tv Patrick Christys Tonight GB News November 27, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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that if you're high means that if you're a young person who's graduating from a global top 50 universities, we you can just come to the uk. >> which one is it.7 slippy rishi new polling says that 53% of brits support an immediate five year freeze on all immigration. do you and just when you think the woke mind virus couldn't get any worse, you're assuming he as any worse, you're assuming he as a pronoun true? >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> sorry. good point. are you he or she or they the bbc's doctor who brings transgender non binary guff to aliens. >> i ask is there any sign of intelligent life at the beeb and king charles thinks harry's a fool. william is a villain and the royals are a nest of racists . the explosive allegations in omid scobie's new book, which will hit the shelves tomorrow morning . we pick these claims morning. we pick these claims apart and that's before we've got started on this . got started on this. >> you've really created a big mess. >> nigel. >> nigel. >> if you believe in democracy
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and independence. >> fred, it's a liberation . >> fred, it's a liberation. >> fred, it's a liberation. >> here's nigel being airbrushed out of i'm a celeb because the left is terrified of him coming across too well on the sofa tonight, we've got the top team of carole malone, benjamin butterworth, and belinda de lucy. this is patrick christie tonight. and we're live . tonight. and we're live. okay. right. come on, talk to me. are you one of the silent majority that would stop all immigration? now for five years? email me, gb views abs—cbnnews.com. get on twitter at gb news. it all revs up after your headlines. >> patrick, thank you . good >> patrick, thank you. good evening to you. and some breaking news to start this bulletin. the israeli military has confirmed ii hostages are now on their way home and will undergo a medical assessment
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before being reunited with their families. captors the foreign ministry confirmed in the last half hour that many of the released are children with photographs of three french, two german and six argentinian being released , as well as two little released, as well as two little girls, three year old twin girls going back to their family. well, hamas says it's received a list of 33 palestine citizens to be released from israeli jails in return , it said these in return, it said these included three female prisoners and 30 minors. in a video posted onune and 30 minors. in a video posted online showed a bus arriving at an israeli military prison on the west bank. that comes as a humanitarian truce between israel and hamas has been extended for two more days as well. the news here at home, the home secretary has said the business model of people smuggling gangs will be destroyed. as he underlined the government's commitment to stopping illegal migration. james cleverly made the comments
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as he faced questions in the house of commons today for his first time as home secretary . mr first time as home secretary. mr cleverly said the government was doing all it could to stop small boat crossings . boat crossings. >> the people who are being smuggled are seen as just products . they are expendable in products. they are expendable in the eyes of those people smugglers . we have to do smugglers. we have to do everything we can and we will do to break their business model. i commend the work of my right honourable friend, the immigration minister, who has recently been to bulgaria to where in close cooperation with our international partners in bulgaria , we have seized boats. bulgaria, we have seized boats. we have seized engines. we are breaking the business model . breaking the business model. >> james cleverly . well, in >> james cleverly. well, in other news today, nearly £30 billion is being invested into new business projects in the uk. the prime minister's told global summit today that there are positive momentum in the uk economy, particularly in the areas of science tech and creative . rishi sunak says the
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creative. rishi sunak says the uk's low tax approach and culture of innovation give the uk a compare positive advantage . uk a compare positive advantage. health news and the uk's first case of a new strain of swine flu has been detected in north yorkshire. the health security agency saying the person contract what's known as the hin2 strain. that's similar to a virus found in pigs. hin2 strain. that's similar to a virus found in pigs . they've virus found in pigs. they've since fully recovered after experiencing what's been described as a mild illness. but there is now increased surveillance in surgeries and hospitals in the north of england. and as the authorities try to work out the exact source of the infection , an agreement of the infection, an agreement has been struck between the government and england's top doctors that could bring an end to strike action. the government's agreed to increase the total pay award for consultants by 4.5. union members will now vote on the proposal, which, if passed, will see strikes called off. drivers are being warned to drive
