tv Patrick Christys Tonight GB News November 22, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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>> good evening and welcome to patrick christie's tonight . patrick christie's tonight. yeah, jeremy from accounts put the nation into a coma this afternoon with his autumn statement. but we will liven it up for you because dame priti patel is on for unvarnished reaction and i will be debating whether the work shy should have their benefit stopped. there's a rumble outside the jungle as itv's lorraine kelly body shames nigel farage. get the fish you deserve. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so what i've done to deserve this. but there we go. kim woodburn will strike back on that. she's fired up and ready to go. don't miss it. and home secretary james cleverly is in trouble for allegedly calling a
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labour mps town a whole . labour mps town a whole. >> why are 34% of children in my constituency living in poverty? >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> okay. and should britain ban sex workers? germany is considering it over fears that they have become the brothel of europe. it's a lively show tonight . and here to sprinkle tonight. and here to sprinkle some more sparkle on it are my panel all woman christine hamilton , the everyman, adam hamilton, the everyman, adam brooks , and well, whatever he brooks, and well, whatever he is, matthew laza . there we go. is, matthew laza. there we go. it's patrick christys. tonight andifs it's patrick christys. tonight and it's live . and it's live. james cleverly denies that, by the way. now email me right now gbviews@gbnews.com. what do you make of lorraine kelly body shaming nigel farage and should the work shy have benefits stop it. we're on at gb news on twitter. we'll get going after your headlines as.
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twitter. we'll get going after your headlines as . patrick, your headlines as. patrick, thank you. >> and our top story tonight, a raft of tax cuts and benefits increases aimed at making 27 million people better off was announced by the chancellor today in the biggest change outlined in his autumn statement, jeremy hunt said national insurance will be cut from 12 to 10% and the triple lock on pensions will be kept taking the state pension up by 8.5% to more than £220 a week. taxes on alcohol will be frozen until august next year, meaning no increase in duty on beer cider wines or spirits. no increase in duty on beer cider wines or spirits . now, the cider wines or spirits. now, the mother of a 28 year old woman shot dead in liverpool has labelled her daughter's killers monsters as they today were jailed for life for the murder. ashley dale was murdered when james witham forced his way into
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her home and opened fire with a machine gun. he and three other men were handed life sentences with minimum terms of between 41 and 47 years to serve with and co—defendant joseph pearce, nigel barry and shaun zeiss were all found guilty of murder and conspiracy to murder. ms dale's partner and the home town of four teenage boys who died in nonh four teenage boys who died in north wales has cancelled tonight's christmas lights switch on out of respect for the families involved . and jevon families involved. and jevon hirst harvey owen will fitchett , hirst harvey owen will fitchett, hugo morris all had set off on a camping trip to snowdon , but camping trip to snowdon, but their bodies were recovered yesterday after a car was found overturned and partially submerged in water. north wales police says it appears to have been a tragic accident, but . and been a tragic accident, but. and a man and a woman in their 30s have died after a migrant boat capsized off the french coast this evening . french and british
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this evening. french and british maritime agencies were called to reports of a boat in the water in difficulties about eight miles from the port of boulogne . miles from the port of boulogne. at around 5:00 pm. french officials say 60 people were crammed on board the small boat and it had begun sinking . some and it had begun sinking. some of the migrants were taken to dungeness in kent . it is , dungeness in kent. it is, israel's prime minister said tonight the red cross will be allowed to visit all remaining hostages in gaza . that comes hostages in gaza. that comes after israel agreed a four day pause in fighting beginning tomorrow morning, 50 pause in fighting beginning tomorrow morning , 50 hostages tomorrow morning, 50 hostages will be freed by the terror group hamas in exchange for 150 palestinian held in israeli jails. and here in the uk, the foreign secretary, david cameron, said the truce was a crucial step towards providing humanitarian relief to gaza as well . and some more detail on well. and some more detail on that breaking news we brought you about an hour ago from the
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us canada border , all four us canada border, all four international border crossings international border crossings in western new york have been locked down following a major vehicle explosion on the us canada border. it happened at the rainbow bridge crossing that's near niagara falls . that's near niagara falls. american media still reporting two people have lost their lives . the fbi has described the situation as very fluid. so to just recap on that for you, all four international border crossings between the us and canada in western new york have closed . and i can tell you that closed. and i can tell you that the us sorry, the prime minister of canada, justin trudeau, has said in the last few moments that the authorities are taking the situation an extraordinarily serious his words. we'll bring you more on that as we get it. now, the prime minister and his wife welcomed south korea's president and the first lady to number 10 in london today , yoon number 10 in london today, yoon suk yeol and rishi sunak signed
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a new long term agreement covering defence and technology. the deal covers improved military cooperation between the uk and south korea , focusing uk and south korea, focusing primarily on countering smuggling in the east china sea on tv, online dab+ radio and the tune in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel . the dull britain's news channel. the dull man award goes to jeremy from accounts whose single handedly caused a spike in nhs admissions today as his boring autumn statement puts us all into a coma . coma. >> did you have your personality bypass done on the nhs, jeremy, or did you go private? that's what want know. but despite what i want to know. but despite being about as engaging as a rainy trudging round rainy sunday trudging round a slough estate, slough industrial estate, looking right bit of looking for the right bit of guttering a marital partner guttering with a marital partner you longer love, jeremy hunt you no longer love, jeremy hunt did at least take axe to some did at least take an axe to some tax . and this what the tories tax. and this is what the tories need to keep reminding people. at not the other. at least he's not the other. >> see. i see the
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>> jeremy i see. i see the leader of the opposition shaking his head. in fact. leader of the opposition shaking his head. in fact . in fact, we his head. in fact. in fact, we do have something in common in both. he and i wanted to make a jeremy prime minister. in in fairness, his party and mine are probably equally relieved. we failed. but whereas this jeremy is growing the economy, his jeremy would have crashed. it >> that's probably the kind of 939 >> that's probably the kind of gag that ant and dec scriptwriter would call the joke of the century. it is flipping rich for the labour party to come out and try to present themselves as the responsible party for government. at the moment doesn't matter moment it doesn't really matter how shadow chancellor how many times shadow chancellor rachel sticks a high vis rachel reeves sticks a high vis jacket on and turns up wearing a hard hat at a building site, the fact is, labour is split over the middle east and always will be. they've bankrupted britain in quite in the past and will quite possibly again. and tony possibly do it again. and tony blair the whopping great blair started the whopping great big immigration nightmare that we've , which
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we've got today, which keir starmer almost definitely , starmer would almost definitely, in continue to make in my view, continue to make worse. look, let's just get down to basics on this, okay? some good stuff from hunt business tax cuts, alcohol duty, frozen national insurance cut by 2% and the pensions triple lock upgraded and secured . he also upgraded and secured. he also said that the work shy taking benefits will have to find work within 18 months. do a forced work placement or have their benefits stopped. this is a good thing . thing. >> every year we sign off over 100,000 people onto benefits with no requirement to look for work because of sickness or disability . that waste of disability. that waste of potential is wrong economically and wrong morally for far too long, people of working age have been scrounging off the state and making you and i pay their way so they can sit inside all day watching a taxpayer funded flat screen telly with their feet up while we all go to work. >> but being a complete and
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utter wet lettuce , he obviously utter wet lettuce, he obviously didn't have the bottle to cut inheritance the same inheritance tax. in the same statement where he's talking about stopping benefits despite statement where he's talking abouannouncingenefits despite statement where he's talking abou announcing thatits despite statement where he's talking abou announcing that he'szspite also announcing that he's increasing the living wage. so be fair. the most exciting thing that happened in the chamber today had nothing to do with jeremy. accounts the new jeremy. from accounts the new home secretary was accused of calling one mps constituency oh. >> why are 34% of children in my constituency living in poverty? yeah well , james cleverly is yeah well, james cleverly is adamant that that wasn't him who said it. >> and to be fair, i really don't think it was . but that don't think it was. but that didn't stop the labour mp coming back for more. >> he was seen and heard to say because it's a no way . because it's a no way. >> i know he is denying being the culprit, but madam deputy speaken the culprit, but madam deputy speaker, the audio is clear and has been checked and checked and checked again . and there is no
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checked again. and there is no doubt that these comments shame the home secretary. this rotten government and the tory party >> okay , so fair play, jeremy . >> okay, so fair play, jeremy. the budget was fine. i suppose the tories really, really need to start hammering the labour party on how much worse things could be under their leadership. they've got to go on the attack more and not just bring up corbyn all the time . but the corbyn all the time. but the winner for me is this tell people stop your benefits people will stop your benefits if you work and don't . we've if you can work and don't. we've got to get people off their backsides and into the economy now , before i get my panel's now, before i get my panel's reaction on this, let me bring in tory mp for dudley north and the member of the new conservatives, marco longhi . conservatives, marco longhi. marco, thank you very, very much . i mean, look, some good stuff from jeremy in there. my concern is this is all going is that this is all going to pale significance because by pale in significance because by tomorrow we're going to be talking record talking about record net migration might migration figures and that might take gloss off any of the take the gloss off any of the good stuff. what do you make of
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all of this? good stuff. what do you make of all well,s? good stuff. what do you make of all well, i’ good stuff. what do you make of all well, i don't to get >> well, i don't want to get into the debate on net migration because you know exactly how i would about that. and it would feel about that. and it was good bump you this was good to bump into you this morning lambeth bridge, was good to bump into you this morway. lambeth bridge, was good to bump into you this morway. um,ambeth bridge, was good to bump into you this morway. um, so beth bridge, was good to bump into you this morway. um, so look,3ridge, was good to bump into you this morway. um, so look, yes, e, the way. um, so look, yes, i think for all the reasons you stated earlier, it was actually a good statement. and, you know, stated earlier, it was actually a g(the statement. and, you know, stated earlier, it was actually a g(the type nent. and, you know, stated earlier, it was actually a g(the type of nt. and, you know, stated earlier, it was actually a g(the type of nt. who you know, stated earlier, it was actually a g(the type of nt. who doesn't w, i'm the type of mp who doesn't hold back and i say it as it is. however, as a new conservative, i would have liked to have seen more. i'd have liked to have seen exciting and to be seen it more exciting and to be fair, i suppose to the chancellor, you can't do everything at the same time and we will obviously have a budget come the spring. so let's see, let's see what he's keeping up his sleeve for then. what i would have liked to have seen is look at that very engine for growth, which we all recognise are the small and medium enterprises. and i would have loved to have seen the vat threshold taken up to 250,000. i think it's about 85,000 right now. but that disincentivizes businesses from actually wanting to go and grow their business,
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employ more people because otherwise if they trip above 85,000 turnover, that means that they have to start charging everybody vat on top of all of the paperwork that that adds to their very small businesses. so i'd have i'd have loved to have seen vat threshold change. and i believe it's not inflation free in any way. and the same thing goes for ir35 because that really discourages the self—employed. we are now 800,000 down on since ir35 came in and we keep talking about them. they are being the engine of the economy. so i'm really hoping i'm really hoping that this is something the chancellor will look come the next will look at come the next budget . budget. >> okay. and you're absolutely fine with idea of telling fine with the idea of telling people who can work but won't that they've got 18 months to find a job. otherwise we'll do a forced work placement you forced work placement for you and don't take that, your and if you don't take that, your benefits , presumably then benefits stop, presumably then you're out on your backside. absolutely >> absolutely. as long as we keep those safeguards the
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keep those safeguards for the people who absolutely do need welfare as as a safety net rather than a way of life, which is what we're talking about. >> okay. one final one. very quickly with you, marco, if that's all right. do you not think the tories have got to go on the attack more here now and really be highlighting how much worse could be under worse things could be under labour? got 13 labour? because you've got 13 years behind you, which years of rule behind you, which technically now everything years of rule behind you, which te your ally now everything years of rule behind you, which te your fault, now everything years of rule behind you, which te your fault, unfortunately. ything is your fault, unfortunately. really? you got to really? so have you not got to go the offence now say go on the offence now and say look, this what labour would look, this is what labour would be this is what they're be like. this is what they're saying, what know be like. this is what they're sayi really what know be like. this is what they're sayi really stick/hat know be like. this is what they're sayi really stick itat know be like. this is what they're sayi really stick it to know be like. this is what they're sayi really stick it to them|ow be like. this is what they're sayi really stick it to them and and really stick it to them and i'll just keep bringing up corbyn. >> i completely agree. we need to sell ourselves an awful lot more notwithstanding ing the difficulties we've had as a party who's been in government, well, fully in government, i would say for eight years, not the 13, because we were shackled by the lib dems for the first five of those. as you know. but yes, you're completely right . we yes, you're completely right. we need to go out on the attack. we need to go out on the attack. we need sell ourselves an awful need to sell ourselves an awful lot but we also to lot more. but we also need to grow economy a lot, a lot grow the economy a lot, a lot
