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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  November 22, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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scoop on what tory mp5 are saying about scoop on what tory mps are saying about rishi sunak with leaked what's sap messages? you won't want to miss that. now the clash. well, it's a kick in the balls for trans women. females are refusing to play against them. are they right to do so? i've them. are they right to do so? pve the them. are they right to do so? i've the woman walked i've got the woman who walked out sporting final instead out of a sporting final instead of competing against a cheating bloke. what? the bbc bloke. and guess what? the bbc says is racist. today the play? yes, the plague . well, i also yes, the plague. well, i also have a blockbuster interview with phil the power taylor. that's coming your way later on as well. we've got a brand new panel tonight. sensational. suzanne evans , tory mp randall suzanne evans, tory mp randall on the panel, jayawardena. and everybody's favourite lefty, it's rebecca reid. this is patrick christys. tonight and, well, i've i want to hear directly from you gb views gbnews.com straight forward should the falklands stay british, get stuck in on
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twitter as well at gb news. it's all go after your headlines . all go after your headlines. >> good evening. your top stories from the gb newsroom. police searching for a group of missing teenagers say they've recovered four bodies from a crashed car in north wales. a major search was launched after john hurst , major search was launched after john hurst, harvey owen wilf henderson and hugo morris failed to return home from a camping trip in the snowdonia area on sunday. police confirmed their car left the road near tremadog superintendent irwin llewellyn says it appears to have been a tragic accident . tragic accident. >> shortly after 10 am. this morning, a member of the public contacted us, reporting a vehicle having left the road between beddgelert and ruthin . between beddgelert and ruthin. police officers attended and located a ford fiesta vehicle upside down, partially submerged in water, tragically , the bodies in water, tragically, the bodies of four young males were
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recovered from within the vehicle . vehicle. >> the national living wage will increase by almost 10, more than 2 million full time workers are set to benefit from a pay rise of more than £1,800 a year from next april . the announcement next april. the announcement comes ahead of tomorrow's autumn statement . israel's prime statement. israel's prime minister says hostages taken from terror group hamas will be released in stages. benjamin netanyahu , who is holding netanyahu, who is holding a cabinet meeting at the moment as a possible hostage release deal, is said to be imminent. earlier, us officials said a tentative deal between israel and hamas that could see a pause in fighting and the release of hostages had been agreed. it would see the release of 50 mostly women and children in exchange for 150 palestine prisoners and a pause of 4 or 5 days , the government's most days, the government's most senior adviser during covid says the plan in place before the pandemic was woefully deficient.
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the inquiry heard evidence from sir chris whitty today. he said the plan had been drawn up by people who'd been through the swine flu, where the mortality rate was quite low. he also said policy decisions regarding quarantining were difficult . quarantining were difficult. lancashire police has been criticised for its handling of the disappearance of nicola burley, a review found failings in the way personal information about ms burley's health struggles was disclosed to the press, which contributed to wild speculation . in it said that speculation. in it said that non—reportable background information should have been provided to the media to help shape responsible reporting without disclosing sensitive information . and the president information. and the president of south korea says his country will work with the uk to bolster the political and economic security in the indo—pacific. dufing security in the indo—pacific. during an address to parliament this evening . earlier, the king this evening. earlier, the king and queen welcomed yoon suk yeol and queen welcomed yoon suk yeol and his wife at horseguards parade. it's the first incoming state visit since the king's coronation and the second of his
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reign. the couple laid a wreath at the grave of the unknown warrior at westminster abbey . a warrior at westminster abbey. a state banquet is now taking place, said to be hosting around 170 guests. this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now back to . patrick >> rishi is leading us towards a record net migration nightmare. by record net migration nightmare. by the looks of things he's heading for total wipe—out himself and he's running out of people to blame. or is he? well, brand new polling has the tories 19 points behind labour at just 24, the lowest percentage since sunak became pm. but the reality for rishi is that he's never got going. we've been crunching the numbers here at gb news so soon after he first got the keys to power unelected, i might add. the conservatives were polling at 27% after announcing his five pledges at the start of the
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yeah pledges at the start of the year. it was 26% post tory conference back to 27. hardly a bounce, is it? and the day before he sacked suella braverman also 27. so zero improvement and he's now at rock bottom three points worse off since he removed braverman from the home office. hardly surprising though, is it, given that she had more balls than any of blokes around the cabinet of the blokes around the cabinet table. now as suella predicted, the rwanda plan is looking like a busted because of our a busted flush because of our pathetic point blank refusal to even to threaten to leave the echr. well, now it's emerged that sunak turned down plans to send illegal migrants to the falkland islands. apparently, the times says that sunak wasn't interested only 30 interested because only 30 migrants would have been sent there in a 6 to 12 month pilot. but that's 30 more than we've sent to rwanda, isn't it? but this is the big one me this is the big one for me today.legal this is the big one for me today. legal migration on thursday. net migration is expected to be announced as a record 700,000, more than double the pre brexit levels, thus not taking back control is it looks
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a lot like a sell out i think. and now we've got foreign students rushing to get their families over here before we get tough on that as well . well, tough on that as well. well, letting them game the system , if letting them game the system, if you ask me now as we speak , you ask me now as we speak, indian students are racing to get relatives over the get their relatives over the border before the government crackdown in crackdown finally happens. in january. soft touch britain led by a soft touch prime minister, anyone? just look at these images today of sunak cameron and cleverly you don't need a body language expert to figure out who is now running the show. rishi here looking well short of the mark. tomorrow is of course, the mark. tomorrow is of course, the autumn statement . and with the autumn statement. and with tax cuts very much on the table, could this be a final roll of the dice for the prime minister? the trouble is, though, captain caution wasn't instilling much hope yesterday . hope with this speech yesterday. >> will take discipline and >> it will take discipline and we need to prioritise . but over we need to prioritise. but over time we can and we will cut taxes . taxes. >> look, read the room, rishi. okay time is one thing. you
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don't have. he's already let the country down on immigration. i think tax cuts are all he's got. but look , before i bring in my but look, before i bring in my esteemed panellists a new panel tonight, i'm looking forward to getting stuck it with them. getting stuck into it with them. joining now with exclusive joining me now with exclusive reporting state of the reporting on the state of the tory inside of it is tory party, the inside of it is political correspondent for the spectator is james heal. james, you're plugged in. okay. what's actually going on? what's the mood the tory party at mood like in the tory party at the moment? phone's the moment? but your phone's been doubt. so tell the moment? but your phone's befall doubt. so tell the moment? but your phone's befall about doubt. so tell the moment? but your phone's befall about it doubt. so tell the moment? but your phone's befall about it . doubt. so tell us all about it. >> well, good evening, patrick. two things really, i think jump out to me, one of which is i think the discussion normally at this time of year would be around the autumn statement and what measures the chancellor's going to be announcing. actually, you've identified actually, as you've identified there at the beginning, i think there at the beginning, i think the flashpoint and the much bigger flashpoint and this something i've got from this is something i've got from to the to talking mps across the spectrum and in previous spectrum today and in previous days has that the big days has been that the big flashpoint is going to be those immigration figures due out on thursday when the reports that we see migration reaching we could see migration reaching a record high. and the second point i'd just to stress as well
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is there is a is that i think there is a bigger sense concern among bigger sense of concern among conservative than there is conservative mps than there is being perhaps in some of being felt, perhaps in some of the higher echelons of the party about where the party is currently because currently going, because you look exactly there was look at exactly how there was that mooted relaunch that much like mooted relaunch back there was talk back in october, there was talk about, you know, kind of ripping up 30 year consensus. and up the 30 year consensus. and even welcomed back even mps who've welcomed back david saying, hang david cameron now saying, hang on a sec, how have we welcomed back the who the back the man who led the conservative of conservative party for 11 of those years? if we're ripping those 30 years? if we're ripping up rule book, indeed. up the rule book, no, indeed. >> and do you think the >> and what do you think the reaction is going be like as reaction is going to be like as and when these net migration figures that as figures drop, if that as expected? you know, cuts expected? you know, our tax cuts all he's got now and is he even going to deliver them? >> well, that's the key thing, i think that rishi sunak think is that rishi sunak probably much of probably has much more of a treasury view of this than some of his colleagues on the backbenches. he wants to know. i think a lot of pressure think there's a lot of pressure within keep within whitehall to keep migration they want migration high because they want to you as you to have these, you know, as you point out, indian student visas because that's seen being point out, indian student visas becalforthat's seen being point out, indian student visas becalforthateconomy. beingwant good for the economy. they want to show the figures going up and
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that's going to important in that's going to be important in next election for next year's election for economic credibility. but i think, alluded think, as you say, alluded to there, there's of concern there, there's a lot of concern about you know, the about whether, you know, the conservatives, all, conservatives, first of all, remember, in remember, were elected in 2019 on reducing bringing on reducing migration, bringing it down to sort of of it down to sort of levels of around we're around 225,000. actually, we're expecting or 3 times that. so expecting 2 or 3 times that. so i that there is going to i think that there is going to be lot of concern, as we saw be a lot of concern, as we saw last year. >> yeah. no, i mean, i know your phone always blazing with phone is always blazing with insight and intel. mean, what insight and intel. i mean, what are the obviously are some of the obviously anonymous flavour of anonymous kind of the flavour of some messages that you've some of the messages that you've been the been getting, you know, in the last of days about about last couple of days about about rishi been going rishi sunak, what's been going on there? well i think the most pessimistic one i've received was from an mp who voted for him. >> and in last year's summer's leadership election, said leadership election, and he said that the he reckons that they're going over the next going to get over the next election somewhere close to 100 mps, which of course would be an absolute disaster, one of the worst elections in the conservative party's history. so i think that's probably the most pessimistic end . i've noticed pessimistic end. i've noticed a real split in terms of how blue
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wall and red wall mps see the david cameron appointment. quite controversial . and i think that controversial. and i think that also i think migration is just really seen as the kind of key flashpoint here. some interestingly, some sunak people are saying, well, actually, you know, maybe it was good that he got rid of suella before those that wednesday court that wednesday rwanda court judgement . that wednesday rwanda court judgement. think there's judgement. but i think there's no it's been a big blow no doubt it's been a big blow and really to jeremy and really looking to jeremy hunt here. hunt for salvation here. >> yeah. james absolutely stellar stuff us in. stellar stuff to lead us in. james hill there, the political correspondent for the spectator. like let's get the thoughts of my panel, shall we? political commentator suzanne evans . we've commentator suzanne evans. we've got environment secretary got former environment secretary ranil jayawardena mp and author and journalist rebecca reid. look, susan, i'll start with you . you think the tories screw everything up, don't you? >> well, i wouldn't go quite that far, but i think they pretty much have screwed everything up. i mean, we're talking immigration, for instance. >> we're expecting huge >> we're expecting these huge immigration on thursday. >> you 700,000. i pray >> you said 700,000. i pray patrick, that is expectations management. so that when it's only not far off the
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only perhaps not far off the last high of 606,606 hundred that we that they think it's not so bad but look what's immigration amounted to basically 23 years of broken promises by the conservatives that 2010 manifesto when they went into coalition with the lib dems. we're going to get it to down the tens of thousands, 700,000 a year. now we're looking at it's absolutely disgraceful and totally undemocratic as well because nobody voted for this . now, the nobody voted for this. now, the autumn statement tomorrow , if autumn statement tomorrow, if jeremy hunt thinks he's going to get the conservative party back on track, he has got to pull a very big rabbit out of a very big hat. and i don't think he's got the headroom to make such big cuts on tax cuts to be able to people to say, well, maybe we should another go. should give them another go. i don't it's going don't think it's going to happen. >> devastating news >> look, ranil, devastating news there our political insider there from our political insider , heal to 100 seats. , james heal down to 100 seats. ihope , james heal down to 100 seats. i hope you're safe. but what's the mood like in the tory party? well you, first of well i can tell you, first of all, i certainly do take all, that i certainly do take anything for granted. >> think many colleagues
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>> i don't think many colleagues do now. look it is tough do right now. look it is tough out knock on doors. out there. i knock on doors. people say do highlight where people do say do highlight where they're dissatisfied with things. my colleagues face things. and my colleagues face the . there a very the same. but there is a very big decision for the country to make. and i think suzanne is absolutely jeremy absolutely right that jeremy hunt, the chancellor, has an opportunity to the choice opportunity to set the choice for the country out very clearly with labour. and the polling shows this . people know they shows this. people know they will face higher taxes is and the opportunity for us right now is to cut them. so whether it's cutting an eye, as is being suggested , will happen tomorrow, suggested, will happen tomorrow, whether reducing or whether it's reducing or scrapping inheritance tax, which is terribly unfair , whether it's is terribly unfair, whether it's introducing changes to ir35 to help small self—employed businesses, those are the sorts of things that we need to get on and do and that might prove to people that we're serious. >> okay, rebecca, your take on all of this? i mean, you know, maybe we're being a little bit unfair on rishi sunak here. i suppose inflation win for suppose inflation was a win for him. yeah and it's unlikely to
