tv Patrick Christys Tonight GB News November 15, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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after the court's hits back after the court's rubbished his rwanda plan . rubbished his rwanda plan. >> so let me tell everybody now i will not allow a foreign court to block these flights , but why wait.7 >> deputy tory shirley anderson wants to ignore the law and get deportation flights in the sky. right now, he is live this hour. i've got a big prince harry truth bomb for you with angela levin. you will not believe how he's treated his own father, our king and things will kick right off with my punchy panel on the sofa tonight . we've got author sofa tonight. we've got author and broadcaster christine hamilton tory and former hamilton and tory mp and former environment secretary ranil jayawardena and former labour party adviser matthew laws is patrick christys tonight. and it's electric . it's electric. mayhem miscible rundown of rishi sunak's biggest day in office so far. is he all mouth and no trousers can the new homesick
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james cleverly really be trusted? that's all to come as well as alex plosive footage as i expose the hate marchers, you will not to miss a single will not want to miss a single second that. right now as second of that. but right now as your headlines with polly . yes well welcome aboard to patrick christys tonight like i said, i've got a heck of a lot coming your way because, well, i attended one of the hate marches, didn't i, a little bit earlier on, i wanted to go to try to expose them and see
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really what the reality is on the ground there. i'm going to be joined by a whole host of unmissable guests throughout the course of this show. we're also going to be bringing you my box office panel, won't we? but but, office panel, won't we? but but, of course, sir keir starmer did face a labour party rebellion in the house of commons. we're going to have all of that and much, much more coming. your way. look, pro—palestinian supporters, they held a mass demonstration , didn't they, demonstration, didn't they, opposite the houses of parliament earlier this evening as the gaza ceasefire vote progressed inside the chamber. but get a load of this. okay a wise man once said the definition of madness is doing the same thing over , over and the same thing over, over and over again and expecting to get a different result. well, if that's true , rishi illegal that's true, rishi sunak illegal immigration was madder immigration strategy was madder than a box of frogs until today. the rwanda plan got a kicking in the courts, a policy backed by the courts, a policy backed by the public but forwarded by a government that won a huge majority at the last election. has democracy died? but tonight, rishi came out fighting not just
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for himself , rishi came out fighting not just for himself, but for british for himself, but for the british people want to stop the people who want to stop the boats. here is just hours ago boats. here he is just hours ago in a frankly sensational press conference, telling conference, finally telling the echr strasbourg court and lefty lawyers where to go. >> but of course , we must be >> but of course, we must be honest about the fact that even once parliament has changed the law here at home, we could still face challenges from the european court of human rights in strasbourg . i told parliament in strasbourg. i told parliament earlier today that i am prepared to change our laws and revisit those international relationships to remove the obstacles in our way. so let me tell everybody now, i will not allow a foreign court to block these flights if the strasbourg court chooses to intervene against the express wishes of parliament, i am prepared to do what is necessary to get flights off. well the deputy chairman of the tory party, lee anderson, who joins me shortly, by the way , thinks that we should just ignore the law and get the planes in the air right now. >> let me know what you think about that, gb views a
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gbnews.com. to hear from gbnews.com. i want to hear from you this today. i'll go to you on this today. i'll go to the inbox. more of the inbox. more letters of no confidence reportedly confidence have reportedly been submitted. now sunak's promised to, merry go to, quote, end the merry go round. it sounds too round. well it all sounds too good true, doesn't it? and good to be true, doesn't it? and could that be because it is? can he trusted to deliver on his he be trusted to deliver on his word? braverman thinks word? suella braverman thinks definitely camp of hit definitely not. her camp of hit out again tonight . yep. there we out again tonight. yep. there we go. as braverman tweeted out this was through an ally. this is a treaty which he's putting in legislation. it's just another version of plan a, he'll be stuck in the courts again. more magic tricks from rishi's magical thinking and suella is replaced at the big bad james cleverly was exposed today by the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper for being a wet. you might have missed this, but we didn't. >> don't believe the new home secretary believed in the secretary ever believed in the rwanda plan. he distanced himself it his himself from it and his predecessor's language on it. he may even on occasion have privately called it bad, but he and i agree . and i agree. >> yeah , well, if that wasn't
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>> yeah, well, if that wasn't bad enough either, another home office minister who's also revealed to have taken the knee dunng revealed to have taken the knee during the blm protests says so to summarise , the signs are, to summarise, the signs are, i think , good, better than they think, good, better than they were this morning anyway. but talk is cheap , according to talk is cheap, according to sunak, when he said that he would the boats, he meant would stop the boats, he meant it so should make it happen it so should we make it happen by getting out of the echr asap? but has won over his but has sunak won over his party? i'll be speaking very shortly to former environment secretary ronald giant wardner in just a moment. but joining me right now, very gratefully so is the conservative mp for stone. it's sir cash , sir. bill, it's sir bill cash, sir. bill, thank you very, very much . as thank you very, very much. as rishi won you over with this latest comment, they're not explosive. >> well, the short answer is that the jury out and for that the jury is out and for their very good reason. >> think the intentions are in >> i think the intentions are in the right direction. >> talk of emergency >> there is talk of emergency legislation very legislation and that's all very encouraging. to be encouraging. but it has to be the right kind of legislation. and basically, as said to the and basically, as i said to the to the home secretary, this afternoon, you've got to legislation which has to be
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clear, express and actually has to effectively override those provisions in the european court and also the human rights act and also the human rights act and also the refugee convention. and i put down an amendment which was supported by around 60in fact, it would have been many more if more people had had a chance to sign it about two years ago. and that said that notwithstanding the existing legislation, that's the key wording and that has hallowed those are hallowed words. there well understood by the courts and by those who interpret legislation . and the net result legislation. and the net result is that you then get what you want on the tin. so the legislation can actually provides us something which the courts have to apply. it's not quite overriding the judges, it's not quite as simple as that, but it requires a bit of bottle, doesn't it? >> it does, actually. >> it does, actually. >> yes. and i think i've got a bit of bottle. i think people have noticed that over the last 40 you have. 40 years you have. >> but unfortunately you're not the one with your on the
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the one with your finger on the trigger, you? well i'm not trigger, are you? well i'm not so about that. so sure about that. >> for reason that >> but for this reason that actually there is an enormous amount of support welling up in the commons. i at a the house of commons. i was at a meeting earlier evening meeting earlier this evening amongst mps who amongst the concerned mps who do really want notwithstanding really want the notwithstanding provision if provision to be embedded and if you clear unamba agus you provide a clear unamba agus piece of legislation and then it's taken to the courts , the it's taken to the courts, the courts will apply it and there's no point in just saying, oh, the judges are the enemies . the judges are the enemies. the judges are the enemies. the judges will apply clear and unambiguous. >> but you know what would send a real message seriously, is if you undid a vote of no confidence in no, i'm not going to do anything of the kind. >> look, we've got a big crisis on our hands and we've got to get this right. and frankly, i don't have the slightest confidence starmer and confidence in keir starmer and his rabble. i'll tell you this , his rabble. i'll tell you this, if were to if you had a if they were to if you had a confidence motion or you get rid of sunak at this moment in of rishi sunak at this moment in time he's coming up with time when he's coming up with these ideas, i've already been talking to government ministers since ended this since the debate ended this
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afternoon and their statements ended this afternoon and i'm getting a very good response from them. they are listening and basically i think we can solve the problem, but it has to be clear and unambiguous legislation and it has to provide the judges with the message that parliament has to prevail. >> the deputy chair your deputy chair, lee anderson, is going to be sitting just over there. yes later on this hour. yes, he thinks we should ignore the law and get the planes taken off. what do you reckon? well, look, lee and i are great friends, so make no mistake about that. >> very close friends. it's not quite my take. i don't actually believe that you can just do that. believe that you can just do that . i think believe that you can just do that. i think what we need to do is to get the legislation right and to make quite certain that it is complete belt and braces and copper bottomed and it can be done. the words are there. and in fact, on the exiting the european union, i use this formula about notwithstanding and that was accepted by boris
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in the withdrawal agreement act of 2020, and it guarantees british sovereignty. what i want is a guarantee that this legislation station will stop the boats and it can be done, but it's going to require the drafting in a particular way. and i'm already engaged in discuss options with the government about to how do that. >> why should the british public trust any of this? i'm not saying they shouldn't trust you. i mean, you're clearly a man of conviction, but why should they trust rishi sunak suella braverman come with braverman has just come out with a bombshell letter. i mean, she obviously word obviously doesn't believe a word of she's already of this. she's just already piped through ally saying piped up through an ally saying that lied to her about that he's lied to her about wanting of the echr wanting to get out of the echr james cleverly, the home sec james cleverly, the new home sec doesn't get out the echr doesn't want to get out the echr we've got a new home office minister who also took the knee. apparently blm apparently one of the blm marches. what's on here? marches. what's going on here? >> yes, well, of course. >> know yes, well, of course. and i quite understand the concern reasons. but concern for those reasons. but what to is this what i am saying to you is this is resolvable problem. there is a resolvable problem. there is a resolvable problem. there is an international part of this. the refugee convention in
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which mentioned which we haven't mentioned yet is important of is a very important part of this. the amendment, this. and in the amendment, i put a couple years ago, put down a couple of years ago, it would have excluded it actually would have excluded the application refugee the application of the refugee convention . and convention as well. and basically , i'm told that there basically, i'm told that there are 63 references. so i heard today in spilling around the place about of judgements and rulings by the by the court which deals with the refugee convention and those have got to be overridden if you if you actually override the refugee convention then all the case law in this particular case as appued in this particular case as applied to our own problem with regard to the borders, will in fact be solved. okay >> very quickly. so we're pressed for time here, right? you don't want to vote in no confidence. you're not going to hand a letter in. >> don't agree with no, >> you don't agree with no, i didn't say i didn't say that. i was. look people know me. i've been doing this for a long time. i'm interested in solutions , not i'm interested in solutions, not in gestures. yeah fine, fine. >> but you also don't think that we should just override it
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straight away, like lee anderson? get the planes in the air. you also want us out air. so do you also want us out of echr? of the echr? >> i would be happy if we did. but this particular instance, but in this particular instance, my priority the borders my first priority is the borders of the united kingdom. our sovereignty, self—government sovereignty, our self—government and what and our democracy. that's what i want and i say want to deliver. and when i say that not okay, well, we're that it's not okay, well, we're off to a flyer tonight, aren't we? >> that is, sir. bill cash. sorry if anyone's offended by the language, but there we go. he really means it. all right. okay so, look, as soon as a press conference was taking place, there was a pro palestine protest outside westminster tower calling for the ceasefire vote to go through inside parliament. but i went down there to check it out. and unfortunately, things turned ugly. what i just want to know why you're here today . why you're here today. >> go away. go away. >> go away. go away. >> you're not wanted. go away. i see. no one said you are. i see. no one said get away from here. i just want to get away from here. no, go away. you're fascist scum. you're not wanted. i just want to know your views,
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that's all. oh, mate, why are you here today? >> sorry. why are you here today? >> do you think? w do you think? >> what do you think? don't talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> don't talk to them. >> do you this is like >> do you think this is like normal behaviour in a democracy where talk these people? normal behaviour in a democracy where me talk these people? normal behaviour in a democracy where me why these people? normal behaviour in a democracy where me why do these people? normal behaviour in a democracy where me why do you; people? normal behaviour in a democracy where me why do you believe ? normal behaviour in a democracy where me why do you believe in >> tell me why do you believe in the freedom movement? freedom of speech of what? a gb news street gb news that was the c—word that older chap used to me at the end there. >> let me tell you, there is a lot more where that came from and i will show you the full shock ing raw footage. very, very soon. but first, let's get the reaction from my panel to an extraordinary day in the battle to stop the small boats. we've got and broadcaster got author and broadcaster christine hamilton we've christine hamilton. we've got former secretary former environment secretary ranil mp and former ranil jayawardena mp and former labour party adviser matthew laza . we normally do. ladies laza. we normally do. ladies first on this show, christine, but we're going to have to go, i'm afraid, ranil , as an mp, i'm afraid, to ranil, as an mp, you know, do you think that rishi sunak here has played a
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bunder rishi sunak here has played a blinder or stuffed us all? >> well, i think the courts and the system that tony blair has left us have absolutely stuffed us up. and so it's absolutely right now that we take this emergency legislation through. sir, bill's absolute spot on to that. what's crucial is that what's in that legislation nafion what's in that legislation nation is spot on. so there's no more room for error. >> that is actually a really interesting point, christine. people were suggesting and obviously stopping short of that, enemies of the people headline, it was tweeted out by the way, by a sitting tory mp . the way, by a sitting tory mp. is there some kind of truth to the idea that the british public voted consistently to cut back on immigration, both legal and illegal? well, that the tory party won a stonking majority based on that and actually now a few judges have blocked it. >> well, yes, but they are sadly in a position to block it. that's the trouble. and the people voted overwhelmingly for it. and that's why boris got the enormous majority, because we