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carefully and particularly avoid puddles after a record number of so—called pothole brake breakdowns were reported and the aa says it received more than 52,000 call outs last month for vehicles caught getting stuck after driving over damaged tarmac. that's the highest number of call outs for any october they have on record. and earlier this month , the prime earlier this month, the prime minister pledged to deal with the scourge of potholes . but the the scourge of potholes. but the cost is thought to be at around £14 billion a and the duke of sussex's legal challenge over his security arrangement for when he spends time in the uk will reach the high court next week . prince harry will reach the high court next week. prince harry is taking legal action against the home office after he was told in 2020 that he would no longer be given the same degree of protection as he was before. when he's visiting the lawyers for visiting the uk, lawyers for harry will argue that he wasn't given an opportunity to make informed representations before the decision was reached. the
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claim will be heard over three days starting next week . so days starting next week. so that's the news on tv online dab+ radio and the tunein app. this is gb news, britain's news channel. this is gb news, britain's news channel . les this is gb news, britain's news channel. les miserables sings empty chairs as empty tables. >> but the miserable brits sing empty words and empty promises. we've been asking the wrong question to mr sunak. never mind can he get immigration under control ? maybe we're better off control? maybe we're better off asking if he actually wants to. today started with the ex home secretary, suella braverman, essentially pouring lighter fluid through the letter box of number 10 and striking a match in that 2019 manifesto, the conservative pledged to reduce overall of migration from overall levels of migration from its pre—brexit level of 239,000, almost laughably last year, saw almost laughably last year, saw a new record of 750 k. we felt her fury at that figure when she wrote that blistering braverman letter after being sacked. she blasted you . sunak have no
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blasted you. sunak have no appetite for doing what is necessary and therefore no real intention of fulfilling your pledge to the british people. i thought she was right then and i'm even more sure she's right now. that's because the telegraph has seen a secret migration deal between sunak and braverman and surprise, surprise, rishi didn't live up to his side of the bargain in exchange for her leadership support. in october last year, suella set out four measures for the tories to reduce net migration. and here's the thing they're absolute no brainers. she was seeking to raise the minimum salary threshold required for foreign skilled workers given. granted workers to be given. granted a visa from £26,200 a year to £40,000 now just hours ago, trade minister kemi badenoch came out and said that the £26,000 threshold is clearly too low. restrict all visa holders from bringing over their family with them, not just postgraduate students. axe graduate visas by giving them four months to find work after study instead of a whopping two years. stop foreign students from coming in to do
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mickey mouse degrees like a business study masters. now, if implemented, these measures would have meant a reduction in net migration to the tune of hundreds of thousands. but our prime minister wasn't interested . and so then the day progressed and sunak was asked to respond to braverman and the claims made in the telegraph. sunak then did a turn as a really, really bad houdini novelty tribute act, tying himself in all sorts of knots . now it's rare that knots. now it's rare that a prime minister gets caught out being so duplicitous so quickly. but here rishi sunak just a but here is rishi sunak just a few small hours . separate these few small hours. separate these clips . clips. >> well, i'm very clear that the levels of net migration are too high. they need to come down to more sustainable levels . more sustainable levels. >> our new high potential individual visa means that if you're a young person who's graduated from a global top 50 university, you can just come to the uk and stay here with your family for two years to just explore your work, study, invent . ain't nothing like that exists
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anywhere else in the world and just explore to do. >> you just come to the uk? just live here with your family? do you ever think there might be a reason why nowhere else in the world does that? rishi but like an east end market stall holder with ten minutes until packing up time, our minister up time, our prime minister is just visas like just dishing out visas like it's going of fashion. going out of fashion. he's offering two for one deals. family and friends discount, you name it, he's got it. i'm surprised he hasn't put on a black friday sale. then also today, somewhere middle today, somewhere in the middle of guff, kemi of all of this guff, kemi badenoch, who is currently serving as secretary of state for business trade, for business and trade, president the board of trade president of the board of trade and and and minister for women and equalities, this i'm equalities, said this i'm certainly in favour of us doing whatever it takes to bring the numbers down to a sustainable level . level. >> this is not this is not something that i'm being mealy mouthed about. but what i don't want is into the want to do is go into the specifics i don't know specifics when i don't know what the but i certainly the plan is, but i certainly will be pushing for the strongest measures possible. >> you're that close to
