, shunted out. you might not have your voice at that meeting. might not get the meeting. you might not get the job. and eventually you might even, know, not even, you know, you might not even, you know, you might not even your life , joanna, even be get your life, joanna, because, you know , you've just because, you know, you've just said that diversity of thought comes from people's experiences, people's experiences are heavily
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influenced on their culture and their background and it's not just about, you know, saying that it's white people. >> it's the fact that certain people come from certain cultures and countries that have a history of and this a history of this. and this isn't type of history that's isn't the type of history that's pushed. it's basically just pushed. so it's basically just the argument is that , you know, the argument is that, you know, history sorry , science isn't history sorry, science isn't just from the european perspective. you've got people like i've already said, like the ancient egypt who were pioneers . ancient egypt who were pioneers. but i think that even from when i was at school, i don't know about anybody else. but when i was taught about the ancient egyptians, i wasn't taught it from a from a science perspective. and the reason why diversity matters well . it's diversity matters as well. it's not about pushing other not just about pushing other people it's showing people out. it's about showing people out. it's about showing people a representation. joanna joanna feel that they belong within that field. >> joanna dr. maggie aderin—pocock is a great talent. she's a very good presenter, a great scientist, but isn't referencing people's skin colour racist ? and doesn't it work racist? and doesn't it work against the words of martin luther king, who preached the
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idea of a colour—blind society ? idea of a colour—blind society? how can this individual just casually refer to white european jews as a bad thing ? jews as a bad thing? >> well, i think that you completely misrepresenting it actually , i just directly quoted actually, i just directly quoted her, joanna. >> i've directly quoted her. >> i've directly quoted her. >> the way that you're interpreted it, saying that she's saying that science is too white. what she's doing is just stating a fact of what we see, what everybody sees in front of their eyes. they know that the main kind of representation of science, the most famous scientists that have been pushed and made famous , are a and made famous, are a particular type of person. so i don't see how it would necessarily be that it's racist. can you imagine , joanna? can you imagine, joanna? >> can you imagine saying, can you imagine saying that another discipline , let's say discipline, let's say literature, was was to black like, okay, if you said that literature was to black because you wanted more diversity within literature, then there's an argument for diversity. >> it's not that diversity only counts only white counts if it's only white people. could talk about
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people. you could talk about diversity when it comes to sexual on or, you sexual city on boards or, you know, it comes to gender. know, when it comes to gender. there's so many other areas of diversity that talk about, diversity that we talk about, but people have problem but people only have a problem with to with with it when it's to do with race. when people talk about gender diversity or all for women know, for more women and, you know, for more diversity of women, but you've only got a problem when it's skin colour. >> okay. do think? >> okay. what do you think? finally, final on this finally, final thoughts on this alka cuthbert oh, no . alka sehgal, cuthbert oh, no. >> the law of gravity is not white, it's not black, it's not got any colour. right. it's a it's a immaterial thing. knowledge itself accumulates and assimilates and it synthesises especially in a subject like science . the reason we hear science. the reason we hear about about dannin or newton is not because they're white, it's because the work that they did, the intellectual leaps they made were based on previous knowledge that were based on previous knowledge contributions from around the world. but they managed to because of who they were at that time and their intellectual capacity, their knowledge of science managed to
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make significant breakthroughs , make significant breakthroughs, as i don't think we need to be ashamed of that. >> okay, joanna, briefly, if you can. >> yeah, just one thing before we wrap up . this isn't about we wrap up. this isn't about taking away from dannin and other famous scientists . it's other famous scientists. it's about adding to it. it's not saying that we shouldn't have those people that have been pioneers in science and have been great for us as a society. it's about promoting that. okay, we can have a few more dannin's, but actually maybe we can have a few i don't know, people few more. i don't know, people from or like more from nigeria or like the more you open up to the next you open it up to the next generation, you . generation, the more you. >> why do you think dannin nigerian people , what did you nigerian people, what did you say? >> dannin isn't? why do you think dannin you know if you were to ask nigeria, where's your nigerian people? where's your nigerian people? where's your ? why wouldn't they your dannin? why wouldn't they say, know, dannin is say, well, you know, dannin is our dannin , my thanks, my thanks our dannin, my thanks, my thanks to social commentator joanna jaflue to social commentator joanna jarjue and the director of don't divide us, alka sehgal. >> cuthbert. thank you both for your contribution to a fascinating debate. who do you agree with is science? now to
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white david says science is based on evidence and facts. your tone is irrelevant. your skin tone is irrelevant. the only relevant quality is your ability. neil says. so—called science built so—called white science built the we should take the modern world. we should take pride have confidence in it, pride and have confidence in it, jackie . maggie proof jackie says. dr. maggie is proof that the colour of your skin does not matter in science. she's highly intelligent and has done very well in the industry because that, not because of because of that, not because of her your verdict is her race. well your verdict is now say science is now in. 7% say that science is too white. no. it is too white. 93% say no. it is not. coming up in a bombshell new documentary about the case, it's been revealed that portuguese police have apologised parents of apologised to the parents of madeleine mccann. but will matty ever be found ? and i'll be ever be found? and i'll be speaking to williams—thomas speaking to mark williams—thomas , the top who has devoted 16 , the top cop who has devoted 16 years of his life to get the truth. but first, could ditching net zero win rishi sunak the next election? nigel farage wades into this clear blue water between the tories and labour soon. also, he'll reveal all about itv's bid to lure him into the jungle. for i'm a celebrity,
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isabel monday to thursdays from six till 930 . six till 930. >> okay. a lot to get through, but big speculation about the kings speech in a couple of weeks time. rishi sunak due to go anti—green of course it's next week in which he'll be announcing to parliament via the king his plans for the coming parliament as he desperately tries to differentiate his tory party from their leader. opposition labour opposition.
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the prime minister is expected to announce pro car policies and plans to expand north sea oil and gas exploration in his landmark speech next tuesday . as landmark speech next tuesday. as well as making it harder for local authorities to introduce 20 mile per hour speed limits and ultra low emission zones. so let's get the thoughts of my panel on this by the way, having a bit of trouble getting the line to nigel farage, but we're working on it. but for now, daily express columnist carole malone, labour malone, former labour party adviser former adviser matthew laza and former environment secretary ranil jayawardena . ranil, let me start jayawardena. ranil, let me start with you. do you think that essentially diluting or even ditching net zero could win rishi sunak the next election? >> well, i certainly think bringing common sense to net zero you know, zero definitely can. you know, the it's been the trouble is it's been absolutely captured by a hard left brigade that frankly don't want anyone to have any fun even want anyone to have any fun ever, don't want people to ever, who don't want people to have control over their own lives, want everyone to be lives, who want everyone to be travelling government travelling on government transport in private transport rather than in private transport. he's transport. and you know, if he's taking anti—car cult taking on the anti—car cult that's infiltrated so many parts of public sector, then good
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of the public sector, then good on him. and will win him on him. and that will win him votes people be votes because people want to be able to their own lives. able to control their own lives. that's normal, entirely that's entirely normal, entirely rational. people to be able rational. people want to be able to where they to go, to get where they want to go, when want to go in the when they want to go in the vehicle, that want to go in vehicle, that they want to go in and keep going. >> okay. what do you think about this, matthew? i mean, is it a worry for keir starmer that rishi made this manoeuvre? >> well, first of all, i think it's a bit of smoke and mirrors from because he does from rishi sunak because he does speeches us what the speeches telling us what the bits the zero agenda that bits of the net zero agenda that he's to dump, he he's to going dump, but he doesn't speech. when he doesn't give a speech. when he a couple of weeks ago the government decided all government decided that all those laws that it had those eu green laws that it had talked about rid of talked about getting rid of after surprise, after all, surprise, surprise, it to get rid of. it wasn't going to get rid of. no, i think, you know, of course, we all want common sense in net zero, but. well, keir starmer doesn't. does, starmer doesn't. yes, he does, because in this because a lot of people in this country really care about it. i think there's a danger for the tories here. the idea that dropping commitments dropping all green commitments would electoral would be a route to electoral success. that's not what they say. i know, but if you're say. no, i know, but if you're talking about dropping more and
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going of tory going further, when lots of tory voters, particularly more voters, particularly in the more prosperous country prosperous parts of the country where dems where the lib dems are challenging the posh bits of challenging in the posh bits of the know, the home counties, you know, wander those surrey seats wander around those surrey seats that the lib dems are targeting wander around those surrey seats thatyou lib dems are targeting wander around those surrey seats thatyou lib over; are targeting wander around those surrey seats thatyou lib over ane targeting wander around those surrey seats thatyou lib over an electricing and you trip over an electric car charger. so you've car charger. so they you've admitted zero is for admitted it net zero is for people can afford it which people that can afford it which is saying is most brits can't is saying is if most brits can't the are hoping that this the tories are hoping that this is political cynicism is going to of the that might to one of the things that might save at least save save them, or at least save a little bit bacon. little bit of their bacon. i think they might have they might find that it's e jean carroll. i think win part of think they win in one part of the and lose people from the country and lose people from every class and from every kind of know, know, of you know, money, you know, division. of you know, money, you know, diviand. think we all want to >> and i think we all want to get to net zero, but we don't want to race at it and we don't want to race at it and we don't want to race at it before we're ready get it seems ready to get there. it seems insanity me to not use the insanity to me to not use the reserves the the north reserves in the in the north sea. i mean, i think we've got something like years worth of something like 30 years worth of power there. why the hell are power in there. why the hell are we using and then we not using that and then sell it? going it and it? we're going to sell it and make but why aren't we? make money. but why aren't we? why do that? it why wouldn't we do that? it makes as for those makes no sense. and as for those 20 an hour zones, i just.