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believed , well, i didn't vote believed, well, i didn't vote tory, they believed what the tory, but they believed what the tory, but they believed what the tory was saying them. >> what the tory manifesto said. and subsequent ministers and subsequent prime ministers have either been unable or unwilling to deliver what they promised. i'm afraid i don't promised. and i'm afraid i don't just don't have any confidence in rishi sunak that says in rishi sunak that he says he'll twiddle everything he'll now twiddle everything unless come of echr unless we come out of the echr and abandon the un convention on refugees . we're not going to refugees. we're not going to solve this problem . we're just solve this problem. we're just simply not. there will always be court case after court case. and if the supreme court had said this morning, yes, it's all right, you go there right, you can go ahead, there would have been appeals to strasbourg. it wouldn't have happened. i have happened. and i just have no faith that will be a plane faith that there will be a plane early year in spring. early next year in the spring. >> are shared by >> your views are shared by linda, just got touch. linda, who's just got in touch. vaiews@gbnews.com. keep these emails to hear emails coming. i want to hear from tonight. linda says. from you tonight. linda says. rishi sunak needs to go. the tories have nothing to now rishi sunak needs to go. the tori outiave nothing to now rishi sunak needs to go. the tori out the nothing to now rishi sunak needs to go. the tori out the echr1g to now rishi sunak needs to go. the toriout the echr give now rishi sunak needs to go. the toriout the echr give give now rishi sunak needs to go. the toriout the echr give give thew get out the echr give give the uk back to the british people . uk back to the british people. matthew no, don't say. >> just say in case >> can i just say in case i don't say you don't think you should but you're sceptical? should go, but you're sceptical? oh can't do that
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again. >> yeah, fine. there you go. matthew. look, rishi sunak was in the house commons earlier in the house of commons earlier today. been thwarted. today. he'd just been thwarted. the the people been the will of the people has been thwarted judges. do you thwarted by these judges. do you agree that? agree with that? >> no. look, i think that the judges were enforcing the law. >> that's what they're there to do. a sign healthy do. it's a sign of a healthy democracy that you have you have strong balances on strong checks and balances on power. the tories could power. 13 years the tories could have out of the echr you have come out of the echr you say tony blair's fault. say it's tony blair's fault. tony blair hasn't been prime minister you could minister for 70 years. you could have the echr, have gone out the echr, the tories, the tories were not. the tories, the tories were not. the tories have what they've done is they've shown a little. they've tried little bit of tried to show a little bit of leg the tory right, to and leg to the tory right, to and the daily mail over the last 13 years. oh, going to leave years. oh, we're going to leave soon. going to soon. we're going to have a review and yet still in review and yet we're still in the echr now i think we should stay echr but if anybody stay in the echr but if anybody today that they haven't today to say that they haven't had 13 years to sort this out, it's nonsense. >> s look, echr is if you're >> s look, the echr is if you're talking echr, you're talking about the echr, you're actually in this context answering the wrong question. the problem the system that the problem is the system that has created by tony blair, has been created by tony blair,
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which fairness, yes, we need which in fairness, yes, we need to really get on with now. and that we've not we've had a long time to do it. >> hang on. >> hang on. >> the problem is you locked us in to a system in this country aided the liberal democrats, aided by the liberal democrats, by way, because five by the way, because of five years we were locked into coalition that had coalition with them that had the human act that had the human rights act that had the equality act, that had the constitutional act that constitutional reform act that created a supreme created this notion of a supreme court. of these court. we never had one of these things. idea of separation things. this idea of separation of powers. it's an american system. appoints the system. but who appoints the judges? the president. judges? they're the president. we that. we don't have that. >> agree with lee >> do you agree with lee anderson, who's shortly, that anderson, who's on shortly, that we get these flights we should just get these flights taken right taken off right now? >> i we need to get >> well, i think we need to get this legislation through quickly >> well, i think we need to get this we islation through quickly >> well, i think we need to get this we can ion through quickly >> well, i think we need to get this we can getthrough quickly >> well, i think we need to get this we can get itrough quickly >> well, i think we need to get this we can get it legislation ly and we can get it legislation through day. the dangerous through in a day. the dangerous dogs was taken through in dogs act was taken through in a day. there's no reason why we can't that. day. there's no reason why we canchristine,. day. there's no reason why we canchristine, do you think the >> christine, do you think the flight take off now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, take off now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, half take off now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, half of take off now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, half of meze off now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, half of me does. now? >> christine, do you think the fligyeah, half of me does. yes? >> yeah, half of me does. yes but on the other half, i'm basically law abiding basically i'm a law abiding citizen. and so no, but to be honest, i am at the end of honest, i am just at the end of my tether with all this business. so have a great deal business. so i have a great deal of with anderson.
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of sympathy with lee anderson. and there's a of and i think there's a mass of people who support tories or people who support the tories or on of the of politics on that wing of the of politics who are furious with the way that there will has been flouted on and i agree with matthew to certainly say the tories have had have thought had 13 years. they have thought this out. >> but alternative we're >> but the alternative we're staring down the barrel is staring down the barrel of is keir plan to stop keir starmer with a plan to stop the boats. patrick, what's the plan legislation, with plan with the legislation, with the with the five the five point, with the five point to the boats, point plan to stop the boats, let's ourselves it's all let's remind ourselves it's all about tory gimmicks. >> is it? we're making it >> what is it? we're making it all. we're making it all about. >> answer the question. why is keir starmer's to keir starmer's grand plan to stop terrorism stop use terrorist use terrorism powers against the people smugglers? >> the tories have failed to do it. 165,000 it. the judges 165,000 applications there with it. the judges 165,000 applion ions there with it. the judges 165,000 applion them there with it. the judges 165,000 applion them not there with it. the judges 165,000 applion them not sorted with it. the judges 165,000 applion them not sorted and] dust on them not sorted and proper agreement. a proper agreement on sharing information across does get through that? >> how does he get through that? he through. he waves them through. >> doesn't know? there's >> doesn't he know? there's nobody going wave nobody nobody's going to wave anybody the tories have anybody through. the tories have had stop the boats. had 13 years to stop the boats. the boats was the small boats crisis was created watch and only created on their watch and only labour solve it. labour will solve it. >> i hear rishi sunak say one >> if i hear rishi sunak say one more time, i will do whatever it takes, it is, it's takes, whatever it is, it's enough you say the words
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enough to make you say the words bibby stockholm barge. >> people on that >> all right. six people on that tonight. it enough. tonight. don't do it enough. >> to off an >> snake oil are to off an absolute flyer here. and there's plenty more of this to come. but find happened i find out what happened when i got the latest got mobbed at the latest pro—palestine march gb news pro—palestine hate march gb news don't them. pro—palestine hate march gb news dorwe them. pro—palestine hate march gb news dorwe just them. pro—palestine hate march gb news dorwe just wantm. pro—palestine hate march gb news dorwe just want to know why >> we just want to know why people are here. shame on you. shame you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame you . shame on you. >> a classic bit of two tier policing coming your way shortly . you do not want to miss that. plus, lee anderson joins me live in the studio to respond to yet more calls for him to get the sack. we're going to put that to him. next in the clash, it's him. but next in the clash, it's the question with little the big question with a little flavour there. but we're flavour of it there. but we're zoning on it now. we need zoning in on it now. do we need to leave the echr human rights lawyer, and lawyer, dr. shoaib khan, and reform rupert reform party spokesperson rupert lowe to
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weekend at 3 pm. on gb news, the people's channel. britain's news channel . well news channel. well a tory deputy chairman, lee anderson , is live chairman, lee anderson, is live in the studio shortly . in the studio shortly. >> he thought we should ignore the law and get the under flights taken off. and there are calls for him to be sacked. but first, it's time for the clash and rishi sunak sent shockwaves through british politics tonight, announcing in a shock press conference emergency legislation declaring rwanda a safe country and insisting that he will not allow foreign courts to block future deportation flights to rwanda and sunak a show of strength against
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supranational courts raises the obvious question. okay could he ultimately end up leading us out of the european convention on human rights? what do you think? in the inbox right now? linda says, just get out of the echr stop talking tough and biasing us all and just turn the boats back as well. get your views coming in gbviews@gbnews.com. but as rishi sunak says , he will but as rishi sunak says, he will not allow foreign courts to block deportation flights to rwanda. should we actually leave the echr ? okay, let me know your the echr? okay, let me know your thoughts that email again gbviews@gbnews.com at gb news on twitter. while you're there , twitter. while you're there, take part in our poll results shortly. but going head to head on this joined by human on this now. i'm joined by human rights lawyer dr. shoaib khan and reform party spokesperson for business and agriculture for rupert low. rupert, i will start with out of echr . now with you out of the echr. now >> well, i've been consistent in saying that the only solution , saying that the only solution, patrick, and if you read if you read suella bravermans resignation letter, she was quite clear that she thought
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she'd done a deal with rishi, that that would be what was happening . happening. >> but she's quite clear that the current legal situation is not going to deliver the result that the british people want and part of the brexit vote was all about protecting our borders. we are now a sovereign nation and sovereign nations do exactly that. sovereign nations do exactly that . the sad fact of the matter that. the sad fact of the matter is they , with an 80 seat is they, with an 80 seat majority, the tories have singularly failed to do anything until they're now panicking that the only thing that's going to save them is the improving economy , which is simply not economy, which is simply not going to happen over the next 12 months. so i think this is a degree of panic from rishi sunak reads suella braverman's resignation letter. he must answer those points that she's raised. >> all right. now human rights lawyer dr. shoaib khan. look, before you tell me that we would before you tell me that we would be joining belarus and russia if we were out of the echr, i'm just going to politely remind you the echr. you canada right in the echr. and absolutely bloody and they're absolutely bloody lovely, it lovely, aren't they, when it comes to human rights. so what are afraid of us
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are you so afraid of about us pulling out the echr? >> yeah, mean, so firstly, >> yeah, i mean, so firstly, just about rishi sunaks just talking about rishi sunaks speech just talking about rishi sunaks speich just talking about rishi sunaks spei mean, i think such >> i mean, i think such a ridiculous suggestion, what he's actually done where, know, actually done where, you know, the today, the uk the supreme court today, the uk supreme went through supreme court went through rwanda's rights record in rwanda's human rights record in detail, talking about extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances , um, forced disappearances, um, refugees being live, ammunition being used against refugees. so many examples of, you know, blatant human rights breaches and essentially concluding, yes, we agree with the evidence between us. we've looked at the evidence. rwanda is not a safe country. and then can i just can i just politely stop you there? >> i'll go back to you on this. shoaib i'm just literally reading right reading an article right now from the un echr people can actually at it on their actually look at it on their screens don't screens now if they don't believe me, unhcr , their believe me, the unhcr, their commissioner has praised rwanda for offering life saving haven for offering life saving haven for refugees . so is that a load for refugees. so is that a load of rubbish ? sorry yeah. no. of rubbish? sorry yeah. no. >> are you saying the supreme court judgement has praise for
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rwanda for offering life saving haven for refugees? >> so. so the unhcr actually, when it wants to, thinks that rwanda is a safe country. yeah know. >> but i mean, basically the point i was making, obviously that's what the british ambassador to rwanda warned at the time, rwanda is not safe . it the time, rwanda is not safe. it won't priti patel. that's what the foreign office said. that's what our ambassador said. and the supreme court considered all those the i'm those things. the point i'm making few hours later, making is a few hours later, rishi sunak stand up stands up, and speech is, well, i will and his speech is, well, i will declare westminster that declare in westminster that rwanda is a safe country. i think that's such a ludicrous thing to do. the point is work through rwanda, make it safe. you declare safe is not you just declare it safe is not going you just declare it safe is not goiiunhcr it's okay. >> unhcr thinks it's okay. that's the point i want to make. >> i think that's a ridiculous thing to do in terms of the echr rupert , i'm going to go to you i'iow. now. >> rupert, go on. what do you say in rwanda , arsenal? say in rwanda, arsenal? >> tell us to visit rwanda on their shirt ? paul kagame in their shirt? paul kagame in rwanda has rejected
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international aid. he's built an incredibly effective country. he's rejected all this sort of aid that used to go into african countries. he's made his country proud . he's made it. it delivers proud. he's made it. it delivers very good public services . very good public services. there's absolutely nothing wrong with rwanda. and the deal is, you quite rightly say the deal we've got with rwanda is perfect. and one of the reforms has a six point plan to solve the problem we always have had. and one of them is offshore processing centres and rwanda is a perfect place to deal with that. so i think it's nonsense to suggest that rwanda is not a safe country. it is . safe country. it is. >> dr. shoaib, what would you say to people who might be watching this now, listening to it and thinking you as a human rights lawyer, maybe you want us to stay in the echr because it can ramp up your legal fees, can't we? we have more appeals and keeps dragging it out. and it keeps dragging it out. maybe cynic in me would say maybe the cynic in me would say that's reasons why that's one of the reasons why you're so in favour of it. >> yeah, i mean, but that's the
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thing. i mean, know, thing. i mean, you know, especially when, for instance, they brought in rwanda. i'm sure lots lots lawyers, lots of people, lots of lawyers, immigration, lots of people, lots of lawyers, immiglawyers made lots of rights lawyers made lots of money because of rwanda. but the very it came in, we were all very day it came in, we were all opposing it. if they had just endedit opposing it. if they had just ended it there, wouldn't have ended it there, we wouldn't have made and that's the made any money. and that's the whole make money whole point we make money because government keeps because the government keeps coming with these. coming up, coming up with these. you crazy you know, absolutely crazy unlawful if unlawful plans. the point is, if they law, then we they followed the law, then we wouldn't any money. and wouldn't make any money. and that's the whole point. so, yeah, i mean, obviously, that's a suggestion a ridiculous suggestion to be making anyone making anyway. but anyone interested rights in interested in human rights is in it so i think, it for the money. so i think, you know, but generally, okay, of course is. mean, think of course it is. i mean, i think any lawyers mean human rights lawyers are probably lowest any lawyers mean human rights lawy of are probably lowest any lawyers mean human rights lawy of lawyers. ably lowest any lawyers mean human rights lawy of lawyers. ably sure lowest paid of lawyers. i'm sure there's areas of law. there's many other areas of law. anyone go into. if you anyone would go into. if you were actually going, know, were actually going, you know, if actually for in the if you were actually for in the money. but in terms of the echr, of course, know, of course, you know, you mentioned russia belarus mentioned the russia and belarus thing, generally a few thing, but just generally a few technical so firstly, technical points. so firstly, the good friday agreement, this is good friday is part of the good friday agreement, that the agreement, something that the agreement is based on that we would signatory to the