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>> so if you're that close to government, a year or so out from an election coming fresh off of massive public off the back of massive public outrage at astronomical immigration numbers, yet again, and don't know what the plan and you don't know what the plan is, may i politely suggest that's because you don't have a plan. now, according to the latest polling, 53% of all voters would support an immediate five year freeze on all further immigration to the uk. so that we can better absorb the mass migration of the last 20 years. that includes 35% of labour voters by the way, 62% of workers and 79% of brexiteers . workers and 79% of brexiteers. so i am asking is that the plan a five year freeze on all immigration, which despite the bullet and do it. immigration, which despite the bullet and do it . let's get the bullet and do it. let's get the thoughts of my panel i've got daily express columnist carole malone, journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth and former brexit party mep beunda and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy karl, i'll start with you on that one. do you think that we should just have a
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five year freeze on all immigration completely? >> matt goodwin wrote a piece on friday and said exactly that. you know, he said it would give us time to assimilate what we've already taken in and kind of, you know, deal them that you know, deal with them in that way, these way, because clearly these numbers sustainable. you numbers aren't sustainable. you know, makes the small boat know, it makes the small boat situation look piddling. in fact, goldwyn actually said that, you know, it's like, you know , worrying about the people know, worrying about the people crossing channel not crossing the channel and not worrying open window on worrying about an open window on the floor a house the first floor of a house when the first floor of a house when the door open and the front door is wide open and it's true, 104,000 have come on small boats since 2018. last year alone here, 745000, you know, net immigration. it's crazy . but you know, it's and crazy. but you know, it's and this sunak, it's clear now he's never had any intention suella has been talking for the last two years about what needs to be done. he has said it needs to be fixed and we know now that this deal was done. the telegraph have of it was have seen sight of it was witnessed multiple people and witnessed by multiple people and what we know is he went away with that document that deal
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which which downing street denied ever happened and now calling it document . and calling it a document. and he completely she sent completely ignored it. she sent him sending him him six letters sending him policy proposals to implement all of those things. and he ignored the lot. so it's clear he has no intention of doing anything about it. okay >> robert's been on gb views at gb views .com. keep these coming in. patrick. i would fully support five freeze. ian support a five year freeze. ian says yes for five years. five year halt to immigration. alan says wholeheartedly agree to says i wholeheartedly agree to all immigration. benjamin are the public want this do you know why not? i mean, it's a completely preposterous idea to go from one extreme, which is the 1.5 million net immigration we've had in the last two years, which i think even labour say is too it's a bit ridiculous really >> it's a bit ridiculous really to another extreme of to go to another extreme of having people for five having zero people for five years. >> i mean, what would that mean in would mean that lots of >> it would mean that lots of hospitals wouldn't the hospitals wouldn't have the nurses doctors . need nurses and doctors. they need lots care. homes wouldn't lots of care. homes wouldn't have staff that need to have the staff that they need to look elderly, our look after our elderly, our universities would collapse because it would ban students
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coming country. coming into the country. >> the london school >> i went to the london school of economics, which is a very hard uni to get into, and people from all over the world that are exceptionally talented come to london stay and london and many of them stay and set businesses and a set up businesses and earn a small fortune. >> and you and yeah. >> and you and yeah. >> me. and so the idea that >> and me. and so the idea that you would close door to all you would close the door to all of would be economic suicide. >> okay. >> okay. >> i just say the proposal >> can i just say the proposal for this moratorium is clear. >> not too bad. it's with >> it's not too bad. it's with the exception of letting health workers workers workers in and skilled workers that added. that we've added. >> can i quickly point out >> can i just quickly point out an oddity about that, though, >> can i just quickly point out an oddit'aabout that, though, >> can i just quickly point out an oddit'aaboiofthat, though, >> can i just quickly point out an oddit'a aboiofthat, thealth because a lot of those health workers going be workers ain't going to be earning £40,000 a year. >> how do you square that circle? >> can we not pay our own health exception the rule? exception to the rule? >> think you have be pretty >> i think you have to be pretty morally to keep morally bankrupt to keep stripping poorer countries of their workers. their health workers. >> disgusting. and >> i think it's disgusting. and i the government's i think the government's reliance on foreign makes reliance on foreign labour makes us vulnerable us an extremely vulnerable country and the that they country and the idea that they would rather do that stop developing countries, develop, would rather do that stop deve developing tries, develop, would rather do that stop deve developing countrieszlop, would rather do that stop deve developing countries ,op, stop developing countries, keeping their own health staff rather than invest and train your own workforce, i think