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20 mile an hour zones, i just. i drove up from dorset today and i swear to god, the roads were empty and when i got into empty and. and when i got into london, we're going london, we're all going to 20 mile. congestion. mile. they caused congestion. they than they they caused more fumes than they actually should be. yes. it's actually should be. yes. it's actually causing actually should be. yes. it's actua he causing actually should be. yes. it's actua he calls causing actually should be. yes. it's actua he calls it's causing actually should be. yes. it's actuahe calls it's bandwagon what he calls it's bandwagon leaping, when you use leaping, isn't it, when you use common sense. >> so, look, have labour >> so, look, we have a labour government wales. isn't government in wales. it isn't 20 miles everywhere, miles an hour everywhere, but it's an and it's 20 miles an hour and everywhere with houses basically. i that's too everywhere with houses basicaibut that's too everywhere with houses basicaibut there that's too everywhere with houses basicaibut there are it's too everywhere with houses basicaibut there are 20 too everywhere with houses basicaibut there are 20 mile an much. but there are 20 mile an hour zones in particular black yes, mile per hour on a4. yes, 20 mile per hour on the a4. >> only friends the >> if only your friends in the labour party agreed with you. >> i was running in wales. >> i was running in wales. >> i'm glad to say we've put £0.10 metre and £0.10 in the metre and we have a line now. gb line to nigel farage now. gb news nigel, do you line to nigel farage now. gb news about nigel, do you line to nigel farage now. gb news about thiingel, do you line to nigel farage now. gb news about this rishi do you line to nigel farage now. gb news about this rishi sunak 0 you think about this rishi sunak showing of showing the tory right a bit of leg of course those red wall leg and of course those red wall voters could diluting leg and of course those red wall vot(zero could diluting leg and of course those red wall vot(zero help could diluting leg and of course those red wall vot(zero help rishid diluting leg and of course those red wall vot(zero help rishi sunak ng leg and of course those red wall vot(zero help rishi sunak win net zero help rishi sunak win the next election? >> well, he can rishi sunak >> well, he can help rishi sunak in there's no in the polls of that. there's no doubt when the next doubt at all when the next election. oh, good lord, no. i mean so much trust has been lost. i now think that's an impossibility unless labour implodes and which is perhaps an even . i mean that could happen, even. i mean that could happen, i guess . but, but look, i mean,
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i guess. but, but look, i mean, what we're getting here, what we're getting here is classic reactive government. it's this conservative party, it's theresa may's legislature action that has put us headlong down a path thatis has put us headlong down a path that is injurious to the poorest in society , to british in society, to british manufacturing . but public manufacturing. but public opinion is now shifting. the prime minister's opinion, not his own, because it never is, because they're followers, not leaders , these people. so could leaders, these people. so could it help them? yes. could it save them from losing every single red wall seat? maybe. or maybe saving half a dozen? yes. but i honestly believe that, you know when 40% of your 2019 voters now say they're not going to vote for you, you might get some of them back, but you will not get all of them back. now nigel suella braverman, the home secretary, has spoken strongly about the propane mark steyn marches we've seen over the last three weekends. >> take listen . >> take a listen. >> take a listen. >> we've seen now tens of
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thousands of people take to the streets following the massacre of jewish people. the single largest loss of jewish life since the holocaust . chanting since the holocaust. chanting for the erasure of israel from the map . to my mind, there's the map. to my mind, there's only one way to describe those marches . they are hate marches . marches. they are hate marches. now nigel, the authorities have turned a blind eye to this for years, haven't they? >> we've talked about that teacher in batley still on the run after showing an image of the prophet muhammad as a teaching material. plenty of other examples , all in the name other examples, all in the name of political correctness as yeah, cowardice really is the word cowardice. >> you know , i'm afraid so much >> you know, i'm afraid so much of this that has happened, it's partly , of course, you know, partly, of course, you know, peter mandelson , then alastair peter mandelson, then alastair campbell, tony blair, who said they wanted to rub the noses of they wanted to rub the noses of the right in diversity. well well done, chaps. well done. absolutely marvellous. but it's also partly conservative cowardice that has allowed us to
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get to this. when i listened to suella, i think. well, yeah, that's good. you're brave , that's good. you're brave, you're speaking out. but does she represent what the conservative party is actually going to do , or is she there going to do, or is she there just as lee anderson is there as a deputy chairman in to say, it's okay, folks, you can vote for us. we're all right. really without really actually ever meaning it. so look, you know, suella says all the right things. priti patel before her says all the right things. and yet things get worse and worse and worse. and i thought, i must say, i thought that the mass is lamic call to prayer in whitehall next to the cenotaph opposite downing street. that took place on saturday night, said so much about how far we've sunk as a country. said so much about how far we've sunk as a country . integration sunk as a country. integration has failed. >> nigel the reaction to october october the seventh atrocities has revealed much, hasn't it, about the simmering hate there is on britain's streets will we
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ever get the genie back into the lamp or do we now have to accept that a significant portion of lamp or do we now have to accept thaipopulation nt portion of lamp or do we now have to accept thaipopulation simply on of lamp or do we now have to accept thaipopulation simply reject the the population simply reject the values this country ? values of this country? >> well, we've already gone past that point in brussels , way past that point in brussels, way past that point in brussels, way past that point in paris , and we're that point in paris, and we're just a little bit behind them. and i don't really honestly and truly think we're going to sort this out. i think we're headed for very much more difficult future. i think we're headed for a very politicised future here. i think we're headed for politics where we will see sectarianism and racism on open display. but it will be allowed because they're not white. and i have to say, i know that the party of islam has been rejected by the electoral commission, but it's going to come in some different form divisive, nasty , different form divisive, nasty, bad politics. mark we have imported the politics of the rest of the world into our country . it's now there to be
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country. it's now there to be seen on the streets of london, birmingham, manchester, edinburgh. wherever you go , it's edinburgh. wherever you go, it's very, very tough to think that genie can get put back. >> however, nigel, briefly, if you can, do you not accept the argument that the vast majority of people on those marches are simply worried about innocent palestinians and that they march in peace? do you not do you not take it's a small, take the view that it's a small, vile, nasty minority who are vile, a nasty minority who are responsible for the hate ? responsible for the hate? >> look, i think, you know, i mean , one the biggest mean, one of the biggest problems were to say problems is if we were to say that march represented every muslim in britain, that would be an even bigger mistake to make. and i'm quite sure there are people on that march who are sincere who would like to see a cease fire because they're seeing the death toll of civilians in gaza mount being very, very quickly. yes i absolutely accept that. all of those things . indeed, on my show those things. indeed, on my show earlier, i had an imam on who condemned so much of what was being said and said that
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actually some of the preachers in the mosques should lose their jobs. so, yes, absolutely , ali. jobs. so, yes, absolutely, ali. the problem is, if even if even a few % of a very large a few% of a very large population of millions feel that way about us, our culture, our country, and are prepared in some cases to go and use violent means that we have a major, major problem. and we do have a major problem. and we do have a major problem. and we do have a major problem. nigel before i let you go to that well—deserved pint of ale, you make headlines every week. >> last week it was the de—banking scandal which was an absolute outrage. my heart goes out to you for what you've been through over the last few months, but better news this week. you're being tipped to go into now . you served into the jungle now. you served into the jungle now. you served in the european parliament. surely that's far worse than a bushtucker trial ? bushtucker trial? >> i would think so, yes. i mean , the ghastly people i had to be with. and you know, in the last few months in brussels, coffee bars wouldn't serve me, restaurants wouldn't serve me. and even my favourite pub said,
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we can't serve you anymore, mr farage, because, you know, we lose all our business. and so i'm used to going through tough times and living with snakes of all different sizes . and of all different sizes. and of course, mark, you know, in previous years i've just ruled it out completely. this year i'm in a conversation with them. they've sent me a contract. i'm to going watch it. i'm going to have a real serious read of it this evening. and look, i might do it. i might not. but i'm giving it very serious consideration. it is a massive programme watched by a vast number of young people who care about their lives and where they're going but aren't engaged in politics. i'm giving it real thought . thought. >> how exciting. let me tell you, whatever they pay you, nigel, it won't be enough because the ratings will go through the roof as they do every time you're on gb news 7:00 monday thursday. a 7:00 monday to thursday. a couple nigel, before couple of seconds, nigel, before i blowing smoke up your i stop blowing smoke up your derriere . we haven't spoken derriere. we haven't spoken since news that boris
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since the news that boris johnson is joining gb news as a presenter and contributor. this is a big statement for the channel is a big statement for the channel, isn't it? >> what it is? i mean, we've lost 1 or 2 presenters and contributors recently and we've replaced them with former replaced them with a former prime minister, which seems to me in me to be quite a good trade in many ways. boris is always entertaining , never, never entertaining, never, never a person to ignore . so let us hope person to ignore. so let us hope that he applies more homework , that he applies more homework, more preparation or thought, and more preparation or thought, and more consistency of view than he did as prime minister. and if he does that, it's going to be just so great. >> nigel, more power to you. have a great evening. we'll catch up soon. nigel farage returns tomorrow seven. returns tomorrow at seven. coming , as labour suspends, a coming up, as labour suspends, a senior mp over deeply offensive comments at a pro—palestine rally. is starmer too weak to be prime minister? we'll debate that shortly. but next, following a bombshell new documentary about the case and a reported police apology the reported police apology to the parents, will madeleine mccann ever found ? i'll be speaking
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n ext next why a woke education authority has refused millions of pounds from the brilliant billionaire james dyson . we'll discuss that james dyson. we'll discuss that with fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie. but time now for top cop mark williams—thomas, who has devoted 16 years of his life to get to the bottom of the disappearance of tragic british schoolgirl madeleine mccann . schoolgirl madeleine mccann. german police believe that madeleine is now dead and their prime suspect is german national christian brueckner. but in a new documentary about the three year old who vanished from her family's holiday apartment on the portuguese algarve in two thousand and seven, program makers dropped this bombshell about portuguese cops who about the portuguese cops who bungled the case from day one. i'm joined now by top investigative journalist and