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would remain a signatory to the echr. n0 would remain a signatory to the echr. no one even addresses that anymore. going to happen anymore. what's going to happen there? there are so many anymore. what's going to happen there’:technical'e are so many anymore. what's going to happen there’:technical points.) many anymore. what's going to happen there’:technical points. imany anymore. what's going to happen there’:technical points. i mean, other technical points. i mean, we've what's happened with we've seen what's happened with brexit. point . you brexit. so that's the point. you know, the tories have been talking about for years. talking about for 13 years. >> you a good point with >> you make a good point with brexit think can brexit because i think we can add a long list of add this to a long list of things that have their things that have turned their backs ordinary british backs on ordinary british people. going to give people. okay, i'm going to give very word you on very quick final word to you on this, because we're this, rupert, because we're having a look at the situation now where british public now where the british public voted in 2016. voted for brexit in 2016. democratic referendum stonking majority in 2019 majority for the tories in 2019 based consistently have based and consistently have voted consistently have voted to lower immigration. i do seriously think if there was a referendum on the echr tomorrow , referendum on the echr tomorrow, there's a decent chance it would win . but. but time and time win. but. but time and time again , it does feel as though again, it does feel as though the are having their will the public are having their will thwarted by a small group of people . people. >> thank you, patrick. i mean, at the end of the day, the british establishment is completely out of touch with the majority people and majority of british people and brexit was mainly about becoming a sovereign nation with an accountable parliament in
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westminster that controlled and basically managed our borders and proper immigration should be done correctly . we should be done correctly. we should be filtering the people who come in. we should be ultimately making sure that illegal immigration is not tolerated and that we actually accept legal immigration, legal, legal. immigration is good, but it has to be done in a structured way. and the british people want that. that's what they want. they don't want armies of illegal immigrants, largely young men, coming in on dinghies and effectively causing problems. i mean, look at some of these hamas marches we've got in london now. it'sjust in london now. it's just unacceptable . unacceptable. >> well, it's interesting you should mention that. it's interesting you should mention that, , i'm going interesting you should mention th.be , i'm going interesting you should mention th.be showing , i'm going interesting you should mention th.be showing later , i'm going interesting you should mention th.be showing later , i'whating to be showing later on what happened went to one of happened when i went to one of these and anyone these marches. and for anyone who's still their head who's still got their head buned who's still got their head buried in the sand the buried in the sand about the reality going on in reality of what is going on in our right now, i urge our streets right now, i urge you stay tuned because, you to just stay tuned because, well, you'll be shocked by what you see. both of you. thank you very, very much. khan, very, very much. shoaib khan,
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the lawyer, and the human rights lawyer, and rupert well of reform. rupert lowe as well of reform. so you agree with so look, who do you agree with there? should just there? right. should we just leave going to go leave the echr? i'm going to go to first because is to twitter first because it is absolutely popping off on twitter. make sure that you get in touch us as at gb in touch with us there as at gb news. but mary says don't news. but mary says we don't need to anything. just need to leave anything. just stop boats. if our political stop the boats. if our political elite our borders, elite can't protect our borders, then not fit for then they are not fit for purpose. well hello. fred says it matter. it wasn't the it doesn't matter. it wasn't the echr that stopped this. it was the uk supreme sunak the uk supreme court. sunak needs sort them out. he can needs to sort them out. he can ignore the echr anyway, i get what you're saying. there 100. but the same time as well of but at the same time as well of course got the bottle, course as he got the bottle, miss on x well obviously miss on x says well obviously the uk should leave the echr but many countries just ignore the echr anyway. yeah, i think that's what people are thinking at the moment. look, your verdict you in our verdict is in 88% of you in our poll agree that we should leave the echr 12% of you say that we shouldn't get the emails coming in. gb views gbnews.com meme has just been on. yes, we should just been on. yes, we should just come out of the echr coming up though, i march straight in
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to the dark underbelly of these pro—palestine demonstrations . pro—palestine demonstrations. >> do you know what the get away from him. i just want to get away from here. no go away. your fascist scum. you're not wanting. i just want to know your views. >> yeah, it's not just a fringe minority of lunatics at these marches, let me tell you. and to tear policing is real. i get the reaction of my panel to that. but next, lee anderson is live in the studio after calls for him to be sacked for saying that we should just defy the law and get the flights to rwanda off the ground. well, he's back in the ground. well, he's back in the headlines , but is there the headlines, but is there anything that you'd like me to the headlines, but is there any'him?that you'd like me to the headlines, but is there any'him? get you'd like me to the headlines, but is there any'him? get those like me to the headlines, but is there any'him? get those emails; to the headlines, but is there any'him? get those emails coming ask him? get those emails coming in shortly. what do you want me to ask lee? we always want to hear you. gb views on hear from you. gb views on news.com. anderson is in news.com. lee anderson is in here in a moment responding to calls for him to be sacked today
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isabel, monday to thursdays from six till 930 . six till 930. >> welcome back to patrick christys tonight. now, soon i will be speaking with royal author andrew levin, who is dropping a royal exclusive for you about prince harry right here on this show. but now you've just got a cheeky little glimpse of him there. i'm joined by the one and only lee anderson. now, look, lee, you have been making a heck of a lot of headlines again as do. of headlines again as you do. okay. the supreme court blocked the deal. you said it's the rwanda deal. you said it's a dark day for the british people. we should just get the planes in the air right now and send them
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back to rwanda. in back to rwanda. steve in lancaster's emailed in, says, lancaster's emailed in, he says, lee, what time is the first flight from england? but the prime minister's press conference earlier, itv journalist anushka asthana was desperate to know if you'd be sacked for your comments. all right, so here's what he said . right, so here's what he said. >> well, i think what lee's comments and indeed the comments of others do is reflect that the strength of feeling the strength of feeling in the country issue. and country on this issue. and i absolutely share actually in the frustration , is that my frustration, is that my colleagues and indeed people across the country have about this. what do you make of that? >> lee well wants he sacked well well itv can go and do one, as far as i'm concerned, patrick. >> i mean, quite clear that the prime minister is backing the sentiment said . sentiment of what i said. >> i spoke to rishi tonight actually just before here. actually just before i got here. >> look, we are frustrated. >> look, we are frustrated. >> we fed up. >> we fed up. >> marched hill a few >> we marched up the hill a few times on this issue. >> this is a bit a kick in >> this is a bit of a kick in the teeth. >> but know what? i think >> but you know what? i think every cloud is silver lining. every cloud is a silver lining. >> this forces us on.
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>> now, i know you spoke to bill cash earlier. >> he's an expert on this matter. and, you know, we need to make that laws to make sure that the laws and rishi going to change rishi said we're going to change the more legislation to make the law more legislation to make it but the it watertight. but here's the thing. thing, thing. here's the thing, patrick. in ashfield, patrick. the people in ashfield, the this country the people in this country are fed up to the back teeth at these illegal migrants coming up in this country, taking the make the stopping in hotels and costing absolute fortune. costing us an absolute fortune. and said i've been and i've always said i've been consistent we consistent from day one. we should them the same should send them back the same day. if we did that, they'd stop coming. >> so you are doubling down on your comments earlier , ignore your comments earlier, ignore the law, get the flights . the law, get the flights. >> i've never changed my mind on this from one. they this from from day one. they should be sent back the same day like in australia. they like they do in australia. they turn around, them turn them around, they turn them on, they stop the problem. these people when people look, patrick, when you go will lock go to bed tonight, you will lock your back door and put your alarm on. and you do that for a couple of reasons. really you don't intruders coming in don't want intruders coming in and house and you don't want your house being and you want being broken into and you want to be safe. we should do the same our borders. it's as same with our borders. it's as simple as that. okay.
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>> steve's >> so to answer steve's question, what time is the first flight taking flight from england taking off now, imagine? flight from england taking off novwell,iagine? flight from england taking off novwell, i'd ne? flight from england taking off novwell, i'd like it to go now. >> well, i'd like it to go now. i'd be waving it off on the runway my union flag and runway with my union flag and saying, know, you come here, saying, you know, you come here, you're getting your break into this you here this country. you come here illegally, your illegally, you throw your passports want passports away. we don't want you flight. okay you get on that flight. okay >> stuff. you go. >> strong stuff. there you go. steve, think your question has steve, i think your question has been well and truly answered there. see the there. but where do you see the tories going from here, lee? you know, is the party in yet another leadership crisis? there's rumours, there's rumours of no confidence, there's rumours, there's rumours of letters no confidence, there's rumours, there's rumours of letters of confidence, there's rumours, there's rumours of letters of no 1fidence, there's rumours, there's rumours of letters of no confidence. more letters of no confidence. >> me tell you now, >> let me just tell you now, patrick here on gb news. that's nonsense. there's no way there's going a leadership going to be a leadership contest. need contest. we don't need a leadership contest. to leadership contest. we need to let crack on with job. let rishi crack on with the job. look, if people stop, i think there's one letter gone in. you know, need about 50 letters. >> let's talk of seven now. >> let's talk of seven now. >> there's no mate. there's one letter gone it. and this is. this thing. if was this is the thing. if there was a leadership election, rishi would win hands down as simple as so would he, though? >> absolutely. the membership as so would he, though? >> abvote ely. the membership as so would he, though? >> ab vote ely. him. membership didn't vote for him. >> yeah, membership >> yeah, but the membership won't vote. you've got to
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won't get a vote. you've got to get over a certain tipping point to get into the last two. it would win, as simple as that. talk a leadership election at talk of a leadership election at this absolute nonsense. this stage is absolute nonsense. it's into the it's playing right into the labour hand. it's playing right into the labso hand. it's playing right into the labso you're hand. it's playing right into the labso you're notnd. it's playing right into the labso you're not going to >> so you're not going to resign? absolutely not. resign? no, absolutely not. >> resigned from >> i've never resigned from anything in my life. i don't think. no, never. you know, think. no, no, never. you know, you're walking away. you're not for walking away. >> for turning. >> you're not for turning. >> you're not for turning. >> for turning. mean, my >> not for turning. i mean, my role is a political role. role is a is a political role. i think, know, i speak to think, you know, i speak to members every single week, patrick, up and down the country. i've got my you country. i think i've got my you know, i've got finger on the know, i've got my finger on the pulse, pulse. pulse, the political pulse. if you the membership. you like, of the membership. they're frustrated. and, you know, the is frustrated, know, the country is frustrated, but what mean. we've but you know what i mean. we've seen labour tonight in the chamber heard them chamber and we've heard them rattling afternoon. they rattling on this afternoon. they ain't this ain't going to solve this problem. know people are problem. i know people are frustrated. frustrated. frustrated. i'm frustrated. people out there frustrated. i'm frustrated. pefrustrated. out there frustrated. i'm frustrated. pefrustrated. but out there frustrated. i'm frustrated. pefrustrated. but the out there frustrated. i'm frustrated. pefrustrated. but the onlythere is frustrated. but the only party can sort this out is party that can sort this out is the conservative party. >> you think people bill >> do you think people like bill cash still have cash would rather still have suella in? >> think he would. >> no, i don't think he would. i mean, suella. he's a good friend of mine. she i think she's been a great home secretary she's
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been you been very, very strong. but you know, moved and the know, we've moved on. and the one pve know, we've moved on. and the one i've learned in one thing i've learned in politics, patrick, short politics, patrick, in the short time i've been involved in that place there, that people place over there, is that people say a week is a long time in politics. sometimes it's a short week, is. you know, this week, but it is. you know, this time we forgot time next week. suella we forgot about be about about and we'll be talking about something about and we'll be talking about sonjust ng about and we'll be talking about sonjust just quickly on this >> just just quickly on this one. phil's been in touch and it ties in. thank you, phil, for something be something that i'm going to be talking later on when talking about later on when i show raw footage show this raw footage of when i was at this. it is a hate was at this. and it is a hate march. >> i've f i've seen a f— f i've seen a bit of it. >> yeah, i've seen a bit of it. >> he says, can you ask how long we this we can go on with this ridiculous two tier policing? we had racism the streets there. had racism on the streets there. we extremism. and they we had extremism. and they asked they leave. this they asked us to leave. and this was off. a was all kicking off. this is a problem. most of this is we >> i mean, most of this is we don't it my of the don't see it in my neck of the woods. patrick to be honest. we see in london lot. and see it in in london a lot. and i think mayor khan turns think sometimes mayor khan turns a eye to this. you know, a blind eye to this. you know, they're quick to clamp down a blind eye to this. you know, theone quick to clamp down a blind eye to this. you know, theone particular. to clamp down a blind eye to this. you know, theone particular set clamp down on one particular set of protests, but seem a protests, but seem to turn a blind seen blind eye on the we've seen tonight actually on whitehall. i was bit late getting was a little bit late getting here because was here tonight because it was absolutely flags and i'm sure palestinian flags and i'm sure amongst them people amongst them there were people shouting horrible, nasty things,
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vile stay tuned, >> stay tuned. stay tuned, everybody, because you're going to fascinating to see some really fascinating stuff. time stuff. it kicked off big time and exposes, frankly , and i think it exposes, frankly, the what is going on the reality of what is going on at these marches and the way that the police deal with them just one final one bit of a shift in tone here, a bit of a different one. we always like to get the culture get you on the old culture wars or so or the wokeist stuff, right? so in female pool in other news, a female pool player walked out of a national competition to competition after refusing to play competition after refusing to play against trans athlete. play against a trans athlete. harry hey, take a look. a look at this . yes yes, yes. at this. yes yes, yes. >> come on, man. >> right. so they refused. they refused to play against the trans athlete. you're a strong defender of women's sports. your reaction ? reaction? >> why are these the men basically, patrick, why are these men intent on competing in women's sports? that's the question i want to win. well, of course they'll win this, this this man dressed as a woman, he probably wouldn't get in the top 50 or top 100 of pool or snooker