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more quickly. and do an awful lot that you will see in lot more that you will see in the new conservatives for lot more that you will see in the economy.ervatives for the economy. >> right. marco, >> all right. look, marco, always and hopefully always a pleasure and hopefully i'll into you on lambeth i'll bump into you on lambeth bridge soon. bridge again some day soon. marco longhi there of the new conservatives and the for conservatives and the mp for dudley now me dudley north. now joining me this evening, course, are my this evening, of course, are my wonderful panel. but jeremy hunt has benefits has announced a benefits crackdown. national crackdown. he cut national insurance the tax insurance by 2. but the tax burden still set hit burden is still set to hit a record high. was the chancellor's autumn statement radical ? and here they radical enough? and here they are, author and broadcaster christine hamilton. we've got businessman activist adam businessman and activist adam brooks and labour party brooks and former labour party adviser matthew laza christine , adviser matthew laza christine, if you can work and you don't work , you've got to get off the work, you've got to get off the sick and you've got to you have a benefit. stop now. absolutely >> i mean, i wish it had happened you need carrot >> i mean, i wish it had hap|sticki you need carrot >> i mean, i wish it had hap|stick and you need carrot >> i mean, i wish it had hap|stick and people need carrot >> i mean, i wish it had hap|stick and people likei carrot >> i mean, i wish it had hap|stick and people like that'ot and stick and people like that need the i'm afraid. but need the stick, i'm afraid. but what i was disappointed in wasn't carrot for other wasn't enough carrot for other people. mean, i would to people. i mean, i would like to have what's going to happen have seen what's going to happen now this famous now is because of this famous fiscal everybody fiscal drag which everybody knows and more knows about, more and more people going to be pushed people are going to be pushed into higher taxes. what
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into higher rate taxes. what happens people, they happens when these people, they come backsides, they happens when these people, they corwork backsides, they happens when these people, they corwork . backsides, they happens when these people, they corwork . the backsides, they happens when these people, they corwork . the enterprising:hey do work. the enterprising aspiring ones are going to want to do more . if they're going to to do more. if they're going to be taxed a billion, they're not going to bother. i would to be taxed a billion, they're not goingseen,»ther. i would to be taxed a billion, they're not goingseen, certainly, uld to be taxed a billion, they're not goingseen, certainly, asi to be taxed a billion, they're not goingseen, certainly, as marcoo have seen, certainly, as marco said, vat threshold reduced said, the vat threshold reduced for small businesses, but also the tax threshold the income tax threshold reduced. utterly absurd reduced. it's utterly absurd that as you push up a little bit more with your income, it's all taken and i think taken away from you. and i think rishi sunak, i may have the figures that i've got here i find extraordinary. the borrowing in march was borrowing forecast in march was 115 billion. i mean , it can't 115 billion. i mean, it can't get much worse than that, can it? it's now been reduced to 98 billion. to think billion. and i seem to think that that rishi seems to think in his alice in wonderland world that he's got a spare 17 billion to spend. he hasn't he needs to cut spending. there was nothing about that at all. i remember just one final thing. i remember nigel lawson's budget in 1988. it was so radical. the house of commons nearly had palpitations and he reduced the top rate from 60 that's what we need. 60 to 40. that's what we need. we need something. they are in
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the doldrums. they're not going to they need something to win. they need something really exciting. >> adam, do feel though, really exciting. >> .know, do feel though, really exciting. >> .know, dothe feel though, really exciting. >> .know, dothe momentthough, really exciting. >> .know, do the moment we've|, you know, at the moment we've got many people lives got too many people whose lives are too easy sitting at home doing and getting the doing nothing and getting the giro ? giro? >> i mean, that started with tony gordon brown, it tony blair, gordon brown, it become a life style choice if you wanted to be on benefits, you wanted to be on benefits, you could live on benefits . you could live on benefits. again, as someone said earlier , again, as someone said earlier, benefits should be there for those that genuinely need it, those that genuinely need it, those that genuinely need it, those that have hard times, you know, those that aren't so lucky. but it should never be a choice. benefits has been too easy to get over the last ten years in this country. and again, people there are towns in this country where many of them choose to live. the benefit lifestyle because they get so much and then their children follow. >> matthew matthew, i'm going to come back to you because look, the inbox, there are many people claiming benefits because they know to play the system, know how to play the system, says betty. thank you very much.
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betty gbviews@gbnews.com. matthew at least hunts matthew at least at least hunts getting the shy getting stuff on the work shy well i adam's right that well i mean adam's right that people should be in work and not on benefit if they can and that's under labour millions that's why under labour millions were taken off welfare and put into work and unemployment fell significantly. >> but this this is one of >> but this is this is one of those typical tory announcements which engaging, which which sounds engaging, which gets people fired up because of the headline. but the detail, the headline. but the detail, the devil is very much in the detail because this is all about taking 200,000 people and rather than them sick notes and than giving them sick notes and signing them off work, it's giving they giving them treatment while they remain work or seeking remain either in work or seeking work. one of the biggest work. well, one of the biggest things you can do to get people welfare off work is get the nhs waiting lists, are waiting lists, which are currently record cut. currently at record levels, cut. people for a hip people are waiting for a hip operation. they're limited in what can go do. what jobs they can go and do. and yet we see more people waiting in pain than ever before. and a knock on before. and it has a knock on effect. so yeah, look, labour is the work. it's in the the party of work. it's in the title. >> always have been nhs >> we always have been nhs waiting isn't going get waiting list isn't going to get any smaller and when we see any smaller as and when we see the net migration numbers
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announced which announced tomorrow, which are anticipated another anticipated to hit 700, another tory failure, well there you go. but it worse under but would it be worse under labour this would lower? labour and this would be lower? well it really? would it? how >> well, i mean first which >> well, i mean first of which bit. of the tory bit. which bit of the tory failure on migration you're talking about. we're talking about legal or illegal legal now. how. >> now. >> legal tomorrow. it's legal and answer and you haven't got an answer for that. >> got legal on legal on >> i've got legal on legal on legal migration. you need to close loopholes. need to close the loopholes. you need to process them properly. need process them properly. you need to who overstay to send people who overstay their home, of their visas home, none of which is happening. stamp is happening. people and stamp them this country. them all into this country. absolutely not. adam that's a tabloid myth. >> right. it's a spicy >> so, all right. it's a spicy start to the show. we love it. quickly two seconds. >> back the economy, >> going back to the economy, the show that the tories need to show that they're to be they're going to be conservatives. need to conservatives. they need to differentiate themselves from laboun differentiate themselves from labour. they're labour. at the moment, they're just on the tax just still on the tax cut. >> let's just remember that by freezing the tax thresholds, which did again it's which you did again today, it's dragged tax and dragged more people into tax and he's the equivalent a he's given the equivalent of a snp. a burglar who snp. it's like a burglar who robs house, steals robs your house, steals everything your house, everything in your house, and then find couple of things then you find a couple of things he's dropped on the on the way out. you're meant to say
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out. and you're meant to say thank you fair. >> jeremy burglar, >> if jeremy hunt was a burglar, he looks like he'd just give it back.i he looks like he'd just give it back. i he'd just wander back. i think he'd just wander in. actually, two days later, in. he actually, two days later, he got letter of apology and he got a letter of apology and something expensive in something really expensive in the now, still to come, the post. now, still to come, as meghan markle revisits a feminist climate change group meghan markle revisits a feminisfirstnate change group meghan markle revisits a feminisfirst timechange group meghan markle revisits a feminisfirst time sincee group meghan markle revisits a feminisfirst time since fleeing for the first time since fleeing the firm, has the duchess made the firm, has the duchess made the world significantly better the firm, has the duchess made the vthej significantly better the firm, has the duchess made the vthej sigfourantly better the firm, has the duchess made the vthej sigfourantly lthrough over the last four years through her taking her activism, we've been taking a what she's actually a look at what she's actually done and levin picks apart the sussexes charity work shortly. but good. next the but this is good. next in the clash, kelly has clash, tv's lorraine kelly has sparked cruelly sparked uproar after cruelly mocking nigel farage. face really? >> you get the you deserve. >> you get the face you deserve. yeah oh ouch. >> yeah. i mean , there's a lot i >> yeah. i mean, there's a lot i could say about that, but i can't, can i? i can't. now, tv firebrand kim woodburn has a few choice words for lorraine when she goes head to head with actress jenny barney, who i'm reliably informed it kicked off between the last time they between the pair last time they were they better on were on, so they better be on their behaviour this time. their best behaviour this time. i've .
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the people's channel, britain's news channel . we well, royal news channel. we well, royal commentator angela levin is coming up shortly. >> but now it's time for the clash . now has the mask slipped clash. now has the mask slipped for itv ? presenter lorraine for itv? presenter lorraine kelly here she is discussing our very own nigel farage on i'm a celeb , what, 59? celeb, what, 59? >> he's got plenty of years ahead of him if he wants to get going again. >> he's the only 59. >> he's the only 59. >> i thought he was a hell of a lot older than that. that's astonishing. it just shows you
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you get the face you deserve. yeah. thankfully, you okay? >> well, considering lorraine has spoken in the past about her struggles with weight and promoting body positivity, her recent dig at nigel seems a little bit out of character. dare i say it a little bit nasty and can you imagine the reaction if that had been a male person discussing a female contestant? so tonight i am asking should lorraine kelly apologise for body shaming? nigel farage and saying he's got the face he deserves? let me know your thoughts . email me thoughts. email me gbviews@gbnews.com. tweet me at gb news. in fact, pre—emptively, you've been you've been getting in touch already and some of them might even be able to actually read out live on air. but there's a poll taking place at the moment on our twitter. i'll bring the results very i'll bring you the results very shortly. now to debate this, i am cleaning guru , the shortly. now to debate this, i am and cleaning guru , the shortly. now to debate this, i am and only cleaning guru , the shortly. now to debate this, i am and only kim ning guru , the shortly. now to debate this, i am and only kim woodburn the shortly. now to debate this, i am and only kim woodburn ,the shortly. now to debate this, i am and only kim woodburn , and one and only kim woodburn, and tv presenter jenny barnet. right okay. so i'm going to start with you, jenny. do you think that
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lorraine was well within her rights to say that? is that not body shaming? and dare i say it even sexism? no if you could elaborate it, it'd be great if you will develop this. >> listen , if you're going to go >> listen, if you're going to go on, i'm a celebrity, get me out of here. >> you are putting yourself self up in the stocks for people to throw tomatoes at you. nigel farage has done a great deal of damage. and if anybody can have a go at him, they will. lorraine kelly hasn't got a nasty bone in her body and to shift his bottom into body shaming in a moment of high jinks, really i think is nonsense. well, it was his faith. >> it wasn't his bottom. there's been universal applause for his bottom. it was his face that she was having a gut. kim, i'll get you on this now, look, what do you on this now, look, what do you make of lorraine's comments? look look, my love, she's a
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stupid , stupid woman. stupid, stupid woman. >> let's face it . now, how old >> let's face it. now, how old is she? 63. >> she's like a child in a playground. >> he is in there. >> he is in there. >> he's doing a splendid job. >> he's doing a splendid job. >> he's doing a splendid job. >> he's polite and courteous. he's done the trial and got every star leave him alone. lorraine kelly. you ain't all that, dear. you ain't all that . that, dear. you ain't all that. >> no, no, no, no, no. >> all right. well stop, stop, stop. jenny. jenny, you know kim. jenny jenny. go, jenny, go talk now. jenny, go . coco talk now. jenny, go. coco >> chanel, stop! >> chanel, stop! >> both of you . i'm already >> both of you. i'm already getting a little bit sick of this. jenny come back to what kim has just said. well, i just think throwing personal all jibes at someone like lorraine is so low, it's not about that celebrity is about people watching and seeing other people being humiliated . being humiliated. >> did coco chanel said we're
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born with three faces. one, we're born with, one we create and one we deserve. it's not something new to lorraine kelly. i think that this is just wanting to knock anybody and people should be allowed to make jokes about a show like celebrity kim. >> go on, kim, respond to that. then this is nigel's. open himself up to it. go on. why should they be allowed to make jokes when it's a television show ? show? >> who gives you or i the right? >> who gives you or i the right? >> because i'm speaking . shut >> because i'm speaking. shut up. you've had your say. now don't start. and hope you've done your homework. >> this time you didn't last time and admitted you hadn't. >> so shut up for a minute. >> so you shut up for a minute. >> so you shut up for a minute. >> go on a television show, >> if i go on a television show, i go because i get a fat cheque. >> they've all gone in for the money, you would as well. money, which you would as well. god, have though. but god, who'd have you though. but the is, are not the point is, you are not supposed be scrutinised for supposed to be scrutinised for your bum or your your face or your bum or your knockers or your is all knockers or your what is all that? are we children? as she's
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63, are we children? hope she scrutinises you, dear. i wonder what you say then wait till it happens to you. and i bloody well hope it does. you deserve it. but back in lorraine , she it. but back in lorraine, she was rude and nasty. >> jenny. yeah, go on. >> jenny. yeah, go on. >> i was asked to go on to i'm a celebrity, but my family said had i done that, they would never talk to me. so turning btec meant i didn't go onto it. but program like that is put on television for people to do exactly what lorraine is. it's there to, you know . how did you there to, you know. how did you feel about myleene klass being talked about under the shower? well you were cross about that as you are about this. >> that was positive, though. i think. i mean, i do say what you're saying, but i mean, that was from my memory of that. and i think memory of that's i think my memory of that's actually relatively vivid. it was quite a positive reaction. it positive
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it was quite a positive reaction. jenny, can i just tell you what, both of you? going you what, both of you? i'm going to little clip now to play a little clip now because another clip of because it's another clip of a female presenter. it's kay burley, also of the channel that we're not going name talking we're not going to name talking about cameron. right. about david cameron. right. so let's this. let's play this. >> jobs that were >> uh, jobs that were controversial . she wrote a controversial. she wrote a memoir, but never put on weight, never fully found his feet post. >> so just in case we missed that, that was that was kay burley making a joke about david cameron putting a bit of weight on.and cameron putting a bit of weight on. and kim, i just wonder, you know, are there double standards here in the media? you know, if these these are women these are these are women talking, you know, pretty bluntly men's appearances ? bluntly about men's appearances? kim they're talking on a television show. >> not if they want to talk among themselves in their lounge with a cup of tea. >> oh, go wild, lovey. but she's on a television show . thousands on a television show. thousands and thousands are listening to this. and it's not fair to farage. i'm sorry. what? they must have history between them.