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former cop, mark williams—thomas , the man best known for exposing jimmy savile as a mark, portuguese cops have tonight come out and denied that they apologised to the mccanns. what's your reading of the situation . yeah good evening, mark. >> very strange documentary. i watched it, >> very strange documentary. i watched it , you >> very strange documentary. i watched it, you know, 18 months ago i made an investigation for paramount tv , a three part paramount tv, a three part investigation, and a very detailed way. we looked at the portuguese case in relation to madeleine mccann , but also more madeleine mccann, but also more significantly, the investigation by the germans in relation to christian b , i can tell you, christian b, i can tell you, having spoken to my contact in the portuguese pjs, that they did have a meeting with the mccann family. it was a commission that went over their their understanding is very clearly that they did not apply charges in relation to the case. what they did very clearly say to them is there is no longer a portuguese investigation . this portuguese investigation. this matter is now being investigated
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by the germans and very much put the responsibility over to them . the responsibility over to them. so when the bbc are saying that there is very clear understanding that they apologise, that is certainly not the message that the pj are telling me. >> yes, it's not an official, but i can tell you my contact in the pj's is a very senior level and that is their understanding of that meeting. >> is there any chance, any >> mark is there any chance, any hope that madeleine mccann is still alive of the chances of madeleine? >> alive are very, very slim. of course, gerry and kate will always live with the hope that one day they will get the answers until such time they answers until such time as they have that have evidence to support that she's dead, which they don't have. she's dead, which they don't have . and will, course, have. and they will, of course, live hope that she's live with that hope that she's still alive. >> wolters, the >> hans wolters, who is the german prosecutor, him and i don't to eye, but he is don't see eye to eye, but he is very in the very misleading in the information he's given. >> let's be clear for five years now, been investigated now, they've been investigated shooting christian b and for five years they have not moved any further fonnard. a year ago he said that he was going to be
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in a position to charge christian b just after christmas. now as we approach christmas, he's saying he hopes next year in the early part of next year in the early part of next year. the charge christian b, they've no more evidence b, they've got no more evidence now than previously and now than they had previously and in , in my paramount in fact, in my paramount investigation, we showed that the they had was the evidence they had was incredibly weak and in fact, we were able to put fonnard not only information that undermined the case that they feel they have, but also show that christian b's likely to have an alibi. let's be very clear . alibi. let's be very clear. >> christian b is a vile individual. >> he's committed some horrific offences against children. >> that does not mean to say that he should be accused of the murder of christian of madeleine mccann just simply because he got a nasty background. hans wolter is a prosecutor . wolter is a prosecutor. >> he's very clearly saying that in his belief he killed madeleine mccann , christian b madeleine mccann, christian b killed madeleine mccann. >> what if you've got that evidence, then charge him. you don't the evidence. so don't have the evidence. so stop. keep telling that. go stop. keep telling us that. go and find the evidence and charge him shut up briefly, mark,
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him or shut up briefly, mark, what do you think did happen to madeleine mccann ? madeleine mccann? >> well, my belief and i've done a very detailed investigation, i've spent hours and hours reviewing this, looked at all the case files i've spoken. >> i've probably got more contacts than anybody else in relation case. having relation to this case. having been there. the first been out there. the very first investigator that really went out that on out there, i believe that on that that madeleine out there, i believe that on thaiwe that madeleine out there, i believe that on thaiwe knowat madeleine out there, i believe that on thaiwe know she adeleine out there, i believe that on thaiwe know she wokeine out there, i believe that on thaiwe know she woke up on the up, we know she woke up on the two nights , gerry and two previous nights, gerry and kate, on the morning of her disappearance, her disappearance, did say to her that you do wake up in the that if you do wake up in the middle of the night again , we're middle of the night again, we're only tapas bar, which is only at the tapas bar, which is just walkway of the just across the walkway of the swimming pool. believe swimming pool. i believe she woke went looking for mum woke up and went looking for mum and and as she walked out of and dad and as she walked out of the apartment, she walked out down steps onto a public down the steps onto a public footpath before having to walk back and i believe at back in again. and i believe at that point she was abducted . now that point she was abducted. now it'd easy say, but it'd be very easy to say, but what is chance of that ? what is the chance of that? predatory are incredibly rare. i've been over to the fbi and spoken to the fbi in regards to the abduction of madeleine, and
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i can tell you that there are similarities in the cases that we've had, particularly with sarah payne and jeanette tate, both of those abducted and disappeared out of sight for a matter of seconds before the abductor abducted them. so these things happen in a matter of seconds. and i believe the abductor happened to be in that location , was a predatory location, was a predatory abducted madeleine. and sadly, to date, we have no further information . i mean, one of the information. i mean, one of the things that's incredible, not just the position of the german authorities who are saying , you authorities who are saying, you know, five years on, they have their man, they haven't charged them, but let's look the them, but let's look at the money wasted by the british, millions, million pounds. >> well, look, mark, i've got to stop you there. but always a privilege to have you on the show. will show. mark williams—thomas will catch up, as catch up again. coming up, as king rolls out the king charles rolls out the red carpet beckham carpet for david beckham after he reported he fell out with harry. and meghan has the king he reported he fell out with harry. a nd meghan has the king he reported he fell out with harry. a cunning an has the king he reported he fell out with harry. a cunning an hasatle king he reported he fell out with harry. a cunning an hasat theing taken a cunning swipe at the sussexes ? i'll be asking sussexes? i'll be asking diana's former butler, the brilliant paul burrell. plus, does he think that nigel farage should
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enter the jungle? all of that is next. >> good evening. it's alex burkill here with your latest news, weather forecast and whilst for many, the unsettled theme continues through the next 24 hours, it's a drier but chillier picture for scotland . chillier picture for scotland. and that's because of a brief ridge of high pressure which is quietening the weather down a little bit here. meanwhile the rest of the under the rest of the uk under the influence of pressure influence of a low pressure centred republic of ireland centred over republic of ireland that's then heavy that's bringing then heavy showery rain many parts of showery rain to many parts of england , wales and particularly england, wales and particularly eastern parts of northern ireland. heavy rain building up here could be up to here overnight. could be up to 100mm perhaps, which is why some impacts are likely drier weather across parts of scotland, a touch of frost likely here, milder south. but with milder further south. but with that a few patches of mist and fog are possible. first thing on tuesday morning. tuesday then, is going to be a changeable day with further showery rain across parts northern ireland, parts of northern ireland, northern a northern england into wales, a drier a time before drier slot for a time before more wet and windy weather arrives from southwest later arrives from the southwest later on. across scotland
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on. meanwhile across scotland here it is looking mostly dry. plenty sunshine, too , but plenty of sunshine, too, but quite chilly. temperatures struggling here in single digits, milder further south with highs of around 14 or 15 celsius. if you're going trick or treating through tuesday evening watch for band of evening, watch out for a band of rain its from rain pushing its way up from the south—west, towards the south—west, drier towards the north, unsettled north, but more unsettled weather is on the way this week as storm kieran approaches most affecting southern areas as we go wednesday night into go through wednesday night into thursday, heavy thursday, bringing some heavy rain. but it's the exceptionally strong winds, particularly around channel coastal parts which most concerned about which we're most concerned about
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>> it is coming up to 10:00. i'm mark dolan . is gb news tonight mark dolan. is gb news tonight breaking this evening, labour backbencher andy mcdonnell has finally had the whip removed for spewing this at a pro—palestine rally at the weekend until all people , israelis and people, israelis and palestinians between the river
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and the sea can live in peaceful liberty . so as sir keir starmer liberty. so as sir keir starmer finally starts punishing dissident mps , will the labour dissident mps, will the labour leader survive this new toxic party? row that's the big debate next with my panel this evening. carole malone, ranil jayawardena and matthew laza . also tonight, and matthew laza. also tonight, as justice secretary alex chalk draws up new plans for prisoner reform, should drug dealers and burglars be allowed to keep their criminal past a secret from new employers in the name of redemption? my panel reacts shortly. meanwhile as king charles rolls out the red carpet for david beckham, who's reportedly fallen out with harry. and meghan has the king taken a cunning swipe at the sussexes? and as speculation grows, should nigel farage be? i'll be asking jungle icon himself. former royal butler paul burrell . and they've done paul burrell. and they've done it again . yes, indeed. you'll
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it again. yes, indeed. you'll love this. a clip from south park completely obliterating woke hollywood. the clip is coming shortly. also, oh, i think we got it. ready. well done, megan. la la , eric. done, megan. la la, eric. >> it's okay. it's okay. na na . >> it's okay. it's okay. na na. i had a dream that i was replaced by a diverse woman . replaced by a diverse woman. >> oh, not again. yeah only this time it wasn't just me . they time it wasn't just me. they were taking all my favourite people. and replacing them with diverse women complaining about the patriarchy check the patriarchy. will you check under make sure under the bed and make sure there's executives there's no disney executives under promise there's under there? i promise there's not. i'm scared. mom, will you please just look and make sure kathleen kennedy isn't under my bed ? bed? >> brilliant star. fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie asks why british billionaire james dyson's philanthropy has been blocked by a woke local authority. meanwhile after the closure of 300 stores, has britain given boots the boots? kelvin is uncancelled shortly, tomorrow's newspapers are coming as well, and i'll be crowning my first greatest britain and union jackass of the week. lots to get
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through. but first, the news headunes through. but first, the news headlines and karen armstrong . on >> very good evening to you. let's get you up to date with the headlines. the israeli prime minister has ruled out a ceasefire in gaza, declaring this is a time for war. benjamin netanyahu said a ceasefire would amount to surrendering to hamas , amount to surrendering to hamas, who he described as a part of an axis of evil being formed by iran. he added even the most just wars have unintended civilian casualties. more than 8300 palestinians have now been killed by israeli bombing, according to the gaza health ministry. mr netanyahu has described hamas as deadly attacks. on october, the seventh as a turning point. >> israel will not agree to a cessation of hostilities with hamas after the horrific attacks of october 7th. call calls for a ceasefire are calls for israel to surrender to hamas, to surrender to terrorism, to
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surrender to terrorism, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to barbarism that that will not happen . will not happen. >> an israeli soldier being held hostage by hamas has been rescued. private ari megadisc was freed during a ground operation in gaza and she's been returned reunite with her family. earlier, hamas released a video of three women being held hostage in an apparent attempt to put some pressure on mr netanyahu . one of the mr netanyahu. one of the hostages is highly critical of the israeli prime minister and demanded to be released in exchange for palestinian prisoners. their relatives, though , say the proof of life though, say the proof of life has given them hope. a conservative mp has been sacked from his government job after calling for a ceasefire in gaza . calling for a ceasefire in gaza. downing street, said paul bristow, a ministerial aide in the department for science , the department for science, innovation and technology, made comments that are not consistent with the principles of collective responsibility . collective responsibility. meanwhile, labour has suspended aide andy mcdonald, claiming comments he made about the war were deeply offensive. the mp