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players in the world. as a man . players in the world. as a man. so what are they doing, patrick? they're cheating . and, you know, they're cheating. and, you know, if you're woman you take if you're a woman and you take up you compete up a sport and you compete against you practice up a sport and you compete agairfrom you practice up a sport and you compete agairfrom a you practice up a sport and you compete agairfrom a young you practice up a sport and you compete agairfrom a young girl] practice up a sport and you compete agairfrom a young girl and ctice up a sport and you compete agairfrom a young girl and spend from from a young girl and spend all your spare time practising in sport, then all in a particular sport, then all of this harry. of a sudden this harry. it probably in a previous probably harry in a previous life along, gets his stick life comes along, gets his stick out and starts thrashing all the women at pool. it's absolute nonsense. should ashamed nonsense. you should be ashamed of absolutely fed up to of himself. absolutely fed up to this in this country. this nonsense in this country. >> i can tell you are bubbling. i'm fury just generally, just generally under under the surface. >> i spoke to it to colleagues earlier about, you know, men just going in, you know, at one time of day. patrick, if a bloke turned up at a swimming baths when a kid and dressed as when i were a kid and dressed as a went into the changing a woman, went into the changing rooms, gets months for rooms, he gets six months for that probably a good idea that and probably a good idea down mine as well down at the local mine as well for. . for. all right. >> well, there you look, >> well, there you go. look, lee anderson, the chair anderson, the deputy chair of the party, you heard quite the tory party, you heard quite a lot stuff there. i'm just a lot of stuff there. i'm just going to a statement made a lot of stuff there. i'm just goiharriet's to a statement made a lot of stuff there. i'm just goiharriet's lawyeratement made a lot of stuff there. i'm just goiharriet's lawyer with ent made a lot of stuff there. i'm just goiharriet's lawyer with hermade by harriet's lawyer with her endorsement. says, for all endorsement. it says, for all the that people hold, the comments that people hold, that advantage
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that being trans is an advantage in there no in sports. there is no scientific evidence to prove that indeed , that is the view that indeed, that is the view also shared by the world. professional billiards and snooker association and the international olympic committee, who sports as who classify cue sports as precision sports and thus not affected by gender. so there we go. lee thank you very much. always a pleasure. strong stuff, as always. coming up, find out what happened when i went down just to turn up to ask a couple of really reasonable questions. by of really reasonable questions. by the way, but ended up exposing the latest pro—palestine rally it pro—palestine rally for what it really view , a hate really is, in my view, a hate march. what kind of right now i know got difficult job, right? >> okay. >> okay. >> try manage your >> i'll try to manage your safety try to safety right now. i'll try to manage . safety right now. i'll try to ma yeah. and a bit of two tier >> yeah. and a bit of two tier policing to as well. but policing to boot as well. but next as prince harry reportedly makes phone call makes a birthday phone call yesterday does makes a birthday phone call ye mark ay does makes a birthday phone call yemark a does makes a birthday phone call ye mark a turning does makes a birthday phone call yemark a turning point does makes a birthday phone call yemark a turning point in does makes a birthday phone call yemark a turning point in the�*s it mark a turning point in the royal family's feud ? royal royal family's feud? royal biographer and journalist angela levin, well, she's got an important exclusive for you. she joins me in the studio . that's joins me in the studio. that's next. miss it
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. and prince harry reportedly phoned king charles yesterday to wish his dad a happy 75th birthday. and could it be, though, the start of a shock reconciliation? the telegraph is reporting that father and son have reached a turning point . they are to speak turning point. they are to speak again next week. the king is also believed to have chatted with meghan , believe it or not, with meghan, believe it or not, the of sussex. but the duchess of sussex. but royal biographer and journalist angela levin joins me now. and angela, i think you've got a thing or two to say about this in an important update. >> yes, i don't actually believe that he rang in. one reason is that he rang in. one reason is that king charles has his day very carefully worked out and he doesn't just take phone calls that happen by chance. you can't ring him directly because he doesn't have a mobile . and it doesn't have a mobile. and it would have gone through various
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aides. i don't believe it as well, because he would have protected himself. if you're going to have a birthday and a lovely time , you don't want lovely time, you don't want harry ringing you and started moaning and groaning and attacking you and saying you've got to apologise to meghan . and got to apologise to meghan. and i don't think you can turn from all the nasty, hateful things that he's said in his book or on tv and suddenly mr nice guy and meghan talking to him as mrs. nice guy. i just don't think it i don't think it happened, but we'll wait and see because there have been other occasions when harry has said he's wrong or he's been somewhere and taken a child. and that's not been true . child. and that's not been true. so i think we wait. i'm not 100% sure, it doesn't fit in at all. >> so you you really you really just straightforwardly do not believe that prince harry called his dad on his birthday, then i don't believe that. >> and i don't believe that that
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he would have been spoken to even if he had, because he would upset the whole day. >> apparently spoke to meghan as well. so. >> yeah. come on, meghan can't stand this country. she hates the royal family. why would she suddenly want to talk unless they've got a big plan there? they need to make money and they want to sell a story about their talking or they want to help him to give them a home. all those things i'm afraid to be very cynical, but this is the pattern his his done on. >> well, now this moves us on nicely to our next story. and you've really been getting your nose into this one. okay. so explosive extracts from an upcoming book end game by royal journalist omid scobie. remember him have been released today and scobie has lashed out at the royal family, claiming that harry and meghan were left in the dark over the queen's death . the dark over the queen's death. angela here's an extract . angela here's an extract. >> when the plane starts to descend, i saw that my phone lit
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up . up. >> it was a message from meg . >> it was a message from meg. >> it was a message from meg. >> they call me when you get this. >> i looked at the bbc website . >> i looked at the bbc website. >> i looked at the bbc website. >> my grandmother had died and my father was king. >> okay . do you really believe >> okay. do you really believe those claims? no. no no. >> the thing is that that he started having a huge row with either his brother or his father to get meghan to go up and see the lake queen up in scotland . the lake queen up in scotland. and they didn't want any women there. and catherine didn't go. so it wasn't a spitefulness on meghan and he missed the plane that was taking them all up because he was arguing and arguing and arguing because he didn't want to leave meghan behind. and this thing about not knowing anything isn't true because the royal family were told just as they were about that her husband , that he was
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that her husband, that he was passing away , that she was very passing away, that she was very ill. you could see it anyway if you looked at her, you could see she was poor woman was shrivelling and in pain . yeah. shrivelling and in pain. yeah. and you can't tell somebody exactly when someone is going to die . none of exactly when someone is going to die. none of us exactly when someone is going to die . none of us know that . but die. none of us know that. but he just looking for reasons to moan again and again and again. he said this years ago and is still now letting it come out again. in another book and another moan. it's to terrible. i can just like to tell you a couple of things. there i mean, you know that here, meghan in the dark that was one. but but this is what scobie said and the family is ignoring its internal fractures at its own peril . fractures at its own peril. that's very unpleasant. and it's also harry's thing because he thinks that he and meghan can run a much better monarchy, much more modern than there has been. so this nasty thing fractures at its own peril . i think the
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its own peril. i think the monarchy is doing very well at the moment. and yet scobie says heir to the throne, william has prioritised his loyalty to the monarchy , even quietly monarchy, even quietly cooperated with the uk press to undermine line harry now , first, undermine line harry now, first, why shouldn't he priority his loyalty ? that's what he is heir loyalty? that's what he is heir to the throne . he's trying to. to the throne. he's trying to. his father. no so that's very nice. >> one of the reasons why i am very sceptical about what harry says is because we were all in this newsroom on that unbelievably depressing day that our late queen passed away. and if we're being honest, we our late queen passed away. and if we're being honest , we knew if we're being honest, we knew we knew a couple of hours before its official , we announced, i its official, we announced, i think, pretty much most journalists, people working in tv were getting we're getting the black suits on a couple of hours before they went on telly wearing them and announced it. so the idea that harry found out by looking at bbc news , i find by looking at bbc news, i find that incredibly hard . hard to that incredibly hard. hard to believe we've got less than a minute. can you summarise
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quickly, angela, what's going on with the invictus games? because it's in trouble, isn't it, financially, yeah. >> the invictus games is not going have any money. going to have any money. they are about harry and are concerned about harry and meghan charging the journey. the protection and all the things that they want. meghan likes a room, repainted and all that sort of thing. they're more than 300 million in the red . 300 million in the red. >> okay. right. interesting stuff . a spokesperson on behalf stuff. a spokesperson on behalf of the invictus games has said there are no budgetary issues relating to invictus games. vancouver whistler 2025, and the organiser is on track to meet its revenue sponsorship and fundraising target dates. well, that's interesting . certainly that's interesting. certainly not the view of angela levin or several other people doing the reports at the moment. angela, thank you. always a treat. that was royal biographer and journalist andrew levin. coming was royal biographer and jou after.t andrew levin. coming was royal biographer and jou after labourw levin. coming was royal biographer and jou after labour frontbenchers1g up after labour frontbenchers defy keir starmer and quit to back a gaza ceasefire , is the back a gaza ceasefire, is the party imploding? former labour aide stella sunak and gb news
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senior political commentator nigel nelson join me live later for that debate. you won't want to miss it, but next, find out what happened. when i went to the latest pro—palestine protest in central london earlier this evening . this guy. he approached evening. this guy. he approached me . me. >> he approached me. >> he approached me. >> you know? yeah it's something that you need to see. >> i'm very glad that we went to try to just see what was going on there. and i'm actually quite glad that we got the reaction that because some that we did because i think some people denial about people are still in denial about the of the kind of the reality of the kind of people are these people that are at these protests the protests and what the undercurrent is and undercurrent there really is and the police deal with it the way our police deal with it all that's coming your way. just ask . ask. >> good evening. burkill >> good evening. alex burkill here again with your latest gb news weather update. there may be touch of frost and some fog be a touch of frost and some fog around as go overnight, but around as we go overnight, but then strong winds then heavy rain and strong winds expected south as we go expected in the south as we go
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through in association through tomorrow in association with a low system with a low pressure system that's currently to the southwest of the uk, making its way in as we go through the next southwest of the uk, making its wa hourss we go through the next southwest of the uk, making its wa hourss vlso]0 through the next southwest of the uk, making its wa hourss viso asthrough the next southwest of the uk, making its wa hourss viso as we ugh the next southwest of the uk, making its wa hourss viso as we g01 the next 12 hours or so as we go overnight, we are going to hold to on the largely cloudy skies across some northern parts, though towards the though clearer skies towards the far north scotland, allowing far north of scotland, allowing for some frost here. elsewhere, a of mist and fog, a few pockets of mist and fog, perhaps wet and windy perhaps before the wet and windy weather mentioned earlier, weather i mentioned earlier, pushesin weather i mentioned earlier, pushes in across of the pushes in across parts of the south southwest . this will south and southwest. this will actually here. actually lift temperatures here. and milder start for some and so a milder start for some in the south, but also a wet and windy one, a and windy windy one, a wet and windy morning for many here, as well as rain its way as that rain pushes its way through , likely to be some through, likely to be some disruption, particularly on the roads the morning rush roads through the morning rush hour the heaviest rain hour and then the heaviest rain and strongest winds do clear hour and then the heaviest rain and stowards winds do clear hour and then the heaviest rain and stowards the ds do clear hour and then the heaviest rain and stowards the east) clear hour and then the heaviest rain and stowards the east through away towards the east through the . further the afternoon. but further showery follow in showery outbreaks follow in behind the of the sunshine, behind the best of the sunshine, likely to be parts of likely to be across parts of scotland. temperatures for many down a degree or compared to down a degree or two compared to today as we go friday and today as we go into friday and watch out for bit of mist and watch out for a bit of mist and fog perhaps some first fog and perhaps some frost first thing places . fog and perhaps some frost first thing places. but thing in some places. but otherwise looking like
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otherwise it's looking like a largely fine day. showers largely fine day. a few showers to watch out for, but most places staying dry and plenty of sunshine before some wet and windy weather returns from the west we go into saturday. so west as we go into saturday. so the weekend does look like it will unsettled than will be much more unsettled than through heavy rain and through friday. heavy rain and strong the strong winds, especially in the west
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at this is patrick christys tonight , gb news. >> hello . we just want to know >> hello. we just want to know why people are here. >> shame on you. shame on you. shame on you . shame on you . shame on you. shame on you. >> wow. i expose the hate marches and show you as the police just stand by and allow racism and extremism on the streets. but clamp down on the free press now has rishi sunak finally grown? a pair ? finally grown? a pair? >> if the strasbourg court chooses to intervene against the express wishes of parliament, i
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am prepared to do what is necessary to get flights off. >> rwanda. got a kicking in the courts , but should rishi just courts, but should rishi just get the planes in the air right now? labour though , is about to now? labour though, is about to implode. talk of mass sackings and resignations over gaza . stay and resignations over gaza. stay tuned for a special second edition of the clash. that's coming your way. and you will not believe some of the explosive stories inside tomorrow's newspapers. i will reveal them to you just after 1030 in the most entertaining press preview that you will get anywhere on on national telly. and here with me , our author and and here with me, our author and broadcaster christine hamilton . broadcaster christine hamilton. tory mps had a busy day. broadcaster christine hamilton. tory mps had a busy day . former tory mps had a busy day. former environment secretary ranil jayawardene and former labour adviser matthew laza as you can see, you really shouldn't go to bed. i expose the hate marches after the headlines .