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defend a tory, i do feel defend a tory, but i do feel a bit sad for rishi because i think he is suffering a cumulative dislike for things that have done his predecessors. >> if you look the >> and if you look at the polling, it pretty it's a pretty much straight downward much like straight downward curve leaders, curve through multiple leaders, including with the much bigger dip truss dip during the liz truss shenanigans. so don't think shenanigans. so i don't think it's on him. think he it's all on him. i think he inherited a poisoned chalice and it's all on him. i think he ilthinkzd a poisoned chalice and it's all on him. i think he i|think it's poisoned chalice and it's all on him. i think he i|think it's insurmountablee and it's all on him. i think he i|think it's insurmountable thati i think it's insurmountable that 13 years is too long to be in power. they have run out of ideas. girls are constantly ideas. the girls are constantly fighting. at fighting. it's all handbags at dawn them all the dawn with all of them all the time. think it makes sense time. i think it makes sense that people are on linkedin considering the next moves. right. >> well, look, suzanne, mean, >> well, look, suzanne, i mean, you know, ranil and co are betting people betting the house on people caring cuts than caring more about tax cuts than immigration. do you think they're about that? they're wrong about that? >> think they are really. as >> i think they are really. as i say, how the say, it depends on how big the tax cut if you scrap tax cut is. if you scrap inheritance tax, which i don't think he's going to do, by the way, but if he did, i think that would a great boost for the would be a great boost for the lower and middle middle classes who that's who might have a house that's above threshold they above the threshold and they want to their want to leave it to their children. but but i think i think the only well, precisely
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the majority of people aren't impacted by 300 and £325,000. >> don't >> the majority of people don't leave anywhere near 300 leftist argument leave anywhere near 300 leftist argumeris missing the point >> this is missing the point because aspires to do because everyone aspires to do better years ahead or better in the years ahead or indeed children. indeed for their children. >> better doesn't >> better, better doesn't necessarily having more money. >> 300 ranil than you. ranil than you. >> all the polling shows that people want this scrap to every income tax, no matter how big their estate, even they're their estate, even when they're told, not true. told, no, that's not true. >> the second part is not true. >> the second part is not true. >> polling previous dan >> polling the previous dan needles not needles polling people do not comprehend unlikely they are. >> people are not going to be affected by it. it's that classic thing. people will vote for people vote for the wealth they they're going to have they think they're going to have one the one day. optimistically not the wealth will have. wealth they actually will have. we create majority of we want to create majority of people. in people. you think everybody in the country will have an estate of £325,000 in four years time? >> brings in £7 billion. >> it only brings in £7 billion. that's enough to the nhs that's enough to fund the nhs for a couple of weeks? for what, a couple of weeks? >> than not. but >> it's better than not. but where are you going to get where else are you going to get £7 billion from? >> billion in the >> you had 7 billion in the economy helping people find businesses, a boost businesses, giving a boost to
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entrepreneurship, spending people. better people. it's so much better than just into treasury. just going into that treasury. >> better. >> it's not better. it's fundamentally i say fundamentally selfish. i say this as somebody who will pay inheritance it's inheritance tax. it's fundamentally try fundamentally selfish to try and get rid of it. if you have that much to pay much money, you deserve to pay that it's that much death tax. it's a double tax. absolutely. it double tax. absolutely. as it should be. >> as it should be. interesting. right. do care right. so. so do you care to what more about you don't seem to care about tax all or immigration? >> i think income tax is a different thing because it will affect people immediately. and it's a one payment and it's not a one off payment and it's not a one off payment and it's that you inherit is it's money that you inherit is not the first not your money in the first place. that you earn every place. money that you earn every day absolutely the day absolutely would improve the economy in the short term and would like a win for rishi. would feel like a win for rishi. i'd it'd be stupid not to i'd think it'd be stupid not to do just a quick tease do that. just a quick tease ahead something that we're ahead to something that we're going talking about going to be talking about a little later on in the show, little bit later on in the show, but it's relevant when it comes to immigration. but it's relevant when it comes to immigapparently rishi ignored >> now, apparently rishi ignored a plan send migrants to a plan to send some migrants to the falkland islands. okay. we're talking we're going to be talking a little about whether or not little bit about whether or not the falkland islands should remain british because the madcap argentina, madcap president of argentina, who, i actually who, by the way, i actually really this guy because really like this guy because he's he's complete loon,
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he's he's he's a complete loon, isn't but he's dead wrong isn't he? but he's dead wrong about he's wrong about this. he's dead wrong about this. he's dead wrong about falklands going about about the falklands going back do you back back to argentina. do you back the falklands remaining british. >> the falkland >> yeah, i think the falkland islanders back remaining british. islanders back remaining britronald, what do you say? what >> ronald, what do you say? what do you say to the recently elected president of argentina? >> falkland >> you're wrong. the falkland islands people have islands are british people have voted to remain. british voted for it to remain. british people fought to make sure it remained and long remained british and long will they you give it away? >> will you give it away? >> will you give it away? >> yeah, obviously. give it back. give back% have it. back. give it back% have it. >> people on on >> look, people on a on a serious note, people, people. >> being serious. >> i'm being serious. >> i'm being serious. >> but people called a >> yeah, but people called a sunk fallacy doing more sunk cost fallacy and doing more fighting protect fighting to protect something that really need that we don't really need would be mistake. all right. be a massive mistake. all right. we're kicking off this we're kicking off on this at ten, sure you stay tuned ten, so make sure you stay tuned because this is going be because this is going to be feisty already. thank you very much. still to come much. top star still to come with doctor strikes revealed to have £3 billion, have cost the nhs £3 billion, have cost the nhs £3 billion, have actually to have they actually helped to cripple their own employer? are all staff actually angels? all nhs staff actually angels? and fails? you and if everyone fails? yep. you heard bit of it before. heard a little bit of it before. should consider sending should we consider sending migrants our migrants to the falklands? our red rock wyler and tory red wall rock wyler and tory party deputy chair lee anderson
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joins me live in studio. joins me live in the studio. he's also to talk about he's also going to talk about benefits britons. should benefits britons. that should be a laugh, but up next in the a good laugh, but up next in the clash, two pool players who refuse to share table with refuse to share a table with trans opponent s alexandra cunha and lynn pinches go head to head with social commentator amy ansell, asking whether it's fair for female athletes to refuse to compete against biological males . you're not going to want to .you're not going to want to miss
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and people that i knew had dewbs & co weeknights from six .
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& co weeknights from six. to deputy tory party chair lee anderson is coming up shortly on a whole host of very controversial issues. >> but it's time now for the clash . and at least four clubs clash. and at least four clubs playing in a female football league in yorkshire have staged a sensational boycott against a team that fielded a trans woman. the action came about after francesca naida made biological male , caused a season ending male, caused a season ending knee injury in a match last month. a needham has now announced that they are quitting women's football, writing online. i sincerely hope that this issue of perceived discrimination against me can be resolved peacefully and promptly with the full support of the football association and the policies they have written and approved. well, it comes after pool player lynn pinches made a big statement by walking out of a national final after she was pitted against a trans athlete. what . yes yes, yes. so tonight i
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what. yes yes, yes. so tonight i am asking , is it fair for female am asking, is it fair for female athletes to refuse to compete against biological males? let me know your thoughts. email me, gbviews@gbnews.com or tweet me at gb news. the inbox is on fire, by the way. mostly about the falklands. and i'm going to go to those very , very shortly. go to those very, very shortly. you can also vote in our poll, can't you? and i'll bring you the results in just a moment. just before i go to my guests, i want to know what you really think of this well. think about all of this as well. is it okay for women to even be asked to play against men? we've seen a season ending knee injury in football . some people might in football. some people might think, well, in pool, for example, is a massive example, is there a massive advantage in darts? are advantage in darts? we are seeing aren't we, in male seeing women, aren't we, in male versions of the darts and they're doing rather well. well, to debate all of this, i'm joined by that very pool player that you just saw limp inches alongside professional alongside fellow professional alexandra also alexandra mckenna, who has also refused to play against trans
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women . and breaking off tonight women. and breaking off tonight against the social commentator amy ansell . all of you, thank amy ansell. all of you, thank you very, very much. great to have you on the show. can i start with you, lynn, and just say, do you think it's fair to actually even be asked to play against a biological man ? against a biological man? >> absolutely not. absolutely not. i do. i don't think that, um, any any woman should put herself in a position where she may suffer either physical or psychological harm by playing against a transgender opponent. and i have i have actually suffered psychological harm , um, suffered psychological harm, um, because what it does is it damages your confidence because you know that it's a level that is unreachable oil and it doesn't matter how much practice ihave doesn't matter how much practice i have or how many hours i put in, if the transgender player is putting in the level amount of practice and hours, they will only get better because they are. and were born biologically male and their brains were
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completely different in this game. their bodies are different , but they have a broad shoulders longer reach bigger hands for bridge shots. there are lots of advantages. they play are lots of advantages. they play much faster. so therefore, between matches they end up getting longer breaks, like an hour break in between. sometimes we play a match and we're immediately back on the table. but this is not just affecting your mental health before, dunng your mental health before, during and after a match, because you feel like you've lost before you even start. and i've even heard this story repeated to me from women and girls as young as 18 years old. one that played snooker in particular was heartbreak and statement that she she statement was that she she practised eight hours a day and feels like she's never going to be good enough. now she's 18 and you know, for me, i'm 50 and my career is coming to end. i did. i did this, you know, for the future of women's sports to protect my own mental health. absolutely protect my own mental health. abswheny when i come back, >> when i when i come back, alexandra, you. but alexandra, i'll go to you. but i
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want to get your views on this, amy. i mean, that's incredibly powerful you know, powerful stuff. you know, damaging mental health, damaging women's mental health, potentially damaging their physical health but but physical health as well. but but you it's you think it's you think it's you think it's all right. you think it's wrong to boycott playing against biological why ? biological mandy, why? >> well, here's the thing, patrick. >> it's not like a man dresses as a woman and then goes ahead and plays a game of pool or plays soccer, football or swims, for example . for example. >> all they have to go through rigorous testing their blood, testosterone level needs to be in a female range . so this isn't in a female range. so this isn't simply a man dressed as a woman to put in that position to intimidate women like we have here today. so i think this is completely discriminatory . i completely discriminatory. i think it's transphobic. i think that, you know, there are regulations , there are checks in regulations, there are checks in place that have been annually. we like i said, this is not just a man dressed as a woman who has an advantage over women in
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general. >> okay. alexandra i'll go to you now. some quite strong stuff there. i mean, the that label, i don't i don't like this personally, but obviously amy is well within her rights to use it, i suppose. but it's idea of being labelled transphobic for not wanting to play against someone who was born a man who i'm assuming your view, just i'm assuming in your view, just just a genuine competitive just has a genuine competitive advantage. to advantage. how do you respond to that ? that? >> well, when i first had to play >> well, when i first had to play against transgender player and i was asked dozens of times what i thought about it, my answer was , i don't see the problem. >> it's okay if you want to beat them, just practice more and beat them . but then when two beat them. but then when two years have passed and i cannot see the things i've seen in two years and i cannot change my opinion anymore , it's far past opinion anymore, it's far past that. i understand that what
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your other guest is talking about, testosterone levels and all the process they need to go through. and i was the one, the first to say to the newspapers and to everyone that i totally respect, this is not an attack on no one. i said this all along. this is a defence. it's not an attack because i do respect all the process. these people need to go through to be happy and to live a happy life. what i'm saying here is not a fair field for us women that were born women and we still women because even with all testosterone levels done and all the tests done , you cannot tell the tests done, you cannot tell me there's no advantages because i can see it's not true . okay. i can see it's not true. okay. >> i, i mean, you know, amy, these are two women here who actually have direct lived experience of the discussion that we're talking about now. and to just label all this transphobia, do you not think that's just wrong ?
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that's just wrong? >> well well, here's the thing. you know, i read about francesca needham in the situation that occurred with her, and i know that, you know, people are obviously not wanting to play against her because they feel that she's stronger. she's taller, but there are so many injuries on the field, in soccer, football , you know, soccer, football, you know, every season, hundreds and hundreds, knee injuries , hundreds, knee injuries, dislocated knees. et cetera . you dislocated knees. et cetera. you can google it. and there's like dozen and dozens of videos on youtube where you can see these women, cis women playing against cis women , men playing against cis women, men playing against men by logical. and they're getting injured just like this injury that occurred supposedly because, you know, francesca's strength and her height. but, you know, look at someone like serena williams. she is a massive athlete. she is so muscular. she is so tall . and, muscular. she is so tall. and, you know, people might think, well, she is an advantage because look at her stature .