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that's her business, not my business. but you don't use every opportunity when you get it to slam someone's face. who the hell is she to say what does look nice and what doesn't ? look nice and what doesn't? beauty is in the eye of the beholder . it's like beauty is in the eye of the beholder. it's like kids do in a school and ofac. there children, not 63 year olds. my love. >> okay, final word to you on this, jenny. i don't agree. >> my husband said quite recently that when he sees me naked, he remembers how old he is . and i thought that was quite is. and i thought that was quite amusing. the fact is that nigel farage has put himself up to be pilloried , and if he didn't pilloried, and if he didn't think he was going to get pilloried after everything he did with brexit, then he should actually have not gone on the programme. and i think your assessment of lorraine is wrong . assessment of lorraine is wrong. >> okay, well, both of you opinion, aren't you mean ? opinion, aren't you mean? >> let's be honest, your husband
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doesn't sound like a gentleman to me. let's be perfectly honest. my husband looks at me after many years of marriage. well, that's your opinion. you've got him. i haven't. my husband looks at me after all our years of marriage and says to me, kim, you're as beautiful as the day i met you. now he might be lying through his teeth , women want that . if you , but we women want that. if you don't want it, there's something wrong your an wrong with you to call your an old , right? never an old old bat, right? he never an old bat. and you're getting. thank you, darling . you, darling. >> okay. this has descended into the gutter now, so we'll call it a day. thank you very much, both of you. lovely stuff. and in a way, that was exactly what we wanted. right? okay so kim woodburn the one and only woodburn there, the one and only on presenter barnett, on tv presenter jenny barnett, who to say, have history who is fair to say, have history and very history. so who and very recent history. so who do with? should do you agree with? should lorraine kelly apologise for body nigel farage i'm body shaming? nigel farage i'm saying he's got the face he saying that he's got the face he deserves. on twitter says, deserves. rob on twitter says, if nigel had said something like that there would if nigel had said something like that been there would if nigel had said something like that been absolute there would if nigel had said something like that been absolute uproar. 'ould if nigel had said something like that been absolute uproar. hed have been absolute uproar. he would labelled would have been labelled a misogynistic arrogant man. misogynistic and arrogant man. well, would done,
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well, yeah, he would have done, but he wouldn't have said it, though. it's the thing. he just wouldn't that's wouldn't have said it. that's not it? kevin on not nigel, is it? kevin on twitter says , why do people twitter says, why do people think such think they can make such personal about nigel? personal comments about nigel? maybe him off maybe she's slagging him off because make maybe she's slagging him off bec popular make maybe she's slagging him off bec popular with make maybe she's slagging him off bec popular with itv make maybe she's slagging him off bec popular with itv bosses. ake her popular with itv bosses. simon on twitter says, i don't think nigel will care what lorraine is saying about him. he's too busy winning in the jungle. well, look, your verdict is in. 86% of you agree that lorraine kelly should apologise, while 14% of you say that she should not. not now. coming up, as germany considers banning prostitution after it was branded the brothel of europe , branded the brothel of europe, should the uk now ban on sex workers? this is a really, really interesting group, a campaign group that i've got on here. so claire bentley smith joins me. she's got a campaign group that photographs these blokes in their cars and posts their number plate in their details online so that the wives find out when they've been kerb
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crawling is the word, i think, isn't it ? but first, as meghan isn't it? but first, as meghan markle revisits a feminist climate change group for the first time since quitting the royal family, is the duchess turning to activism to halt her hollywood decline? i've been deau hollywood decline? i've been dealt into some of her activism so far , and the results may so far, and the results may shock you. top royal biographer angela levin offers her expert insight and reporting . that's insight and reporting. that's next. don't move
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six till 930. for former home secretary and tory hard hitter priti patel is still to come. >> but it's time now for royal biographer and journalist angela levin. meghan markle made levin. and meghan markle made a surprise visit to a feminist climate change group in vancouver yesterday . the duchess vancouver yesterday. the duchess of sussex went to justice for girls for the first time since january 20th, 20 days after she sensationally quit the royal family and taking to instagram . family and taking to instagram. obviously, after the visit, justice for girls wrote a feminist advocate from a young age herself . the duchess was age herself. the duchess was keen to chat with two of our teen interns to discuss their personal struggles for justice, her genuine and understanding approach left the girls feeling heard and supported and inspired. so angela, has the duchess made the world significantly better over the last four years through her activism ? activism? >> no, not at all. because because it's nonsense. she hasn't known how to do things.
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she's often there for five, ten minutes. all you see is that five, ten minutes that get the money and they're off. she's off. so she doesn't spend a long time really talking. there's a lot of phoney smiles and it's just because she needs ticks now for loads and loads of things that she's going to do across a wide range. i mean, what she's really done the most of is flying in private jets . that's flying in private jets. that's been a great hobby. and also it's very interesting because when she was in new york and went to read her book, the bench to some very, very poor children in a school, to some very, very poor children in a school , she to some very, very poor children in a school, she had pulled herself up in the most ridiculous jewellery and outfit, and she did the same with this case that she went along with a very expensive necklace and wrist ring and all sorts of things like that . and i don't things like that. and i don't think when you go to somebody who's got no money and is actually very finding life very difficult, you don't go there's
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a sort of flamboyant woman in very expensive clothes . very expensive clothes. >> i suppose the counter to that is that you would say, well, maybe she's giving them something to aspire to. no i don't think so. >> it's to show off, isn't it? i think if you look through what she's failed at, it's loads of things. you know, there's so many of them because she starts off and blasts herself that she's going to be great. like she's going to be great. like she wants to be number one in a in a film . and but only if she in a film. and but only if she gets an a grade director and nothing comes of it because she's very demanding and she can't do it. she's not a very good actress. and so on. it's just loads of things bearing in mind that they left the royal family at least in part because they wanted to go and do a load of activism. >> they wanted to go and do a load of charity work. and again, i think it's worth noting that had they stayed in the royal
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family, yes, some of that stuff would have been cutting ribbon would have been cutting a ribbon outside milton keynes outside an aldi in milton keynes or a plaque somewhere. or unveiling a plaque somewhere. there's a of that stuff that there's a bit of that stuff that goes on and i understand how goes on and i can understand how that's the most that's not always the most glamorous thing, but it is essentially stop charity essentially a stop charity round. october the 11th, round. now, october the 11th, 2023 celebrate created international day of the girl with troop 6000. i don't know what they are. they sound like a 90s band providing back to school essentials for girls in nigeria. meghan wins a top entertainment podcast chat host from the gracie awards, which i'm assuming is not an ironic award. they've contributed a recipe. meghan contributed a recipe. meghan contributed a recipe to the world's central kitchen cookbook, feeding humanity , feeding hope. now, we humanity, feeding hope. now, we just did a little bit of a dive. now, this is what we found online. okay? so this is what we found online. reportedly the charitable foundation that harry and meghan have is tax returns for 2021 showed that $13 million came from two anonymous backers as. okay. well, harry and meghan
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and this is just what we found onune and this is just what we found online on worked 52 hours in the year which equates to one hour per week. and it raised less than four and a half grand in pubuc than four and a half grand in public donations. is that a dedicated life of service ? no, dedicated life of service? no, no, of course not. >> that's one hour a week for all the charities that they're supposed to be involved in, which is really nothing. it's a five, ten minute for each of them. and i don't think any of these things i think harry would love to do more, but i don't think it's meghan's idea either. i mean, he wanted to go to africa and really help either with animals that were now, you know , very few of them. and help know, very few of them. and help people there. meghan wasn't the least bit interested. meghan's got the thing of pushing herself. that's the thing. harry still has quite a lot of wishing he could do proper charity work, but she won't let him and drags him with her. and of course, it is actually shameful goal to
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pretend that you are somebody that people should look up to because if we all did one hour a week or a month or a year without charity, it would be absolutely appalling . absolutely appalling. >> well, let's let's veer away from harry and meghan now and talk about princess eugenie, because she's revealed in the table manners podcast the golden rules that members of the royal family are meant to follow. we can have a little listen to this. >> i think also, yeah, i just i've i the way we've been brought up is to is to just not yeah not you know i to overshare i >> -- >> um -_ >> um okay imam >> um okay so you don't overshare . would harry and overshare. would harry and meghan do well to remember that. >> no, they don't do that at all, do they? i mean, we've already seen with with harry telling the world that he was going to phone his father to wish him happy 75th birthday. >> they've offered an invite up. they said they were open to an invite for christmas. >> have done, they? >> they have done, haven't they? >> they have done, haven't they? >> said they're open to it. >> they said they're open to it. oh, yeah. >> open gm" >> they're open to it. yeah
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they're. right. they're. that's right. but i mean this was not something that you would do because he hasn't spoken to father months spoken to his father for months to but they to keep it private. but they can't private. they can't keep things private. they actually spill it all actually have to spill it all out. they make money that way. and feel rather cynically that and i feel rather cynically that they want to go and see the royal family to actually get information that they can sell on that would be the fear, wouldn't it? >> that would be the fear that they they simply could not be trusted. and you know, you look at some of the things, again, that they've done here, international women's day, elevating . what elevating working women. what does of this really mean? does all of this really mean? you know, duchess of sussex you know, the duchess of sussex are smartworks are patronage smartworks partnered cuyana, a women's partnered with cuyana, a women's empowerment initiative. is this just the kind of word salad that people like is like people this is like this is like linkedin for charity? >> it's known much as >> it's known very much as meghan and the word salad, because if you actually listen to what she says, you can't actually hear it at all. i mean, she said one thing just recently when she was in her beige dress and she said, what? she's very excited because going to excited because she's going to
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do of things, do all sorts of things, including helping people to feel , well. well, you tell me, how do people feel, people to feel helping people to feel right? yes well, you know, she thinks she was thinking that was rather important. but do you know what that means? i don't know. >> a lot of work in helping people to blink and helping people to blink and helping people inhale oxygen in as people to inhale oxygen in as well. but angela, thank you very much. we're out of time. that was lovely stuff there. that is the royal biographer and journalist, angela levin. now the duchess of sussex the duke and duchess of sussex have said the have previously said the archewell foundation believes that defining that compassion is the defining cultural of the 21st cultural force of the 21st century. and through work , century. and through its work, archewell foundation supports a growing of partner growing community of partner organisations fuelling systemic cultural change. grief archewell foundation listens to people and their communities, helps them tell their stories , puts real tell their stories, puts real action behind its words , and action behind its words, and spotlights a new generation of leaders. ukip okay, at some point we might see hardcore evidence of that . now coming up, evidence of that. now coming up, i'm joined dame priti patel i'm joined by dame priti patel live in the studio for her
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exclusive reaction to jeremy hunfs exclusive reaction to jeremy hunt's snoozefest . he hunt's autumn snoozefest. he took an axe to tax, but was the chancellor bold enough ? the chancellor bold enough? the former home secretary gives her unfiltered verdict on that. rwanda a little bit more. but next, the brothel of europe. that's germany's newest nickname. and they're desperately trying to shake it by banning sex workers. but should the uk follow suit? co—founder of save our eyes, the campaign group claire bentley smith has her say. you will not want to miss that .