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after the headlines. the full clip of my enlightening and alarming trip to today's pro—palestine demonstration . one pro—palestine demonstration. one of the most shocking experiences i've had as a journalist. and it's right after the news right now with paul . patrick. now with paul. patrick. >> thank you and good evening . >> thank you and good evening. well, our top story tonight is that sir keir starmer faced a labour rebellion in the house of commons tonight as mps voted on gaza and eight members of the shadow cabinet ended up leaving the party after failing to toe the party after failing to toe the party after failing to toe the party line . the labour the party line. the labour leader had ordered labour members to vote for humanitarian pauses in the fighting and reject the snp king's speech amendment, calling for all parties to agree to an immediate ceasefire. our political correspondent katherine forster has more . has more. >> a real challenge to sir keir starmer was leadership. he'd hoped that by offering a vote on a labour amendment, that would be enough to stave off a rebellion. but it was not to be.
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just over a quarter of labour mps, some 56 actively side with the scottish national party and voted for a ceasefire despite explicit instructions as not to do so . now eight shadow do so. now eight shadow ministers and two parliamentary private secretaries have now left the front bench the most well known example, i think probably jess phillips. she was shadow domestic violence and safeguarding minister for proof that rishi sunak is not the only party leader struggling to manage his own party. arlene foster reporting from westminster earlier on. >> well , westminster earlier on. >> well, meanwhile, pro—palestinian supporters held a mass demonstration opposite the house of commons earlier this evening as the gaza ceasefire vote progressed inside the chamber, protesters were chanting , we are all chanting, we are all palestinians and they held up placards reading free palestine, the gb news team also heard anti—israel chants and witnessed anti—israel chants and witnessed
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anti semitic sloganeering. the met police says the event is now oven met police says the event is now over, but they monitor a group which continues the protests . which continues the protests. now the prime minister says he will introduce emergency legislation to deem rwanda a safe country and prevent legal challenges in the future . it challenges in the future. it comes after the supreme court this morning ruled the government's rwanda plan was unlawful. rishi sunak says he doesn't agree with the ruling, but he does respect it. mr sunak says the european court of human rights would still be able to intervene in a new treaty. but won't be able to block flights. he says he'll do all he can to bnng he says he'll do all he can to bring fundamental change to the country . country. >> we are a reasonable government and this is a reasonable country , but the reasonable country, but the british people's patience can only be stretched so thin and they expect the boats to be stopped . that is why i made it stopped. that is why i made it one of my five priorities. and whatever our critics might say, we are making progress because
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the rwanda scheme is only one part of our strategy. last december, the number entering the uk illegally in small boats had more than quadruple . in just had more than quadruple. in just two years. now with the recent storms, we've been having a huge whale has been found dead on a beach in cornwall . beach in cornwall. >> it was discovered on newquay's fistral beach early this morning by members of the nearby activity centre. there it's a fin whale and fin whales are the second largest mammal following the blue whale in the world. the authorities have urged members of the public to avoid the area completely until the mammal can be removed . this the mammal can be removed. this is gb news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news this is britain's news channel . today . britain's news channel. today. >> may i experienced the hate marches. too many people , too marches. too many people, too many politicians, too many faux worthy individuals have been
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burying their heads in the sand for too long about what is really taking place on our streets right now . i went to streets right now. i went to parliament a couple of hours ago as people gathered to call for a ceasefire. a pro palestine demonstration . i just went to demonstration. i just went to walk through that crowd . now, as walk through that crowd. now, as i was waiting the crowns really ramped up . 37 ramped up. 37 sevilla . it was a ramped up. 37 sevilla. it was a cauldron. now chants are from the river to the sea. were ringing out as well. f israel was being shouted by people wearing masks . you can listen to wearing masks. you can listen to some of the chants as well as the tension builds. they are saying israel is a terrorist and hamas as well. >> and hamas is definitely .
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hello. >> would you be news? >> would you be news? >> you don't talk to gb news. quick question, quick question. >> why are you here today? >> why are you here today? >> where are you from? >> where are you from? >> i'm just going for gb news. okay can i ask can i ask why? why? you're covering your face. i just want to know why you're here today . here today. >> she's gone. go away. go away. >> she's gone. go away. go away. >> you're not wanted. go away after tell not wanted. you are answering. no one said get away from here. i just want to get away from here. no, go away. you're fascist scum. you're not wanted. i just want to know your views, palestine . >> free palestine. >> free palestine. >> does palestine mean ? >> 7_ >> ceasefire. >> ceasefire. >> so ceasefire now. okay. and what do you think of the gb news? >> i'm just asking. >> i'm just asking. >> normal ceasefire. don't speak to them. all right, keep moving. you're having a normal chat? no, i don't want talk to you. gb i don't want to talk to you. gb news. talk them . news. don't talk to them. >> i just want to know why people are here. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. interesting oh,
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mate. oh mate. why are you here today ? today? >> sorry. why are you here today ? what do you think? don't talk to them. don't talk to them . to them. don't talk to them. >> i'm just asking you why they're here. shame on you. >> perhaps you can do it on the peripherals right there. >> so do you want me? do you want me to? >> this is going to >> so this is this is going to be like people is be allowed like people like is it is it are we going to have to be move because of be the ones to move because of people accosting us? >> is that going have people accosting us? >>happen? going have people accosting us? >>iwhat's’ going have people accosting us? >>iwhat's going going have people accosting us? >>iwhat's going on ing have people accosting us? >>iwhat's going on right have people accosting us? >>iwhat's going on right now?�* >> what's going on right now? >> what's going on right now? >> i know you've got a difficult job right? >> trying to your >> i'm trying to manage your safety now while i try to safety right now while i try to manage the it. manage the rest of it. >> okay. this guy . wanted to talk. >> he approached me. he approached me , you know, oh gb approached me, you know, oh gb news. boss. kyrees gb news oh four street. gb news off streets. gb news booths off streets. gb news booths off street . gb news. street. gb news. >> well, that is a hate march. i had a security guard with me, and if he wasn't there, i do genuinely think that i may well
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have been physically attacked. i would like to thank him very much for what to protect much for what he did to protect me and our man as well. me and our camera man as well. the police stood by and allowed behaviour like that and much worse as well and told us to move along . instead. we were move along. instead. we were asked leave . but and asked to leave. but racism and threatening behaviour is allowed . and before i get the thoughts of my panel, let me cross live to activist peter tatchell, who was at the protest tonight. peter you can't seriously call this peaceful protests anymore . this peaceful protests anymore. you can't even surely say now that this is a fringe minority of people . i've been there. i've of people. i've been there. i've lived it . i experienced it . lived it. i experienced it. >> well, there are about 5 to 10,000 people there outside parliament tonight. what you expect was not typical. >> that was not what the majority of people were there for. >> they were respectful and kind and simply calling for a ceasefire in order to protect my presence alone. >> i'm sorry, but that's not true , right? they might have
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true, right? they might have been quite respectful and kind to you or to someone like greta thunberg or whoever else , but thunberg or whoever else, but they are not respectful or kind to anyone that they disagree with. and is it not reasonable to expect or suggest that if a jewish person had walked through that crowd today , that they that crowd today, that they would have been torn limb from limb ? limb? >> no, that's not true. there were jewish people there and they were welcome and they were embraced by the rest of the crowd. you you you had a bad experience once with about 10 or 12 people. excuse me, 5 to 10,000, 10 or 12 people, 10 or 12 people. >> you are absolutely having a how can you honestly still condone what's going on at these marches? you are for a man who i like, peter, i don't understand why you're choosing to go into bat. firstly firstly, for a group of people who are are violent and thuggish and angry and hateful ,
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violent and thuggish and angry and hateful, all okay. and who also know some of them. given what we've seen at previous things with i fully support hamas. i seriously do think would actually a well, how would they respond to you and your particular views? peter they'd execute wouldn't they . execute wouldn't they. >> well, i don't condone what was done to you. you know , i do was done to you. you know, i do not support that. but i don't think you can damn the whole group of people on the basis of your personal experience . i your personal experience. i mean, i've been on all these marches as i've never heard a single word of anti—semitism or support for hamas. but there was and have been some people , a and have been some people, a tiny, a tiny minority , they do tiny, a tiny minority, they do not represent all. and it's really unfair to damn the whole protest because of a small, unjust minority walked through it. >> peter i just started at one point and just walked through it with a camera and everyone can see that and that is the
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reality. peter i'm sorry, but thatis reality. peter i'm sorry, but that is the reality . and people that is the reality. and people can keep burying their heads in the sand as much as they want, but that's that. peter look. thank you anyway. peter tatchell. i'm going to go to my panel and panel now, author and broadcaster hamilton , broadcaster christine hamilton, former secretary former environment secretary ranil jayawardena, and former ranil jayawardena, mp and former labour adviser matt labour party adviser matt matthew laza. look, ronald , i'll matthew laza. look, ronald, i'll start with you on that. i mean , start with you on that. i mean, look at that. suella braverman was right, wasn't she? >> yeah, i mean, it's wholly unacceptable that there is so much abuse , so much danger of much abuse, so much danger of violence that that sadly there does seem to be a reluctance to call out that sort of behaviour for what it is. >> i mean, peter's probably right that there are some people who go along to marches who go along to these marches with the best of intentions, but sadly people then get sadly too many people then get dragged by the wrong crowd. >> it's mob mentality. and matthew, know, i've got to matthew, you know, i've got to be honest, there was a lot of people there on one of the speaking tents as well that were members labour party, members of the labour party, etcetera. i mean, do you guys
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want to be associated with people like that? >> absolutely not. i mean, i think that they they're was clearly there. we've seen behaviour there. and we've seen some unpleasant scenes. some very unpleasant scenes. look understand . i look i can totally understand. i think we all can. why people are coming from what's motivating people to concerns about what's happening in gaza as well as what's happened in israel . but what's happened in israel. but these marches are not the way to do it. and i you know, i haven't seen a single free palestine from hamas poster when hamas are the people holding the people of gaza hostage and destroying gaza to hostage and destroying the of sorting the the chances of sorting the situation out. so it's just very, very disappointing . and i very, very disappointing. and i hope that none of my none of the labour colleagues who who voted for snp amendment tonight for the snp amendment tonight voted to virtue signal over a ceasefire. i hope they realise that they're turning this into a football match. pro it's not like that. it's a very complicated situation. >> yeah, look exactly. and there is, there's absolutely no doubt that there were some people that ispoke that there were some people that i spoke to, a couple of them when the wasn't a go when the mob wasn't having a go at well, were just when the mob wasn't having a go
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at quite, were just when the mob wasn't having a go at quite normalere just when the mob wasn't having a go at quite normal people. and normal, quite normal people. and we saw a couple of clips there of people who perfectly of people who were perfectly willing talk to me. then, willing to talk to me. and then, you it ramps up you know, then it all ramps up and then they get told no. so you know, i am tarring you know, i am not tarring everyone brush. everyone with the same brush. but saying, christine, but what i am saying, christine, is that is this illusion that it is a fringe of people at fringe minority of people at these who are actually these marches who are actually just kick off. that's lie. >> i agree . and i mean, like >> i agree. and i mean, like you, i have a lot of respect for peter tatchell. in many ways. i think he's a very brave man. yes. over the years, he's been incredible. think he's incredible. but i think he's incredibly naive. what he said just and i was astonished . just now. and i was astonished. did that there were did he say that there were 10,000 people outside parliament? , that is a parliament? i mean, that is a monumental of people . monumental number of people. this all the time . this cannot go on all the time. what i like to see is what i would like to see is people with placards people marching with placards that free the hostage is that say free the hostage is anybody who genuinely wants peace in that area. it's got to start freeing hostages start with freeing the hostages and people say they don't this to river the sea chant, they means it doesn't. the river is the jordan. the sea is the mediterranean, and they want to destroy between, it destroy israel. in between, it is obvious what they're doing and is supporting hamas.