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that's really immoral . that's really immoral. >> these bleeding heart liberals that mass immigration don't that love mass immigration don't understand impacts poorer understand how it impacts poorer countries. movement of countries. this mass movement of people. it certainly does nothing to raise the global poor at all. i think we have a political class now sees political class now that sees england as a land mass of england as just a land mass of buyers and sellers and cheap labour and nothing else, whereas millions of us see as our as millions of us see it as our as our home, something that we have our home, something that we have our and our culture and our roots and our culture and national identity connected to. but to those who just see this country as a balance sheet, it's nothing more than that. a way to make money with make big corporations money with cheap line their cheap to labour line their pockets. four kids at pockets. i've got four kids at home. don't know they're home. i don't know if they're ever be able to buy a ever going to be able to buy a house university almost house university is almost impossible for young impossible now for young students into because the students to get into because the pnces students to get into because the prices are so competitive now i've daughterjust doing i've got a daughterjust doing her eldest her a—levels one. my eldest daughter not go to daughter decided not to go to university. says, mummy, university. she says, mummy, it's impossible. there's it's almost impossible. there's too now because too much competition now because they've doors to they've opened up their doors to they've opened up their doors to the world much. we're not the world so much. we're not training students training british students anymore. the anymore. doesn't that show the nonsense small nonsense and the small mindedness of the
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anti—immigration argument say anti—immigration argument to say that universities are so that our universities are so compare additive to get into? >> and there's though that's a problem is a good thing . problem that is a good thing. >> van—tam not the latest and the best from around the world to coming here to open to be coming here to open businesses to be studying at our universities. >> we are better off when it's harder. don't see harvard harder. you don't see harvard saying don't the saying we don't want the geniuses, be. geniuses, but they should be. >> should be a ratio. do >> there should be a ratio. do you not agree with that, benjamin? not think that benjamin? do you not think that british say british universities should say actually this amount of percentage places we should percentage of places we should go community or do go to the local community or do you just think, no, our you just think, no, sell our souls off everyone souls off to everyone international kids don't international and our kids don't get international students international and our kids don't get always ernational students international and our kids don't get always in|ational students international and our kids don't get always in additiontudents international and our kids don't get always in addition to ients are always in addition to a quota, but it's domestic students over the years. >> tell you, a lot of >> and let me tell you, a lot of our universe cities wouldn't be able to provide the resource without china paying without people from china paying 20 your argument for all >> what's your argument for all of those students coming? 40,000 students every year who are bringing number bringing a huge number of dependents well? dependents with them as well? because there time after because there was a time after when degree was finished when the degree was finished that the student and the dependents now. dependents went home. not now. they're the numbers. >> can i ask benjamin, can i ask, know, we've had rishi
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ask, you know, we've had rishi sunak there just hours apart saying, got i've got saying, look, i've got i've got to tough on this. i want to to get tough on this. i want to get costs far too high. and they're standing in front of they're standing up in front of a different audience and saying exactly think i'm exactly what they think i'm going later on in going to talk about later on in the show. by the way, later on in the show, there's some interesting we've interesting stuff and we've reached 10 on this reached out to number 10 on this and reached out the and we've reached out to the company infosys, which is was set sunaks wife's set up by rishi sunaks wife's father. father in father. so his his father in law. there's an interesting article today in conservative post, suggest post, which appears to