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for middlesbrough used the controversy phrase between the river and the sea in a speech at a pro—palestinian demonstration at the weekend . the home at the weekend. the home secretary, meanwhile, has described pro—palestinian protests in the uk as hate marches . as earlier today the marches. as earlier today the government and the police held an emergency cobra meeting to discuss the threat of terrorism unked discuss the threat of terrorism linked to the conflict . the linked to the conflict. the meeting follows a rise in anti—semitic and islamophobic incidents across the country . incidents across the country. since october the 7th. the country's top civil servant had no confidence in boris johnson's leadership at the height of the pandemic in whatsapp, messages shared with the covid inquiry, simon case , who remains cabinet simon case, who remains cabinet secretary, said boris johnson cannot lead and accused him of changing his mind on a daily basis . the private basis. the private correspondence september 2020 correspondence in september 2020 was during the period was revealed during the period of mr johnson's former top aide, martin reynolds, who's evidence revealed dysfunctional internal politics within downing street because of dominic cummings. he
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claimed mrjohnson's because of dominic cummings. he claimed mr johnson's former top adviser , who will give evidence adviser, who will give evidence tomorrow . the police officer tomorrow. the police officer charged with murder following the fatal shooting of chris kaba will be named publicly. the fatal shooting of chris kaba will be named publicly . the will be named publicly. the officer's name and date of birth will be made public on the 30th of january. will be made public on the 30th ofjanuary. their will be made public on the 30th of january. their home will be made public on the 30th ofjanuary. their home address, of january. their home address, though, or any image of them can not be published. mr kaba died when he was shot through the windscreen of a car in south—east london last year . south—east london last year. that's all for the moment. i'll be back with another bulletin a little bit later, but now it's over to . mark my thanks to aaron over to. mark my thanks to aaron armstrong, who returns in an hours armstrong, who returns in an hour's time . hour's time. >> tomorrow's news tonight in our media buzz. and we'll kick >> tomorrow's news tonight in ourwith ia buzz. and we'll kick >> tomorrow's news tonight in ourwith a buzz. and we'll kick >> tomorrow's news tonight in ourwith a firstz. and we'll kick >> tomorrow's news tonight in ourwith a first looki we'll kick >> tomorrow's news tonight in ourwith a first look at'e'll kick off with a first look at tomorrow's front pages . and we tomorrow's front pages. and we start with the metro miracle . as start with the metro miracle. as kieran heads for the uk save from storm a couple was swept off a harbour wall during a storm, had a miraculous escape when the waves pushed them back
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onto it. there you go. there is a god after all. also i think we've got the independent. do we? megan lovely, the independent newspaper covid inquiry. chaotic flip flopping. bofis inquiry. chaotic flip flopping. boris made it impossible to tackle pandemic effectively evidence from former pm's closest advisers as top aide admits to ensuring messages on pm's covid whatsapp group disappear . weird also tanks disappear. weird also tanks target gaza city in major escalation of israel. ground offensive more papers to come , offensive more papers to come, but let's get reaction to the big stories of the day with my top panel this evening. daily express carole maloney express columnist carole maloney and former environment secretary ranil jayawardena and former labour party adviser matthew laza . breaking tonight, labour laza. breaking tonight, labour backbencher andy mcdonald has had the party whip suspended after he appeared at a pro—police 9th march over the weekend and said this. >> we will not rest until we have justice, until all people,
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israelis and palestinians, between the river and the sea can live in peaceful liberty, free, a free palestine . free, a free palestine. >> but what's sir keir starmer hand forced by the prime minister for just an hand forced by the prime minister forjust an hour hand forced by the prime minister for just an hour before the labour announcement? rishi sunak disciplined tory mp paul bristow for breaking ranks and calling for a ceasefire in gaza by sacking him from his government role . so actually , government role. so actually, can i start with you on this one, ranil ? do you think the one, ranil? do you think the prime minister was right to relieve paul bristow of his government duties today ? government duties today? >> yeah, i mean, paul's even said that the prime minister was right to do that because if you're government or if you're in the government or if you're in the government or if you in government you serve in a government role, then collective then you have collective responsibility. really responsibility. it's really important that the government speaks with one voice. but interestingly , though, starmer interestingly, though, starmer has taken this action against andy mcdonnell. it's a bit of a distraction really, because half
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of , i distraction really, because half of, i say, distraction really, because half of , i say, exaggerate, distraction really, because half of, i say, exaggerate, perhaps make the point. but a good number of his shadow government can't agree with his own policy. so whatever we make of starmer's policy , half of his government policy, half of his government in waiting supposedly don't agree with it . and that's the agree with it. and that's the action that he needs to take. if he's serious about having a government in waiting , then he's government in waiting, then he's got to show it and he's got to get rid of the people who are not going to agree with his policies. he policies. othennise, if he is prime there really prime minister, is there really going to be of going to be a set of two governments downing street, governments in downing street, one person supposed leading the country and a bunch of the hard left saying the opposite? well matthews shaking his head, i'll come to him in moment. come to him in a moment. >> starmer lost >> carol. has keir starmer lost control of his well, control of his party? well, clearly , he's lost control of clearly, he's lost control of his party. >> that the fact that >> the fact that the fact that macdonald able out macdonald felt able to speak out in also , you're in that way and also, you're right, half of his mps want a ceasefire, which is going against what starmer has said. you know , i thought this you know, i thought when this all last week, all started to happen last week, when when he had that when he when he had made that comment right comment about israel had a right to defend itself and party
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to defend itself and the party started to implode, thought, started to implode, i thought, this going to be a test of this is going to be a test of what kind prime minister he's what kind of prime minister he's going make. and then saw going to make. and then i saw him couple of days later him a couple of days later issued ridiculous issued that ridiculous clarification. didn't clarification. i didn't really say absolutely say that. he absolutely said what we all heard it. what he said. we all heard it. and this week, i think his hand probably has been forced by sunak, but he's you know, reynolds. has show reynolds. right. he has to show he keep this mob he is able to keep this mob under control because because people like macdonald and macdonald should have kept their heads down since since corbyn got kicked out . but they're got kicked out. but they're still there and they've come roaring back at the first opportunity. and he has to deal with them because this will make them why them unelectable. this is why they elected the last they weren't elected the last time because of that time round, because of that momentum type mob. they're and that's why they won't get it again. and the thing is, this is the first time he's ever been close to getting into downing street. and he i think he's i think he's probably not strong enough to control it. i think he's not really fit to be prime minister. i think he's too weak and we will find out in the next
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few if messes this up few weeks if he messes this up because he's not tough enough. labour doesn't deserve to get in, really does. and we don't deserve the labour party that will be there notwithstanding mr b ristow. >> the tories bristow. >> the tories look positively united on israel as opposed to labour horribly divided and well, in a sense the country is divided as well, because there are two issues here. >> there the and it is, as >> there is the and it is, as cowell says, it's confusing because both sound because they both sound similar sounding as andy sounding surnames as andy mcdonald, was the former mcdonald, who was the former transport spokesperson under corbyn, who has been suspended. he was then defended by john mcdonnell, shadow mcdonnell, who was a shadow chancellor, more chancellor, rather more high profile who defended his profile figure who defended his comments, who i think should also be suspended. and i think you the you may well see that in the next 24 hours, depending on what john people who john says, those are people who i mean, look, andy knew exactly what doing by using that what he was doing by using that language. know, language. nobody, you know, you'd in a, you you'd have to be in a in a, you know, on mars for the last two weeks you know, weeks to not know that you know, that being sensitive to that anybody being sensitive to the not have the situation would not have used was used language like that. it was quite suspended quite right that he suspended from river the sea. from the to river the sea. >> eradication >> this implies the eradication of imply. of jews. it would imply. >> yeah , i mean, certainly
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>> yeah, i mean, it certainly implies eradication of implies the eradication of israel yeah israel as a state. yeah >> but john macdonald then i'll shut up. john mcdonnell did say and this is insults all of our intelligence he said this was this was a chant about how we could all peacefully could all live peacefully together. well, if you looked at those last two those marches over the last two weeks, they were not about how we can all live. >> that's why. absolutely, >> and that's why. absolutely, karen. that's think karen. and that's why i think that should that that john mcdonnell should be now, be suspended as well. now, that's the larger that's different to the larger number you've both number of mps that you've both talked about who signed talked about who have signed calling talked about who have signed callinthey're to call think they're naive to call for a l think they're naive to call for a , but way are a ceasefire, but in no way are they supporting hamas. what they what they are, if they call it yes, they are, because what that means is hamas remain place. means is hamas remain in place. >> they remain in >> it means that they remain in place do again what did . place to do again what they did. >> should. >> i think they should. >> i think they should. >> is the strategic >> i think they should. >> of is the strategic >> i think they should. >> of hamas is the strategic >> i think they should. >> of hamas completelyzgic >> i think they should. >> of hamas completely .|ic goal of hamas completely. >> so, look, i don't they should be for a ceasefire. be calling for a ceasefire. i think they should calling think they should be calling for, what for, which is actually what we've rishi we've seen today from rishi sunak himself is concentrating on into gaza. on aid, getting into gaza. so it seems the momentum. seems to me that the momentum. but ask about the political but you ask about the political you about leadership , ask you asked about leadership, ask for doing the for a ceasefire as doing the terrorist work for them. he has
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been labour been tougher than any labour leader he hasn't changed leader before. he hasn't changed much. changed well , much. he hasn't changed well, it's tougher tony it's even tougher than tony blair in terms of the next generation of labour mps who will be coming through at the next they next election. they are literally in keir in literally moulded in keir in called mr flip—flop for anything i >> none of us have any idea what keir starmer stands for. i can't remember single policy that he has stood. >> he could have given in over the week this pressure. the last week to this pressure. he given in to this the last week to this pressure. he hundred. given in to this 101 hundred. >> did in. >> he did give in. >> he did give in. >> if rishi not sacked this >> if rishi had not sacked this bloke because early bloke today isis because early in the day the news was saying all the today that all through the news today that he the both of those men he was the both of those men were going to be punishment. he was the both of those men weri going to be punishment. he was the both of those men weri mean to be punishment. he was the both of those men weri mean they) punishment. he was the both of those men weri mean they) punistheylt. he was the both of those men weri mean they) punisthey would >> i mean they would they would have got are they going get have got are they going to get rid shadow ministers? have got are they going to get rid they adow ministers? have got are they going to get rid they going ministers? have got are they going to get rid they going to 1isters? have got are they going to get rid they going to geters? have got are they going to get rid they going to get rid of >> are they going to get rid of the shadow, the minister the shadow, the shadow minister chanted then know chanted the phrase, then know calling ceasefire. calling for a ceasefire. >> prime >> that's what the prime minister >> that's what the prime mirand' >> that's what the prime mirand if half your mps are >> and if half of your mps are saying a ceasefire saying they want a ceasefire too, that i'm not talking about laboun too, that i'm not talking about labour, that's they're against. >> i think the key thing is, is that chaos remains completely consistent supporting consistent in his supporting israel's right, but everyone around getting