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and that is supporting hamas. they're think that they're naive if they think that that march does anything other than give succour. >> got nothing to hide >> if you've got nothing to hide right, then you don't need to boot me out of a march because i will through it with a will just walk through it with a camera see what we see. camera and we'd see what we see. >> the police's action was disgraceful somebody disgraceful as somebody who was, you who was a television you know, who was a television journalist years, i mean, journalist for 15 years, i mean, the police's actions there are completely inappropriate idiot. the defending freedom of the press is one of our fundamental values . and so from we values. and so from what we could see there, that was very worrying. >> but this is why suella was absolutely right when she said the police are they discriminate in who they don't. >> ronald, look, you should have had protection had proper police protection there. i shouldn't have needed any is point, really? yes any, is the point, really? yes >> yeah . you need anything but >> yeah. you need anything but in context? yeah. >> given what you did, they should have been on your side protecting rishi sunak has just sacked a lady who called things like that hateful, which i think it was pretty hateful, felt hateful . hateful. >> and so there was two tier policing. i think there's a two
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tier policing there. why is he sacked , sir? sacked, sir? >> well, suella is pretty much set exactly why she feels set out exactly why she feels she was asked to leave in her letter, which has been read, what, 25 million people or something like that? >> yeah, around the world. >> yeah, around the world. >> but the i think the key point here that the police have here is that the police have demonstrated consistently that they're willing to take the knee for blm. they're willing to allow statues be torn down allow statues to be torn down and they're willing to allow tv journalists in a free country to be sent away. that's the wrong signal. now, i back the police . signal. now, i back the police. i think the police do a really good job most of the time. they have a hard to most of have a hard job to do. most of the time we need to have more police. need to give them the police. we need to give them the right powers. but here they're demonstrating. right powers. but here they're demoitheating. right powers. but here they're demoithe powers they and using the powers they have. and that's concern. using the powers they have. and tha well concern. using the powers they have. and tha well , concern. using the powers they have. and tha well , ioncern. using the powers they have. and tha well , i think]. using the powers they have. and tha well , i think that for you >> well, i think that for you know, a third of the metropolitan police have less than four years experience. there young police. there are too many young police. >> i'd quit. >> i'd quit. >> they haven't got enough senior experienced police and the senior ones are terrified of being accused of being unwoke by
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the younger ones. i mean, there was a police officer the other day, a training officer, and he had of mix girls, girls had a group of mix girls, girls and boys, etcetera, young men and boys, etcetera, young men and women and he used the words guys. and women and he used the words guys . he has and women and he used the words guys. he has been reported for sexism . now, if the police are sexism. now, if the police are going to behave like that, and i also think that if there was a picture on the television the other day, a couple days ago, other day, a couple of days ago, of being so of a police woman being so severely jostled, i would be terrified. >> we've never recovered since it moved from being a police force to a police service. and that's the problem. yeah force to a police service. and tha matthew,yblem. yeah force to a police service. and tha matthew,yblemword1 force to a police service. and tha matthew, yblem word to force to a police service. and tha matthew,yblem word to you on >> matthew, final word to you on this that very angry, this. that is a very angry, enraged mob mob, but a mob of a small minority of the british population at large, the british population at large, the british population at large , don't want population at large, don't want to see that stuff on our streets . don't people like me . they don't want people like me turfed like that. turfed out of places like that. have just mob rule in britain? >> well, i hope not, but i think it's there are clear problems. and look, we've got the weekend march up, which is march coming up, which is bigger. no god given. bigger. there is no god given. we in the to we believe in the right to protest. no god given protest. there's no god given right protest particular
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right to protest in a particular place particular we place at a particular time. we saw that things were saw last week that things were a lot because the march, saw last week that things were a lot pro—palestinian 1e march, saw last week that things were a lot pro—palestinian marchch, saw last week that things were a lot pro—palestinian march was the pro—palestinian march was routed away from from whitehall and westminster because of remembrance. but i actually think that we need to if people want to protest in every week , want to protest in every week, then they cannot disrupt the life of the city like that. it's having a big impact the having a big impact on the life of as well. having a big impact on the life of so as well. having a big impact on the life of so a as well. having a big impact on the life of so a single'ell. having a big impact on the life of so a single one these >> so a single one of these marches issue or marches here on this issue or indeed issue has ever had indeed any issue has ever had the inaya. >> absolutely . >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> i mean, i'm sorry, but i tell you what, i tell you what i take away from that and everyone can see it with their own eyes, okay, which is that you want okay, which is that if you want to up on the to right now, turn up on the streets but the streets of britain. but free the free get physical free press, get physical with them, violence, be them, threaten violence, be racist, smoke drugs on the street by the way, didn't street by the way, i didn't mention on. that mention that earlier on. that was all around me was taking place all around me as mask, as well. the police wear a mask, right? police officer can right? the police officer can stand right next to you stand there right next to you and let you do all of that stuff. but if i tip up with a camera, i've got to go anyway. >> take a of coffee. it's >> take a cup of coffee. it's dunng and >> take a cup of coffee. it's during and were banged during covid and you were banged up. there you go. >> well, well, there you go. right. loads more
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>> well, well, there you go. righto loads more >> well, well, there you go. righto come. loads more >> well, well, there you go. righto come. loads ads more >> well, well, there you go. righto come. loads more|ore >> well, well, there you go. righto come. loads more still still to come. loads more still to come, because we've got all the stuff as well, the rwanda stuff as well, haven't we? rishi sunak says that working that the government is working with court with the supreme court to get rwanda the ground, rwanda flights off the ground, but message as but he's been sent a message as well . well to strasbourg. >> so let me tell everybody now, i will not allow a foreign court to block these flights . to block these flights. >> well, we cover the pm's threat to leave the echr in the most entertaining, informative and explosive newspaper review that you will not find anywhere else. some sensational stories on the inside pages as well. and next, just after labour frontbenchers defy keir starmer and quit to back a gaza ceasefire , it is the party ceasefire, it is the party imploding . former labour aide imploding. former labour aide stella that's a nick hewer and gb news senior political commentator nigel nelson. they join me in a bumper second edition of the clash. that's coming your way shortly , only to coming your way shortly, only to go to bed .
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the people's channel, britain's news channel . news channel. >> look, following on from my expose there about what it was really like at those pro—palestine marches . i really like at those pro—palestine marches. i am just seeing some stuff here. i'm going to bring that to you later on in the show of appears on in the show of what appears to protesters now climbing to be protesters now climbing all the cenotaph and police all over the cenotaph and police rushing to that scene. so that
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thing that we were told would never happen apparently is happening literally right now. so we'll bring some footage of that to you very, shortly. that to you very, very shortly. but breaking tonight, the labour party is facing a full revolt and on the brink of imploding as 56 of their mps, including ten frontbenchers, defied keir starmer's orders and backed an snp motion calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza. with the strictest three line whip imposed on labour mps. those frontbenchers who voted to support a ceasefire now face being sacked, with several having already resigned this evening . so the frontbench evening. so the frontbench rebels were paula barker. rachael hopkins , afzal khan, rachael hopkins, afzal khan, sara owen , jess phillips, yasmin sara owen, jess phillips, yasmin qureshi , naz shah and andy qureshi, naz shah and andy slaughter. there we go . keir slaughter. there we go. keir starmer said that israel had suffered its most awful terrorist attack in a single day at the hands of hamas on the 7th of october. he added at every stage during this crisis, my approach has been driven by the need to respond to both these tragedies. regret that some
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tragedies. i regret that some colleagues felt unable to support the position tonight, but wanted to be clear about but i wanted to be clear about where i stood and where i stand. going head to head on this right now, i am joined by former labour aide stella tronchetto and gb news senior political commentator nigel nelson . commentator nigel nelson. stella, thank you very, very much. well rishi sunak is bang in trouble. sorry, keir starmer, easy for me to say. is bang in trouble here now, isn't he? he's got to find a new a new shadow frontbench, hasn't he? got to find a new a new shadow froryes.|ch, hasn't he? >> yes. >> yes. >> yes, he does. and i think he's struggle because he's going to struggle because i think support for support think that support for support for a ceasefire is spreading, not just across the labour party, across the country and across the world. >> i think the mps who stood down the right thing . i down did the right thing. i think they are voting with their values think this is very values and i think this is very important for politicians. i think people really tired of think people are really tired of politicians and politicians saying one thing and really another . and i really meaning another. and i think will see more and think that we will see more and more people coming out in favour of ceasefire. and i'm really pleased and very proud if i'm honest, mps who did the
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honest, of the mps who did the right thing according to their honest, of the mps who did the rightvalues according to their honest, of the mps who did the rightvalues .:cording to their own values. >> okay, nigel, i'll throw it over to you mean, it's over to you now. i mean, it's the party exploding. the labour party exploding. >> , i mean , obviously >> no, i mean, obviously emotions are running high just as they are in the country and they're running high in the labour party. so what you've seen tonight is ten frontbenchers quitting rather than than vote against their conscience . what for keir conscience. what for keir starmer this is an issue of discipline that he demands , just discipline that he demands, just as rishi sunak would demand out of his ministers collective responsibility if they vote against the official line, then they can't stay in post and it this time next year keir starmer will probably be prime minister. this is the biggest test out of whether or not he's got the credentials to country and that's a concern . that's a concern. >> i was saying just a second ago that we're seeing stuff now taking place at the cenotaph in
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london. and i believe i can bnng london. and i believe i can bring to you this is footage of police running towards the cenotaph now en masse. there they are obviously trying to guard it. there is footage that's also on online which appears to show appears to show that people have been climbing near that and showing quite a lot of disrespect. and i believe that we're going to be showing that we're going to be showing that to you very, very shortly. we are going to be showing that to you very, very shortly. weyou going to be showing that to you very, very shortly. weyou very,g to be showing that to you very, very shortly. weyou very, verybe showing that to you very, very shortly. weyou very, very shortly. ing that to you very, very shortly. weyou very, very shortly. that to you very, very shortly. that awful thing that were told awful thing that we were told was going to happen. well was never going to happen. well it's that comes it's happening. and that comes straight of i straight off the back of what i brought earlier on from brought to you earlier on from in some of these marches in amongst some of these marches as stella i put it to you as well. stella i put it to you that people in the labour party right now, the party that could well be in government in a year or so's time support this kind of stuff. no, they don't. >> this is a matter of domestic policy. what you're showing me right there, patrick, the marches have to do with domestic policy and the police has to do with domestic policy. the mps that rebelled against the three
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line whip tonight are rebelling against the foreign policy of the labour party, which in my opinion, is going the wrong direction right now. the reason why it's going the wrong direction is because you have the support of a the continuous support of a military operation that has aims that are going to be that are not going to be achieved. these objectives are not achievable and the situation is only going to get worse because gaza is going to be destroyed even further. you have a population where 40% of the male population is unemployed and they are just sitting around watching the women in gaza, hamas . yes. hamas. yes. >> and hamas, billions in aid and your readers living in qatar, billion billions in aid in gaza. >> yes. well, gaza at the moment, there is a blockade in gaza. so you can imagine the economy is struggling to flourish. and these people, they are not allowed to move. they are not allowed to move. they are not allowed to move. they are not allowed to leave gaza anyway . the point i wanted to anyway. the point i wanted to make about the reason why i'm bringing this up is because it is bad. foreign policy. and is very bad. foreign policy. and we seen this in previous
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we have seen this in previous international conflicts to expect to solve a political problem through military aims . problem through military aims. >> the point the point is, nigel, and this is why i do think that keir starmer is bang in trouble over this because every single that israel every single time that an israel issue raises its head, is, issue raises its head, which is, let's once every let's be honest, once every couple is this an couple of years, or is this an extreme example , he's going to couple of years, or is this an extforcedexample , he's going to couple of years, or is this an extforced inmple , he's going to couple of years, or is this an extforced in this; , he's going to couple of years, or is this an extforced in this position.)ing to couple of years, or is this an extforced in this position. howto be forced in this position. how is to find ten people is he going to find ten people now in his party willing to fill those frontbench positions ? those frontbench positions? they're going to seen as as they're going to be seen as as traitors by people the grass traitors by people at the grass roots labor party. i mean, he could be out on his backside here. >> i don't think so . here. >> i don't think so. i here. >> i don't think so . i mean, >> i don't think so. i mean, you're talking about ten people. there labour mps there are about 200 labour mps and he's likely to have an awful lot more after the next election . so there won't be a problem about filling the positions. yes, it's sad that that people like jess phillips, dan carden, astrakhan have felt that they couldn't support the leadership up, but that is their choice. it's a matter of conscience. that's what they decided to do. but i don't think i think the stella absolutely right.