suggest that well that that company does very well off basically. off mass migration, basically. and they are making the and they are they are making the insinuation as to whether or not rishi sunak has a vested interest in to keep mass interest in trying to keep mass migration high. again, want to emphasise we've reached out to them on that, but them for comments on that, but benjamin like benjamin does that look like a bloke you who is kept awake bloke to you who is kept awake at night the problems facing at night by the problems facing this because don't this country? because i don't really rishi. really see that with rishi. i see a bloke who might looking see a bloke who might be looking at quickly he can move to at how quickly he can move to california. well, rishi sunaks career, go into career, which may well go into tech been in banking and tech but has been in banking and hedge those kind of things. >> there is loads of people there that are incredibly
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talented come london talented that come to london because world in because we lead the world in financial services. that financial services. in that second played at the second clip you played at the start the monologue, he talks start of the monologue, he talks about for highly talented about visas for highly talented people. what kind of a country becomes minded? >> best of the >> kind of it to the best of the rest of the world. >> we don't want a small nation bedroom. you can't have a million plus people coming here every not every year. it's just not sustainable. tell you, sustainable. let me tell you, only and the south—east only london and the south—east contribute they contribute more in tax than they take country . take in this country. >> and that's where all of these highly live. highly skilled migrants live. >> can whether or not >> how how can whether or not we're being lied to by a duplicitous, we are absolutely. i think they've been lying to us for i think they've got for years. i think they've got no the no intention whatsoever. the money good. the cheap money is too good. the cheap labouris money is too good. the cheap labour is too profitable for a few big corporates and communities suffering well communities are suffering well later , labour's grand plan. >> now, although what they've just blurted this out, i'm not sure actually really mean sure they actually really mean it migration it is to bring net migration down thousand . down to a hundred thousand. couple of 200,000? well, you couple of so 200,000? well, you know that mean when know what does that mean when you that out? but you extrapolate that out? but coming up, reform uk leader and gb news richard tice gb news star richard tice explains wants abolish
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explains why he wants to abolish the office replace it the home office and replace it with new for department with a new for department immigration people immigration staffed by people who the cause of who believe in the cause of sovereign independence. plus, we'll the latest on this we'll get the latest on this explosive spat with lee anderson. don't miss that . but anderson. don't miss that. but up next in the clash, no sign of intelligent life in the new series of doctor who. you're assuming he as a pronoun , true? assuming he as a pronoun, true? >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. sorry. >> yes. sorry. good >> yes. sorry. good point. >> yes. sorry. good point. are you he or she or they are. >> it's a furby, i think, isn't it? but the creators have been slammed. for what? cringeworthy virtue signalling. that is so has going woke wrecked the tv classic former corrie star and voice of the people, charlie lawson takes on doctor who's superfan and manager of the who shop. owen luckhurst . that's shop. owen luckhurst. that's next. don't miss out .
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news, the people's channel, britain's news channel . welcome back. >> now richard tice is coming up on a new department for immigration. but now it's time for the clash . and today, dalek for the clash. and today, dalek exterminate all common sense from the new series of doctor who hopes were high for the revamp of this beloved british franchise with the beeb's top writer russell t davies reuniting former stars david tennant and catherine tate. but it looks like even a tardis could return doctor who to its heyday just look at the woke
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nonsense that viewers were subjected to me . subjected to me. >> yes, the meep. i promise i can help him get home. and then you'll never see me again. >> you're assuming he as a pronoun true ? pronoun true? >> yes. sorry. good point. are you he or she ? or they? you he or she? or they? >> my chosen pronoun is the definite article i am always the meep . meep. >> oh, i do that. >> oh, i do that. >> but no signs of intelligent life there. >> clearly. so after that pronouns disaster tonight i'm asking has going woke wrecked the tv classic. let me know your thoughts. email me gb views. our gbnews.com. tweet me on gb news. and while you're there, go and vote in our poll. i'll bring you those results very, very shortly. well, it's a debate this i'm joined now by the actor and coronation legend and coronation street legend charlie manager charlie lawson and the manager of owen lockhurst. of the who shop, owen lockhurst. both of you, thank you very, very much. and i'll start with you on this. do you think that that was a bit cringe worthy and overly woke and it's ruining it?