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because look at her stature. look at her. okay >> all right. look, i'm going to i'm just going to finish by asking a pretty straightforward question. we'll do it one at a time, though. so, lynn, will you continue to say no, to play playing against biological men? do you will that be a hard no from you throughout the course of career? from you throughout the course of because career? from you throughout the course of because i'm career? from you throughout the course of because i'm doing reer? from you throughout the course of because i'm doing iter? from you throughout the course of because i'm doing it to >> because i'm doing it to protect my own mental health. like i said, i'm doing it to protect the future of women's sports and the and the young people that are feeling like they're up and not good they're giving up and not good enough. there's enough. i mean, there's a billiards tournament that's been going in glasgow and going for years in glasgow and unfortunate the unfortunate because the most recent that tournament recent winner of that tournament is participant in is a transgender participant in that is no longer that tournament is no longer going and that's been going to run. and that's been going to run. and that's been going 1931. so you know, going since 1931. so you know, if you want to carry on ruining a women's sports with by by including is causing self—exclusion so it's no longer inclusive , okay. if it's causing inclusive, okay. if it's causing exclusion . exclusion. >> alexandra, just just, just, just just quickly, alexandra, do you think it's cheating ? you think it's cheating? >> what , transgenders playing ?
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>> what, transgenders playing? yeah. um i think it's not fair. okay. i don't want to i don't want to take and make a position about people's intentions because everyone knows about their own intentions, about cheating or not. the only thing i see is, as i told you before, this is not an attack. it's a defence. yeah. and i will not accuse no one of cheating. i say i see is not fair. >> all right, look, very, very quickly, because i'm going to shout it out in a minute, but i've got to go back to you, amy. you know, do you think that you should be more to should maybe be doing more to defend rights? no defend women's rights? no i think should be doing more to think i should be doing more to defend trans women's rights. okay. was quick. there we go. okay. it was quick. there we go. lovely stuff. you very, lovely stuff. thank you very, very right. very much. all right. we're going to have to going to we're going to have to leave it. look i'm sorry, ladies. we could carry this on leave it. look i'm sorry, lad evening,ould carry this on leave it. look i'm sorry, ladevening, and carry this on leave it. look i'm sorry, ladevening, and iarry this on leave it. look i'm sorry, ladevening, and i hopehis on leave it. look i'm sorry, ladevening, and i hope to on leave it. look i'm sorry, ladevening, and i hope to get all evening, and i hope to get you all back on again soon. thank you. thank you, though, very all you. right. very much. all of you. right. strong to say the least. strong stuff to say the least. what do make of that? who do what do you make of that? who do you it fair for
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you agree with? is it fair for female athletes to refuse to compete biological compete against biological males? no, males? chris on twitter says no, women should never be forced to play women should never be forced to play against biological males. we urgently address we need laws urgently to address this issue. martin's been on women's put women's shouldn't be put in a position have to position where they have to compete men. but sadly, position where they have to compewomen men. but sadly, position where they have to compewomen aren't n. but sadly, position where they have to compewomen aren't asbut sadly, position where they have to compewomen aren't as brave dly, many women aren't as brave as your guests just accept your guests and just accept trans athletes. olivia on email says really simple. it's says it's really simple. it's unfair in unfair for men to compete in women's sport. not many different of grey there, women's sport. not many di mustt of grey there, women's sport. not many di must be of grey there, women's sport. not many di must be said. of grey there, women's sport. not many di must be said. and rey there, women's sport. not many di must be said. and rey tiview it must be said. and that view is reflected in my inbox. i can't lie. that's what we're getting but the poll getting in. but here's the poll 94% you agree that is fair 94% of you agree that it is fair for athletes to refuse to for female athletes to refuse to compete against biological men. 6% of you say that it's not the people have spoken. now, later tonight, i speak to phil the power taylor after the 16 time world dance champion announced his retirement from the sport and he's given a ringing endorsement of our very own nigel oh, he's good at politics. >> i like him. i'd vote for him if he was prime minister trust me. >> yeah. he goes on to say a heck of a lot more. by the way,
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incredibly unguarded interview from that we'll get from that legend. we'll get a bit of that you later. bit more of that for you later. but next is rishi sunak right that having 2 million brits out of is a national scandal? of work is a national scandal? and should the pm have chosen the islands instead the falkland islands instead of rwanda deporting rwanda for deporting migrants? deputy anderson rwanda for deporting migrants? depu me anderson rwanda for deporting migrants? depu me live. anderson rwanda for deporting migrants? depu me live. he's anderson rwanda for deporting migrants? depu me live. he's unfiltered, joins me live. he's unfiltered, as always . he's not to be as always. he's not to be missed, seeing
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sunday mornings from 930 on. gb news is . gb news superstar.
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news is. gb news superstar. >> nana akua is on the way. but first, it's time for our red wall rottweiler lee anderson and a shockingly new report has found that striking doctors cost the nhs an eye—watering £3 billion, with some hospitals forced to shell out more than £6,000 a day on staff cover . £6,000 a day on staff cover. meanwhile, it's emerged that you're more likely to get a gp appointment . and i am not making appointment. and i am not making this up in rwanda than right here in the uk. i mean , i'm here in the uk. i mean, i'm inclined if you've got a hernia, why don't you just get on a boat from calais, get over here and beg to be on that first flight? but it means our creaking nhs is the third in the world for the third worst in the world for quick access to a family doctor lee me now. look, given lee joins me now. look, given that lot of this was caused by that a lot of this was caused by strikes, lee, does this show that not all nhs workers that maybe not all nhs workers are well, look, patrick, mean, >> well, look, patrick, i mean, the figures are astonishing. £3 billion it's incredible . billion is it's incredible. look, the doctors, they know what they're signing up when what they're signing up for when they they go into the they when they go into the profession, what the profession, they know what the terms conditions are. they terms and conditions are. they know what wages are. for know what the wages are. and for them striking, you
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them to start striking, you know, 4 or 5 years down know, three or 4 or 5 years down the line, i think it's disgraceful, to be honest with you. you know, they're you. they you know, they're they're preserve life. they're there to preserve life. they're save life. and they're there to save life. and i think there are certain professions country professions in this country at the seen it since the moment. we've seen it since covid that are trying to hold the to ransom. and the country to ransom. and i think doctors, these think these doctors, these junior don't junior doctors and i don't always blame themselves. always blame them themselves. the using doctors to the unions are using doctors to get back at the government. look they're there to do a job. they should do the if they don't should do the job. if they don't like money, go get like the money, go and get anotherjob. well what like the money, go and get another job. well what would that practice? that mean, though, in practice? >> when leaves and >> lee when everyone leaves and we any doctors. we haven't got any doctors. >> i mean, it is >> well, i mean, it's it is a big problem, patrick. we've we've seen it since, you know, since the of covid. but since the outbreak of covid. but these there's been on these doctors there's been on strike the moaning about their wages from two thousand and seven you know, it's seven to 2010. you know, it's been what, 16, 17 been like, what, 15, 16, 17 years, you know, since the you know, they've been moaning about the never been on the wages. they've never been on strike . and of strike before. and all of a sudden, you know, we've seen the strike i since strike since, like i say, since covid, the government's had a spot difficulty. all spot of difficulty. they're all putting on all putting the pressure on and all of they're saying that
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of a sudden they're saying that they, know, they're not they, you know, they're not getting paid enough. i disagree, patrick. sign patrick. i think when you sign up a profession, you know up to a profession, you know what the terms and conditions are. know wage is. are. you know what the wage is. you stick to it, you should stick to it, not halfway change your halfway through, change your mind. okay. >> i've got a little statement here the medical here from the british medical association here from the british medical associaticphilip banfield, professor philip banfield, who recently negotiations to recently said negotiations to find fair way forward to find a fair way forward to restore doctors lost pay and value. their unique expertise must continue unabated. long waiting and striking waiting lists and striking doctors have the same root causes. a catastrophic and chronic underinvestment. it's rubbish. it's rubbish . rubbish. it's rubbish. >> our nhs go on, it's rubbish. the nhs is not underfunded . it the nhs is not underfunded. it is, if anything, overfunded . the is, if anything, overfunded. the waste. we're seeing it patrick christys every week you cover it on this show. the ridicule less vacancies advertised vacancies they've got advertised on basis. the you know on a weekly basis. the you know the these diversity they the these diversity offices they waste in literally hundreds of millions pounds a year. you millions of pounds a year. you know, it isn't underfunded. it's absolutely nonsense. seen absolutely nonsense. i've seen it first hand. >> okay. right , look, we've >> okay. all right, look, we've got lot to through, so got a lot to get through, so rishi sunak has been laying down the to 2 million people
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the law to the 2 million people out of work getting handouts from state, as he puts it, from the state, as he puts it, under be unveiled under changes set to be unveiled tomorrow . and this will be tomorrow. and this will be interesting. people with mobility and mental health problems told to find problems will be told to find work. they can do from home or face having their benefits slashed or the charity disability uk has disability rights uk has previously accused the government of a cynical attempt to reduce benefits payments. know is the prime minister trying to get people back into work or is he being mean to the. >> he's not being mean, patrick. he's being bang on. go back to 19405 when the welfare benefit system introduced this system was introduced in this country. the labour party the country. the labour party at the time introduced time they they, they introduced a system and a welfare rights system and there's about 90% of disabled people back in the 405 went to work the we got lots work after the war. we got lots of injured men. people of injured men. we got people who disabled and like who were disabled and like i say, odd percent them went say, 90 odd percent of them went to work with the right support in place. we know we know in place. and we know we know that with mental health that people with mental health problems, whatever, problems, anxiety or whatever, which can be the new which by the way, can be the new bad back. they better off bad back. they are better off being the workplace, doing being in the workplace, doing something useful and they should go people go to work. patrick people should stake in society.
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should have a stake in society. it's fair when you see it's not fair when you see a street in a place like ashfield where you've got houses in where you've got ten houses in a row, houses are to row, seven houses are going to work every getting up at work every day, getting up at the of dawn, putting a the crack of dawn, putting a shift in, there's 3 or shift in, and there's 3 or 4 hours that can't bothered to hours that can't be bothered to get of bed and do a shift. get out of bed and do a shift. it's not fair on the british taxpayer. they should go to work. everybody in this country, regardless disability work. everybody in this country, regillness, disability work. everybody in this country, regillness, can disability work. everybody in this country, regillness, can do disability work. everybody in this country, regillness, can do something. okay. >> all right. well look, moving on. emerged sending on. it's emerged sending migrants falkland islands migrants to the falkland islands was mooted home office was mooted by home office officials was mooted by home office of1the ls policy . the to the rwanda policy. the falklands getting a lot of falklands are getting a lot of attention today, aren't they? but, you know, the but, you know, with the government's rwanda policy but, you know, with the governninlt's rwanda policy but, you know, with the governninlt's icourt,i policy but, you know, with the governninlt's icourt, should we stalling in the court, should we ship off the ship asylum seekers off to the falkland? ship asylum seekers off to the faliwell,’ do think about this, >> well, i do think about this, patrick, mentioned this to patrick, and i mentioned this to boris. i mentioned the falkland isles and georgia about two years georgia , when i when years ago, georgia, when i when i with boris and he i when i met with boris and he sort of smiled at me. but i don't think it's fair on the falkland islanders, to be honest. don't want honest. they they don't want these migrants these these illegal migrants coming on there. there's a better option. you know, if we can them british soil. can keep them on british soil. if you like. we've got the
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orkney or remote orkney isles or some remote scottish it's scottish island and know it's a bit parky up there this time of yeah bit parky up there this time of year. if people are year. but if people are genuinely escaping war or persecution, nice persecution, then a nice scottish a few few scottish island with a few few outbuildings, there would be suitable. you don't think the >> you think you don't think the human rights has climb human rights brigade has climb all that and say, well, all over that and say, well, they're going to freeze in the winter? >> lee well, listen, it's nonsense. i mean, this is a beautiful country. it's a go to destination of scotland, destination parts of scotland, the you know, the remote islands. you know, i like be able to afford like to be able to afford a place up there. patrick if we can some accommodation up can get some accommodation up there, keep people safe there, keep these people safe because you know, let's because let's, you know, let's let's these people let's be honest. these people want fleeing want to be safe. they're fleeing so—called from these so—called persecution from these war countries, if we can war torn countries, if we can put safe island in put them a nice, safe island in the north of scotland, done. the north of scotland, job done. >> is fair on the people of >> is it fair on the people of the falkland islands or the orkneys? >> well, we find an >> well, if we can find an island in the orkneys or one of the islands up there that's got no people on there start off no people on there to start off for with, some decent accommodation it's job done. accommodation on, it's job done. i mean, the falkland islands i think is a little bit far to go. and it's not fair on the falkland islands who have got
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their own problems at the moment with sovereignty with the sovereignty with argentina. if argentina. but like i say, if people are genuinely saying they're violence or they're escaping violence or persecution no persecution or whatever, no country, little remote country, a nice little remote island in the north scotland island in the north of scotland island in the north of scotland is right. is perfect. all right. >> before i on >> just quickly before i go on to a rude cartoon about to a rather rude cartoon about you, tomorrow is going to be quite day. yeah right. quite a big day. yeah right. with autumn statement or with the autumn statement or autumn etcetera. i mean , autumn budget, etcetera. i mean, have any heads up for us have you got any heads up for us this? >> no, i drop patrick at all. it's strange because normally we read in the press. the read stuff in the press. the journos are us and journos are texting us and giving a call gb news and giving us a call gb news and normally all over it . but normally all over it. but remember, not a budget. remember, it's not a budget. it's just a statement. heard nothing we're hoping , as nothing yet. we're hoping, as backbench mp5 are hoping that it's good news from the chancellor , he's going to pull chancellor, he's going to pull some rabbits out of the hat. we need to, you know, we're not in a good place at the moment, but let's it's positive. all right. >> so now we are going to be having a look at the latest edition of spectator magazine. right. make of their right. what do you make of their depiction of you there , lee? depiction of you there, lee? >> well, i mean , it's a very
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>> well, i mean, it's a very cruel cartoon. patrick i suppose my mother's watching this now . my mother's watching this now. she wouldn't be very happy. i'm not happy with the jowls they look for the jowls. i think the jowls is problem. it's got me jowls is a problem. it's got me got i've got pointy ears on there they're rather large there and they're rather large nose. it's a shocker. legal nose. it's a shocker. my legal team are investigating this as we speak, and they'll be getting a strongly worded letter. we speak, and they'll be getting a stbutjly worded letter. we speak, and they'll be getting a stbut yourorded letter. we speak, and they'll be getting a stbut you just d letter. we speak, and they'll be getting a stbut you just need er. we speak, and they'll be getting a stbut you just need to raffle >> but you just need to raffle off, isn't it? >> it's a bit of fun. you know, all news is good news. there's no bad press in this game. so if i'd got a message to the spectator, then just keep it up. >> keep it up . i thought i was >> keep it up. i thought i was worried i was going to ask to ask you an on air apology. then for a second. but thank you very much. always a pleasure. good luck tomorrow. i hope hear luck tomorrow. i hope to hear from you again very soon. i know we anderson, the one we will. isley anderson, the one and only. now coming up, as argentina's but argentina's brilliant but completely barmy. new president fails falkland fails to get the falkland islands need to do islands back. do we need to do everything our to everything in our power to defend islands again? defend the islands once again? that's debate . that's that's the big debate. that's with panel. soon. with my panel. that's soon. but next, starmer was unabated,
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next, keir starmer was unabated, unabashed speaking up for gender equality today. brass net now, but given that he couldn't define what a woman is and i think eddie is outstanding, isn't he? or she or it in brighton . i mean, really, are brighton. i mean, really, are these welcome words from the labour leader ? no nonsense gb labour leader? no nonsense gb news star nana akua gives her verdict . and of course, we'll be verdict. and of course, we'll be telling you all about prince harry's big night out. telling you all about prince harry's big night out . see you harry's big night out. see you
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yeah. look, the inbox is absolutely on fire. gb views gb news gbnews.com the falklands should not be used for refugees, but maybe one of the uninhabited small sandwich islands says mark. how about sending them to the scottish isles? says brian . the scottish isles? says brian. and this is after what lee anderson had to say a little bit earlier on. there's also a heck of a lot of anger from you wonderful people about
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something. hanson dac have apparently said on i'm a apparently just said on i'm a celebrity. we'll be giving you the next hour. the lowdown in the next hour. but legend phil the power but darts legend phil the power taylor is on the way as well. but first, it's for news but first, it's time for gb news star leader star nana akua and labour leader keir starmer taken to x , the keir starmer has taken to x, the artist formerly known as twitter to encourage enter to encourage women to enter politics. watch and listen over 100 years ago, the first woman took her seat in parliament and since then, more than 5000 mp5 have been elected , but fewer have been elected, but fewer than 600 of them are women . than 600 of them are women. >> i'd ask her to stand aims to encourage women to get involved in all levels of politics, local and national. so if you know someone who would make a great representative in parliament and in their local community, ask her to stand down. now it's worth bearing in mind that while the conservatives have gifted the conservatives have gifted the country, two female prime ministers in fact, three actually, isn't it the first, more than 40 years ago, labour have given us no one.