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around him is not getting humanitarian but getting humanity , humanitarian support humanity, humanitarian support in. and that's a position that he will remain absolutely consistent and give the consistent of and give the leadership was asked for. consistent of and give the lea he's ip was asked for. consistent of and give the lea he's just was asked for. consistent of and give the lea he's just gotvas asked for. consistent of and give the lea he's just got no asked for. consistent of and give the lea he's just got no aske backing >> he's just got no one backing him. lots of people him. he has got lots of people backing but they need to backing him, but they need to speak up. >> would say to people >> but i would say to people like i'm from like andy burnham, i'm from manchester, to andy, manchester, and i'd say to andy, who's a good thing. who's in many ways a good thing. i used to work with him when i was centre of labour was at the centre of the labour party. don't party. i would say, look, don't just know, sign justjump on, you know, sign a letter or a petition because justjump on, you know, sign a lett(situation tition because justjump on, you know, sign a lett(situation tition btoo use this situation is way too complex you're not freeing complex and you're not freeing palestine by doing that. the leader no authority. >> he he does not want labour's position to be that there will be a ceasefire and yet all be a ceasefire is and yet all and around him are and sundry around him are calling it's not. he's calling for one. it's not. he's demonstrating should they calling for one. it's not. he's denit,istrating should they calling for one. it's not. he's denit, should| should they calling for one. it's not. he's denit, should they should they calling for one. it's not. he's denit, should they getwuld they calling for one. it's not. he's denit, should they get into they get it, should they get into power, the labour party will be ungovernable. >> it's also that's not >> but it's also that's not true. it also goes beyond his own mps. it goes to the country . own mps. it goes to the country. starmer is very aware that the muslim vote is huge to get labourin muslim vote is huge to get labour in and if he's not seen to paul bristow i mean, i have to paul bristow i mean, i have to say i know the constituency that comes from . that paul bristow comes from. >> paul bristow does a lot
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that paul bristow comes from. >>work paul bristow does a lot that paul bristow comes from. >>work with bristow does a lot that paul bristow comes from. >>work with bris muslim; a lot of work with the muslim community know, community there. and, you know, today, people community there. and, you know, tonpeterborough people community there. and, you know, tonpeterborough are people community there. and, you know, tonpeterborough are telling eople community there. and, you know, tonpeterborough are telling me.e in peterborough are telling me is a cynical move to try and in peterborough are telling me is a cjupzal move to try and in peterborough are telling me is a cjup hisnove to try and in peterborough are telling me is a cjup his vote. to try and shore up his vote. >> fascinating debates. well, an hour the suspended labour hour ago the suspended labour mp andy he andy mcdonald has said that he looked fonnard andy mcdonald has said that he lotengaging fonnard andy mcdonald has said that he lotengaging with fonnard andy mcdonald has said that he lotengaging with and fonnard andy mcdonald has said that he lotengaging with and fully nnard to engaging with and fully cooperating the cooperating with the investigation . he my investigation. he went on my words on saturday should not be construed in any other way than they as a they were intended, namely as a heartfelt for an end to heartfelt plea for an end to killings in gaza and the occupied west bank and for all peoples in region to in peoples in the region to live in freedom threat freedom without the threat of violence happy violence. i'll be happy to explain views to the explain these views to the investigation convenes investigation when it convenes and that whip be and trust that the whip will be restored. meantime , for restored. in the meantime, for the humanity, i hope restored. in the meantime, for the we humanity, i hope restored. in the meantime, for the we pray|umanity, i hope restored. in the meantime, for the we pray thatnity, i hope restored. in the meantime, for the we pray that we, i hope restored. in the meantime, for the we pray that we willope restored. in the meantime, for the we pray that we will see an that we pray that we will see an end to the gaza . so end to the war in gaza. so coming up, do you agree with new justice reforms that allow drug dealers and burglars to keep their criminal a secret from new employers in the name of redemption ? my panel weigh in redemption? my panel weigh in shortly. and carol's not happy, but first, as king charles rolls out the red carpet for david beckham, who has reportedly fallen out with harry. and meghan has the king taken a cunning swipe at the sussexes?
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position on a ceasefire in the middle east. >> hi mark and team says andrew. let's say from saturday there's a ceasefire. what would we expect the israelis to do if hamas broke the ceasefire shouts of show restraint, don't retaliate , hate hamas, need to retaliate, hate hamas, need to be gone. strong views there from andrew. thank you for your emails. mark at gbnews.com now fleet street kingpin kelvin mackenzie is on the way. why is billionaire sir james dyson having so much money so much trouble giving money to a local school? we'll discuss that shortly. but first, fresh off the back of his record breaking netflix documentary , it be netflix documentary, could it be that had an avid that david beckham had an avid viewer inside buckingham palace? indeed the king has invited becks for dinner to discuss the possibility of him becoming an ambassador for his charity , the ambassador for his charity, the prince's foundation . this prince's foundation. this follows reports of a major feud between the beckhams and the royal runaways, the duke and duchess of sussex. so for reaction , i'm joined now by the reaction, i'm joined now by the former butler to princess diana, paul burrell . paul, great to paul burrell. paul, great to have you back on the show. is
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king charles making a bit of a statement here? cosying up to david beckham, who appears to have fallen out with the sussexes, course he is. sussexes, of course he is. >> of course, the king is making a statement, but so is david beckham . beckham. >> he's saying, look at me, i've swapped sides and now swapped sides and i'm now with the and not with prince the king and not with prince harry and meghan. but i think it's than that. mark i it's more than that. mark i think it is about becoming an ambassador for the prince's trust. but by cosying up to charles and camilla, david is now on a fast track to a knighthood . and i think that's knighthood. and i think that's what he is always wanted. and by doing his work for the prince's trust, he will be rewarded accordingly . but his latest . accordingly. but his latest. yes, i think his latest . yes, i think his latest. netflix. yes, go on, mark, do you think he merits a knighthood ? not at the moment, no. because he hasn't put in the work yet for it. i mean, it's an amazing title to hold. and your wife, he comes lady will then have lady victoria beckham. but i don't
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think he's mature enough yet for it but of course he's heading towards that and the latest netflix series , of course, is a netflix series, of course, is a carefully managed pr exercise to shine up his profile. ready for the prince's trust and then ready for bigger things. but you can't forget, mark, the fact that the lgbt plus community are not very happy with him because as he became an ambassador for the world cup in qatar , for the the world cup in qatar, for the qatari regime's rights , for qatari regime's rights, for human rights and the gay community and not brilliant. and so a gay icon supporting a country with poor gay rights. it's not a very good move. of course, it was for the millions. the king is making a statement. david is making a very clever mood move. and we could all see in the not too distant future so
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sir david beckham and lady victoria beckham , you heard it victoria beckham, you heard it here first. >> has king charles been known to play games like this in the past? is he someone that can indulge in a bit of family politics? yes he can. >> and he it's his gift to he has a list every year of notables which he nominates for knighthoods and awards and david could be well heading for that list. this could have been actually an interview not only for the princess trust, but for the future knighthood. >> interesting stuff . now, paul, >> interesting stuff. now, paul, the final season of the crown is about to be released with the netflix show dramatising, the death of your friend, the late princess here is some of princess diana. here is some of the trailer i don't really understand how i ended up . here understand how i ended up. here dashing around .
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dashing around. set against a background of raw emotion, the royal family remained silent . remained silent. >> what do people want from me? >> what do people want from me? >> for you to be mother to the nafion >> for you to be mother to the nation now? >> pull this upcoming series of the crown. we'll see diana in her final months . they will her final months. they will recreate the horrific scenes in paris. and i understand she'll also appear as a ghost in the show. is this appropriate ? well show. is this appropriate? well mark, you see diana is the ghost that will forever haunt the house of windsor. >> so maybe it is appropriate. the crown is going to open up old wounds, especially for charles and camilla. and it's a war which camilla can never win . war which camilla can never win. she could never win that battle against camilla. i'm not sure she's winning the battle as a queen either, because idea late queen either, because idea late queen did make it known that she
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wanted to camilla be known and styled as queen consort. but i think the king had other ideas. he always insisted that she would be his queen. so styled and crowned beside him. i'm not so sure that the public totally agree with him on that. and there's an issue with it. these years, which we're going to see in the crown, are the years that i stood beside diana from 1987 to 1997. i was at the heart of all of that. i saw everything happening. i saw the separation , happening. i saw the separation, the divorce. martin bashir, hasnat khan, dodi al fayed , and hasnat khan, dodi al fayed, and i was there. so i'm hoping that the crown and the producer is going to be faithful to the truth because my princess was very misrepresented and misinterpreted in her lifetime. i don't want to see that happen again through a fictional tv series which people might believe . i want the truth to be believe. i want the truth to be shown and to not be whitewashed .
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shown and to not be whitewashed. and i have to say, mark, that voice of elizabeth debicki haunts me . it voice of elizabeth debicki haunts me. it haunts me voice of elizabeth debicki haunts me . it haunts me because haunts me. it haunts me because it's so close to the truth . and it's so close to the truth. and i'm thinking it is diana. it's going to be very upsetting for a lot of people, including me, because it changed our lives forever . i because it changed our lives forever. i can't because it changed our lives forever . i can't i because it changed our lives forever. i can't i can't think how william and harry will cope with this. seeing someone portray their mother so perfect . portray their mother so perfect. and i don't agree with showing the final crash scenes that could have been done more tastefully . but let's see what tastefully. but let's see what happens because i really want to see it on everybody's city and say that didn't happen . that say that didn't happen. that happened because this is a dramatisation. it's not exactly the truth. and we all have to remember that. >> it's interesting that you've reminded us queen elizabeth was quite keen for camilla to be queen consort, not queen. what's your appraisal of her as queen?