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>> no, not at all. >> no, not at all. >> i've been watching doctor who, myself for about 17, 18 years now, and i've found that over the years, you know, i've watched both classic series and the new series and doctor who is just one of those shows ever since the 1960s, it's always been, um, such object to change and it's, i think its foundations have been built upon that , um, foundations have been built upon that, um, simply because as william hartnell, who couldn't carry on as the doctor anymore, someone had to take, you know, the place of him. so, you know, since then, since you know , since then, since you know, they've had to, you know, keep changing and keep evolving to keep the show going all these years . years. >> okay, charlie, i'll bring you in. your thoughts. >> um , look, i. gabrielle phoned >> um, look, i. gabrielle phoned me this morning and i thought, what, what, what are you on about, darling? so i watched the
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clip , actually think. listen. clip, actually think. listen. oh, nice to meet you, son. um this is invading all our sort of television , and in my opinion, television, and in my opinion, but i have to tell you , i think but i have to tell you, i think david tanner probably handled this very well because the character who the girl is very serious about this question. but i think david plays it very well. he he everybody is aware of that. you know, this old classic, if you watch television , uh, television series now are issue driven as opposed to character driven. et cetera. et cetera. but i think david tennant took hold of the reins here, and i think his tongue is firmly in his cheek now. i mean, the next episode, god knows we're going to ask the cybermen who what they identify of or what sex is a frigging dalek , what sex is a frigging dalek, you know? i mean, it's just silly. but this is this is invaded everything that we as actors play . but you can
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actors play. but you can guarantee that if somebody ever objected to such a silly load of nonsense in a script, then they'd be told, i'm sorry, but you have to play it, you know, because that's just the way things are now. i just think it's silly. i think i think david actually handled it quite well because his tongue is firmly in his cheek. but uh, yeah , i mean, i win. yeah, i mean, i win. >> i win. i mean, do you think it really needs to be in there? i mean, i can all for, you know, maybe getting with the times, as you say. but he is essentially talking to a furry alien about genden talking to a furry alien about gender. and at point, gender. and at that point, i wonder they've their mind. >> um, i think sometimes , you >> um, i think sometimes, you know, it's good to address some of these things, but also at times it can be a little on the nose. sometimes you can be, you know, it can be there, but it doesn't have to be spoken as such because, you know, it's visual to the, you know, the viewer . so sometimes, you know, viewer. so sometimes, you know, you don't have to necessarily mention anything , charlie, just
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mention anything, charlie, just just to broaden it out a little bit. >> you made a point there about, you know, this is happening everywhere now. it does appear that you can't turn your tv on without hearing some of this stuff. and this virtue signals. i mean, how you feel about that? >> well, listen, i could tell you personally, personally party. um, you as an actor and someone who's been around for 42 years, i can tell you now. and incidentally , as i've told you incidentally, as i've told you and other of your colleagues over the last couple of years, i always consult a few actors. now um , it is everywhere . and there um, it is everywhere. and there are all, as you say, things have to be addressed and we have to move on. but in, in images it's, it's , it's shoved in now for the it's, it's shoved in now for the sake of it. if you want to do an episode about a dalek and sexuality, then then address it and do it properly. but this is just it's tokenism . um, it's just it's tokenism. um, it's
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virtue signalling, bringing nonsense and i have come across scripts in the last sort of 2 or 2 years that , that are full of 2 years that, that are full of this one and it's as simple as that strong stuff. >> okay i, i could see you were itching to get involved there. go on. >> yeah. i mean, back in the 1970s, there was an alien called alpha centauri , and even back alpha centauri, and even back then, i think it think it was addressed that, um , alpha addressed that, um, alpha centauri wasn't , you know, centauri wasn't, you know, gender specific . but back then, gender specific. but back then, you know , don't recall anyone, you know, don't recall anyone, you know, don't recall anyone, you know, don't recall anyone, you know , complaining about it. you know, complaining about it. i don't think anyone complains about it now. no, there's not many bloody lokus doing because it wasn't rammed down your throat every friggin ten minutes in every episode of every thing you say . you say. >> i must say, though. >> i must say, though. >> but i must. can i just say >> but i must. can ijust say this is why we get owen from the who shop on, right? because you know, you've got this, this, this, depth of knowledge, this, this depth of knowledge, a