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>> also . so this is a man who >> also. so this is a man who couldn't answer this simple question. >> a woman can have a penis. >> a woman can have a penis. >> they come not, i don't think we can conduct this to debate with no , you all struggle with it. >> the penis question, don't you look , firstly, a woman is an look, firstly, a woman is an aduu look, firstly, a woman is an adult female . adult female. >> so let's clear that one up. we don't think that selfies identification is the right way forward . forward. >> right. well, there we go. so nanais >> right. well, there we go. so nana is keir starmer really the man to be banging the drum for women in politics? >> oh. oh, patrick. that bit when he goes when he's trying to answer the question. that always gets me. i mean, seriously, he couldn't answer whether a woman has a penis or not. then he said 99.9% of them don't. which means 1 in 1000 do. and then it took him almost a year to confirm that. actually, yeah. a woman isn't adult female. i mean , can
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isn't adult female. i mean, can you trust this man? i can't trust him. and then eventually he said it's all about it's not all about biology, though . well, all about biology, though. well, it is about biology. he's got eddie izzard in his party who decides whenever he wants to be a woman or a man. decides whenever he wants to be a woman or a man . so can he be a woman or a man. so can he be involved in this? ask her to stand day? i mean , you had rosie stand day? i mean, you had rosie duffield, who was scared to go to party conference to her own party conference because she agreed with the nofion because she agreed with the notion that only women have a cervix . this man who cannot cervix. this is a man who cannot be trusted. he flip flops like anything . it's a nonsense. it's anything. it's a nonsense. it's farcical . and i noticed the farcical. and i noticed the amount of times he started off saying woman and then he used started to use the terms. female male in little brief. so male in this little brief. so it's a very, very just a little subtle change there in his language . but i suspect really language. but i suspect really he's doing this to appease don't know some the women because he's marginalised us and let's not forget that the labour party we are talking about making self—id eafien are talking about making self—id easier. so this doesn't sound like somebody i can trust . and like somebody i can trust. and yeah, no female leader
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whatsoever ever. >> no. no. well now on to something else that i must say i found utterly ridiculous. okay so a scientific study by the museum of london has found that black women were more likely to die during the medieval plague that ravaged london in the 14th century due to racism. it's a racist plague . dr. rebecca racist plague. dr. rebecca redfern , senior curator of redfern, senior curator of archaeology at the museum, claims that the black death reveals the pre modern structural racism is devastate dating effects . nana. dating effects. nana. considering only nine victims of the plague were included in this study, is it really worth the paper it's written on? >> i mean, wow , they've told us >> i mean, wow, they've told us something that who knew if perhaps you were in a minority group in the early 14005 or 1348 or whatever it was in london and you were poor , you may well have you were poor, you may well have been a servant. you may have been a servant. you may have been a servant from somebody who was travelling to london and you
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lived london with this person lived in london with this person and you impoverished and and you were impoverished and a lot poorer, that you were more likely to die of the black death . well, who knew ? my goodness. . well, who knew? my goodness. and there could have been an element of racism. what's the point of this? i presume they've spent money on this. i think they exhumed 145 bodies or something and checked the bones and all this . how much money did and all this. how much money did they spend on this ridiculous piece of information that could have told them that? anyway, what is the point of this? it does appear as people does appear as though people people to more and people are now going to more and more extreme lengths, including literally digging up the bodies of people who died , you know, in of people who died, you know, in the 14th century in order to try to prove that structural racism has always existed. >> well , every racism has always existed. >> well, every racism has has always existed. >> well , every racism has always >> well, every racism has always existed anyway, whether you're it's black and black, whether it's black and black, whether it's white or white, whether it's white or white, whether it's racism has existed. >> we are one race, but unfortunate. we believe that people of different races and we've from it's nonsense . we've come from it's nonsense. we know but it has existed
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we know that. but it has existed since began. it is an since time began. and it is an absolute nonsense that they've gonein absolute nonsense that they've gone in to find that if you are poorer at that time, it's more likely that people of colour and from ethnic minorities were not the population would the indigenous population would have been therefore, have been poorer. therefore, ultimate the fact that they were poorer was more likely the reason why they died. not necessarily were necessarily because they were black. it's absurd that they would go to such lengths. racism has existed since time began. so if the place was racist, which i imagine it was, then those who are lower in the pecking order are lower in the pecking order are more likely to die of a disease. yeah i just find it absolutely bonkers . absolutely bonkers. >> and you add it to the list of things that are racist now, which by the way, includes stuff like countryside. then you like the countryside. then you think, on a minute, think, well, hang on a minute, we all just pack we might as well all just pack up go home. prince harry up and go home. but prince harry is emulated. his grandmother, little little little sneaky, sneaky little wants at the wants to squeeze in here at the end by becoming the second member of the monarchy drop member of the monarchy to drop a hockey a match in canada hockey puck at a match in canada with making with the late queen making a similar fumble back in 2002. nana. it's as endearing as he
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emulating the queen. you think she'd of him his she'd be proud of him for his for his puck drop moment? >> oh god. he even slightly got it wrong well, so it was it wrong as well, so it was a bit awkward, guy. i just bit awkward, this guy. i just feel i feel sorry for him. he doesn't know whether he's coming or he's or going. and then he's obviously compared a great, obviously compared to a great, wonderful, late queen who was just faultless in my view. there's no comparison to put the two pictures side by side. and you just thought it was awkward. apparently he got a little bit of assistance on how to do it as well. i just they have they've they have purpose. it's they have no purpose. it's really sad. got money. really sad. they've got money. they've no purpose. really sad. they've got money. the nana no purpose. really sad. they've got money. the nana thank 3urpose. really sad. they've got money. the nana thank you ose. really sad. they've got money. the nana thank you very much. i >> nana thank you very much. i always chats. and always love our chats. and i think idea as that think the idea as well that prince harry couldn't just hold his and let gravity do his hand out and let gravity do the rest without receiving some kind instruction does really kind of instruction does really speak nana that speak volumes as nana akua that gb legend. now i have got gb news legend. now i have got a bumper second hour coming your way. i do mean that. way. i really do mean that. okay? because we're going to be having a chat with phil, the power who is the great power taylor, who is the great ever darts player now he announced his retirement from
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darts this week. but big phil had a big message for the nation i >>i -- >> i would lam >> i would say keep your chin up. keep pushing forward . you up. keep pushing forward. you know, when you knock you down, it's you've got to get back up again. >> yeah. so he's got a positive message for the nation. i did a completely unguarded interview with him . he talks lot about with him. he talks a lot about nigel politics. nigel in the jungle, of course. by the way, i am getting your emails. apparently, ant and have apparently, ant and dec have teed on gb news again, so teed off on gb news again, so we're going to be talking about that. argentina's controversial new president is promising to take back the falklands. does britain need to do everything in her power to defend the islands once again, tonight's panel thrashed that one out. and yes, when i come back, we'll be taking you down under and i will have all all of the newspaper front pages for you in the most entertaining press preview you will get anywhere on the telly. don't move . don't move. >> good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update . latest gb news weather update. with me, annie from the met
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office. it will be staying cloudier through tomorrow with some rain moving in from the north, but still some sunshine on offer across southern areas with that high pressure still dominating the ridge, extending across many areas of england and wales. but further north, we've got a weather front in charge throughout evening and throughout this evening and that'll charge into that'll stay in charge into wednesday and thursday as well. so we've got rain arriving across much of western scotland, parts of northern ireland as well. further south, it'll stay dry tonight. mist and fog dry tonight. some mist and fog developing and temperatures falling than last night, falling lower than last night, as low as 2 or 3, perhaps in some southern counties. so a bit of a colder mystere start on wednesday morning. but the sunshine will come out throughout the afternoon once again. so not a bad day for the time of year. rather different story, though. farther north, further some further north, with some rain persisting , particularly across further north, with some rain perrfar ng , particularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north articularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north of icularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north of scotland cross further north, with some rain perrfar north of scotland and. the far north of scotland and the far north of scotland and the north—west in particular, where the rain totals will start to build up. but despite the rain, will be fairly mild for rain, it will be fairly mild for the of year as high as 14
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the time of year as high as 14 degrees in north eastern scotland. then thursday, there's little for many areas little change for many areas apart from the far north where that front then clear that front does then clear through. we've got much through. and we've got much colder so colder air behind it. so we could some showers could see some snow showers starting to fall over the hills . starting to fall over the hills. and generally there just will be a cold feel to the wind. that cold field will become more widespread into friday and will last into the weekend with
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>> good evening and welcome to patrick christys. tonight at get a load of this guy. argentina's new president wants the falklands back. well, he can come and get them if he wants. we sent the rgs packing once and will do it again. and we will be joined by a british hero, an
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outright global megastar. everybody seems to like nigel, not just me . not just me. >> i think the general public themselves. and if you want a sneaky tanning bed, put it on. put it on. nigel phil the power. >> taylor doesn't just back nigel in the jungle. he backs him to be pm as well. i've got it all from the best darts player of all time. on the day he announces his retirement and his message to the his stirring message to the british people and we go live to australia for exclusive reaction to nigel farage's a day in the jungle with ben leo. good lad. well, apparently , apparently well, apparently, apparently tensions are bubbling over with arch remainer. fred and ant and dec have just done a massive pop at gb news. we'll have some reaction to that as well. ben leo's on the ground for us over there. heck of lot to go at. there. heck of a lot to go at. and top body language expert, the man dubbed the human lie detector analyses what's really going on for nigel farage down under we've got tomorrow's front pages faster than anyone else,
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andifs pages faster than anyone else, and it's the most entertaining paper of you anywhere on the telly. i guarantee you both of those things here to get busy on the sofa is suzanne evans. ronalde giar wardner and rebecca reed. this is patrick christys tonight and we're live . tonight and we're live. get your emails in gb views gb news dot com. all right. and dec coming across like nasty little men. tweet me at gb news. it's all go after the headlines . all go after the headlines. >> good evening. your top stories from the newsroom . stories from the newsroom. police searching for a group of missing teenagers say they've recovered four bodies from a crashed car in north wales. our national reporter theo theo chikomba is in garreg . theo, chikomba is in garreg. theo, what's the latest ?