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stella is absolutely right. we're about foreign stella is absolutely right. we're we're about foreign stella is absolutely right. we're we're talking)out foreign stella is absolutely right. we're we're talking aboutyreign stella is absolutely right. we're we're talking about anjn policy. we're talking about an international crisis. we're not talking about what labour would be like it comes to be like when it comes to governing country . governing this country. >> suella who do you think the vast majority of the people are climbing over the cenotaph climbing all over the cenotaph are vote in the are going to vote for in the next election? >> actually know. >> i actually don't know. i don't people don't think that people who climb the cenotaph are climb over the cenotaph are going to vote. don't think going to vote. i don't think they don't strike me as the kind who going to and go who are going to wake up and go to so i don't to the voting booth. so i don't think very about think i'm not very worried about who vote. anything who they would vote. if anything , with , if i'm perfectly honest with you , i don't these kind of you, i don't think these kind of people the average labour people are the average labour party voter either. not party voter either. i do not understand why they do have to be conflated. i mean, the labour party now and i say this party right now and i say this as someone who doesn't approve of current of the labour party's current foreign policy, the labour party position right now is extremely right wing if anything. so i'm not sure why there would be any connection whatsoever with the mobs that we are seeing and the labour party is because the leader of the labour party at the moment tried to get a man
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elected twice. >> he refused to condemn hamas 15 national television. 15 times on national television. the other day. mean, that the other day. i mean, that might to do with might have something to do with it. stella. nigel, it. to be fair, stella. nigel, i'll just throw it over to you right now. when we look at the state the labour party is state that the labour party is in, mean, how does keir in, i mean, how does keir starmerjust, in, i mean, how does keir starmer just, just come of starmer just, just come out of this? because mps this? because he's got mps sitting communities with a sitting in communities with a muslim vote , okay? muslim majority vote, okay? which i think is more of the reason why people like jess phillips have gone than she will dispute this. by the way, more of a reason why people like jess phillips gone deep phillips have gone than a deep seated conviction. it's seated sense of conviction. it's a a numbers a votes game. it's a numbers game. a problem for game. and that's a problem for laboun game. and that's a problem for labour. nigel well, mean, labour. nigel well, i mean, i mean whether or not it's to do with muslim vote, i don't know . with muslim vote, i don't know. >> i mean you'd have to ask the mps who decided to quit themselves whether that had anything to with it's anything to do with it. it's quite true that lot of them quite true that a lot of them come where muslim come from areas where the muslim vote important. so vote is really important. so obviously mps take that on board. i mean, these people are their constituents and they have to take their opinions into account . but they quit , to take their opinions into account . but they quit, quit account. but why they quit, quit tonight? i mean, i think it was
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probably a conscience issue . probably a conscience issue. it's unfortunate that they've gone, but keir starmer has got to be able to enforce party discipline. that's really important . important. >> both of you, thank you very, very much. i've thoroughly enjoyed that. that was stella guido and nigel nelson . thank guido and nigel nelson. thank you much for that. you very, very much for that. now, i'm not sure if we do have a couple of clips for you . not a couple of clips for you. not there just yet, but they will be coming there. this is it. they will definitely be coming. is will definitely be coming. it is really up on the really ramping up on the streets. brought you a little really ramping up on the streearlier brought you a little really ramping up on the streearlier on ought you a little really ramping up on the streearlier on some you a little really ramping up on the streearlier on some footage ttle bit earlier on some footage of me protest, two tier me at the protest, two tier policing turfed out policing and me being turfed out of we also showed you the of there. we also showed you the police running towards the cenotaph. and there is some more shocking coming shocking footage coming your way. night is way. but before the night is out, toby young joins us as well because it's patrick's press pack. we've got tomorrow's newspaper headlines and some of the stories from inside the book as well. it's the most entertaining and informative newspaper you. will newspaper of you. you will get anywhere on national television. my riled up and my panel are riled up and they're with tomorrow's they're ready with tomorrow's top stories
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>> look, the news is coming in thick and fast about the scenes that are taking place on the streets at the moment, apparently. and we're just heanng apparently. and we're just hearing the police apparently. and we're just heari made the police apparently. and we're just heari made arrest police apparently. and we're just heari made arrest onice have made one arrest on suspicion of possession of an offensive weapon. they are currently surrounding the cenotaph in london, as some pro ceasefire. pro—palestine protesters are kicking off. and we're going to bring you some footage of that very, very shortly . but let's bring you shortly. but let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight now in the most entertaining paper of you anywhere on telly , the very you anywhere on telly, the very first front pages have just been delivered for my press pack . oh delivered for my press pack. oh all right. we're going in with the metro . so, rishi, i have a the metro. so, rishi, i have a new flight plan . it says rwanda new flight plan. it says rwanda scheme illegal supreme court rules. yet we know a bit about that massive picture of kate as well. looking wonderful in purple. up next, we have got the
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eye pensions boost at double uk in inflation. that is , to be in inflation. that is, to be honest with you, a really weird front page i think, on today's day. but there you go. anyway sunak versus the supreme court as the picture as well. that's the picture story top. and cameron's as well. that's the picture story policyyp. and cameron's as well. that's the picture story policy blitz.d cameron's as well. that's the picture story policy blitz. newneron's foreign policy blitz. new foreign key to play foreign secretary key to play key in deepwater nation key role in deepwater nation deal talks. quite a lot to unpack there on the eyes front page.i unpack there on the eyes front page. i must say. next, we're on to the daily express and the daily says fights daily express says pm fights back. will deport migrants . back. we will deport migrants. as rishi sunak vowed to defy foreign judges. yeah, okay. there's a picture story just on the side there. turning point . the side there. turning point. harry did speak to king on birthday . well, you might have birthday. well, you might have been listening earlier our been listening earlier on our royal levin, thinks royal guru angela levin, thinks he didn't. but else have we he didn't. but what else have we got next? now we're going to the independent are. what independent. yes, we are. what can i bring you from the independent there? big picture story, of course, of rishi sunak on the front, as you would expect rattled rishi. expect, it says rattled rishi. i'll change law to send migrants to rwanda . onto the telegraph to rwanda. onto the telegraph now. pm will use emergency law
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to start rwanda flights . okay. to start rwanda flights. okay. the inflation story is still on the front there. starmer suffers biggest rebellion over israel ceasefire. they always pack loads onto the telegraph's front page they? there's also page, don't they? there's also a picture in relation to the final series of the crown. okay the picture of the lady there who is playing diana and an interview with her. so there we go. right. that's some of the front pages for you. i've got some more coming your way. i've got my panel here thank you panel in here now. thank you very much for still joining me. i'm going to start i'll start with telegraph , i think. with the telegraph, i think. yeah, not? pam will use yeah, why not? pam will use emergency to start a rwanda emergency law to start a rwanda flights and starmer suffering biggest rebellion over israel ceasefire ever again. i'm just going to hope that at some point very, very soon we'll be able to bnng very, very soon we'll be able to bring you some footage of it. kicking streets . kicking rice off on the streets. but no. can i start with you about other story that's on about the other story that's on here not spoken about here that we've not spoken about tonight? to tonight? inflation, victory to bnng tonight? inflation, victory to bring cuts . tonight? inflation, victory to bring cuts. this bring inheritance tax cuts. this guy overshadowed today, but it was a win for rishi inflation,
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wasn't it? i absolutely you know, this has moving in know, this has been moving in the right direction. >> still further to >> we've still got further to go. of course we do. but it is good and doubly good good news and it's doubly good news. it helps news. not only that, it helps bnng news. not only that, it helps bring for mortgage bring rates down for mortgage mortgages across this country, but also it means that we can now begin to cut taxes. and my group in parliament, the conservative growth group i conservative growth group that i chair campaigning chair, has been campaigning for some to do something about some time to do something about inheritance tax, which is just a death tax . it's so unpopular for death tax. it's so unpopular for people at every income level in this country, almost nobody pays it. >> it's got to go. it.— >> it's got to go. it's it. >> it's got to go. it's all about politics all about about politics is all about choices, it ? sorry, christine. >> i know, but i was about i think we're about to say the same sort of point because not that many people pay in hard same sort of point because not that ma|families3 pay in hard same sort of point because not that ma|families pay( in hard same sort of point because not that ma|families pay it,| hard same sort of point because not that ma|families pay it, hardi working families pay it, hard working families pay it, hard working but surely, working families. but surely, wouldn't it better to , in wouldn't it be better to, in their own interest to direct tax cuts? absolutely. across the board on income tax, is this all part of the same surrey? >> and forget about inheritance part of the same surrey? >> iwhich'get about inheritance part of the same surrey? >> lwhich which out inheritance part of the same surrey? >> lwhich which doesn'teritance part of the same surrey? >> lwhich which doesn't affect. tax, which which doesn't affect. >> well, inheritance tax is not inflationary , so you can cut it . inflationary, so you can cut it. >> you can cut the rate. you can
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scrap it entirely. it won't drive inflation. and it's unfair because it's been taxed once before. just a bad tax. no, before. it's just a bad tax. no, sweden's scrapped it. it grew the all right. the economy. all right. it's time for go. time for it to go. >> i tell what we're going >> i tell you what we're going to we'll return to to do, because we'll return to the always the front pages. i always say that best paper of that this is the best paper of you you'll get anywhere on telly. why? delve telly. why? because we delve straight into the inside of the book well. and we're going on book as well. and we're going on the priti the telegraph. this is priti patel. inside patel. okay. on the inside of the we must the telegraph. what we must do now the rwanda plan. there now about the rwanda plan. there are solutions, she are no quick solutions, she says, ahead , says, but we must press ahead, look at all options, and be look at all the options, and be candid with the public over the challenge . is matthew, you're challenge. is matthew, you're itching to go on this? >> well, i mean, it's the thing about the rwanda is and all this stuff about the flights is we haven't mentioned the haven't mentioned today the bars. the barge, haven't mentioned today the bars. was the barge, haven't mentioned today the bars. was their the barge, haven't mentioned today the bars. was their initiative�*ie barge, haven't mentioned today the bars. was their initiative thatirge, which was their initiative that was going to that was going to go there are go and i believe there are six people on tonight a cost people on it tonight at a cost of that's what that's of 7 million. that's what that's what . it may be what i understand. it may be five, i'm i'm being generous. 66. >> 66. >> 66. >> no, not so no, it's all >> no, not 66. so no, it's all very well for priti patel to come out with her, take on the rwanda plan. but it just reminds
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us, i think the lawyers know, it reminds us of the it's not the lefty lawyers were stopping the barges. this government's barges. it's this government's incompetence to stop. >> the lawyers took the lefty lawyers took the home office to court. they've taken he wasn't the who the the lefty lawyers who put the salmonella in there. the lefty lawyers who put the sal|s01ella in there. the lefty lawyers who put the sal|so leta in there. the lefty lawyers who put the sal|so let himthere. the lefty lawyers who put the sal|so let him talks. the lefty lawyers who put the sal|so let him talk lefty lawyers >> so let him talk lefty lawyers keep because frankly keep intervening because frankly , paid to defend the indefensible. >> and you're going to say that keir starmer is the biggest lefty lawyer them aren't lefty lawyer of them all, aren't you? which which? which you? well, which is which? which labour spokesman heading it labour spokesman said heading it off. i was spokesman i >> -- >> but there's a huge . christine >> but there's a huge. christine well there's a huge industry has grown up with lefty lawyers or let's just call them lawyers. no idea what the politics are. a massive industry gaming the system people . system and encouraging people. we the people we know what happens. the people who across the boats, who come across in the boats, they're what say. they're told what to say. they're told throw away. this is all is all the people all about this is all the people who stop the boats fortune out of they are exploiting. of this. they are exploiting. >> yes. what they want to do is they they want they they want to they want to they want able to get this. want to be able to get this. they able they want to be able to get labour vote the labour to vote against the emergency and then emergency legislation and then use in marginal conditions.