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cavern of knowledge that you can claw up from . so this is claw up from. so this is actually potentially the second gender reference in gender neutral reference in doctor who history . owen and it doctor who history. owen and it was fine. it was fine . it was was fine. it was fine. it was fine. the first time round is the point that you you were getting out there and can i ask you a question now? just be very honest me as doctor who got honest with me as doctor who got better or worse. >> uh, for me personally, i think better watching saturday night's episode and, um, literally when it finished, i was in tears of joy because i remember watching daisy and catherine back in 2008. so, you know , i was at 14 year old child know, i was at 14 year old child watching doctor who again and for me, that excitement is back again . and, you know, i'm really again. and, you know, i'm really enjoying it . enjoying it. >> oh, bless you. i'm hoping that everyone else save yourself on you should be sitting on the sofa , not honest to god , son, sofa, not honest to god, son, you should be sitting behind the sofa when i watched, maybe when the. >> the daleks and the cybermen. you know something scary is on
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screen. then maybe . screen. then maybe. >> all right, both of you . >> all right, both of you. >> all right, both of you. >> both of you. i think that's what doctor should be about. what doctor who should be about. i who should scare i think doctor who should scare the frigging pants you. and the frigging pants off you. and you be hiding behind the you should be hiding behind the sofa, and sofa, not just laughing and thinking, i mean, you thinking, my god. i mean, you know it. look, i'll tell you what will happen, paddy, that eventually people like me and owen will shake hands and have a pint in the pub and agree it's all going too far. >> well , okay. you never know. >> well, okay. you never know. maybe. maybe dylan mulvaney will p0p up maybe. maybe dylan mulvaney will pop up as some kind of alien in the next episode, and that will have people cowering behind their sofas. but both of you, thank you very, very much. that is coronation street is actor and coronation street legend lawson and the legend charlie lawson and the manager the shop, owen manager of the who shop, owen lockhurst. well, you lockhurst. well, who do you agree episode agree with after a new episode of who blasted for of doctor who gets blasted for a scene in which an alien gets asked about its pronouns, has going the classic going woke ruined the tv classic tim on twitter says woke ruins everything doctor who no everything doctor who is no longer viewing longer credible family viewing paul on twitter there was paul on twitter says there was always going to be a few woke moments. it's 2023, after all, but it was generally the old
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doctor who we all loved. good story and cleverly thought out geordie also says, geordie on twitter also says, i found the scene quite humorous. actually, . and found the scene quite humorous. actu.tried . and found the scene quite humorous. actu.tried forcing . and found the scene quite humorous. actu.tried forcing gendernd found the scene quite humorous. actu.tried forcing gender norms they tried forcing gender norms onto it. quite that humans onto it. quite funny that humans assume everything fits into nice neat well your verdict is neat boxes. well your verdict is now in. 93% of you agree that going woke has ruined doctor who, while 7% of you say that it hasn't. right. coming up, as omid scobie claims that king charles is a pampered royal who has his shoelaces ironed for him and that prince william briefs the press against his own brother. is harry now duty bound to hit out against his biggest fans ? furious allegations. fans? furious allegations. that's the questions tonight . that's the questions tonight. it's all very well and good saying , oh, i've got nothing to saying, oh, i've got nothing to do this. but but has harry do with this. but but has harry now got a duty to come out and defend family ? he top defend his own family? he top daily columnist celia daily telegraph columnist celia walden stuck into scobie's walden gets stuck into scobie's bombshell book shortly. but bombshell book that shortly. but as rishi sunak is accused of a migration betrayal is richard tice right that we need a new department of immigration staffed by people who believe in