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what's the latest? >> yes, well, it's been a sombre moment for the local community in a situation which ended up worse than they thought. >> four bodies were found in the search for missing teenager , search for missing teenager, others in what appears to be a tragic accident. >> according to north wales police . now jevon hurst harvey , police. now jevon hurst harvey, owen, wilf henderson and hugo morris, aged between 16 and 18, were travelling in this area on saturday for what was meant to be a camping trip between the four young teens rangers. >> now, officers say they have appeared to have died and the car that they were travelling in on this road which runs through the heart of greg on the a4 085. >> now , police have said i would >> now, police have said i would ask the families of these boys are afforded privacy at this desperate time. now for all of the police force and other agencies who are working in this extensive search left this area
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at around 6 pm. this evening. and of course, it's now a time for those families to mourn following the news and confirmation from north wales police this evening, our national reporter theo chikomba there. >> theo, thank you for that update. the national living wage will increase by almost 10, more than 2 million full time workers are set to benefit from a pay rise of more than £1,800 a year from next april. the announcement comes ahead of tomorrow's autumn statement . it tomorrow's autumn statement. it is . israel's tomorrow's autumn statement. it is. israel's prime minister says hostages taken from terror group hamas will be released in stages. benjamin netanyahu is holding a cabinet meeting as a possible hostage release deal could be imminent. earlier us officials said a tentative deal between israel and hamas that could see a pause in fighting and the release of hostages had been agreed . it would see the been agreed. it would see the release of 50 mostly women and children in exchange for 150
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palestinian prisoners . and a palestinian prisoners. and a pause, 4 or 5 days. lancashire police has been criticised for its handling of the disappearance of nicola burley. a review found failings in the way personal information about miss billy's health struggles was disclosed to the press, which contributed to wild speculation . it said that speculation. it said that non—reportable background information should have been provided to the media to help shape responsible reporting without disclosing sensitive information . an and the king and information. an and the king and queen have hosted a state banquet for the president of south korea and his wife. this evening . their majesties hosted evening. their majesties hosted 171 guests in the buckingham palace ballroom. the kings banquet speech praised south korean culture's remarkable ability to capture great imaginations. it's the first incoming state visit since the
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king's coronation and the second of his reign while the king used that banquet speech to throw in some unexpected references to korean popular culture, korea has matched danny boyle with joon ho , james bond with squid joon ho, james bond with squid game and the beatles. >> let it be with bts's dynamic or dynamite . our cultures share or dynamite. our cultures share a remarkable ability to captivate imaginations across the world to transforming a so—called soft power into a shared super power. >> this is gb news across the uk on tv , in your car, on digital on tv, in your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now back to . patrick to. patrick >> i have a message to the mad
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cat president of argentina. the falkland islands are ours back off. javier melaye, who can i just say actually really do quite like mainly because he does stuff like getting his chainsaw paw out and a load of other absolutely bonkers things . other absolutely bonkers things. >> minister of culture out ministry of the environment and sustainable development out ministry of women and genders and diversity out . and diversity out. >> yeah . and here he is >> yeah. and here he is expressing i will do that . expressing i will do that. this guy mean anyway right he's a complete maverick and he stuck it to the establishment clearly i absolutely love it. and anybody who makes hysterical socialist do this has my vote. but the man known as el loco has said this. argentina's sovereignty over the malvinas islands is non—negotiable. the malvinas are argentinian now we
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have to see how we are going to get them back. right? jorg on you lot tried it on once and we smashed it to pieces and we would do it again in case you forget. 255 british service personnel died defending that british territory. and not british territory. and we're not going desecrate memory going to desecrate their memory by to you. may by handing it back to you. may also remind you that 649 argentinian military personnel died in your failed invasion . died in your failed invasion. you were about as good at holding on to those islands as joe biden is holding on to the railings of an aeroplane staircase case. now el loco continues. now we have to make every effort to recover the islands through diplomatic channels. here's your diplomacy. britain put an end to this by humiliating argentina militarily. the falkland islanders put another end to it with a referendum in 2013 on a turnout of 92, 99.8% voted to remain a british territory, with only three people voting against it . presumably those three it. presumably those three people had names like juan
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francisco and carlos, or maybe they were blind and tick the wrong box. but either way, it's oven wrong box. but either way, it's over, mate . look, you've had over, mate. look, you've had your hand of god, all right? you've got your world cup said little world cup . just be happy little world cup. just be happy with that. we've got the falklands and we always will. and of but to respond now i'm joined again by political commentator suzanne evans. we've got former environment secretary ranil jayawardena mp and author and journalist rebecca reid . we and journalist rebecca reid. we cannot not surely lose the falklands to this nutter, nutter do you know i was really with him when he was ripping those ministries off the wall? >> i was saying, yeah, get rid of that one. get rid of. and then he ripped off ministry of education as well. and i thought, oh, i'm not so sure about this. yes. you thought trump interesting. my trump was interesting. my goodness. yourself we trump was interesting. my goo aless. yourself we trump was interesting. my gooa bumpy yourself we trump was interesting. my gooa bumpy ride ourself we trump was interesting. my gooa bumpy ride with lf we trump was interesting. my gooa bumpy ride with this we trump was interesting. my goo a bumpy ride with this one. got a bumpy ride with this one. but look, he can't say anything else. but he wants to else. but but that he wants to take the malvinas, the falkland islands argentine islands back because argentine argentina to argentina put an amendment to their in bind
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their constitution in 1994, bind all successive governments to this aim. so to be fair, you can't say anything else. but i'm just very grateful he's ruled out war. although i have to say our defence secretary, grant shapps, doesn't appear to have done because i gather he sent out hms forth to the to the to the falklands after a nine month absence. so i hope he's not ratcheting up here. but yeah, he can't anything else but that can't say anything else but that really. but as you said , the really. but as you said, the falkland islanders consider themselves to be british. they don't they don't want to be going back to argentina. >> suppose that does down >> i suppose that does come down to i mean, there was a war, there was referendum. i mean, there was a referendum. i mean, what this guy what more does this guy need? >> well, exactly. i mean, it's totally but it's you totally bonkers, but it's you know, he's playing to a domestic audience that wanted audience perhaps, that wanted to hear that from him. >> important thing that >> the important thing is that we those servicemen and we back those servicemen and women who are down there in the falkland right now. falkland islands right now. >> make that they've got >> we make sure that they've got the they've got the right resources, they've got the right resources, they've got the up coming. so i the right back up coming. so i actually anything that actually support anything that grant to make grant shapps is doing to make sure very clear that the sure we're very clear that the british control over the
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falkland islands to falkland islands is here to stay. absolutely stay. and you're absolutely right, patrick, you know, british. british forces died to protect the falkland islands and to defend the self—determination of the people there. and we should always remember that. so rebecca, you give it back, wouldn't you give him back? >> yeah, i would give it back. and i think the idea that we would let more people die to defend a of mostly defend a bit of rock, mostly wood birds. >> a very strategic bit of >> it's a very strategic bit of rock, isn't it? rock, though, isn't it? >> it gives us a bit of an >> well, it gives us a bit of an access to antarctica to watch the it's not the arctic like it's not antarctic. arctic of the antarctic. arctic one of the two. it. one of those. two. that's it. one of those. other than that, i'm not sure that it's actually desperately important. think more important. i think it's more that it's an argentinian that it it's an argentinian pride and pride thing, right. and i slightly disagree that on slightly disagree with that on the he has to make the idea that he has to make this because i think if this point because i think if he's to of the he's willing to get rid of the ministry of education, he's clearly too worried about clearly not too worried about about things differently. about doing things differently. they are raised to that they are raised to believe that the was stolen and they they are raised to believe that the raised was stolen and they they are raised to believe that the raised believe len and they they are raised to believe that the raised believe len eit'sthey are raised to believe that it's their that they should their right and that they should take it back. and it's a massive, massive point of national i just can't national pride. and i just can't
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see anybody could think it's see how anybody could think it's worth anyone over this. we worth anyone dying over this. we don't it. it's useful don't need it. it's not useful to well,i don't need it. it's not useful to well, i do think he's saying >> well, i do think he's saying anyone's to die. mean, anyone's going to die. i mean, that's ruled. that's the thing. he's ruled. he's saying wants he's saying he wants a diplomatic solution, not a not a. >> but then rishi said it's not for discussion. quite right. and it's not grown up response. >> you can keep asking for the diplomatic solution then, think. >> but i don't. i don't think saying it surely saying it's not up discussion the up for discussion is the opposite of diplomatic opposite of a diplomatic solution. >> you're kind of saying we've got give back or people got to give it back or people are going to die. that's not an opfion are going to die. that's not an option table. right. option on the table. right. hopefully ukrainian hopefully there is a ukrainian people. hopefully there is a ukrainian peooh, well, let's cede all your >> oh, well, let's cede all your territory russia. territory to russia. >> if we say we stop a war. >>— >> if we say we stop a war. >> no, but i don't think principle. but i don't. >> the of falkland >> the people of the falkland islands it very, very islands have made it very, very clear. well, we want to remain british. >> i think the ukraine situation is the people >> i think the ukraine situation is falklands the people >> i think the ukraine situation is falklands the pfeele of the falklands might feel they're british, this a they're british, but this is a this a piece of land that is this is a piece of land that is 168 the coast of 168 miles off the coast of argentina. are in the argentina. they are in the domesticity it? argentina. they are in the dor i esticity it? argentina. they are in the dori think/ it? argentina. they are in the dori think it's it? argentina. they are in the dori think it's a it? argentina. they are in the dori think it's a further >> i think it's a bit further than yeah, matters. than that. yeah, that matters. but but i mean. >> sorry, but does geography
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actually mean, i actually matter? i mean, i don't know current home know what your current home ownership need ownership state is. i don't need to pry ownership state is. i don't need to pry on but to pry on that. but hypothetically speaking, you know, used to hypothetically speaking, you knovyour used to hypothetically speaking, you knovyour flat used to hypothetically speaking, you knovyour flat or used to hypothetically speaking, you knovyour flat or house used to hypothetically speaking, you knovyour flat or house camei to own your flat or house came knocking one day and knocking on the door one day and asked about how things asked questions about how things were installed. well, were installed. yeah, well, yeah. once you've asked yeah. once you once you've asked them why is them where the boiler is, why is everything broken? >> have to say, well no, >> you'd have to say, well no, this legally, this this is mine now. legally, this is so sure. but i think if you. >> so sure. but i think if you. it's different to money changes hands. difficulty is if you hands. the difficulty is if you accept was taken in accept that when it was taken in the became belong the 18005, it then became belong to no, no. a5 to us. accept that. no, no. a5 in it belong to them. in the early 18005. and then it was taken agreed it taken treaties agreed that it was ours. >> therefore it is there that >> so therefore it is there that islands have said that should islands have said that it should remain line remain british. but that's line with the un's rules. >> of view it >> their point of view it remains. was it was remains. but it was it was largely largely largely it was largely uninhabited people uninhabited and then people and then in the 18005, somebody arrived is for arrived and went, this is for britain, released treaties that existed current existed prior to the current political geography of latin america. political geography of latin am buta. political geography of latin am but previous but the >> but previous but the argentinian is that argentinian view is that previous to that person arriving on a boat the 18005, it on a boat in the 18005, it belonged to argentina. >> it's ramping up in the inbox now. i'll just say this
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gbviews@gbnews.com. ivan's been on. just remind argentina that the vulcan can still fly. i think talking about he's ivan's up for it. ivan's up for the scrap. >> this is because there's a certain kind of person who gets a little bit of a i can't say what for the idea of a war. there are people who feel that what for the idea of a war. the last'e people who feel that what for the idea of a war. the last'e pecwe who feel that what for the idea of a war. the last'e pecwe whysomething the last time we did something really and it was really cool and great, it was the falklands and they want a return to it. right? >> tease ahead >> well, can i just tease ahead to quite a big way? to something in quite a big way? okay. because there's a few bits and out of the and bobs coming out of the jungle. now very jungle. that's right. now very shortly, be shortly, we are going to be heanng shortly, we are going to be hearing from the power hearing from phil the power taylor, greatest darts taylor, the greatest darts player that the world has ever seen. all right . player that the world has ever seen. all right. he's been backing nigel a little bit to win in the jungle and other things as well. ant and dec of apparently had another pop at gb news. i'm going to be asking whether or not these two are actually just quite unfunny and nasty or whether or not they need better scriptwriters. i don't we'll also of don't know. we'll also of course, going to be going live to with our very own to australia with our very own ben leo, who has whopping ben leo, who has got a whopping great inside track for us on
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great big inside track for us on what's really going on in the camp and what really is happening with nigel. we've also got a body language expert who's going to tell us exactly how nigel is really feeling in the jungle. are you not entertained and do you think i'm need to stop having a pop at gb news? hey look, how much would it cost to advertise gb news in on, you know, around. >> i'm a celebrity. absolutely fortune. take the hit . free fortune. take the hit. free publicity. bring it on. keep talking. ant and dec. >> well, the latest series of i'm a celeb is gaining huge traction because star traction because gb news star brexit broker nigel farage headed under . brexit broker nigel farage headed under. but brexit broker nigel farage headed under . but down brexit broker nigel farage headed under. but down in headed down under. but down in the jungle itv's host ant and dec seem to have focussed on us back home. watch >> i suppose with those kind of comments. that's why he's got his own show on gb news. >> oh god . gb news. yes, sorry. >> oh god. gb news. yes, sorry. after some of our comments over the last few days gb news have beenin the last few days gb news have been in touch and they have asked us to make it clear that keith their keith and linda aren't their only we're happy to
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only viewers. we're happy to clear up. and course, clear that up. and of course, they are absolutely right. >> absolutely some times they are absolutely right. >> dogylutely some times they are absolutely right. >> dog wanders some times they are absolutely right. >> dog wanders. some times they are absolutely right. >> dog wanders. in some times the dog wanders. in >> i mean, run . this is this is >> i mean, run. this is this is ridiculous . we can't stand for ridiculous. we can't stand for this stuff. i mean, keith and linda, for a start, the dogs offended. so, gary, ian, you know, they're all up in arms. >> well, this just proves why i don't watch this. this programme. i must confess to gb news viewers , i have much more news viewers, i have much more important things to do, like being on this great show. >> nobody currently working here, i think has crashed their car while drink driving recently, car while drink driving recer mean car while drink driving recermean , it's an interesting >> i mean, it's an interesting angle on this, isn't it? >> because first stone like really . really. >> well, it's interesting to hear you say that . seriously. it hear you say that. seriously. it is. and they have also had some other quite fruity characters in there. i mean, boy, george has got a past, hasn't he. >> he did on like if anybody doesn't know google what boy george has been up to, they do host some extraordinary people. and not sure their and also i'm not sure their mental track on and also i'm not sure their men people track on and also i'm not sure their men people haveick on and also i'm not sure their men people have been on and also i'm not sure their men people have been treated in how people have been treated in the has exemplary.