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just reading between the lines of your earlier answer , it of your earlier answer, it strikes me that you feel she's been a disappointing don't know. >> i think she's been very quiet. i think she's been in in in the scenery. she's been in the sidelines. she's been there to keep charles on track , i to keep charles on track, i think. i don't think she really wants to be queen. i think she's just landed this role because she loves the man who happens to be king. so, you know, it's a dilemma for her. it always will be a dilemma for her. and the more she can keep out of the limelight, i think better for her because she will have much a much more rewarding life staying in the sidelines and not front centre. >> and you say that she'll never win the pr war with diana . win the pr war with diana. that's your clear view. never >> no, never. she diana was loved by millions around the world. still is loved by millions in our own country. it's an impossible battle . it's an impossible battle. >> no, it's definitely. finally,
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paul gb news is very own. nigel farage has been sensationally speculating that he might go into the i'm a celebrity jungle this year. in fact, he told me earlier tonight he's been sent a contract by itv. he's going to have a whisky and through have a whisky and a read through it . you came so close to winning it. you came so close to winning this series back in 2004. what's your advice to nigel on whether he take part, it , your advice to nigel on whether he take part, it, do it? >> i want to see you there. i want to see nigel farage. glugging a cockroach cocktail. i want to see him facing all those dangers as i think he will be brilliant in the jungle because he's not afraid of danger. he's not afraid of trials in life , not afraid of trials in life, and he's not afraid of confrontation . ian and i think confrontation. ian and i think they are . they're valuable they are. they're valuable assets to have in the jungle. but i'd say to him, remember, nigel, you can't hide . there's nigel, you can't hide. there's nowhere to hide. the general pubuc nowhere to hide. the general public will see who you are and they will make up their own minds. i don't think you've got anything to lose. go and do anything to lose. now go and do it, nigel. do it. it's a
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wonderful opportunity. it changed my life and it shows people right? really? changed my life and it shows people right ? really? who changed my life and it shows people right? really? who you are . don't. people right? really? who you are. don't. don't people right? really? who you are . don't. don't don't turn it are. don't. don't don't turn it down. you'll always regret it. >> briefly, paul, how much should he charge ? should he charge? >> oh, i think he will be top billing. it will be a hundred plus. i would think. i mean , itv plus. i would think. i mean, itv could go to half a million on. that's a that's that's a big, big price . that's a that's that's a big, big price. but then he's a big guy and he's a name other than bofis guy and he's a name other than boris johnson. i can't think of anybody else i'd rather see in the jungle. >> there you go. well, there speculation it could be headed towards a million. be towards a million. i'll be honest with you , signing nigel honest with you, signing nigel is because when he's is priceless because when he's on, the numbers will go through the . listen, a thrill to the roof. listen, a thrill to have paul , by the way. have you on, paul, by the way. listen, i've got get to listen, i've got to get to kelvin because kelvin mackenzie because he's in the room and raging the green room and he's raging as usual . you were diagnosed as usual. you were diagnosed with cancer very seriously some
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time ago. you've been on the road to recovery . what's the road to recovery. what's the latest? how you feeling ? latest? how are you feeling? >> going to see my >> i'm going to see my specialist next week . she's specialist next week. she's going to give me the final results . it's fingers crossed . results. it's fingers crossed. i'm feeling good. i hope everything is good. >> thoughts and prayers for a full recovery. you look brilliant . listen, full recovery. you look brilliant. listen, paul. full recovery. you look brilliant . listen, paul. we'll brilliant. listen, paul. we'll catch up soon. love those guns in the jungle, by the way. i'll have to ask for your fitness have to ask you for your fitness fitness and other times. have to ask you for your fitness fitnnthem? and other times. have to ask you for your fitness fitnnthem? yeah other times. have to ask you for your fitness fitnnthem? yeah they'venes. have to ask you for your fitness fitnnthem? yeah they've got. have to ask you for your fitness fitnnthem? yeah they've got that. got them? yeah they've got that. well, it wasn't adonis , but well, it wasn't adonis, but listen, all best. and speedy listen, all the best. and speedy recovery the brilliant paul recovery to the brilliant paul burrell coming up in uncanceled. why has british billionaire james dyson school philanthropy been by a woke local been blocked by a woke local authority and has britain given boots the boot after its planned closure of 300 chemists? i'll be asking fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie . he's live in the mackenzie. he's live in the studio. and let me tell you, sparks will fly, but next, as the justice secretary draws up new plans for prisoner reform , new plans for prisoner reform, should drug dealers and burglars be allowed to keep their criminal past a secret from new
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radio. >> tomorrow's news tonight in our media buzz. more front pages have landed and we'll start with the i newspaper . johnson made it the i newspaper. johnson made it impossible for uk to tackle covid. a top adviser says sounds like a blame game . running riot like a blame game. running riot through the covid inquiry. the daily telegraph, israel frees kidnapped soldier in gaza raid reports as a hostage being released by hamas. not the case, no . ten tried to strong arm no. ten tried to strong arm vallance and whitty over cummings saga . okay where should cummings saga. okay where should we go next? let's go to the guardian. israeli pm rules out ceasefire and declares this is a time for war pressure on johnson over covid messages is the other story. sun newspaper now after 16 years maddie cops finally say
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sorry to kate and gerry and the mail in the jungle. get ready for leeches in intimate places , for leeches in intimate places, nigel writes. nadine dorries and pawns of the terrorists israeli pm condemns barbaric of hamas as they parade three distraught women in a devastating hostage video . more of the media buzz video. more of the media buzz now with tonight's panel. we have daily express columnist carole malone , former carole malone, former environment secretary ranil jayawardena mp and former labour party adviser matthew laza, now , party adviser matthew laza, now, critics have asked what justice secretary alex chalk has been smoking after he unveiled new plans to allow drug dealers and burglars to keep their criminal past secret from new employers. mr chalk said having to confess unspent convictions years after being released from prison can being released from prison can be a huge barrier for criminals to reintegrate into society, including finding jobs, housing and getting insurance . s but and getting insurance. s but from saturday, just gone. prison
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sentences of four years or more for crimes deemed less serious will now become spent after seven years of rehabilitation . seven years of rehabilitation. crucially, violent sex offenders and terrorists are excluded from the plans . but is this a the plans. but is this a dangerous step for society? carol it's a win win, really, for burglars and drug dealers, which is how it mainly applies to, you know, the chance of them ever getting caught for any of those offences are slim to none. >> and the that do get >> and the ones that do get caught serve a bit time, caught and serve a bit of time, they're going to come out and get look, get a job. now, look, i completely believe everyone should second chance. should be given a second chance. don't that's don't get me wrong, that's absolutely the thing to absolutely the right thing to do. but by the same token, i believe employers need to believe that employers need to know employing. it know who they're employing. it is their to know the. >> carol, let me interrupt you. we need to fix your microphone. i'm about this . i'm really sorry about this. >> i know what's happened . >> i know what's happened. >> i know what's happened. >> switched off >> you've switched it off because the loo. because you went to the loo. see, have see, you shouldn't have done that hear that. we want to hear everything, carol. there you go. let's get you fired up. start again. >> again. >> start again. >> start again. >> in the room. so? >> you're back in the room. so? so it's win win for so you think it's a win win for these criminals? so you think it's a win win for the i) criminals? so you think it's a win win for thei thinkinals? so you think it's a win win for thei think it'ss? win for
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>> i think it's a win win for burglars. you've got little or no being caught. if no chance of being caught. if you can you are and you get out, you can get straight away. get a job straight away. everyone a second everyone should get a second chance. wrong. chance. don't get me wrong. but we've stop about we've got to stop talking about people for people that go to prison for burglaries and drug dealing like they're victims. they're not. they chose to break law and they chose to break the law and they law so badly that they break the law so badly that they break the law so badly that they to jail for it. so they was sent to jail for it. so they was sent to jail for it. so they to there's a price to they have to there's a price to pay they have to there's a price to pay and price they have to there's a price to pa pay and price they have to there's a price to pa pay is and price they have to there's a price to pa pay is that\nd price they have to there's a price to pa pay is that\nd harder rice they have to there's a price to pa pay is that\nd harder toe to pay is that it's harder to get job, then so be it. but get a job, then so be it. but employers have every right to know about the person they're employing. they need they they need to know the backstory of that person because they're invested in their employees. you know, pay wages , they know, they pay their wages, they pay pay , pay their pensions. they pay, you know, everything. and there has a trust involved has to be a trust issue involved here. they have to trust they here. so they have to trust they have know the people they're have to know the people they're employing. and if you have a habitual offender who was allowed to kind of not say what he's done , i don't think that's he's done, i don't think that's fair on the employer. well agree. >> i mean, if i was employing someone , i'd like to know, even someone, i'd like to know, even if they burgled house 20 years if they burgled a house 20 years ago, that information, ago, i'd like that information, even do hire no
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even if i do hire them. no >> yeah, you're totally right. i mean, the act that is mean, the act that this is from this good this piece of law has many good things, clamping down things, including clamping down on just up and on things like just up oil. and so seem to be so on. but this does seem to be a bit of a fail. so on. but this does seem to be a bit of a fail . and, you know, a bit of a fail. and, you know, i'm an employer. i employ people to serve my to help me serve my constituents. i'd want to know who is coming to work for me and for my constituents. i want to know that i can trust them. and yeah, if someone's committed an offence in the past, if someone's done something wrong and really want to make and they really want to make good on that, fine, but they should be honest about it. and this is about covering it up and i think it only serves those who do want to do actually still do bad , still do ill. and i think bad, still do ill. and i think we need to think really carefully about this, although, matthew, suppose idea is matthew, i suppose the idea is that we people have that we want people who have committed crimes to be in work. >> and if it's hard for them to get into work, then they continue with crime. >> mean, all >> totally. look, i mean, we all agree do the crime. agree that people do the crime. they should do time. but they should do the time. but remember the old phrase , pay remember the old phrase, pay your society. yeah, your debt to society. yeah, let's remember, this is not people they come out