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censor nigel farage. but first with germany fast becoming and this is their words, not mine, the brothel of europe, polish citizens in the country are calling for a ban on buying sex. more than two decades after much celebrated lords legalised prostitution and gave thousands of sex workers employment rights. now, since then, opposition parties argue that the system is being gamed by exploitative human traffickers and pimps . i exploitative human traffickers and pimps. i mean, who could have seen that coming , for want have seen that coming, for want of a better phrase, who import vulnerable young girls from abroad in german abroad to work in german brothels? now i am joined by claire smith, co—founder claire bentley smith, co—founder of a grassroots of save our eyes, a grassroots group monitors street group that monitors street prostitution in the uk. look, claire, thank you very, very much. i'm going to start by asking you a little bit about what your group does, because i must i find this must say i find this fascinating. so go on. oh, okay. we'll get claire's audio sorted. don't worry, claire. we'll sort that out. i'll fill you in a little bit on what goes on. so there are parts of leeds where
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it's essentially become legal to or not really legal to tout or it's not really legal to tout for business on the street, as it were. and people been it were. and people have been abusing that, so see abusing that, right. so you see massive problems, of course, with massive problems with drugs, massive problems with drugs, massive problems with pimps, massive problems with pimps, massive problems with women, with violence towards women, and also people who actually also for the people who actually live that area in holbeck, live in that area in holbeck, it's nice it's just not particularly nice to turning up in cars to see blokes turning up in cars and, you know, pulling over and whatever the whatever happens next, the police have up until now been turning a blind eye to this so the local residents decide that they were going to take it upon themselves to do something about it. started doing it. so what they started doing was pictures the was taking pictures of the number and the cars for number plates and the cars for some of these alleged punters, as it were. and they have a punter of the week, right? so then they put it out on their social media and they try to out this individual or shame this individual anyway . so we were individual anyway. so we were having a little look earlier on and it is not illegal at the moment in britain to exchange money for sexual services. i know that many people think that it is, but it isn't.
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know that many people think that it is, but it isn't . so i was it is, but it isn't. so i was wondering whether or not we should actually go the whole hog and ban it a little bit like germany has done, because what the germans are finding and this is not just a problem in germany, it's actually a problem right europe, especially right across europe, especially apparently european apparently near the european parliament apparently near the european parl read nt apparently near the european parlread into that apparently near the european parl read into that what you can read into that what you will, but they are looking to ban claire is back. yes ban it. claire is back. yes >> okay. >> okay. >> so i can hear you now. >> good. so, yeah, go on. so fill us in a little bit about about what your what your group does and whether or not you think we should do what the germans are thinking of doing , germans are thinking of doing, which is basically banning sex work . work. >> what what our group was >> so what what our group was established in 2017 as a reaction to the decriminalisation of street sex work, specifically in the area where we lived in leeds . where we lived in leeds. >> and what that saw was , is as >> and what that saw was, is as soon as it was tolerated or decriminalised, that the industry flourished , demand industry flourished, demand
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increased and we saw an influx of women being trafficked from eastern europe and such like. and that's very similar to what's happened in germany since it was the liberalised ization of prostitution laws in 2002. >> is that there's been a huge upsurge in trafficking and exploitation of people being brought in to fill the demand and of the men that want to buy sexual services . sexual services. >> and i think what we need to oh, okay, we're not having much luck with claire, are we? >> but there we go. i mean, there is very much multiple different aspects to this. okay so there is the massive exploitation of women. okay there is the influx there and the money flooding into the black economy when it comes to pimps, etcetera. but there is also genuinely the issue for local residents. if you live in an area you will probably like that area to not just be something looking a lot like an
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open air brothel . and the police open air brothel. and the police we see all too often they write off shop thefts, they write off car thefts and now it appears they might be writing this off as well. i'm going to go for the hat trick here, claire. yes okay. so. so you've explained a little bit about what what some of the problems are there, but can i ask a bit about some of the novel tactics that, that some of the campaign groups are using to, to try to clamp using to try to, to try to clamp down on this ? down on this? >> so we were able to expose the punters that were coming into our area. >> they were actually quite often kerb crawling. >> my self. other members of the community and even some of the schoolgirls walking around in their school uniforms where we lived. >> and because of that , we >> and because of that, we started to photograph the guys and posting posted their number plates and stuff online in order to expose and embarrassment, embarrass them and actually warn other punters that the community wasn't going to stand for the
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oppression of this sort of crime wave and anti—social behaviour . wave and anti—social behaviour. >> the other thing that we were very importantly wanting to champion was, you know , increase champion was, you know, increase services to help women to have rehabilitation and exit from the industry, because what we saw happenin industry, because what we saw happen in our streets was immense suffering. >> like i can't even begin to describe the sort of stuff that our community witnessed happening in our streets. >> yeah , well, claire, thank you >> yeah, well, claire, thank you very, very much for shining a light on this issue and for giving us a little bit of context. i would love to get you back on, maybe talk for a little bit longer about this is claire bentley got group bentley smith, who's got a group save our eye is about the problem in their local area. now, been trying to now, gb news has been trying to arrange sparring match between arrange a sparring match between our presenter, the red wall rottweiler, anderson , and rottweiler, lee anderson, and the with a megaphone , the ramona with a megaphone, steve but thus far it's steve bray. but thus far it's amounted to nothing with steve refusing to appear on lee's show. so the pair had a little
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run in instead on the streets today and we've obtained footage in this me on this show on thursday. >> come on, michelle. last pins in my eyes. no, don't listen. great news with the autumn statement today, steve. what's 27 million working people are getting a tax for break you? >> does it? >> does it? >> they're all working . >> they're all working. >> they're all working. >> why do you think we're only here on the wednesday? >> the only work one day a week. >> the only work one day a week. >> we're here voluntarily in our free challenges there. steve come on. come on, michelle. come on. your show, man. be your man . on. your show, man. be your man. is it low? you can make it love if you want. >> oh, come on. >> could be tempted this time. trouble is, when it's pre—recorded, you can edit it. >> that's the good news is we can record it any time because you won't be at work. >> don't worry, steve. we can make it happen for you on our show in this studio . anderson show in this studio. anderson versus bray on patrick christys
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tonight. i've laid down the gauntlet. don't let me down, mr bray. well, coming up, gauntlet. don't let me down, mr bray. well, coming up , former bray. well, coming up, former home secretary dame priti patel joins me live in the studio to give her unvarnished reaction to jeremy hunt's tax slashing autumn statement. don't miss a true tory titan coming live in just a sec. oh, and yes, what's this ? oh, wow. well, apparently , this? oh, wow. well, apparently, apparently we're about to see it kick right off in the jungle with nigel farage. stay tuned. good evening. >> i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. the wind's picking up a bit tonight and tomorrow, particularly so across the north, largely dry in the south tomorrow, but it's going to turn colder for all of us by friday. still got high pressure nearby the pressure nearby to the south—west. cold front south—west. but this cold front will be introducing the colder air as the isobars squeeze together the wind's picking up a very blustery night across northern scotland, particularly so northern isles. got a so in the northern isles. got a wet night the highlands wet night for the highlands and that edging south
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that rain slowly edging south across western isles, across the western isles, further south, some patchy rain over hills of southern over the hills of southern scotland and northern england. but places will be dry. the but many places will be dry. the breeze and the cloud will help to temperatures up. so to keep the temperatures up. so a than late, but a milder night than of late, but it to turn colder it is going to turn colder initially tomorrow across scotland . so there'll be some scotland. so there'll be some sunny developing, but sunny spells developing, but there'll be blustery showers across the far north, a wet morning through the central belt. rain spreading south belt. that rain spreading south into northern ireland, eventually northern eventually into northern england, but a good part of england, but a good part of england and again looking england and wales, again looking dry, across parts dry, some sunshine across parts of the south and east, easily seeing temperatures to 12, seeing temperatures up to 12, maybe celsius. but there's maybe 13 celsius. but there's the colder single digits the colder air, single digits and feeling even colder with the wind across scotland and the colder spreads south for colder air spreads south for friday. some patchy rain in the south—west showers coming into the north—east there'll be wintry in nature, some sleet and snow even to lower levels for many, though, friday will just be a bright, crisp day. but you will notice that drop in temperatures, single figures and feeling even colder in the east with the wind
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good evening. >> this is patrick christys. tonight >> then margaret was a very strong leader and they were tough times. yeah but she changed the country completely . changed the country completely. yeah, completely . yeah, completely. >> would you ever want to run or. >> well, does nigel farage actually wants to be prime minister i'll bring you his exact answer with our man on the inside. ben leo. he's got all the jungle gossip for us. that's coming shortly. but in the moment of the series so far, and this is just happened and nigel had an all mighty ding dong over immigration with the villain of the show, nella, who absolute completely lost it last night. that full explosive clip is coming to you in mere moments . coming to you in mere moments. then there's unmissable reaction from britain's best entertainer. it's jim davidson plus form home secretary dame priti patel is
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live to give her unvarnished view of the autumn statement. rwanda and much, much more going at it on the sofa tonight, christine hamilton , adam brooks christine hamilton, adam brooks and matthew laza. it's patrick christys tonight and we're live. but now, as your headlines. patrick thank you. >> good evening. a raft of tax cuts and benefits increases aimed at making 27 million people better off was announced by the chancellor today in the biggest change outlined in his autumn statement this morning, jeremy hunt said national insurance will be cut from 12 to 10. the triple lock on pensions will be kept taking the state pension up by 8.5% to more than £220 a week. and taxes on alcohol will be frozen until next year, meaning no increase in duty on beer , cider wines or in duty on beer, cider wines or spirits . the mother of a 28 year spirits. the mother of a 28 year
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old woman shot dead in liverpool, has labelled her daughter's killers monsters. today as they were jailed for life for her murder. ashley dale was murdered when james witham forced his way into her home and opened fire with a machine gun. he and three other men were handed life sentences with minimum terms to serve of between 41 and 47 years and the home town of four teenage boys who died in north wales has cancelled tonight's christmas lights switch on out of respect for the families involved, jevon hurst, harvey owen and will fitchett and hugo morris were off on a camping trip in the snowdonia area , but their bodies snowdonia area, but their bodies were recovered yesterday after a car was found overturned and partially submerged in water for nonh partially submerged in water for north wales. police saying it appears to have been a tragic accident . it and a man and accident. it and a man and a woman in their 30s have died after a migrant boat capsized off the french coast this
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evening. french and british maritime agencies were called to reports of a boat in difficulties around eight miles from the port of boulogne . at from the port of boulogne. at around 5:00, french officials say 60 people were crammed on board the small boat, which had begun sinking . other migrants begun sinking. other migrants have been taken to dungeness in kent this evening . those are kent this evening. those are your latest news stories. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on digital radio, in your car, on digital radio, and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> welcome back. now, we've had a right rumble in the jungle. that's right . a right rumble in the jungle. that's right. things have got a bit spicy down under after tiktok star nyla rose clashed with nigel over the uk's out of control immigration numbers here it is. >> we're going to get everything out in the open. >> let's get everything out of there. right. so when all the t's coming out now. so basically but this is what i was saying.
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>> apparently your anti immigrants and who told you that? >> oh, the internet told oh well there we are then. >> it must be true. it must be true. it must be, it must be true. >> okay. but then why don't black people like you? >> you'd be amazed. they do. you'd amazed, nigel, you you'd be amazed, nigel, if you came me. you came with came with me. if you came with me. you came. if you came me. if you came. if you came with through london, with me through south london, you'd . with me through south london, youwhy? . with me through south london, youwhy? were . with me through south london, youwhy? were you doing in >> why? what were you doing in south london, nigel? >> i'm there day. >> well, i'm there every day. >> well, i'm there every day. >> south dumas. wait, >> you're in south dumas. wait, sorry. so sorry to be shot. sorry. i'm so sorry to be shot. what are you doing? sorry. >> he's from south london. i travel through south london. >> he's from south london. i tra\so through south london. >> he's from south london. i tra\so everyone outh london. >> he's from south london. i tra\so everyone hates ondon. >> he's from south london. i tra\so everyone hates ondcfor no >> so everyone hates you for no reason. well no, no. not reason. well no, no, no. not that that so that everyone hates. that was so bad. like , you can disagree bad. but, like, you can disagree with somebody , but to chuck with somebody, but to chuck around the accusations , the way around the accusations, the way that they've been chucked around is grossly unfair. >> anti—immigrant, no >> the anti—immigrant, right? no no. i've said is we cannot no. all i've said is we cannot go on the numbers coming to go on with the numbers coming to britain do you britain that are coming. do you know ? one of the numbers. know why? one of the numbers. right. so that's it then. so should it be 5 million a year? 10 million? question no, you don't see to understand. nigel hang on, hang on.