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the jungle has been exemplary. i just if you're going to just think if you're going to get you get into a position where you want snide things about want to say snide things about other you're opening other channels, you're opening yourself those back. >> your views . back. >> your views. i mean, do you think that do you think that nigel is clearly far from nigel farage is clearly far from the controversial the most controversial person they they're going they might think they're going for hanging fruit, but they might think they're going f
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shameful what you did. >> nigel. >> nigel. >> sadly, sadly , it was >> sadly, sadly, it was absolutely true . mass young men absolutely true. mass young men moving illegally through across borders , but it was about borders, but it was about demonising migrants. >> that was wrong. >> that was wrong. >> no, it wasn't even your view. it was. but it wasn't . it was. but it wasn't. >> it's not only just my view. >> it's not only just my view. >> right? so we're going to take you down under very shortly with ben. leo, there's a lot of reaction that, apparently. reaction to that, apparently. apparently fred has been quite sulky. again it's turned out it's backfired for fred from what i can gather, because the campmates you campmates rallied round. you made grilling made us uncomfortable grilling nigel like that. i did really thoroughly the fact that thoroughly enjoy the fact that nigel doubled nigel completely doubled down on it. was wiggle room on it. there was no wiggle room on it. there was no wiggle room on it whatsoever . i mean, ronald, it whatsoever. i mean, ronald, is that the kind of conviction and that you like to see? and belief that you like to see? >> fundamentally. >> yeah, fundamentally. and you know people know what? the british people agree. the there agree. the you know, the there are many hardworking people, are so many hardworking people, including come here including migrants who come here lawfully, work every hour of lawfully, who work every hour of every day. and they know that it's really unfair that people come here illegally. what do you think about being a new think about nigel being a new daddy one day? >> do you think nigel might
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>> mm do you think nigel might take the big cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi the big cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just the big cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just had he big cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just had to big cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just had to bei cheese? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just had to be clearse? >> mm do you think nigel might takyi just had to be clear what >> i just had to be clear what you were talking. you know , you you were talking. you know, you told me, daddy , i think nigel's told me, daddy, i think nigel's got some important work to do here on gb news. >> yes, fair enough. i mean, he's currently the. the big daddy for a load of cockroaches and i think a lamb's teat at the moment, but not sure nigel moment, but i'm not sure nigel would feel about being reynolds big daddy. we should big daddy. maybe we should educate me more here. >> coming up . >> coming up. >> coming up. >> coming up. coming >> coming up. coming up. >> coming up. coming up. yes, we've uk's most we've got the uk's most entertaining paper of you. you won't bored as my panel of won't be bored as my panel of news experts through the news experts chew through the latest headlines. off the latest headlines. hot off the press and next, gb news press. and next, gb news superstar brexit hero nigel farage has taken the i'm a celeb jungle by storm again tonight. so we've got live from australia ben leo. he's got the verdict of day three down under. plus why lorraine kelly's jibe at nigel has landed her in a heck of a lot of hot water. and we've got a body language expert to unpick. nigel's dramatic showdown with ramona . fred
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showdown with ramona. fred sirieix yeah , i know. me sirieix yeah, i know. me nehhen sirieix yeah, i know. me neither. don't move
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& co weeknights from . six well, & co weeknights from. six well, here we go. >> our very own nigel farage is conquered day three in the jungle with his fun can do attitude not being the only thing though, that he's laid bare. yeah, that's a video of his bum. anyway live from down under our very own reporter ben
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leo is beachside for the inside scoop to see if the brexit king can add another crown to his collection . ben, what have you collection. ben, what have you got for us? >> evening, patrick. hope you're well. yeah. cracking couple of first days for nigel. getting right stuck into the first bushtucker trial. the jungle pizzeria, where, of course , you pizzeria, where, of course, you saw him munching on anything from camel back side. i'll say to crocodile penis as he earned lots of stars for the camp, earned lots of plaudits as well from guys online and all the fans. tonight's episode a bit lacklustre in terms of coverage from nigel. he wasn't chosen for tonight's bushtucker trial. nella rose , the youtuber, was nella rose, the youtuber, was picked for that and actually the cameras and the mics picked nigel up whispering to grace dent that he was a bit disappointed really not to have been chosen because he wanted the he said , if you do the airtime. he said, if you do a bushtucker you get 25% a bushtucker trial, you get 25% of the airtime. so he was a little disappointed that little disappointed on that front he did front in terms of what he did get tonight. it was an emotional
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chat with the campmates about his plane crash that he had a couple of years ago. he was flying. must have been about 15 years ago now. he was flying a small aircraft. he was a passenger with a banner off the back of promoting brexit. back of it promoting brexit. basically calling for independence. is the moment independence. this is the moment he sat down with his camp mates and had an emotional chat about he sat down with his camp mates ancnear—death)tional chat about he sat down with his camp mates ancnear—death experience: about he sat down with his camp mates ancnear—death experience .about his near—death experience. that's where you get like phones 4u, spears and stuff going. >> battles like those guys. >> battles like those guys. >> i just saw you doing a bit of a workout over there. >> yeah, i have to. really? >> yeah, i have to. really? >> why? >> why? >> because i've had a neck reconstruction and i smashed everything more than once . so if everything more than once. so if i do it, i'll be in i don't do it, i'll be in a terrible state. you smash it. a car and a plane crash. car crash and a plane crash. a plane crash. a plane crash? yes. >> what were you doing the >> what were you doing at the time, when you were time, nigel, when you were flying a plane? >> where are going? yeah, >> where are you going? yeah, well, big an idiot flying bannen >> oh, wow . well, it wasn't the >> oh, wow. well, it wasn't the banner , was it? who are you? banner, was it? who are you? brexit message, obviously. oh it
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was quite a funny moment, actually, because the campmates thought and assumed that he was flying a banner for some sort of romantic proposal. >> but no, it was just to promote brexit. the die hard independence man. he is because of that plane crash, he suffered , he had a reconstructed neck. he had a bad back, which he still suffers with today. and actually, we saw some shots of him picking up some logs and doing some exercises, which the campmates were quite impressed at. the injuries at. but because of the injuries suffered crash, it means suffered in that crash, it means he's from the bushtucker he's exempt from the bushtucker trial so again, he's trial tomorrow. so again, he's going to be disappointed that he gets no airtime. one thing that has got chins wagging in recent days, think it happened this days, i think it happened this morning. time was lorraine morning. your time was lorraine kelly commenting off the back of nigel's. now infamous shot in the waterfall shower when itv's josie gibson strolled past, looked up and saw nigel's bear behind on lorraine in what i think is actually quite a spiteful comment was taking the mic and essentially body shaming
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. nigel laughing away with two female guests. she had on the show cackling away and she said that she couldn't believe he was 59. he looks much older than he does and he has the face that he deserves . does and he has the face that he deserves. this is the moment. take a look what 59? >> he's got plenty of years ahead of him if he wants to get going again. he's the only 59. >> i thought he was a hell of a lot older than that. >> that's astonishing. it just shows you get face, you shows you you get the face, you deserve. you deserve. yeah. thankfully you know, look, in previous days, i've tweeted about the fact that people some people are moaning that ant and dec have been having digs at gb news and nigel. >> i mean, there was another one tonight, which you mentioned, patrick, people upset patrick, that people were upset over two viewers over the whole two viewers thing. think it's and my thing. i think it's funny and my kind was , you know, it's kind of vibe was, you know, it's just a joke. don't take to just a joke. don't take it to heart. but in fact, heart. but in actual fact, lorraine's this morning lorraine's comments this morning were spiteful . so make of were a bit spiteful. so make of that what you will. but anyway, plenty more to come in the next three weeks. >> 5 three weeks. >> a legend. thank >> ben, you're a legend. thank you try to you very much. and try try to survive there on the gold coast
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with your son and your cocktails mate. i'll see you in a bit. okay. right. now, for those okay. all right. now, for those of you keeping up with nigel's progress, have seen this progress, you may have seen this spicy ruckus with french restauranteur fred shrieks . restauranteur fred shrieks. let's take a look at this. i'm not fluent , but your poster , not fluent, but your poster, which i thought. >> well, i thought it was shameful what you did, nigel. >> sadly, sadly, it was absolutely true . mass young men absolutely true. mass young men moving illegally through across borders, but it was about demonising migrants saying that that was wrong. no, it wasn't even your view. it was, but it wasn't . wasn't. >> it's not really just my view . >> it's not really just my view. >> it's not really just my view. >> right. okay. so i'm going to turn now to behaviour and body language expert. it's darren stanton. darren, thank you very much. great to have you on the show. so look, what could you gauge from that clip that we've seen now? because who do you think was more uncomfortable? what's going on for you? what did really feel? did nigel really feel? >> i think fred was more >> i think i think fred was more uncomfortable and good evening, by the way, patrick.
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>> for having show . >> thanks for having the show. and one of the things i look for is a micro expression. >> now, goes deeper >> now, this goes much deeper than traditional body language because are because we only generally are able to flash one of seven emotions and in that short clip that you played , fred showed that you played, fred showed two, two one was disgust that which is kind of the crinkling it's a very quick gesture. >> so he was having none of what nigel was saying him . and nigel was saying to him. and also which is course also contempt which is of course , a one sided smile. also contempt which is of course , a one sided smile . and so , a one sided smile. and so there was a lot of anger as well. when someone when someone's eyebrows come together and are down, that shows and are pulled down, that shows that person is experiencing that the person is experiencing anger. that the person is experiencing anger . so he obviously wasn't anger. so he obviously wasn't accepting anything that nigel was to him . was saying to him. >> interesting. so you >> that's interesting. so you think that actually think that fred is actually actually getting very, very angry there at nigel? angry in there at nigel? i wonder if that's going to bubble oven wonder if that's going to bubble over. but nigel himself, i think, i mean, he's used to this stuff isn't he? but, but, but he did down think that did double down and i think that was quite good to see. >> think one of the >> yeah. i think one of the things that surprised a lot of people the, the actual just like the easiness that nigel's kind
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of integrated into the camp. i think a lot of people were expecting to see a very different version of him, especially , as your especially attacking, as your colleague said earlier, the bushtucker trial. i mean, you know, sort of straight know, to sort of go straight into it's quite an into that, it's quite an horrific of process to go horrific sort of process to go through. and he i think the one thing that came out for me as well is the first episode when he actually coaching his he was actually coaching his bella. know, he was a bella. and you know, he was a very kind of calming force with her. she was quite anxious and irritable. and i noticed that that nigel was kind of coaching her and keeping her calm while she went through and got the stars. that was quite interesting. >> look, i've got another clip for from tonight. so for you from tonight. okay? so we're have a little we're going to have a little look and a listen now and i'll get to analyse it's get you to analyse it. it's about being about about nigel being quizzed about if being unpopular, if he minds being unpopular, let's away. so where do let's take it away. so where do you kind of up in a room you kind of stand up in a room and a speech and make a speech that's incredibly unpopular? >> you think it's that >> do you think it's that flavour it that's kind of you flavour of it that's kind of you only and so today , only live once. and so today, but you mind being but you don't mind being unpopular ?