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people who, when they come out of day one, they don't of jail on day one, they don't have declare it. this have to declare it. this is after seven and think after seven years. and i think the important for all the most important thing for all of to crime to of us is to reduce crime and to reduce re—offending . and i think reduce re—offending. and i think this help it. i'm going this will help do it. i'm going to i don't often this, to look, i don't often say this, but going praise the tory but i'm going to praise the tory government this. it's government for doing this. it's a of toryism is a bit of liberal toryism is still chalk. he's still alive in alex chalk. he's going to lose his seat to the liberals the next election. liberals in the next election. but seriousness , you but but in all seriousness, you know, have consensus know, we should have consensus about re—offending about reducing re—offending because that's the key. but none of us want we need to stop people re—offending isn't the problem. >> actually, we deter >> actually, we need to deter people committing in people from committing crime in the be the first place. that should be the first place. that should be the government and the focus of the government and the focus of the government and the effect of prison. the deterrent effect of prison. isn't people isn't there too many people do come of which there are more come out of which there are more people than anywhere else in europe. people come people than anywhere else in eur(ofe. people come people than anywhere else in eur(of prison people come people than anywhere else in eur(of prison commite come people than anywhere else in eur(of prison commit more:ome out of prison to commit more crime. that this is crime. and i think that this is a of people to get into a chart of people to get into jobs, crime against jobs, to commit crime against their , against other their employers, against other people all sorts of people taking all sorts of valuable information with them . valuable information with them. i it's really dangerous. i think it's really dangerous. >> ministry justice >> and the ministry of justice said employment, you said today that employment, you know, when someone comes out of prison, it can stop them re—offending. people in
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employment commit crimes all the time. that's not strictly time. so that's not strictly true. i do think have to, true. and i do think we have to, as a society, stop as a as a society, stop concentrating on the perpetrators of crime and concentrate a little bit more on the victims of crime, because lives wrecked by things like lives are wrecked by things like burglaries, people like drug burglaries, by people like drug dealers. never recover dealers. people never recover from that. the cops have from that. and the cops have almost stopped . almost stopped. >> well, i think you're right. i think it's about it's about forgive, but never forget. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> okay. well, listen , look, >> okay. well, listen, look, we've got more reaction coming on that. but it's one of the longest running comedy shows in the and it cares for not the world. and it cares for not politics preference when politics or preference when routinely ripping its targets to shreds with humour. a new season of south park has hit tv screens and its latest episode ridicules how hollywood has succumbed to the woke mind virus , not least the woke mind virus, not least the woke mind virus, not least the jokers at disney and lucasfilm. the head honcho , lucasfilm. the head honcho, kathleen kennedy. take a listen to this . nah, nah , eric, it's okay. >> it's okay. nah, nah . i had a
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>> it's okay. nah, nah. i had a dream that i was replaced by a diverse woman . oh, not again. diverse woman. oh, not again. yeah only this time it wasn't just me. they were taking all my favourite people and replacing them with diverse women complaining about the patriarchy. will you check under the make sure there's no the bed and make sure there's no disney under there? i disney executives under there? i promise there's not. i'm scared. mom, just look promise there's not. i'm scared. mon make just look promise there's not. i'm scared. mon make sure just look promise there's not. i'm scared. mon make sure kathleenst look promise there's not. i'm scared. mon make sure kathleen kennedy and make sure kathleen kennedy isn't my bed ? kathleen isn't under my bed? kathleen kennedy is not under your bed. can you check the closet? eric, enough. can you check the closet? eric, enough . i've told you, there's enough. i've told you, there's no such thing as disney executives who replace everyone you love with diverse women who complain about the patriarchy. now, a big boy comedy gold is now, be a big boy comedy gold is ever from south park . ever from south park. >> coming up, i'll be revealing nominations for greatest briton and union jackass. but next in uncanceled , why has british uncanceled, why has british billionaire james dyson school philanthropy been blocked by a woke local authority? and has britain given boots the boot after its planned closure of 300 chemists? kelvin mackenzie is next. and let me tell you, he's
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it's time now for uncanceled with fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie . and home office mackenzie. and home office bosses have been laying down the law to british universal cities after shocking new figures revealed that 3000 foreign students from countries like bangladesh and ghana have claimed asylum in the uk. within just months of arriving . is this just months of arriving. is this higher education's equivalent of the small boats crisis? kelvin what do you think? >> yes, i think it is. and it's andits >> yes, i think it is. and it's and it's quite shocking . and in and it's quite shocking. and in fact, the home office has done something about it. they've actually shut down some the actually shut down some of the courses they were courses because what they were applying these business applying for was these business courses. you know, there's loads of business. of them, economic and business. and go to i don't want to and if you go to i don't want to be unkind, but some some nondescript university in the middle of nowhere that's
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previously technical previously was a technical college ago and now college about 20s ago and now they're dishing out like they're dishing out first like sweeties as they put their names down for them because they know there's not enough people to fill courses. when fill up the courses. and when they they're an they turn up, they're half an hour they produce a load hour later, they produce a load of fraudulent documents and say, there we want to stay there we are. we want to stay here now. and what we should do is we should be a lot tougher on them. we should be a lot, a lot tougher on them. and i think out of the 3000 that have tried to come in in this way or have appued come in in this way or have applied to come in in this way, 1600 came from 1600 of them came from bangladesh and apparently about 100% more now come from ghana than they've ever tried before . than they've ever tried before. so suddenly they've given up lorries , they've given up the lorries, they've given up the boats. and they said there's an easier over this. and easier way to get over this. and just plymouth just try and join plymouth university on a how to be a billionaire by christmas phd. and you'll be laughing too, right ? right? >> well, listen, the issue we've got as well, i mean, the issue of stop the boats, the illegal crossings, sort crossings, then this rather sort of clever loophole opportunity
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that's being used. then there's the legal net migration of 600,000 d0 the legal net migration of 600,000 do you think 600,000 per year. do you think those numbers will ever come down? >> well, i don't really. and what you're looking at in the world is that it's you know, you wouldn't have to be a genius right now to say it's a very unsafe place and island off unsafe place and an island off the european mainland . i'd write the european mainland. i'd write that vaguely looks like democracy, although i must say november year may may challenge that particular analysis. looks like a very good place to be here. you know, great benefit system. if you turn up here, you'll either have a hotel or you'll either have a hotel or you'll have a £300,000 flat in chertsey in surrey, which i see is the latest, latest piece of madness to deal with the huge inflow and this is right, every time there's a war, somebody says, you've got to get to mainland europe unless the war is already in mainland europe, in which case we have the problem on our doorstep, what is going to happen ? what happens going to happen? what happens with wars africa?
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with all the wars in africa? more wars middle east? more wars in the middle east? all is going to happen all this is going to happen is we're more and more we're going to get more and more people and what i people come here. and what i would leader. would like is any leader. i mean, given up on rishi and mean, i've given up on rishi and even suella. i mean, they talk a good game, but nobody actually does anything. for instance, we get over an australian prime minister who had quite a good idea. he used to put them in an island in the middle of the pacific and they said, well, hold worse than pacific and they said, well, hold we worse than pacific and they said, well, hold we nobodylan pacific and they said, well, hold we nobody actually where we were. nobody actually does anything. and every time anybody tries do anything, anybody tries to do anything, then courts say, you know, then the courts say, you know, who were probably all lib dems or probably or socialists or probably members of the socialist workers party or something, they all say, you can't do that. say, oh, no, you can't do that. so are you going to do? you so what are you going to do? you need fresh laws. and the trouble is right now and you know, i don't know where tory mps are on all this, they're scared of their own shadow right now. of course, there's counterargument. >> people would argue that there's a direct link between economic growth and migration there's a direct link between ecorthec growth and migration there's a direct link between ecorthe country] and migration there's a direct link between ecorthe country andi migration there's a direct link between ecorthe country and also ration there's a direct link between ecorthe country and also ,ition there's a direct link between ecorthe country and also , well, into the country and also, well, we're doing it. >> doing we're >> we're doing our bit. we're doing our bit for that anyway,
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aren't not it's not as aren't we? it's not it's not as though honestly, aren't we? it's not it's not as thot are honestly, aren't we? it's not it's not as thotare either honestly, aren't we? it's not it's not as thotare either the honestly, aren't we? it's not it's not as thotare either the wrongnestly, aren't we? it's not it's not as thotare either the wrong colour, you are either the wrong colour, the wrong shape or the wrong size or the wrong age . we are size or the wrong age. we are actually a very welcoming place. i don't know as anybody ever been on, been on the london underground. this we are a fantastic country, but what we have got to say is we are a small island. we've got 65 million people. the way we are going, we will literally be hong kong within 20 years. it's a very serious moment. >> kelvin , let me ask you about >> kelvin, let me ask you about james dyson, a brilliant, brilliant entrepreneur, brilliant entrepreneur, brilliant billionaire , brexit brilliant billionaire, brexit supporter. give away supporter. he can't give away money to a local school. what's going on? >> it's ridiculous. do you know malmesbury at all? no, no. fantastic. fantastic place. and the it's fantastic . first the reason it's fantastic. first of a lovely area, of all, it's a lovely area, but mainly got mainly because dyson's got a fantastic works down fantastic engineering works down there. is an enormously there. he is an enormously clever bloke. he's so clever. he he lives in monaco, right? he doesn't live in he doesn't live in malmesbury. so he says, in malmesbury. and so he says, look, school , we got look, this local school, we got little church of england primary school, little. it's school, not so little. it's bursting at the seams. why?