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hang on, hang on, hang on. >> hang immigrants. are you . >> hang immigrants. are you. >> hang immigrants. are you. >> hang immigrants. are you. >> hang hang on, hang on, >> hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on. >> been in power a bit later. >> goodbye, immigrants . >> goodbye, immigrants. >> goodbye, immigrants. >> yeah, we've got more of that coming your way as well. well, what do you make of that? i want to hear from you, gb views gbnews.com. get the emails coming in. i'm joined by author and broadcaster, former campmates as well, christine hamilton , businessman and hamilton, businessman and activist, possibly to soon be campmate adam brooks and former labour party adviser matthew lanza. he's been asked and lanza. he's not been asked and never will be. but christine, look that there nigel farage getting called all the names under the sun. black people don't like you. why are you hate it essentially being called a racist? right. >> well, i mean, nella, i didn't know who she was when she came in. >> she had a huge row with fred last night or night before, which was appalling the way she behaved with him. she's now done it again. she's either thick or stupid. take your pick, one or the other. >> not a lot of it's not a lot
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of wiggle room. there isn't exactly. >> but nigel. nigel. nigel did not rise. >> good for nigel. he didn't rise quite right too. she's made some outrageous accusations. but i think where i think nigel has gone wrong is that he said in what he thought was a stage whisper, but he obviously hasn't realised a bit naive. still every single whisper is heard to grace dent. i want to do the trials because i want 25% of the airtime that will absolutely wind people up. not to give him the trials. i don't think he'll get another trial. >> do don't think that sums >> do you? don't think that sums it that is in there, it up that nigel is in there, right. and he's got someone like nella saying really, really , nella saying really, really, frankly, stupid stuff. what are you doing in south london? that was extraordinary. >> what were you . nigel, i dare >> what were you. nigel, i dare you. he went to school in south london. >> nigel genuinely very popular amongst amongst the black community. i mean, you have to be quite out of touch to say that stuff now. >> but we see this on >> yeah, but we see this on twitter every day. you know, because on gb news. suddenly because i'm on gb news. suddenly i'm that label, i'm this label on that label, they like to parrot these
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they just like to parrot these silly sort of tropes that they hean silly sort of tropes that they hear, and it goes hear, you know, and it goes around and these younger generations, almost trendy generations, it's almost trendy to that opinion about to have that opinion about someone like nigel all i will say is every time i see nigel up here comes and asks me how my pubs are doing, comes and asks me how my family is, he's a genuinely nice guy and there's a lot of lefties that actually work at gb news that like him as well. you know, he's a pleasant quy- >> 9”!!- >> look, matthew, so in >> look, matthew, so far in there okay, has had fred there, okay, nigel has had fred say things to him like, i won't do the accent , say things like, do the accent, say things like, yes , you don't say saying, oh yes, you don't say saying, oh you know, the brexit vote attempted , you know, i am i'm attempted, you know, i am i'm quivering on the edge. didn't want europeans in, which is just absolute madness. you know criticised again for that that poster which has is it legitimate that's a legitimate criticism because it's happened though. no but that that poster that nigel stood in front of is happening. right. so nigel, i my view was right to double down on that. you've nella going that. now you've got nella going why people hate you?
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that. now you've got nella going why this? people hate you? that. now you've got nella going why this? i people hate you? that. now you've got nella going why this? i mean,le hate you? that. now you've got nella going why this? i mean, howate you? that. now you've got nella going why this? i mean, how do you? that. now you've got nella going why this? i mean, how do you’ that. now you've got nella going why this? i mean, how do you how why this? i mean, how do you how do you engage with that? >> i look, as you >> well, i think look, as you say, adam, i about nigel say, adam, i think about nigel is agree with him disagree say, adam, i think about nigel is aghim.'ith him disagree say, adam, i think about nigel is aghim. andiim disagree say, adam, i think about nigel is aghim. and in disagree say, adam, i think about nigel is aghim. and i disagree gree say, adam, i think about nigel is aghim. and i disagree with with him. and i disagree with him on pretty much everything. he is utterly charming. when i work for a long time, work at the bbc for a long time, you know, in the years when he you know, in the years when he you when he was building you know, when he was building ukip was always ukip up, he was always incredibly people at incredibly polite to people at the bbc who were not his natural, not his favourite broadcaster, natural broadcaster, not his natural audience. calm audience. and he's very calm reaction. only do him reaction. there will only do him in good stead. i mean the left is getting its are we allowed to say knickers in a twist still? yeah. there were three yeah. i mean, there were three there three headlines from there are three headlines from the this week, which the guardian this week, which just same day, he's a just in the same day, he's a celebrity. but nigel farage gives creepy crawlies. gives me the creepy crawlies. itv by itv normalises the abhorrent by putting in the putting nigel farage in the jungle. george was in there. >> one of the who >> one of the blokes who presents prison. presents been in prison. >> exactly. so i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.toly. so i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to sayyo i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to say is i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to say is if i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to say is if is i'm saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to say is if is the saying presents been in prison. >> ex.to say is if is the left ng trying to say is if is the left need to take a chill pill because reacting like that is exactly plays into in into his hands go to the inbox hands and just go to the inbox human quickly on this human look quickly on this monty's going to monty's been on we're going to by way i want to bring you
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by the way i want to bring you this again at some point this clip again at some point soon because think people soon because i think people might first time around. >> so i just want to play against a minute or so. patrick. i'm discuss i'm absolutely discuss stated that practically that nella is practically accused. being a accused. nigel of being a racist. yeah there you go. and there's a lot of just who there's a lot of this just who is gobby woman? nella says is this gobby woman? nella says jill. say, nigel, jill. and people say, nigel, nigel knows, scott. says nigel knows, said scott. says that wasn't prepared to that woman wasn't prepared to listen just listen to the answer. she just says, immigrant and this listen to the answer. she just says, me immigrant and this listen to the answer. she just says, me not1migrant and this listen to the answer. she just says, me not willingt and this listen to the answer. she just says, me not willing to nd this listen to the answer. she just says, me not willing to engage means me not willing to engage christine on the detail of, well, hang on a minute. how what's how many migrants is should about should be the limit. what about gp well, nigel gp appointments? well, nigel is a mature knows his onions. >> nella is 26. she's suddenly been promoted to this massive stage. she's an influencer or a blogger. i'm not quite sure which she's frankly, she's promoted beyond her pay grade and she's so out of her depth and she's so out of her depth and she's so out of her depth and she is just displaying grotesque ignorance and inability to argue. nigel is coming over very , very well when coming over very, very well when he talks, as he did when he was talking to fred. >> who do you >> well, who brexit? who do you think across better there, think came across better there, though, twitter though, nigel? twitter. twitter will be divided on this.
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>> were just chatting >> we were just chatting backstage, priti patel and i said, bray, educated said, like steve bray, educated remainers back steve bray remainers will back steve bray because he's on their side , because he's on their side, right? so people, their i don't know but what i think was nella is going to be a star from this. she's causing controversy even though she's not coming across well , she's though she's not coming across well, she's going become well, she's going to become a lot more famous because her lot more famous because of her anfics. lot more famous because of her antics . and at the end of the antics. and at the end of the day, this young generation, that's they want, and that's all they want, clicks and likes . likes. >> and i was just checking when nella actually born >> and i was just checking when ne belgium.ctually born >> and i was just checking when nebelgium. so ally born >> and i was just checking when nebelgium. so she's born >> and i was just checking when nebelgium. so she's a born >> and i was just checking when nebelgium. so she's a new born >> and i was just checking when nebelgium. so she's a new part in belgium. so she's a new part of the answer to name five famous belgians. she is. >> yes, she is. she will be applauded. >> she'll be applauded for attacking nigel. yes >> she'll be applauded for attiokay. nigel. yes >> she'll be applauded for attiokay. nigright.s >> she'll be applauded for attiokay. nigright. look, look, >> okay. all right. look, look, look. going cross live look. we're going to cross live now to australia our now to australia where our reporter beachside reporter ben leo is beachside for the inside track on another event full day for nigel down unden event full day for nigel down under. ben . patrick under. ben. patrick >> good morning from down under. look, i don't know about you, but i'm getting right involved in serious journalists. but i've gone all mainstream talking about nella rose. goodness me .
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about nella rose. goodness me. gen z victimhood personified . gen z victimhood personified. she could win the lottery and take offence at it, but let's forget about her for a minute. elsewhere last night, nigel gave the hint that he's the biggest hint yet that he's going make a return to going to make a big return to politics. john king to prime minister he didn't rule it out . minister he didn't rule it out. >> yeah, absolutely . this was >> yeah, absolutely. this was where nigel was talking, wasn't he, about whether or not he would be prime minister? i think we've got a little clip of that now, haven't we? >> your favourite prime >> who's your favourite prime minister ever in your lifetime? >> ever in my lifetime. any really, in my lifetime. two prime ministers who've been really strong , men who've really strong, men who've changed the country . one's changed the country. one's thatcher and one's blair. i didn't like the way blair changed the country at all, but ihave changed the country at all, but i have to admit he was a strong leader. now, margaret was a very strong leader and they were tough times. yeah but she changed the country completely. yeah yeah, completely. >> you ever want to run generous? >> i don't know. we'll see what's best. the country gets really ? i honestly don't know .
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really? i honestly don't know. it's not an easy job. >> look, ben, thank you very much for everything you're doing for us down there. i might go back to you before the end of the show, but we've got to rattle through this. it's a wonderful bannau leo trying his best enjoy too best not to enjoy himself too much gold coast now the much on the gold coast now the emails are flying here now, emails are flying in here now, has herself up, says has just shown herself up, says paul has just shown herself up, says paul. yeah, absolutely. we're going that clip going to play you that clip again shortly. but i'm again very shortly. but i'm a celebrity hit with its celebrity has been hit with its biggest behind the scenes biggest ever behind the scenes row the programme's woke row with the programme's woke snowflake production staff said to be unable to stomach the sight of nigel because of his brave champion king of brexit and tough stance on and his tough stance on immigration. all heard what immigration. we all heard what he said to nella there. it was absolutely fine . but one source absolutely fine. but one source in the sun said nigel's political views are at odds with many working on i'm a celeb shock , but he's the best shock, but he's the best character in the jungle. by far, giving so much screen time giving him so much screen time may be the last thing some of the crew want to do. but nigel is too good to. not i'm joined now by comedy king jim davis.