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unpopular? >> well, it depends who you're unpopular with. >> you know, like they come down. >> what do you make of that? you know, nigel being asked with a naughty mind is being unpopular. well, you've seen well, you you've just seen now, what think ? what do you think? >> i think the end of the day it shows an authenticity, know, shows an authenticity, you know, so of other so maybe a lot of other politicians i mean, i analyse this last year when matt hancock was there who i felt was was in there who i felt was playing a little bit of a strategy sometimes. whereas one thing think has come over thing that i think has come over to and obviously worked thing that i think has come over to you d obviously worked thing that i think has come over to you d obvquite worked thing that i think has come over to you d obvquite a worked thing that i think has come over to you d obvquite a lotnorked thing that i think has come over to you d obvquite a lot and ad with you guys quite a lot and nigel well, just come over nigel as well, it just come over as authentic you as being very authentic and you know, or him, he know, love him or hate him, he will tell you what he thinks. i just think that from a, just think that he came from a, you point of being open you know, a point of being open and honest and giving his true views. >> yeah. and so the body >> yeah. and so that's the body language you're getting language that you're getting from in there, is , from nigel in there, which is, you know, quite relaxed and as far as you're concerned, he's got much less of a game plan , got much less of a game plan, you think, psychologically than matt hancock yeah, absolutely . matt hancock yeah, absolutely. >> i think it's just gone in there. yeah, naturally. so he wants the airtime and things like that. but i think one thing
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that struck me is he has gone in there and emerged as the natural leader with josie. him there and emerged as the natural leadjosieth josie. him there and emerged as the natural leadjosie haveie. him there and emerged as the natural leadjosie have ie. the m and josie have become the kind of father of of mother and father of the group, especially with, you know, um, jamie lee, who seems group, especially with, you kn be um, jamie lee, who seems group, especially with, you kn be urtearsnie lee, who seems group, especially with, you kn be urtears all lee, who seems group, especially with, you kn be urtears all the who seems group, especially with, you kn be urtears all the time seems group, especially with, you kn be urtears all the time .eems group, especially with, you kn be urtears all the time . um,; to be in tears all the time. um, so i know josie has been consoling quite lot, but consoling me quite a lot, but nigel just seemed i think people have seen a bit of a softer side to um in scenes. to nigel. um in scenes. >> look. darren thank you. great stuff that love it. and no doubt i'll be calling on you very regularly. is this series progresses that's the wonderful darren stanton there tv's darren stanton there from tv's human lie detector thank you very , very much. now nigel has very, very much. now nigel has of course, taken the i'm a celeb camp by storm so far. don't miss the reaction. no from darts legend phil, the power taylor. all right. he's tipped the gb news to star become this year's king of the jungle. and much, much more as well . much more as well. >> everybody seems to like nigel, not just me. i think the general public themselves. >> if you want a sneaky >> and if you want a sneaky tenner bet, put it on. put it on. nigel one of britain's greatest ever sportsmen tees off very, very shortly .
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very, very shortly. >> but next in the uk's most entertaining paper review, you won't be bored as my panel of news experts chew through the latest headlines. they're hot off press. what's on the off the press. what's on the front pages? tell you
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radio. >> you are just moments away from darts. legend phil, the power taylor revealing what he thinks of nigel, what he thinks about the jungle and a positive message for the british people as well . after another bombshell as well. after another bombshell day , down under continues. but day, down under continues. but let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight . now let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight. now in most tonight. now in the most entertaining paper of you, you will anywhere telly. the will get anywhere on telly. the very first front pages have just been to me for been hand—delivered to me for my press start with the press pack. we start with the daily mail . press pack. we start with the daily mail. £4. we press pack. we start with the daily mail . £4. we have press pack. we start with the daily mail. £4. we have a press pack. we start with the daily mail . £4. we have a very daily mail. £4. we have a very sad story. this four pals who went camping and never came home. this is an absolutely devastating story. four teenagers may have lain undiscovered in their upturned car for 48 hours. we'll have more on that in a sec. you'll be
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getting more of it in our bulletins as well. the sun, very, very similar story here. four pals die in crash. so young, four teenage friends at the frantic search the centre of a frantic search on the side of that, as was with the as well. the same the mail as well. the same picture , the picture picture story, the royal picture special shows, kate looking stunning, arriving at the palace, the national goes off. something different. okay. so the newspaper that supports an independent scotland, they said scotland killing . scotland says stop the killing. scottish parliament votes for immediate ceasefire in gaza. protests outside holyrood, his desperate pleas for peace . a5 desperate pleas for peace. a5 we're going over to the independent now, this is going to be a massive story tomorrow because hunts all tatum to the disabled w.f.h work from home or lose your benefits . charities lose your benefits. charities attack work from home policy that will punish people with serious mobility and mental health issues. that's according to the independent. they've also, of course, got that picture story there of those tragic four lads who passed away . the daily telegraph biggest tax cut for businesses in 50
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years. hunt vows to support entrepreneurs and is also expected to cut national insurer lawrence. we've got a few other bits and bobs here. calais migrant chief absent for past decade. a french police chief in charge of preventing migrant crossings in the channel has been absent for 14 years. while he spends his time golfing, swimming , etcetera . he spends his time golfing, swimming, etcetera . uh, and we swimming, etcetera. uh, and we are also going to finish this off now with the times netanyahu backs deal to free women and children held by hamas. they've also got hunt offers tax cuts for workers and businesses, but yet tonight, like i was saying, the times has revealed the huge policies announced in jeremy hunts autumn statement tomorrow, including a national insurance cut for 28 million brits, as well as making permanent a £10 billion annual tax break for businesses . the chancellor will businesses. the chancellor will bill this as the biggest tax cut for businesses in modern british history. i'm going to start with
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that with my wonderful panel . that with my wonderful panel. and i'm joined by political commentator suzanne evans, former environment secretary ranil jayawardena, and author and journalist rebecca reid. look i'll start with you on this. the biggest tax cuts for a decade.i this. the biggest tax cuts for a decade. i mean , i suspect you decade. i mean, i suspect you should hope so. otherwise you're knackered. are you? >> yeah, i mean, look, if what's published true and we'll wait published is true and we'll wait to what happens, of course, to see what happens, of course, tomorrow , this is massive step tomorrow, this is a massive step in the right direction. clearly you know, tax is very high right now. we know it would go up even higher labour. but if we higher under labour. but if we can deliver tax not only to can deliver a tax not only to working people, a cut to an eye, but also to support businesses to grow, which will grow the economy , make more people get economy, make more people get good jobs, put more money in people's pockets . that's got to people's pockets. that's got to be a good thing. but, you know, this just a start a ten. this is just a start of a ten. and this is the and i think this is the important thing. we important thing. you know, we can't this it. we've can't just say this is it. we've got to keep going. we've got to keep growing the economy. we've got to keep cutting taxes, including year's spring budget.
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>> rebecca, your reaction >> okay. rebecca, your reaction to front there on the to that front page there on the times ? times? >> think it's about cutting >> i think it's about cutting the taxes taking the right taxes and taking the right money from the right amount of money from the right amount of money from the right of people. right amount of people. and i feel things like the living feel like things like the living wage going feels like a great wage going up feels like a great thing. going thing. i think that's going to be i think cutting an be fantastic. i think cutting an eye people who earning eye for people who are earning over whatever feels over 150 grand or whatever feels a silly. you're earning a bit silly. if you're earning a lot, might still be lot, you might as well still be paying lot, you might as well still be paying at the same rate paying an eye at the same rate as you were before. okay. >> a reminder >> all right. just a reminder for that very shortly we're for you that very shortly we're going to fill the going to be going to fill the power. going to be power. taylor he's going to be talking in the talking about nigel in the jungle we've a jungle as well. we've got a couple other clips for you. couple of other clips for you. new from nigel down under new clips from nigel down under and reaction well ant and some reaction as well to ant and some reaction as well to ant and to cracker and dec decided to cracker very naughty joke news expense. naughty joke at gb news expense. how very they suzanne how very dare they but suzanne can i get you on on the national front page just to move it on a little bit from tax which i think we can all agree is snoozeville a lot of the think we can all agree is snoozisn'te a lot of the think we can all agree is snoozisn't it? a lot of the think we can all agree is snoozisn't it? scotland)t of the think we can all agree is snoozisn't it? scotland when he time, isn't it? scotland when you're paying it, isn't true. you're paying it, it isn't true. yeah, true. bankrupt yeah, that's true. bankrupt >> are you suggesting that patrick tax ? patrick doesn't pay tax? >> no. when you are paying it for me and very dodgy accountant. >> so can i have his number?
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scotland says so. scotland says stop this. stop the killing. scottish parliament votes for immediate ceasefire in gaza. look, do you think that hamas could cares about what humza yousaf says? >> and neither of course does benjamin netanyahu. neither of them are quaking in their boots, are they? it's just a virtue signalling vote from the scottish parliament and nobody cares, really. you think? >> absolutely nobody cares. well, you make of this well, what do you make of this riddle? you know, scotland is now saying killing. we now saying stop the killing. we want a ceasefire. what you want a ceasefire. what do you make parliament has >> the scottish parliament has no more business talking about foreign than basingstoke no more business talking about foreign does. than basingstoke no more business talking about foreign does. it's|n basingstoke no more business talking about foreign does. it's absolutelyoke no more business talking about foreign does. it's absolutely ae council does. it's absolutely a waste of time , a waste of waste of time, a waste of taxpayers money that they've spent time doing this actually, what they should doing is what they should be doing is focusing on the public services in scotland, which are dire. and, you know, the truth is that, you know, these israeli government is trying to defend and the israeli people from what was an absolutely horrific act of terrorism, i would absolutely concede, though they've got to
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be proportionate in the way they exercise that power. >> yeah, well, i think stop the killing is a very emotive way of putting it because, of course, everyone the everyone wants to stop the killing. nobody to killing. nobody wants to see more that the more killing. i think that the situation that's being discussed with or 5 day break and with a 4 or 5 day break and exchange is a much, exchange of hostages is a much, much way forward much more sensible way forward than this. this just feels like a ourselves into a way of putting ourselves into a way of putting ourselves into a it's bit. a conversation which it's a bit. >> yeah, you've actually >> yeah, i think you've actually genuinely nail on the genuinely hit the nail on the head stop the killing. head there. stop the killing. we've seen similar slogans we've seen similar ish slogans branded the killing, you branded stop the killing, you know, black lives things know, black lives matter, things that true. that are like demonstrably true. >> absolutely true. >> but then you look at it, well, it? what does it well, what is it? what does it all does all all really what does it all really mean? all really what does it all reaiand|ean?this is stop the >> and also this is stop the killing, not release the hostages. yeah. >> release hostages. >> so sided. >> so one sided. >> so one sided. >> true. now, can i just >> very true. now, can i just make a slight observation here about national pages? make a slight observation here ab
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rebecca, you were talking to me a little bit off air because i was wondering, well, itv's ratings are they've plummeted. but you don't think that's because people are boycotting for nigel, do you? i don't think say boycotts, generally speaking, work. speaking, don't work. >> have the >> people don't really have the attention span to maintain them. what's happening is what's actually happening is that lot what's actually happening is th.reality lot what's actually happening is th.reality tv lot what's actually happening is th.reality tv shows lot what's actually happening is th.reality tv shows that lot what's actually happening is th.reality tv shows that the ot of reality tv shows that the viewership is going down. love island exact same island has had the exact same problem were people island has had the exact same prob claimed were people island has had the exact same prob claimed because yeople who claimed it's because they were because the were boycotting because of the mental around it. mental health crisis around it. it's not that, it's that it's the same format and the same format over and over again. what do again. people get bored. what do you for people you think, reynold, for people who boycotting something you think, reynold, for people who nigeltting something you think, reynold, for people who nigel farage mething you think, reynold, for people who nigel farage isething because nigel farage is appearing it? because nigel farage is appwell,] it? mean, people >> well, look, i mean, people should they can should have choice. they can do what want and certainly what they want and certainly on the the fence, the other side of the fence, i've always said broke. i've always said go, go broke. you should be able you know, people should be able to vote with their feet. but i tell what, nigel farage tell you what, nigel farage being not the being on that program is not the reason not watch it. reason to not watch it. you know, you for know, i'll tell you that for free is quite refreshing , free is quite refreshing, actually, genuinely to you actually, genuinely to hear, you know, at least saying know, an mp is at least saying that is too busy at his work that he is too busy at his work to actually go and watch something like, i'm a celebrity, you know? >> what do you think of this,
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this supposed of this supposed backlash of results of nigel farage? >> don't think it's >> i don't really think it's happening. actually more happening. i think actually more people i must admit i don't watch. celebrity, i watch. i'm a celebrity, but i have because nigel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. because nigel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. why because nigel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. why wouldn'tause nigel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. why wouldn't i?;e nigel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. why wouldn't i? and gel is watch. i'm a celebrity, but i hayit. why wouldn't i? and iel is on it. why wouldn't i? and i think a lot of people will be doing that as well. >> yeah. well can i just >> yeah. yeah. well can i just tease ahead to something i'm very glad about this. we've got tomorrow home tomorrow and former home secretary is going secretary priti patel is going to on the show in very big to be on the show in a very big way, reacting to the autumn statement. whilst i've got statement. so whilst i've got your attention. all right, make sure set your sure you tune in, set your alarms, because priti alarms, because tomorrow, priti patel, it will be completely unguarded, holds barred. she unguarded, no holds barred. she doesn't back at the best of doesn't hold back at the best of times, going to times, does she? she's going to be this show. but look, be live on this show. but look, loads still come because loads more still to come because were international were the international cricket council to trans women council right to ban trans women from in the female from competing in the female category? my panel will return to thrash that one out in the latest edition of greatest britain and jackass . but britain and union jackass. but next, nigel farage. he's next, yes, nigel farage. he's storming the aussie jungle. former darts legend phil the power. taylor reckons that he would make an excellent prime minister to farage. >> he's good at politics. i like
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him. i'd vote for him if he was prime minister. trust me . prime minister. trust me. >> stay tuned for much more of that and a couple of other unguarded clips from nigel farage in the jungle and the way the itv have chosen to react to it. more of that interview with dance legend next. don't you dare miss out .