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because i employ so many people. they've got so kids and we they've got so many kids and we need to increase that size of that school. haven't got that school. they haven't got any all are skin. any money. all schools are skin. so says here we are. take so he says, here we are. take 6 million immediately. wiltshire county say, you county council say, oh, you can't do that, matey, because if that becomes a really successful school and you want to make it tech and you to tech and science, you want to make fantastic. all the jobs make it fantastic. all the jobs that desperately need. that we desperately need. what it is small little it will mean is small little village there will village schools out there will be damaged and therefore may have down. may is the have to shut down. may is the explanation and why can't we just come to a deal? if went just come to a deal? if you went to said, i tell you to dyson and said, i tell you what, on top your 6 million, what, on top of your 6 million, give a million each the give a million each to the local little village schools, what would everything would would happen? everything would be guy's be solved. the guy's a billionaire . he's a great guy. billionaire. he's a great guy. and council and once again, council bureaucrats are trying to wreck his largesse and actually our future . the people of malmesbury future. the people of malmesbury demand that that school has that money giving up, giving up the opportunity for britain to be a technology and science superpower for laura may's the wiltshire council cabinet member superpower for laura may's the wilchildren's1cil cabinet member superpower for laura may's the wilchildren's services|et member superpower for laura may's the wilchildren's services hasnember superpower for laura may's the wilchildren's services has saidyer for children's services has said there are already sufficient
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places in the three local schools to cater for expected demand. >> and so we've expressed our concern that potential 210 concern that a potential 210 additional places at malmesbury primary school a primary school would have a severe impact on neighbouring schools, their pupil schools, reducing their pupil numbers their future numbers and putting their future sustainability at risk. kelly in boots are in trouble. they're axing 300 stores. why has britain hopeless management absolutely useless >> 101. you still go into hopeless . there is. there is hopeless. there is. there is a boots in my high street weybridge high street. absolutely dreadful . well, there absolutely dreadful. well, there is nothing on the shelves and there is no stuff. i don't even blame the stuff. they can't seem to hire staff . they don't to hire any staff. they don't even to have even seem to have any pharmacists you anybody in pharmacists. you ask anybody in my town , which is the worst my town, which is the worst pharmacist , my town, which is the worst pharmacist, they would say a pharmacist, they would say to a man woman , they would say man and a woman, they would say boots. and there's one, boots. and there's a little one, right? a little one on the corner there that everybody loves admire my the loves and they admire my the people. truth about the people. the truth about the matter sooner they flog matter is, the sooner they flog the whole thing, right? i'm not making a racist point. they should sell it to asian
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pharmacists . they seem to do the pharmacists. they seem to do the hours they seem to do. they seem to do the work. what you've got is you've got some some big corporate executive corporate chief executive running boots who basically take destocking. destocking the whole the whole of the company because actually they want to flog it. so they've got no payroll . so they've got no payroll. they've got no they've got no stuff. no any any stuff. they've got no any any kind of any kind of stuff worth or anything. anything they just want to get rid of the thing . i want to get rid of the thing. i would grateful for him if would be grateful for him if he's today, the chief he's watching today, the chief executive, there , executive, if he's out there, flog it flog it. now right. flog it and flog it. now right. >> i mean, kevin, i don't know what you're worried about. the pharmacy. you don't need drugs. what you're worried about. the phagod's. you don't need drugs. what you're worried about. the phagod's sakes. on't need drugs. what you're worried about. the phagod's sakes. look1eed drugs. what you're worried about. the phagod's sakes. look1eeyou. igs. for god's sakes. look at you. i mean, all, your body's mean, first of all, your body's a secondly, you're a a temple. secondly, you're a picture. cathedral. picture. it's a cathedral. by the we're the way, i should ask. we're done. we're time. done. we're out of time. but what into boots what are you going into boots for? like a lynx. for? you look like a lynx. africa man to me. for? you look like a lynx. afrino,nan to me. for? you look like a lynx. afrino,nebuy me. for? you look like a lynx. afrino,nebuy that. i buy that >> no, i buy that. i buy that nivea cream because you don't look without health. nivea cream because you don't look why without health. nivea cream because you don't look why wittsot health. nivea cream because you don't look why wittso ageless. that's why you're so ageless. >> kelvin >> the legendary kelvin mackenzie in week's mackenzie returns in a week's time, the week time, i think later in the week as spokesperson for as well. now, a spokesperson for boots can confirm boots has said we can confirm the stores a part of boots
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the stores a part of the boots store consolidation programme previously announced all team members from stores will be members from the stores will be offered alternative there offered alternative roles. there you go. well, look , i've you go. well, look, i've got a boots crouch end. i go in boots in crouch end. i go in there all the time. it's got a lovely. it's not working. >> no, it's great. >> no, it's great. >> it's great. but listen, so are we'll see you are you kelvin. we'll see you soon. time our soon. now it's time for our greatest and jack greatest britain and union jack carson who's your carson. carol, who's your greatest britain. >> kelvin doesn't realise that it was matthew who dropped a minute about the olivia. >> coming out. >> he saw coming out. >> he saw coming out. >> we also have it. so my greatest brit is gb news. very own patrick christie. he's raised a staggering £77,000 in one day for the royal british legion. hang on. just let me say this. the royal british legion raises millions every year for our vets , many of whom served our vets, many of whom served and many of whom died for queen and many of whom died for queen and country. deserve every and country. they deserve every single penny they get from us. it's way saying it's our little way of saying thank of poppies thank you. buy loads of poppies and say thank you to the volunteers give time volunteers who give their time for free to sell the poppies. >> great nomination. about >> great nomination. how about you, greatest britain? >> well, your viewers know that
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i against anti—car cult i am against the anti—car cult and sunak has been taking and rishi sunak has been taking on anti—car cult, on the anti—car cult, particularly trying stop the particularly trying to stop the blanket 20 mile per hour speed limits that drive everyone mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed lim well, it drive everyone mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed lim well, i drive everyone mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed lim well, i do ve everyone mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed limwell, i do likeveryone mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed limwell, i do like me one mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed limwell, i do like me a|e mad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed limwell, i do like me a bitnad. blanket 20 mile per hour speed limwell, i do like me a bit of]. >> well, i do like me a bit of rishi. how about you, matthew? your britain. your greatest britain. >> might be my ever >> this might be my last ever nomination . nye bevan gets his nomination. nye bevan gets his hands but mine is an hands on me, but mine is an honorary brit. honorary greatest britain, which is matthew perry, who, as we know sadly passed away over the weekend. he gave general lessons in britain, as he the world. joy and he did around the world. joy and he did around the world. joy and he was a troubled soul. but he gave people such happiness through his work. >> so and we've got a development to that story. it's breaking tonight. the cast of friends have said they're utterly by loss utterly devastated by the loss of perry, all them of matthew perry, all of them collectively have said we were more than just cast mates. we're a family. there's so much to say. right now we're going a family. there's so much to sajtake right now we're going a family. there's so much to sajtake a'ight now we're going a family. there's so much to sajtake a moment we're going a family. there's so much to sajtake a moment w(grieve ng a family. there's so much to sajtake a moment w(grieve and to take a moment to grieve and process unfathomable loss process this unfathomable loss in more as and in time, we'll say more as and when able. your when we're able. carol, your union. oh, wait a minute. i've got to announce my winner. yeah, of perry would of course. matthew perry would be a nomination, it's got to
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be a nomination, but it's got to be a nomination, but it's got to be . sorry for be patrick christys. sorry for being broadcaster as being a heroic broadcaster as well as doing so much for charity. okay, look, clocks against us, folks. carol, your jackass. >> the welsh government in its entirety, leaked its entirety, a leaked draft of its gender bill proposes that gender quotas bill proposes that half the candidates on any list to go into the senate, which is the world's parliament, be the world's parliament, must be women. but that women. and that. but that includes which includes trans women, which means that the half that are supposed to women, biological supposed to be women, biological women , some will be who women, some will be blokes who decided, world's gone mad. >> ronald, you've smashed it tonight. thank you for your company, jackass. tonight. thank you for your conwell,. jackass. tonight. thank you for your conwell, continuing ss. tonight. thank you for your conwell, continuing the devolved >> well, continuing the devolved government me government theme, it's got me nicola the hypocrisy in nicola sturgeon the hypocrisy in her deleting the whatsapp messages her mismanagement messages given her mismanagement of scotland . of covid up in scotland. >> oh, maybe she deleted them when she was in that motorhome. um, listen, matthew, briefly , um, listen, matthew, briefly, your jackass pursglove , who your jackass tom pursglove, who is a tory work and pensions minister, but he managed to get himself photographed canvassing with peter with disgraced tory mp peter bone weekend, bone this weekend, just days after mr bone was suspended from the , having been found the commons, having been found of bullying and sexual
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misconduct stuff. fair play. but i'm to going give it to nicola sturgeon. thank you to my brilliant pundits and the team and you for your company. i'm back tomorrow at 9:00. headliners is next. >> good evening. it's alex burkill here with your latest news weather forecast. and whilst for many, the unsettled theme continues through the next 24 hours, it's a drier but chillier picture for scotland . chillier picture for scotland. and that's because of a brief ridge of high pressure which is quietening weather down a quietening the weather down a little bit here. meanwhile, the rest of the uk under the influence a low pressure influence of a low pressure centred republic ireland centred over republic of ireland that's heavy that's bringing then heavy showery rain to many parts of england, particularly england, wales and particularly eastern parts of northern ireland. heavy rain building up here overnight could be up to 100mm perhaps, which is why some impacts are likely . drier impacts are likely. drier weather parts of scotland weather across parts of scotland , a touch likely here. , a touch of frost likely here. mild further south. but with that , a few patches of mild further south. but with that, a few patches of mist and fog are possible first thing on tuesday . tuesday then is tuesday morning. tuesday then is going changeable day going to be a changeable day with further showery rain across parts northern ireland, parts of northern ireland, northern wales , a
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northern england into wales, a drier for a time before drier slot for a time before more wet and windy weather arrives from the southwest later on. meanwhile, across scotland, here looking dry, here it is looking mostly dry, plenty sunshine , too, but plenty of sunshine, too, but quite chilly. temperatures struggle here in single digits, milder further south with highs of around 14 or 15 celsius. if you're going trick or treating through tuesday evening, watch out rain pushing out for a band of rain pushing its south—west, its way up from the south—west, drier the north, but drier towards the north, but more weather is on the more unsettled weather is on the way this week as storm kieran approaches most affecting southern areas as we go through wednesday night into thursday, bringing rain. but bringing some heavy rain. but it's exceptionally strong it's the exceptionally strong winds, particular around channel coastal which we're most coastal parts which we're most concerned . concerned about. >> is it we're here for the show . for energy this time. >> welcome to the dinosaur hour. >> welcome to the dinosaur hour. >> i was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie, second best marbella . de—man you best marbella. de—man you interviewed saddam hussein.
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>> i'm karen armstrong in the newsroom. the israeli prime minister has ruled out a ceasefire in gaza, declaring this is a time for war. benjamin netanyahu's promise to stand against what he called the forces of barbarism until victory is achieved describes hamas as part of an axis of evil being formed by iran . he added being formed by iran. he added even the most just wars have unintended civilian casualties . unintended civilian casualties. more than 8300 palestinian have been killed by israeli bombing, according to the gaza health ministry. mr netanyahu has described hamas as deadly attacks on october the 7th as a turning point. >> israel will not agree to a cessation of hostilities with hamas after the horrific attacks of october 7th. calls for a ceasefire are calls for israel to surrender to hamas, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to terrorism, to surrender to barbarism that that will not happen . an israeli will not happen. an israeli soldier has been being held hostage, has been rescued,
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