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jim, do you think that they're going to try to just cancel him off the show despite the fact they've supposedly given him £1.5 million? >> no, i well, i don't think they should cancel him off the show. >> i think they should throw her out. i mean, what what an idiot. seriously, i don't wish to be rude to that poor young girl, but nigel should just swerve around that. i mean, if brains were she wouldn't have were dynamite, she wouldn't have enough off, enough to blow her head off, would how can you debate would she? how can you debate with someone that is so bigoted like ridiculous. and like that? it's ridiculous. and i'm about nigel. i i'm not talking about nigel. i think this is a of reverse think this is a sort of reverse situation got here. situation that we've got here. it's crazy. it's crazy . this it's crazy. it's crazy. this woman obviously knows nothing about politics. she's read about nigel farage on the internet, and bang, she goes. and bang, in she goes. absolutely ridiculous. she's so daft. she could be on the labour front bench well. front bench as well. >> give it time, jim. >> well, give it time, jim. i suppose. >> well, give it time, jim. i suppose . i mean, what did you suppose. i mean, what did you think of that exchange? because nigel nigel's copped it over brexit far and, you know, brexit so far and, you know, batted that away what he was saying about nella again, we'll
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get that clip up for you again in a second. but what he was saying about nella was, i can't i can't really have a discussion with you. okay? so think about what the numbers immigration what the numbers of immigration is and population growth. she is and population growth. is she didn't consider that. didn't want to consider that. she she she basically said because she was immigrant into this was an immigrant into this country, that i think made country, that that i think made him a racist. and he was wrong about everything. mean, how about everything. i mean, how can discussion can you have a discussion with someone that? can you have a discussion with sonyou e that? can you have a discussion with sonyou can't. that? >> you can't. »- >> you can't. >> well, that's belgians for you, isn't it? he should give up on and go back and have a go on her and go back and have a go at the frenchman. i think he's on there and i think on a winner there and i think he's doing really, really well. when he hit them pizzas with the willies well, a star willies on, well, he's a star for me. now, here's what could happen, could the happen, nigel could join the conservative become deputy conservative party become deputy prime anderson. conservative party become deputy princould anderson. conservative party become deputy princould go anderson. conservative party become deputy princould go in anderson. conservative party become deputy princould go in as anderson. conservative party become deputy princould go in as foreignerson. you could go in as foreign secretary and have me as home secretary and have me as home secretary and have me as home secretary and we'll be the gb news party. perfect >> all right. now i am just going to emphasise, as somebody who's recently got back from belgium, i love the belgians. there's nothing with the there's nothing wrong with the belgian people. let's just play a little refresher clip, a little clip of nella
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little refresher clip of nella versus nige , right? versus nige, right? >> so when sorry, all the tea is coming out now. so basically. but this is what i was saying. apparently your auntie immigrants. >> and who told you that? >> and who told you that? >> oh, the internet. oh, well, there we are then. >> it must be true. it must be true. it must be. it must be true. >> are you worried, though, jim, that he's going to end up at the mercy of the edits with this kind stuff? you know, and kind of stuff? you know, and it's be gang up on it's all going to be gang up on nigel. >> what you're saying >> i hear what you're saying now. i think the are we going to get with. get up with. >> okay. all right. now, are you worried, christine, that it's all gang up on all going to be gang up on nigel? >> i where you're coming >> i know where you're coming from. was asked, what are from. when i was asked, what are you of? not snakes, you afraid of? not snakes, nothing that. it's the nothing like that. it's the editing. he's too to edit editing. he's too good to edit out completely. i don't editing. he's too good to edit out c(theyetely. i don't editing. he's too good to edit out c(they will. i don't editing. he's too good to edit out c(they will. i i don't editing. he's too good to edit out c(they will. i mean, ion't editing. he's too good to edit out c(they will. i mean, what think they will. i mean, what i fear he's done. i touched on it earlier. he's edited himself out of because people are of the trials because people are not going to for him, first not going to vote for him, first of because does them. so of all, because he does them. so well. not much fun if well. that's not much fun if people are. matt did people are. matt hancock did them all brilliantly. farage would single one
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would do every single one brilliantly. he's admitted would do every single one brill he tly. he's admitted would do every single one brill he wants he's admitted would do every single one brill he wants to e's admitted would do every single one brill he wants to do admitted would do every single one brill he wants to do admitsoi that he wants to do them so people are going to vote for people are not going to vote for him. perfectly honest, him. i to be perfectly honest, i don't think he can win. he you have to be really nice to win. you have be begins. you have you have to be begins. you have to be tony blackburn. i mean, i wasn't nice enough win. wasn't nice enough to win. i came third. tony blackburn won. it's nice it's always the very nice people. right through, people. he'll go right through, i don't think he'll win. >> the sense in the inbox at the moment. gb a gbnews.com moment. gb views a gbnews.com and echoes this . i'm going and tim echoes this. i'm going to paraphrase you though is to paraphrase you though tim is basically saying the basically saying that the bigotry be shown bigotry here appears to be shown by other side by the people on the other side of discussion because of this discussion because they're not of course they're not. they're actually not. they're not actually listening what says. listening to what nigel says. they really done their they haven't really done their it what nilla or it doesn't matter what nilla or anyone got anyone says to him, you've got these romaniacs on twitter these crazy romaniacs on twitter and online that will back anything that goes against nigel. >> so it's almost like a bit of a cult against nigel farage. but you know, one thing, matthew, very finally, because i know we're on a break now, but very finally, i do wonder, you know, nigel spends a lot of time here and he spends a lot of time around likes and a lot
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around people he likes and a lot of people who do, you know, echo his a the time. his views a lot of the time. >> maybe he might struggle to realise amongst realise good grief amongst people live and people who don't live and breathe politics and who aren't that about it. god, that educated about it. god, maybe perception of me. >> i think it's slightly. i mean, the truth the matter is >> i think it's slightly. i mean,politician the matter is >> i think it's slightly. i mean,politician facesa matter is >> i think it's slightly. i mean,politician faces voterszr is every politician faces voters who naturally aren't don't who quite naturally aren't don't spend lives talking about spend their lives talking about politics in the way that they do. that's why politicians politics in the way that they do. quite at's why politicians politics in the way that they do. quite at's wwith)liticians politics in the way that they do. quite at's wwith people s politics in the way that they do. quite at's wwith people who are quite good with people who don't much about don't know as much about politics, those are the politics, because those are the people they ask to vote for them. talking the the them. talking of the woke the woke worked on the woke team i nearly worked on the first series. i worked itv first series. i worked at itv and about to work in the and i was about to work in the jungle and would have met jungle and i would have met christine, could have met. we would met those years would have met all those years ago. left the bbc in time. >> you would? you would. which is a phrase no one's ever said before. >> i got a pay rise, too. oh there you go. >> yeah, well, which we paid for so welcome right now. so you're welcome right now. okay, coming up. up, okay, coming up. coming up, coming bring you the most coming up, i bring you the most entertaining and informative press the press preview anywhere in the country as me and tonight's press pack analyse all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages and and and a couple of bits and bobs
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from inside the book. but next, former home secretary dame from inside the book. but next, form patel�*ne secretary dame from inside the book. but next, form patel is! secretary dame from inside the book. but next, form patel is live retary dame from inside the book. but next, form patel is live to ary dame from inside the book. but next, form patel is live to give dame from inside the book. but next, form patel is live to give her me priti patel is live to give her unvarnished view on the autumn statement and statement a bit on rwanda and much more. go anywhere dry or chesty cough? wondering what type of cough you have? try bronchostop. bronchostop is used to relieve dry and chesty coughs.
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initially is dame priti patel. >> now, thank you very much for joining us. >> it's very nice to see you. >> lovely to have you the >> lovely to have you on the show. important day for news, actually, because chancellor jeremy a crucial jeremy hunt delivered a crucial autumn he, to autumn statement, didn't he, to the bit the nation. that was a bit earlier today. and he's aiming to bolster economy to bolster britain's economy and, reward hard and, quote, reward hard work. i'll a little of i'll just show a little clip of what he said. >> our choice is not big government , >> our choice is not big government, high spending and high tax because we know that leads to less growth , not more. leads to less growth, not more. instead we reduce debt, cut taxes and reward work bc in response to yeah, there we go. >> so what was your reaction to that? >> so quite mixed. >> so quite mixed. >> to be perfectly honest. >> to be perfectly honest. >> i think first and foremost, you know, i'm a low tax conservative. >> i actually believe in targeted tax interventions. >> so tax cuts that are specifically targeted to businesses, but also individuals i >> -- >> so there are certain things that i would like to have seen happen that didn't happen. but if you look at the politics of today and that's quite important , i think the chancellor i think
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jeremy hunt has kind of like just nudged the door open a little bit. >> kind of like showing >> it's kind of like showing a little bit of leg basically in terms of that true conservative narrative . we're tax. narrative. we're low tax. >> know, we want to give >> you know, we want to give people more of their money. and the that announced the measures that he announced today don't go far today are they don't go far enough we'll about enough and we'll talk about that, the cut to that, such as the cut to national insurance. >> that's important, isn't and it's significant because he said he's going to bring it forward to january next year and of course, the public will start to feel the benefits of that by the spnng feel the benefits of that by the spring as well. so you spring next year as well. so you can into all of that in can read into all of that in whichever you would like whichever way you would like to potentially terms of the potentially in terms of the electoral politics as well for the government. >> of things there. >> so a couple of things there. where like have where would you like to have seen changes? where would you like further? like to see him go further? >> i'm a great believer in >> so i'm a great believer in unfreezing those tax thresholds. so it's known as fiscal drag there are many people on low incomes basically that get caught in, you know, that tax threshold that has been frozen
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basically the personal tax allowance threshold and also the higher rate . so, for example, higher rate. so, for example, many of our public sector workers, you know, are police officers or our nurses and teachers. they now get caught in that fiscal drag, which basically means that more of their income just gets hoovered up their income just gets hoovered ”p by their income just gets hoovered up by the exchequer and the evidence today is very clear. the obr have published it all now anyway. so in the next well, this year alone , the treasury this year alone, the treasury will rake in something like £12 billion through fiscal drag . so billion through fiscal drag. so that's more people paying the higher and higher rates of taxation. and you could argue it's actually a tax increase without it being a direct tax increase on individuals in terms of the headune individuals in terms of the headline rate of tax and by 2028. so in a few years time, basically so many more people will be caught into that 4 million more lower workers will be 3 million more people will be paying be 3 million more people will be paying the higher rate and on top of that, the obr have forecast that the government will rake in wait for it nearly £45 billion of extra revenue
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just through fiscal drag. and i think that's one area where changes should have been made, could still be made next year. don't rule that out . could be don't rule that out. could be made next year in the spring budget and would actually make a big difference to people having more money in their pockets. >> i mean , it does sound a >> i mean, it does sound a little bit like you've identified quite a lot of negatives there. i mean, labour might happy what might be quite happy with what you've done there, do you think? >> sure. well, i was in the chamber today in parliament speaking about this. ironically, there labour saying there were labour mps saying exactly they exactly the same thing and they themselves quoting the themselves were quoting from the obr. i don't think labour obr. now i don't think labour would change that at all, quite frankly, because it's not and it's not just about politics. okay? so the reality is we have to look at why the government is in the situation that it's in right now, has fiscal right now, has some fiscal headroom made cuts to business taxation on some of its good. there's more again in the future that could be done. and obviously on national insurance . obviously on national insurance. but we have to be very honest as well. state spending is at a record high government debt is
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very high. you know, we are trying to get that equation right. >> this could have been a labour party budget really, or a labour party. >> autumn statement. >> autumn statement. >> no, i don't. definitely not. i labour would have taxed i think labour would have taxed more think there more and also i think there would been higher levels of would have been higher levels of pubuc would have been higher levels of public spending in. you public spending in. now you could could it get could argue how could it get much well, under much higher? well, under labour it would. it our job as it would. it is ourjob as conservatives and i say this as a conservative mp to a conservative backbench mp to hold feet to hold the government's feet to fire ensure that actually fire to ensure that actually they efficiencies they are pursuing efficiencies when it comes to public spending, that actually they're not increasing public spending when need to. and at when they don't need to. and at the time making sure we've the same time making sure we've got productivity in got much more productivity in our economy and our labour market and ultimately trying to reduce the burden of taxation on businesses and on individuals. >> okay. well, look, it's interesting stuff about the autumn statement there. we have also seen, you know, there was this dramatic reshuffle that was got last and got this time last week and a day or two, wasn't it? some rather familiar faces re rejoined the front benches. i'm showing a video here, cameron. we've got james cleverly. we've
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got . what do you got rishi sunak. what do you what you see when you look at what do you see when you look at that? what do you feel? >> well, i was obviously in david cameron's government back in 2014, 2015, and i actually was part of that national election campaign in 2015. an i have a very significant amount of respect for david cameron. you know, he we went on to win a conservative majority government in 2015, and i think he did a lot of good things, actually back in the days of the coalition. didn't feel like it at the time, by the way, because we tough and we were making tough and difficult decisions. and david cameron respected . lord cameron is respected. lord cameron, should say yes, cameron, i should now say yes, it takes getting he is it takes him getting he is respected respected respected and he's a respected figure the party. i think. figure in the party. i think. however, though speaking quite candidly , people would say, candidly, people would say, well, rishi sunak has tried to separate himself from the past. he's given speeches about that recently. and then, of course, he brings back political he brings back former political figures as well. actually, i mean, there is this debate going on right now, foreign secretary, that's not accountable to an elected chamber in parliament. now, i think , you know, that's
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now, i think, you know, that's that's a topic of discussion and debate. but at the same time , debate. but at the same time, it's a bit odd that, you know, the current prime minister could not find and a foreign secretary from his own backbenches and chose that route. and i don't mean that in a disrespectful way at all to lord cameron. david cameron has many, many attributes and qualities and i think he will be you know, he's going going to be very good in that role. >> yeah, i mean, there is also the kind of remain brexit argument, there really? argument, isn't there really? he's already come out spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit already come out spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit abouty come out spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit about he'sne out spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit about he's had ut spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit about he's had to spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit about he's had to row spoken argument, isn't there really? h bit about he's had to row backen a bit about he's had to row back on this about the foreign aid discussion. he was quite critical they've critical of boris. they've always an interesting always had an interesting relationship . sure. and it does relationship. sure. and it does feel to me, as though maybe he's the antithesis of what lot of the antithesis of what a lot of the antithesis of what a lot of the 2019 tory voters wanted. >> of course. yeah. and patrick, i think you're right. you know, a week in politics is a long time. right. but actually, when you back from 2019 you reflect back from 2019 to where now, it feels where we are right now, it feels like it's gone full circle, so to speak . and in mind, to speak. and with that in mind, i mean, look, i take the view