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now. earlier today, i sat down with dance legend phil the power taylor, 16 time world champion . taylor, 16 time world champion. well, he's announced that he will retire from the sport by the end of 2024. phil spoke openly about his admiration for our very own nigel farage and even hinted at his own jungle adventure . here it is. got to adventure. here it is. got to ask, really, i mean, what now? what next anyway? when you retire, you know, you are from from where i'm sitting and from where i know the gb news viewers and listeners are sitting as
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well. you know, you are an absolute legend . you're an icon. absolute legend. you're an icon. you're a very articulate chap who clearly , you know, has his who clearly, you know, has his head screwed on about, i imagine a variety of things. i mean, can i ask, does a does a career in politics sway politics? >> no , not for me. nigel farage >> no, not for me. nigel farage is good at politics. i like him. i'd vote for him if he was prime minister. trust me, he doesn't i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any trust me, he doesn't i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any punches. he doesn't i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any punches. he doesn't i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any punches. he says;n't i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any punches. he says itt i'd vote for him if he was prime mini any punches. he says it how pull any punches. he says it how it is. and that's what i love about him. i get him on tiktok. i watch a lot of tiktok arade dam. he comes up dam. i love it. and he comes up many, you know, many, many times. you know, we've stopped my bank account or they've done this, done they've done this, they've done that, and he's dead, honest. that's about him. that's what i like about him. and says it as is. you and he says it as it is. you know, a of politicians watch know, a lot of politicians watch different politicians different shows of politicians is on and they never answer the questions . but nigel does . questions. but nigel does. >> yeah, it's quite refreshing. i think a lot of people and he is doing quite well in the jungle. i mean, he's going to be eating absolutely everything that they throw at him for the best three weeks, best part of three weeks, i think. isn't he? and doing goodness knows what, hey, i'm a
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celeb. ever come celeb. if they ever come knocking on your door , i've got knocking on your door, i've got an interview with them few an interview with them a few years ago, the time i years ago, but at the time i couldn't possibly done it because championships and because world championships and tournaments were around . tournaments were around. >> now would now and now i've jumped the chance. i think nigel's done you nigel's done brilliant. you know, in and everybody know, he come in and everybody seems like nigel. not just seems to like nigel. not just me. the general public me. i think the general public themselves . and you a themselves. and if you want a sneaky tanner bet, put it on. put it on. nigel but he's doing well. five stars other night well. five stars the other night with the with these , with these with the with these, with these challenge. so he's done really well the letters you know some of the people in the jungle at the minute i've never heard of them know they so them don't know who they are. so you anytime a celebrity you know, anytime a celebrity but i've honest to god, i'm 63. so i haven't got a clue. so some of these people i'm asking me why. who's that? i don't know. no, you know, it's weird. we don't watch these reality shows and things like that. >> we watch the phil, the power taylor they're speaking for the nation. i'm just getting in nation. and i'm just getting in my another little my ear. we've got another little bit ant and dec bit of content from ant and dec making another joke at our
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making anotherjoke at our expense in our expense. never >> oh, we've already seen nigel farage naked in the shower this week. and now he's gone and got wood. >> no, thank you . no, not for me >> no, thank you. no, not for me . where you get that? >> that's bogus. . where you get that? >> that's bogus . spears . where you get that? >> that's bogus. spears and stuff going down like those do you think, suzanne, that it's a little bit cheap? >> what ant and dec are doing with these gags? is it low hanging fruit or is it all all right? >> oh, it is a bit cheap, isn't it, really? but. but as i said, it's all publicity for gb news. and, you know, you never know. it might just get somebody to tune in and see what's really going on as opposed to what they think. that going on as opposed to what they thinkof that going on as opposed to what they thinkof advertising that going on as opposed to what they thinkof advertising . that kind of advertising. >> would go the >> would you ever go into the jungle >> would you ever go into the jun i'm afraid not. you know, >> i'm afraid not. you know, that's beyond my talents, shall we say? well, nigel's got 1.5 million reasons to go into the jungle, so. >> don't know. think.i >> i don't know. i think. i think that's not enough. i think i change now . i could change your tune now. okay. just about
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okay. so sorry. i've just about got for this as well, got time for this as well, because i thought there'd be a nice, uplifting way end nice, uplifting way to end the show. phil during show. so i asked phil during what could sometimes feel a little bit like a bleak and dark time for this country , whether time for this country, whether or not he a national hero, arguably our most successful ever sportsman, actually. phil the power. taylor could give a little message for you at home. here he is . here he is. >> i would say keep your chin up. keep pushing forward . and up. keep pushing forward. and you know, when you knock you down, it's you've got to get back up again. you know, world is cruel. is a horrible place is cruel. it is a horrible place at times. you know , even your at times. you know, even your local town, you've got to be careful when you know, you've got streetwise. got to be streetwise. when you got to be streetwise. when you got there because there are people there were not nice people up there were not nice people. keep your wits people. and keep keep your wits about work hard and about you and work hard and that's whatever that's all you can do. whatever you're good at, then dedicate yourself sure you yourself and make sure that you try earn a good living. try and earn a good living. >> wise words . wise words, that >> wise words. wise words, that man. well, it's time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union. jack has suzanne your greatest britain
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>> it's the international cricket council for saying we're banning men who become women from the sport. about time . um. from the sport. about time. um. >> mhm. okay. yeah. i know. i think a lot of people are thinking that the tide is really seriously turning on that now. >> ranil yeah, that's a better nomination . mine is. david lord nomination. mine is. david lord cameron we cameron because they, we disagreed on brexit. i welcome him coming back to public service. that's a good thing to do. >> quite surprised that you said that maybe because you that is it maybe because you think the next think he's going to be the next leader want to come? leader and you want to come? >> well, i think even the conservative accepts not >> well, i think even the cons> well, i think even the cons> well, i think even the cons> well, i think even the condoes lords anymore.ts not >> well, i think even the condoes ityrds anymore.ts not >> well, i think even the condoes it justanymore.ts not >> well, i think even the condoes it just reminde.ts not >> well, i think even the condoes it just reminde.ts |of >> does it just remind you of being teenager and it makes being a teenager and it makes you safe? you feel safe? >> hearing him the >> you know, hearing him at the 22 yesterday, wonderful. 22 yesterday, it was wonderful. i'll it was absolutely i'll tell you, it was absolutely wonderful. well there we go. i'll tell you, it was absolutely worgorful. well there we go. i'll tell you, it was absolutely worgo on. well there we go. >> go on. >>- >> go on. >> mine is sadiq khan, who usually can't stand, but am usually i can't stand, but i am very this orb that very anti this orb thing that he said the level of said no to. i think the level of noise light pollution that noise and light pollution that normal would have had to normal people would have had to have put with have have put up with would have been awful. house prices would have tanked once. i think he made tanked for once. i think he made a sensible decision. >> your anti orb. >> i'm deeply anti orb. benjamin butterworth here yesterday defending the orb. tonight i'm anti go.
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anti orb. yeah. there you go. >> from the left. okay >> a range from the left. okay so just on that not a thing britain my greatest britain is of course, the icc. yes that's right. international cricket council coming trumps right council coming up trumps right union jackass . yeah. union jackass. yeah. >> i'm tempted to change it for david cameron now, but i won't. i'll stick with my original idea. who is cliff richard now? i normally like cliff richard, but he fat shaming on the but he was fat shaming on the telly. very quick. >> good, very quick. we've got a little bit a to what little bit of a clue to what you're about at the you're talking about at the end of though, said of the interview, though, i said , can we put it off? >> because he was he put on a lot of weight. and i thought, if i'm having a photograph taken with him and it's going to be hanging on my refrigerator outer, he's got to look good. and i put it off. and of course, then he died. oh should never have put it off just because they're a little bit heavier . they're a little bit heavier. >> yeah, okay. >> yeah, okay. >> right now, quickly, we've discussed all the reasons why the nomination is the honorary nomination is javier melaye for trying to take over the falklands. >> god, mine is westminster council. they seem to love to get rid of anything that's nice
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about and they want about london. and now they want to of the street to get rid of the street performers and covent garden potentially vote week. potentially vote next week. >> today's union jack, it is cliff mean , actually cliff richard. i mean, actually tipping wants tipping the bloke who wants to wrestle sovereign wrestle off some sovereign british territory is really saying something there we saying something but there we go. look, can i just thank my wonderful new look? fantastic tuesday panel. excellent stuff . tuesday panel. excellent stuff. can i thank you, the wonderful viewers and listeners as well. i'll be back tomorrow at 9 pm, serving up some delicious content you as well. and content for you as well. and make sure that you tune in. keep a gb news for headliners who are banging at the door now on the way in. see you at nine. good evening. >> welcome to your latest gb news weather update. with me annie from the met office. it will be staying cloudier through tomorrow with some rain moving in from the north, but still some sunshine on across some sunshine on offer across southern areas with that high pressure still dominating the ridge, extending across many areas of england and wales. but further north, we've got a weather front in charge throughout this evening and that will charge into
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will stay in charge into wednesday and thursday as well . wednesday and thursday as well. so we've got rain arriving across much of western scotland, parts of northern ireland as well. further south, it'll stay dry tonight. and fog dry tonight. some mist and fog developing temperatures developing and temperatures falling than last night, falling lower than last night, as as 2 or 3, perhaps in as low as 2 or 3, perhaps in some southern counties. so a bit of a colder mystere start on wednesday morning. but the sunshine will come out throughout the afternoon once again. so not a bad day for the time of year. rather different story, farther north, story, though. farther north, further north, with rain further north, with some rain persisting particularly across further north, with some rain perrfar ng particularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north articularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north of icularly across further north, with some rain perrfar north of scotland cross further north, with some rain perrfar north of scotland ,'oss further north, with some rain perrfar north of scotland , the the far north of scotland, the north—west particular, where north—west in particular, where the rain totals will start to build . but despite the rain, build up. but despite the rain, it be fairly mild for the it will be fairly mild for the time of year, as high as 14 degrees in north eastern scotland. then thursday, there's little change for many areas apart from the far north where that then clear that front does. then clear through. and got much through. and we've got much colder air behind so we colder air behind it. so we could snow showers could see some snow showers starting to fall over the hills. and there just will be and generally there just will be a cold feel to the wind. that cold field will become more
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widespread into friday and will last into the weekend with temperatures falling to single figures . figures. >> widget . we're here for the >> widget. we're here for the show . well come to the dinosaur show. well come to the dinosaur hour with me. >> john cleese . haha that was >> john cleese. haha that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie second best. i'm bellissima. you interviewed saddam hussein. what's that like? >> i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. oh no, thank you . cd5 need to be no, thank you. cd5 need to be put in alphabetical order. >> oh, are you going to be problematic again ? problematic again? >> the dinosaur. our sundays at 9:00 on gb news. who's
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>> good evening. your top stories from the newsroom. police searching for a group of missing teenagers say they've recovered four bodies from a crashed car in north wales. a major search was launched after javon hurst harvey , owen, wolf javon hurst harvey, owen, wolf henderson and hugo morris failed to return home from a camping trip in the snowdon area on sunday. police confirmed their car left the road near tremadog . car left the road near tremadog. superintendent irwin llewellyn said earlier it appears to have been a tragic accident . the been a tragic accident. the chancellor is set to declare the economy is back on track when he gives his autumn statement tomorrow . jeremy hunt will tomorrow. jeremy hunt will unveil measures to boost businesses investment by £20 billion a year. cut tax and get more people working . hunt is more people working. hunt is also expected to slash national

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