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emergency legislation and then useall n marginal conditions. emergency legislation and then useall right.ginal conditions. emergency legislation and then useall right. look,:onditions. >> all right. look, just quickly, to want quickly, i want to i want to tell you what priti patel has said here. should won tell you what priti patel has saicquestions should won tell you what priti patel has saicquestions andjld won tell you what priti patel has saicquestions and questions'on the questions and questions will be about be raised. this is about the court options court case. she says options risk bogged down, risk being bogged down, questioning how quickly it will actually be for them to manage the law, do an updated deal with rwanda. now, look, sorry about this, but well, i'm not that sorry because this is really important. actually, a pro—palestine protester has climbed on top of the royal artillery, wore memorial by hyde park in london. we can have a look at this now . rah, rah, rah, look at this now. rah, rah, rah, rah , rah . rah, rah. that's just coming into us now. again, i want to emphasise that we are also getting reports of one person being arrested on suspicion of possession of an offensive . ann,
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offensive weapon. ann, christine, you were quite strong whilst that clip was playing. what were you saying? well, i mean really makes my blood mean that really makes my blood boil. mean that really makes my blood boiihow dare these people. i >> how dare these people. i i haven't they probably hasn't defaced it, but just by very going up there, to me that is defacing our safe , sacred defacing our safe, sacred monuments and how dare they? >> well, we have somebody respect our culture and a group of people climbing, climbing all over war memorials right now . over war memorials right now. >> so stick them in prison . >> so stick them in prison. >> so stick them in prison. >> shocking. and you know, this is undermining the case of those who do want to make a peaceful protest . it's undermined. it's protest. it's undermined. it's undermining the cause of the humanitarian issues that there are in gaza. of course, there are in gaza. of course, there are . but these this are in gaza. of course, there are. but these this is are in gaza. of course, there are . but these this is not the are. but these this is not the way to do it. and frankly, this is the sort of trespass that the police should be acting against. we've seen what happened in the west england people west of england where people were statues as a were tearing down statues as a result of blm. this is the this is the next step of this leftist march. we've to stop it. march. and we've got to stop it. >> government have been
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>> government should have been building prisons, building more prisons, so they've to put they've got somewhere to put these all right, all right. >> look, i'm going to say stay tuned . i'm definitely to tuned. i'm definitely going to say don't go to say stay tuned. if i don't go to bed because we're to bed because we're going to be bringing that's taking place situation that's taking place right the streets. right now on the streets. and this probably the worst it's this is probably the worst it's been. probably the worst been. it's probably the worst it's any of these it's been of any of these marches. tony marches. but coming up, tony blair, corbyn the blair, piers corbyn and the princess all princess of wales, they're all nominated edition nominated in tonight's edition of britain and of the greatest britain and union jackass. but takes union jackass. but who takes home tonight's crown? stay tuned to find out. but first, we'll get stuck into more of tomorrow's front pages tomorrow's newspaper front pages with the one and only toby young. some absolute star studded stories in there. my panel , they're on standby as panel, they're on standby as well. this is the place to be, so don't you dare move .
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stories and quite possibly the ongoing story of massive unrest ongoing story of massive unrest on the streets and people climbing all over war memorials, etcetera, etcetera , due to these etcetera, etcetera, due to these completely peaceful and lovely pro—police marches that we're seeing. i am delighted to welcome the free welcome founder of the free speech union, toby young. toby look, thank you very, very much. i'm going to whiz through some more pages people. more from pages for people. first, please, the guardian, now pm vows through rwanda pm vows to push through rwanda plan after court rules it unlawful . and there's also unlawful. and there's also a story here about eight mps exit labour front bench over gaza ceasefire. take you to the ceasefire. i'll take you to the sun fed up? rishi asks. no no. bloody rwanda . all right. bloody rwanda. all right. a fuming rishi sunak apparently has vowed to bring in emergency laws. there we go. also, another picture there of kate looking resplendent in purple. we go to the daily mail. now the pm's eyes blaze like hot coals as he thundered. we are a reasonable government, a reasonable country . but the british people's patience can only stretched patience can only be stretched so thin. and toby, i'll go to
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you on this. i'm going to start with the mail on this, if that's all right. do you think he's got all right. do you think he's got a point that the british people's patience can only be stretched stuff like stretched so thin on stuff like this . this. >> yes, i do . >> yes, i do. >>- >> yes, i do. >> and i think rishi now really has to do something to make it possible to see through this policy of deporting illegal migrants to rwanda . and it looks migrants to rwanda. and it looks as though the route he's going to take, plan b, which suella braverman, of course, claimed he didn't have plan b is to pass emergency legislation on, making it clear that any illegal migrants deported to rwanda cannot then be sent back to the countries they originally came from, where they might be at risk of being imprisoned or tortured. that was the reason the supreme court gave for rejecting this particular policy . so he's going to pass emergency legislation and rule out that risk. so the supreme court won't be able to reject it again, that's that's the plan
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anyway. >> yeah, that's the plan. it's whether or not the public can continue to trust it because we do keep getting . oh, just one do keep getting. oh, just one more i will just try one more thing. i will just try one more thing. i will just try one more thing. i will just try one more thing. we'll just try one more thing. we'll just try one more and look, there is more thing and look, there is also a couple of other stories doing the rounds. can i just get you on this one? because this is he's on the inside one of the he's on the inside of one of the papers all right. and papers tomorrow. all right. and it indo metousiosis. it's not it is indo metousiosis. it's not a gynaecological condition , ian. a gynaecological condition, ian. apparently that's according to the founder of a charity supporting women with the disease after it appointed a transgender woman as its chief executive. jodie hughes, a founder, founder of endometriosis south coast, told bbc woman's hour on wednesday that referring to a disease as a gynaecological disorder may be the reason medical research into the reason medical research into the issue has not gone on further . and the the issue has not gone on further. and the telegraph have got a story about this on the inside. what do you make of that? >> it feels like a pretty weak excuse is that the chairman's making for the fact that the
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board has appointed a biological male who imagines he's a woman to be the chief executive of this particular charity . this particular charity. >> so the claim is it doesn't matter that a biological male has been appointed to run a charity which tries to raise money to treat a condition that 1.5 million women across the world are suffering from . no one world are suffering from. no one point in the uk, 1.5 million women in the uk are suffering. doesn't matter. for that, it's primary . a female disease. it primary. a female disease. it doesn't matter. we've appointed a biological male because actually it's a female actually it's not a female disease seems like a bit disease which seems like a bit of a stretch. know any men of a stretch. don't know any men who this who are suffering from this particular affliction . particular affliction. >> yeah, no indeed . now look, >> yeah, no indeed. now look, toby, my inbox is absolutely fizzing at the moment. vaiews@gbnews.com i'd like to know who is behind these hate marches. who pays for them ? marches. who pays for them? steve's been on deface sacred statues steal from the shops , statues steal from the shops, chant racist hate, carry knives ,
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chant racist hate, carry knives, take drugs in front of police officers. do what you want. just don't have a union. jack or saint george's flag or you'll be beaten and arrested. toby, i'm going you little clip, going to play you a little clip, the coming to us the latest coming through to us here and a quick reaction here and get a quick reaction from please oh, la la la ra from you. please oh, la la la ra ra . ra. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> toby, look, this is happening right now in london. police rushing towards the cenotaph as well to protect it. your your views what we're seeing there. >> it is absolutely shocking. patrick, i was one of a small group of people . um, we started group of people. um, we started something called the british friends of israel, and we went down to the statue of winston churchill in parliament square on saturday morning to make sure the space in front of it wasn't occupied by pro—palestinian
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protesters and to protect the statue from anyone trying to daubit statue from anyone trying to daub it with free palestine graffiti or to place a palestinian flag around churchill and i'd have to say we didn't experience any trouble. we didn't get into any argy bargy . it was all fine. it was bargy. it was all fine. it was actually very respectful, a fantastic moving occasion . uh, fantastic moving occasion. uh, but this is precisely the kind of thing that we were worried might happen then. and clearly it has happened just a few days. it is absolutely shocking the way i look at it. patrick is think about how absolutely outraged, devout muslims become when their holy book, when their sacred values are trampled upon , sacred values are trampled upon, they go they i mean, some people think, well, we should respect their sacred values. we may not share their religion , but it's share their religion, but it's something they care really deeply about. then let's not trespass on those sacred values. let's respect what they consider sacred . but you'd expect these sacred. but you'd expect these muslim protesters to extend the same courtesy . to
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muslim protesters to extend the same courtesy. to indigenous britons. these are our sacred monuments, and you need to respect them. if you want us to respect them. if you want us to respect your holy books and your sacred values . sacred values. >> toby, thank you very, very much. that's toby young there, founder of the free speech union. right. we're going to have to absolutely rapid with have to be absolutely rapid with this. now time for greatest this. now it's time for greatest britain union jackass. this. now it's time for greatest britain union jackass . we're britain and union jackass. we're going greatest britain first. christine >> well, the name may not be familiar to everybody, it's familiar to everybody, but it's lynn she took a stand. lynn pinches. she took a stand. she was competing in the champion ladies champion of champions. ladies snooker she realised snooker finals. and she realised that she was up against a man, a trans man. and she said, right, i'm walking out. she gave up the chance of the crown this is my greatest britain gone. >> well, it is the princess of wales who has been delivering her speech on children's, social and emotional development . an and emotional development. an absolutely right thing to stand up for children in their development . development. >> matthew quick mine is labour's shadow health secretary. wes streeting was saying that he's going to bring in be a move on in it's going to be a move on nhs and there'll nhs league tables and there'll
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be blind eye be no more turning a blind eye to failure in the nhs. after 13 years, greatest britain is. years, the greatest britain is. >> lynn pinches for turning her back on the trans issue very quick, very quickly, very quickly. >> pearce corbyn, who says that the october the 7th massacre was a flag operation. how dare a false flag operation. how dare he on? he go on? >> tony blair, the leftist traps that he's left this country . that he's left this country. >> charlotte owen who made a fool of herself as the youngest peer with an embarrassing speech about boris, who put her in there. about boris, who put her in the okay. right in is tony blair. >> okay. right in is tony blair. yes there we go. your old mate matthew laza . there we go. matthew laza. there we go. right. it's been absolute rip right. it's been an absolute rip roar of a show today. thank you very very everybody who's very, very much. everybody who's tuned watched and has tuned in, who's watched and has offered as well offered some support as well after in amongst that after getting in amongst that pro—palestine march, i hope that you've had as much fun as i have. and we monitor and continue monitor very closely continue to monitor very closely the that are the disgusting scenes that are taking place on the streets at the moment. patrick christys gb news. you tomorrow. news. see you tomorrow. >> alex burkill >> good evening. alex burkill here your latest gb here again with your latest gb news weather update. there may be of frost and some be a touch of frost and some fog
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around overnight, but around as we go overnight, but then heavy and strong winds then heavy rain and strong winds expected in south as we go expected in the south as we go through in association through tomorrow in association with a low pressure system that's currently to the southwest the uk, making its southwest of the uk, making its way in as we go through the next 12 hours or so as we go overnight, we are going to hold on cloudy skies on to the largely cloudy skies across northern parts, across some northern parts, though towards the though clearer skies towards the far scotland, allowing far north of scotland, allowing for frost elsewhere, for some frost here. elsewhere, a pockets of mist and fog, a few pockets of mist and fog, perhaps before the wet and windy weather earlier , weather i mentioned earlier, pushes parts of the pushes in across parts of the south and southwest. this will actually temperatures here. actually lift temperatures here. and start for some and so a milder start for some in the south, but also a wet and windy one, a wet and windy morning for many here as well as that pushes its way through that rain pushes its way through , likely to be disruption, , likely to be some disruption, particularly roads particularly on the roads through the morning rush hour particularly on the roads thro then he morning rush hour particularly on the roads thro then he rheaviestush hour particularly on the roads thro then he rheaviest rainhour particularly on the roads thro then he rheaviest rain and and then the heaviest rain and strongest winds do clear away towards through the towards the east through the afternoon. but further showery outbreaks following in behind afternoon. but further showery outhest s following in behind afternoon. but further showery outhest ofollowing in behind afternoon. but further showery outhest of the wing in behind afternoon. but further showery outhest of the sunshinezhind afternoon. but further showery outhest of the sunshine likely the best of the sunshine likely to be across parts of scotland . to be across parts of scotland. temperatures down temperatures for many down a degree or two compared to today as we go into friday. and watch
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out for a bit of mist and fog and perhaps some frost first thing places, but thing in some places, but otherwise like otherwise it's looking like a largely day . a few showers largely fine day. a few showers to watch for, but most to watch out for, but most places staying dry and plenty of sunshine some and sunshine before some wet and windy from windy weather returns from the west we go into saturday. so west as we go into saturday. so the weekend does look like it will be much more unsettled than through friday. rain and through friday. heavy rain and strong especially strong winds, especially in the west coming next time on the dinosaur . dinosaur. >> our you know, we killed a man. did i tell you that? no bellissima no bellissima bellissima no bellissima bellissima . bellissima. >> oh, really? we were in arizona. >> she got stung by a scorpion . >> she got stung by a scorpion. >> she got stung by a scorpion. >> the scorpion was the scorpion was throwing up for hours. >> the dinosaur are with me. john cleese sundays at 9:00 on
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gb news. good evening. >> the top story from the newsroom tonight, sir keir starmer was up against a labour rebellion in the house of commons tonight as mps voted on gaza.ten commons tonight as mps voted on gaza. ten of the party's frontbenchers have left their jobs, including eight shadow ministers . the labour leader had ministers. the labour leader had ordered labour members to vote for humanitarian pauses in the fighting in gaza and reject the snp's call for all parties to
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agree to an immediate ceasefire. our political correspondent katherine forster has more. >> a real challenge to sir keir starmer's leadership. he'd hoped that by offering a vote on a labour amendment, that would be enough to stave off a rebellion. but it was not to be. just over a quarter of labour mps , some 56 a quarter of labour mps, some 56 actively sided with the scottish national party and vote for a ceasefire despite quite explicit instructions not to do so. now eight shadow ministers and two parliamentary private secretaries have now left the front. the most well known example , i think probably jess example, i think probably jess phillips. she was shadow domestic violence and safeguarding minister proof that rishi sunak is not the only party leader struggling to manage his own party. >> katherine forster there . >> katherine forster there. well, pro—palestinian supporters held a mass demonstration opposite the houses of parliament earlier on this
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