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that, number one, we need to forget, you know, the animosity, brexit leaving the eu leave or remain. you know, i was on the leave campaign. there was a lot of antagonism and animosity within our own party and government at the time, and we need to forget all that and we need to forget all that and we need to forget all that and we need to really park all that . need to really park all that. our job collectively is to do what's in the best interests of our country. we i do think it's quite interesting. i watched some of the debate in the house of lords yesterday lord of lords yesterday with lord cameron new cameron speaking around the new trade , brexit policies trade, brexit freedoms policies and of course it was very interesting to hear the context as to why cptpp, the new trade deal coming forward was speaking about that, but actually not associating it directly and using the language that it is all because of brexit and it's down to our brexit freedoms . i down to our brexit freedoms. i just think everyone needs to be humble and move on basically, and country in a very, and serve our country in a very, very focussed and diligent way. i the questions for i hope is that the questions for rishi, which is going to have to
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deal with who's pulling deal with about who's pulling his you know, i've got to ask >> but you know, i've got to ask as there was the supreme as well, there was the supreme court ruling last week, wasn't there, james cleverly there, on rwanda. james cleverly is man in charge of is the man in charge of delivering do you delivering this now. what do you think chances are? think his chances are? >> so james is actually my neighbour, my essex neighbour in. of in. so he's the member of parliament and parliament for braintree and you know, already spoken to know, i've already spoken to james. you know, i wish him know, i've already spoken to jamessuccess ow, i wish him know, i've already spoken to jamessuccess in', i wish him know, i've already spoken to james success in what sh him know, i've already spoken to jamessuccess in what is him every success in what is the toughest job in government. there's about that. there's no doubt about that. you've about the supreme you've asked about the supreme court i have to say i was court and i have to say i was quite listening to that quite cross listening to that judgement very judgement last week for very good because that good reasons, because that judgement was very similar to the court appeal judgement the court of appeal judgement that came the summer. the court of appeal judgement th.be ame the summer. the court of appeal judgement th.be very the summer. the court of appeal judgement th.be very candidthe summer. the court of appeal judgement th.be very candid ,ie summer. the court of appeal judgement th.be very candid , listening r. the court of appeal judgement th.be very candid , listening to to be very candid, listening to that judgement, i felt that the government could have done much more that more work to avoid that conclusion that the supreme court reached, which was very much based on this whole issue of refoulement, that effectively if you send people to a third country, they could then be removed again to another country or their country of origin and subject to, you know% labuschagne fear, torture . et labuschagne fear, torture. et cetera. having been the
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architect of the rwanda policy and the strategy and worked with the rwandan government, even went to meet the unhcr people in geneva had some very good discussions with them. actually and with the foreign minister of rwanda . i felt that the rwanda. i felt that the government really should have knuckled down over the last 12 months and address many of those concerns that the court raised . concerns that the court raised. of course, james cleverly, our new home secretary, will have to address issues. been address those issues. i've been speaking him about some of speaking to him about some of that already, and i've been very open with him. i will, if i can give him insight, knowledge give him some insight, knowledge and on that. and support on that. i absolutely will. >> okay. well interesting stuff. and look, i couldn't you and now look, i couldn't let you get going without asking a little about what's going on little bit about what's going on down under. okay. because nigel farage competing i'm farage is competing in i'm a celeb. is celeb. i'm actually. this is kind your wheelhouse kind of in your wheelhouse because it covers immigration as well. debate. right. well. this latest debate. right. >> topical, isn't >> so it's quite topical, isn't it? >> well, it em- h it's almost it? >> well, it it's almost like >> well, it is. it's almost like we because we didn't we planned it because we didn't know the fellow campmate nella rose. well, tried strips rose. well, tried to test strips
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off remind off him. let's just remind ourselves a little about ourselves a little bit about what happened, okay? right. >> , all the t's >> so when sorry, all the t's coming out now. so basically. >> but this is what i was saying. >> apparently your anti immigrants. and who told you that? oh the internet told. >> oh well we are then. it >> oh well there we are then. it must it must be true. must be true. it must be true. it must be, it must be true. >> okay. but then why don't black people you? black people like you? >> amazed. they do. >> you'd be amazed. they do. well, be amazed if you well, you'd be amazed if you came me . if you came with came with me. if you came with me. if you came . if you came me. if you came. if you came with me through south london, you'd be astonished. wow. with me through south london, youwhat astonished. wow. with me through south london, youwhat were ished. wow. with me through south london, youwhat were you d. wow. with me through south london, youwhat were you doing wow. with me through south london, youwhat were you doing inyw. with me through south london, youwhat were you doing in south >> what were you doing in south london, >> what were you doing in south lonwell, there every day. >> well, i'm there every day. yeah >> en- en— 9 do you make of yeah >> do you make of that 9 do you make of that ? >> what do you make of that? >> what do you make of that? >> do you know, i think they'll be friends by the time be best of friends by the time that actually, that show ends. actually, i think get on think they'll probably get on quite well. i think that's interesting. for a start, you know, just gut reactions know, just those gut reactions about immigration and sort of how nigel was described. basically i thought nigel, his responses were pretty good in terms of, you know , responding terms of, you know, responding to nella. but at the end of the day, it's inevitable. nigel's gone into the jungle. he's going
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to be tested and asked about all sorts things, from brexit to sorts of things, from brexit to migration , and we know his views migration, and we know his views on obviously on on this. obviously he's on constantly talking about those issues . so, you know, it's just issues. so, you know, it's just it's just interesting to see that. i'll take it. >> i take it you're you're not focussed on entering the jungle any time soon. no way. >> i'll tell you that. now, i actually haven't watched it yet this week, but will because this week, but i will because nigel is on it. and obviously, you know , nigel's a friend and you know, nigel's a friend and you know, nigel's a friend and you know, nigel's a friend and you know, i really wish him well and i think he's going to do really well in the jungle. he when he could do he absolutely really well in the jungle. he when do.:ould do he absolutely could do. >> there we go. >> oh, there we go. >> oh, there we go. >> not ruling out that's >> it's not ruling out that's not really love. >> but see, thank very much. >> but see, thank you very much. you're a tremendous sport you're always a tremendous sport as it's to great have you as well. it's to great have you on, know, wide ranging on, you know, wide ranging stuff. to see you again stuff. hope to see you again very, soon. that is very, very soon. that is wonderful. priti patel, wonderful. dame priti patel, thank now, thank you for joining us. now, coming mikhailova, the coming up, anna mikhailova, the deputy political editor of the mail joins me live. mail on sunday joins me live. why? well because we've obviously tonight's obviously got tonight's press pack, we'll have pack, haven't we? we'll have a deep into tomorrow's front deep dive into tomorrow's front pages. will ahead of the
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news radio show. >> let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight. >> now in the most entertaining paper of you, you will get anywhere on the telly . the very anywhere on the telly. the very first front pages have just been delivered press pack . i'm delivered for my press pack. i'm just getting in my ear. we've got another little nigel gem to bnng got another little nigel gem to bring you shortly, but here we go. on the front of the metro. happy new year. yes, chancellor fires election starting gun surprise. from january to surprise. 2% cut from january to give a £27 million boost. this is the metro . they're obviously is the metro. they're obviously leading on the autumn statement . leading on the autumn statement. similar story the i biggest similar story in the i biggest tax cuts since the 1980s. who are they kidding? news. are they kidding? good news. national insurance slashed the rattle off a couple of good things. bad things, highest tax burden since world war two. that's the independent. yes. sorry. i should clarify that . sorry. i should clarify that. there is also something there from an individual whose daughter is still being held by hamas. the son a little bit on
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i'm a celebrity at the top there. i'm a celeb. nelly's rant at fred. you cannot be serious . at fred. you cannot be serious. they say, well, nelly's kicked off again, hasn't she, this time at nigel? but they go off on the mini—budget in january with a champagne bottle popping £450 off national insurance payments . off national insurance payments. £18 a week rise in the state pension and duty frozen on all your party booze. new year's. well hey, they say now the actual tax burden to hit record high despite two pick up for millions . i high despite two pick up for millions. i mean obviously the political allegiances at play here they've broken it down as well with a variety of different political commentators on the inside of the book, we go over to the guardian in because we have to hunt reveals £20 billion in tax cuts as tories move to on election footing. actually quite a soft front page neutral headune a soft front page neutral headline from the guardian there . they also do have a picture story of israel. hamas world awaits start of four day truce
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and hostage release . peace. and hostage release. peace. well, an interesting smorgasbord ahead of that. and look, very quickly , i'm going to zone in on quickly, i'm going to zone in on the guardian. i didn't think i'd say that this is actually quite a neutral front page. very neutral front page. and potentially, matthew shows that. did jeremy hunt get this right then? >> well, i mean, labour hasn't opposed it. labour is in favour of the cut in national insurance, think as insurance, but i think that as the as i says quite rightly the as the i says quite rightly reminds us, taxes at the highest that they've been for 50 years of 40 years. so prime minister when. absolutely. and you know you know and what's particularly galling is this idea that they've given us everybody a great present when actually it may be new year way, but it's after they've gone up. so you know, you can absolutely wrap it up. >> i want to delve into something if it's all right with something if it's all right with something that's on the inside of the book. right. and this is in the times. so you'll be able to a good look at this to get a good look at this tomorrow. the times are reporting internal internal reporting an internal internal fury with said fury at the bbc with staff said to fuming with match of the to be fuming with match of the day. lineker
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day. presenter gary lineker after and endorsed after he shared and endorsed a left wing commentator owen jones's interview with an israeli professor who accused israeli professor who accused israel of, textbook israel of, quote, textbook genocide. jewish staff at the beeb are said to be particularly uncomfortable . one employee is uncomfortable. one employee is quoted as saying it's pretty expletive for any jew having to work with quite a few folk here right now. christine well, i honestly feel that all those years of heading the ball have done something to his brain . done something to his brain. >> lineker i mean, his massive, massive ego, who does he think he is? he's paid for by the taxpayer. he's not supposed to indulge in political stuff. and i feel that he's the bbc's useful idiot because we all know what the bbc think about all this. they refuse to call hamas a and they allow a terrorist and they allow lineker this latitude. so he lineker all this latitude. so he goes out says things that goes out and says things that they say. but what they might want to say. but what he was absolutely he said was absolutely despicable. he unaware that despicable. is he unaware that there's been a 1,350% rise in anti semitism in this country? >> well, he's certainly not tweeting last month. >> i mean, he certainly
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appalling. he should be vorderman's gone. he should go immediately. >> you're calling for >> okay. so you're calling for gary to go immediately? gary lineker to go immediately? absolutely. gary lineker to go immediately? absolutelyagain , with >> i feel, again, with like vorderman, become like vorderman, he's become like a pantomime figure for the left. he knows he winds up the right. and i think he does it on purpose. this is a serious misjudgement. what he's done here. i don't want anyone cancel him. but he needs to be reined in. he's gone too far. he's someone that i idolise as a boy. icannot someone that i idolise as a boy. i cannot stand the man. >> so he's been reined in several times. there comes a time you know. >> isn't he doing? don't you think he's doing a suella? don't you think he's desperately sort of goading the bbc into sacking him so that he can become a martyr for the left? because look, it's not just the current bbc employees angry bbc employees who are angry about spent, you know, about this. i spent, you know, a dozen in the keeping dozen years in the bbc keeping my which are my political views, which are there under check and, there firmly under check and, you he's just literally you know, he's just literally taking here. he taking the mickey here. he thinks he's got the rules appued applied to him. >> well, according to and >> well. well, according to and this is important we this is important that we mention because the mention the rules because the bbc's rules get
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bbc's impartiality rules get brought up all the time, to according the bbc, this it according the bbc, this is as it stands. say they stands. they say that they implemented new social media rules. think that was in the rules. i think that was in the wake of 1930 comments. yes wake of his 1930 comments. yes and they say they say, yeah , and they say they say, yeah, they say that he's not broken any rules. he's not any of those rules. he's not under investigation. can under investigation. so he can tweet something out which says this is worth anyone's time and 30 of anyone's time , you 30 minutes of anyone's time, you know, about essentially really the israeli state being responsible for a genocide . responsible for a genocide. okay. put forward by certainly not the most left wing commentator at all, owen jones. he's not. and he's actually, i must say, genuinely, i'm not going to win any friends by saying this. but behind the scenes, owen jones is actually quite a nice guy. seriously he, um. this out, you um. but putting this out, you know, he's tweeting know, and he's and he's tweeting it. mean, people you're it. i mean, people say you're endorsing , it. i mean, people say you're endorsing, but it. i mean, people say you're endorsing , but the it. i mean, people say you're endorsing, but the bbc journalism carefully meant journalism is so carefully meant to be so carefully calibrated and here's lineker sitting in his pound mansion, his million pound mansion, retweeting probably having retweeting away, probably having watched three minutes of watched about three minutes of this 18 minute clip. >> but thinks that it's >> but he just thinks that it's a good do. and i'm a good thing to do. and i'm amazed i think quite amazed because i think quite clearly has broken new
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clearly he has broken the new rules. clearly he has broken the new rulelt's not such a massive ego. >> it's not such a massive ego. >> it's not such a massive ego. >> think the bbc has been >> i think the bbc has been corrupted by its own wokeness. and you were working and if you were a jew working within bbc, my goodness, how within the bbc, my goodness, how would quickly , we've would you feel quickly, we've got another nine farage clip from the jungle and all it says. >> here is nigel versus rat . >> here is nigel versus rat. >> here is nigel versus rat. >> this is the rubbish sack. >> this is the rubbish sack. >> is that a little hole in the corner of it? >> are you joking? no >> are you joking? no >> haven't been gnawing at it. >> haven't been gnawing at it. >> yeah, someone's had a gnaw at that. >> oh, my god . that's bloody stupid. >> it all got a bit slack. it all got a bit slovenly leading to an error which was a food bag being left out overnight which clearly had been attacked by vermin of some kind. that wasn't very clever. everything else was done apart from that . done apart from that. >> wow . >> wow. >> wow. well, >> wow. well, nigel >> wow. well, nigel not >> wow. well, nigel not happy with the state of the camp and not afraid to say it as well .
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not afraid to say it as well. coming up, though, the french have allowed a calais migrant police officer to go on sick leave for 14 years. so are they actively seeking to wreak havoc on our borders? my panel will thrash that one out in tonight's greatest britain and union jackass and mikhailova , the jackass and anna mikhailova, the deputy political editor at the mail on sunday joins me live to give her expert opinion on some more of tomorrow's front pages. you won't want to miss it.
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times get stuck into more of tomorrow's front pages as and with me is deputy political editor at the mail on sunday. it's anna mikhailova. anna, thank you very , very much. like, thank you very, very much. like, where to start ? so we've got the where to start? so we've got the telegraph, the daily telegraph biggest tax since the 1980s. biggest tax cut since the 1980s. and they also have analysis by camilla tominey of this parish with a wave of his magic wand. hunters finally taken the fight
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to labour. but i will go to the mail. biggest tax cuts since the 19805. mail. biggest tax cuts since the 1980s. literally the same headline. let's hope it's just the start. views . the start. your views. >> have we got? well, i think number 10 are going to be delighted with this crop of front pages. >> we've got the sun, we've got the times, everyone, even as you pointed out earlier, the guardian is pretty positive. and i think the key thing here isn't the fact that, yes , the tax the fact that, yes, the tax burden is still going to be high. finally, we've got high. but finally, we've got a bit direction from number 10 bit of direction from number 10 and from treasury of what and from the treasury of what rishi sunak is actually about. and they're setting out their stall obviously an stall ahead of obviously an election where they're saying they really they they want people start working again. people to start working again. they to start they want the economy to start growing. so the cuts we've growing. so the cuts that we've seen are specifically directed to and get people back into to try and get people back into the workforce course. this is something that rishi sunak has been personally very concerned about a while now that a lot about for a while now that a lot of people had dropped out of the working of the working world and
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everything they've done is essentially targeted at that . so essentially targeted at that. so the business rate , you know, the business rate, you know, biggest business cuts in decades and of course the cuts to national insurance . national insurance. >> yeah. i mean, we'll have to see whether or not this pales into insignificance tomorrow when there's net migration figures do land. but you know, 27 million to save an average of £450 on near. all right . £11 £450 on near. all right. £11 billion tax breaks for business. a state pension rise by 8.5. i mean, the living wage is going up as well. and only the people who i think my take on it would be are absolutely, completely and utterly bone idle are at risk of losing their benefits. it's not really a bad statement, is it? really >> yeah. i think they it was generally received as pretty well. i mean in westminster today and mps crucially are happy. so even even some of sunak's fiercest critics . so the sunak's fiercest critics. so the liz truss , the liz truss group
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liz truss, the liz truss group who warned that they were they were even threatened to start voting down the autumn statement, they formed accepted that they're happy . they think that they're happy. they think it's the right direction of travel. so overall, but i think what we're seeing here, crucially is clarity and a real dividing line with labour. so it's saying this is what rishi sunak is, is going to be about. and as the mail says , you know, and as the mail says, you know, let's hope this is just the start because as the tax burden is rising hugely, so many people are being dragged into the tax net, but , you know, are being dragged into the tax net, but, you know, bear in mind, inflation has only started falling. if you take them on falling. so if you take them on their word they're waiting their word and they're waiting for that to fall further and then hopefully spring then hopefully in the spring statement, they'll even more statement, they'll be even more cuts. even income cuts. hopefully even an income tax yeah well, chance to be tax cut. yeah well, chance to be a fine thing wouldn't it? >> just i've just got time >> but just i've just got time to squeeze more in with you. to squeeze one more in with you. thank you for this. the times is reporting is inside reporting today. this is inside the with lower the book that people with lower cognitive have been cognitive ability have been found. likely voted found. more likely to have voted for brexit comes from the
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university of bath, essentially, or bath, if you , you know, got or bath, if you, you know, got higher cognitive ability and voted remain, i suppose. and what do you make of that ? what do you make of that? >> i mean, this is this is the boffins biting back i think. why would even this kind of would you even run this kind of study, frankly kind of study, frankly it's the kind of patronising attitude that made people vote for brexit in the first place. you know, people in london, in in around, around the dinner table saying that, frankly only stupid people want to vote for brexit. it's simply not true. and this study , what not true. and this study, what it's trying to say is that there was more misinformation in the campaign and that people who voted brexit were more likely to fall for it. but but again, i'm not convinced. and there's there are huge questions about how they've worked this out. yeah >> and thank you very, very much. real pleasure to have you on and i hope to have you on for a little bit longer next time as well. anna michelle over there of the mail on sunday and it is
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time now to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass okay okay, christine, you take it away with your greatest britain. >> well, my greatest britain is kemi badenoch because she has fought within government and won for much, much stricter rules on pupils in schools, identifying as the opposite gender. and she is going to be far more difficult. and the parents must be told. so she has fought for common sense and won so kemi badenoch okay, i'll go on. >> mine is a very inspirational guy that met last friday. a guy that i met last friday. a guy that i met last friday. a guy called farron farron. paul he's a guy that is taking knives and machetes off of gang members on streets of london, on the streets of london, sometimes offering them jd sports vouchers, taking them off the streets , and he hands them the streets, and he hands them into the police station. he's took knives off the took hundreds of knives off the streets of london and he needs to be commended for it and supported. >> i must say that's a strong start. you to go on matthew drag it into. >> i'm not going to win, but i'm
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sure can i get to the end to get to end today? this week? yes to the end today? this week? yes my to the end today? this week? yes my greatest britain the patriotic millionaires group who are before patriotic millionaires group who are gain before patriotic millionaires group who are gain callinge personal gain by calling for higher the super rich, higher taxes for the super rich, for multi multi millionaires like themselves. as we can for multi multi millionaires like they selves. as we can for multi multi millionaires like they cheekily as we can for multi multi millionaires like they cheekily projected can see, they cheekily projected their demands onto the front of their demands onto the front of the bank of england the treasury. >> that is a way of showing off that they're millionaires. i'm telling way telling you, that is a way anyway, right? we're getting to that tonight. greatest that right tonight. greatest britain far . that right tonight. greatest britain far. paul there we britain is far. paul there we go. so well done to him and well done , adam. we've just about got done, adam. we've just about got time the union. jack time for the union. jack >> christine well, mine is honorary french honorary and it's the french because they calm down. they are allowing the belgians now, the french , they listen quiet. we french, they listen quiet. we haven't got long. they are allowing somebody called luc noel locker , who is the head of noel locker, who is the head of a police unit, which is supposed to be stopping the migrants coming on to the boats. yeah, we are paying 100. no, it isn't. it's 500 million over three years to the french to stop the boats. and the head of the unit
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has been absent. listen, has been absent for 14 years as he is playing golf and swimming. so there mad they're doing this. they're cocking a snook. they're taking our money and they are not doing the business. >> the french mine is the chancellor jeremy >> the french mine is the chancellorjeremy hunt >> the french mine is the chancellor jeremy hunt for not listening to hospitality and cutting vat and not understanding small businesses at all. >> he is just presided over tens of thousands of businesses going bust in the next six months. in my opinion. >> okay. >> okay. >> matthew and mine is lancashire police who've been brought book by the brought to book by the independent inquiry for the failings the investigation failings over the investigation into murder of young into the awful murder of young mum nicola bailey. they brought in irrelevant details of a private life which they shouldn't. been. shouldn't. and they've been. they've been found they've been. they've been found bang on actually . bang to rights on that actually. >> genuinely that is >> again, genuinely that is a very, very strong contender. it's the french . it was always it's the french. it was always going to be the french . of going to be the french. of course it was the french. fantastic stuff. yes. well done, christine . the french, they are christine. the french, they are this week's honorary union
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jackass for letting a bloke who was supposed to be in charge of their borders taking the sick for 40 years. i mean, by anyone's standards. >> unbelievable. and also , >> unbelievable. and also, christine's passionate. passionate. >> you sold it. i'll be honest with you. i'll be honest with you. you it, right? okay you. you sold it, right? okay well, thank you very, very well, look, thank you very, very much. wonderful wonderful much. wonderful panel, wonderful show. absolutely loads. show. we went absolutely loads. and will be ready re—enter and we will be ready to re—enter the fray again from 9 pm. tomorrow. but for more on all of these bumper pages and its headliners and that's next. i'll see you at nine. >> good evening. i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. the wind's picking up a bit tonight and tomorrow, particularly so across the largely dry in the the north. largely dry in the south tomorrow, going south tomorrow, but it's going to turn colder for all of us by friday. still got high pressure nearby south—west. but nearby to the south—west. but this front will be this cold front will be introducing colder air as introducing the colder air as the isobars squeeze together the wind's up a very wind's picking up a very blustery northern blustery night across northern scotland, the scotland, particularly so in the northern isles. got a wet night for the highlands and rain for the highlands and that rain slowly edging south across the
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western isles. further south, some the hills some patchy rain over the hills of scotland and of southern scotland and northern england. but many places be dry. the breeze places will be dry. the breeze and the cloud will help to keep the temperatures up. a milder the temperatures up. so a milder night than of late, but is night than of late, but it is going to colder initially going to turn colder initially tomorrow scotland. so tomorrow across scotland. so there'll some sunny spells there'll be some sunny spells developing, be developing, but there'll be blustery far blustery showers across the far north. a wet morning through the central belt rain spreading central belt that rain spreading south northern ireland and south into northern ireland and eventually into northern england. but good of england. but a good part of england. but a good part of england and again looking england and wales, again looking dry. sunshine across dry. some sunshine across parts of south and easily of the south and east, easily seeing temperatures up to 12, maybe 13 celsius. but there's the colder air. single digits and feeling even colder with the wind scotland and the wind across scotland and the colder air spreads south for friday. some patchy rain in the south—west showers coming into the north—east. they'll be wintry in nature. some sleet and snow even to lower levels for many , though, friday will just many, though, friday will just be a bright, crisp day. but you will notice that drop in temperatures single figures and feeling colder in the east feeling even colder in the east with wind .
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with the wind. >> who is it? >> who is it? >> we're here for the show . >> we're here for the show. welcome to the dinosaur hour with me, john cleese . with me, john cleese. >> ha ha. that was married to a therapist. >> and you survived. >> and you survived. >> i thought we were getting hugh laurie. second best man . hugh laurie. second best man. >> bellissima. >> bellissima. >> you interviewed saddam hussein? what's that like? i was terrified. i'm playing strip poker with these three. >> oh , no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> oh, no, thank you. >> my cds need to be put in alphabetical order. >> are. >> are. >> are. >> are you going to be problematic again? the dinosaur. >> our sundays at 9:00 on
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>> good evening. you're with gb news. and our top story tonight. a raft of tax cuts and benefits increases aimed at making 27 million people better off was announced by the chancellor today in the biggest change outlined in his autumn statement, jeremy hunt said national insurance will be cut from 12% to 10. the triple lock on pensions will be kept taking the state pension up by 8.5% to more than £220 a week. and taxes on alcohol will be frozen until august next year, meaning no increases in duty on beer cider wines or spirits. in other increases in duty on beer cider wines or spirits . in other news wines or spirits. in other news today, the mother of a 28 year
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