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scobie's bombshell new book. but first, it's time for gb news presenter and leader of reform uk richard tice and the new home secretary, james cleverly has assigned a new nickname today by his counterpart yvette cooper captain calamity. so why is he the captain of a sinking ship? cleverly certainly doesn't think so. i will continue to do what we know to be right driving down small boat arrivals, reducing the number of hotel rooms that are needed. >> we closed 50. we've closed 50, and we will do more , right? 50, and we will do more, right? >> well, richard , you've got >> well, richard, you've got a solution, haven't you, which is ditch the home office entirely and a new department of immigration. >> i've been saying for months, patrick, that office is patrick, that the home office is not for purpose. it hasn't patrick, that the home office is not forr purpose. it hasn't patrick, that the home office is not for years ose. it hasn't patrick, that the home office is not for years and it hasn't patrick, that the home office is not for years and years.1't patrick, that the home office is not for years and years. and been for years and years. and they actually believe in open borders . they want mass borders. they want mass immigration. they constantly have a track record of working against the wishes of their elected ministers . and i think elected ministers. and i think you've got to ditch it. i think you've got to ditch it. i think you've got to start with a whole new department of immigration
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thatis new department of immigration that is staffed very deliberately by people who actually believe in the cause , actually believe in the cause, is of sovereign, independent, protected borders. people who actually are deliberately sceptical about the claims that are coming in, that are looking at the visa applications that are coming in, the lawful ones with a very close eye, because that's how you actually carry out the wishes of the people, the wishes of the people is crystal clear election after election to bring immigration numbers down. that's what they voted for and that's what the civil servants should be enacting. and so i actually think that that's what you need. >> what would you do? would you sack a load of civil servants and just bring in their very welcome to reapply? >> is to a whole >> but this is to a whole new job and is an area where job and this is an area where actually you don't want civil service neutrality. you want people believe in defending people who believe in defending our protecting our our borders, protecting our borders and carrying out the wishes of the british people who have constantly voted to reduce immigration. that's why our
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policy is absolutely clear. one in, one out, that equals . net in, one out, that equals. net zero immigration. very good. about 400 to 450,000 people leave the country every year. so you can have smart immigration, high qualified, highly skilled people to that number. but no more. you could you could sort of almost have like a ryanair booking system as you get nearer the end of the year and the numbers towards the ceiling numbers get towards the ceiling all sorts ways you can cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbutts ways you can cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbut the ways you can cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbut the bottom ou can cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbut the bottom linean cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbut the bottom line is cut numbers get towards the ceiling allbut the bottom line is one it. but the bottom line is one in, one out, we've got the biggest population ever. we've got our own got record numbers of our own people of work benefits. people on out of work benefits. it's simple. you've got it's very simple. all you've got to our own people. and to train our own people. and here's rub. when people here's the big rub. when people bang about , here's the big rub. when people bang about, oh, we it bang on about, oh, we need it for the social and health care system, i'm about to ask. right. well, very simple. 30 years well, it's very simple. 30 years ago, immigration ago, when net immigration was less 100,000, didn't less than 100,000, we didn't seem a crisis then. why? seem to have a crisis then. why? because they paid because cause they were paid properly. they trained properly. they were trained properly. they were trained properly. they were trained properly. they have to do properly. they didn't have to do degrees. into degrees. they got straight into the training . and the job with training. and that's you look after that's how you look after people. need to people. that's what we need to get if it ain't broke, get back to. if it ain't broke, don't fix it. current home
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don't fix it. the current home office broken. it's trashed. office is broken. it's trashed. been start again. been it start again. >> well, look, moving on now to well, i don't know, a little bit of bother potentially well, i don't know, a little bit of a bother potentially well, i don't know, a little bit of a fellow other potentially well, i don't know, a little bit of a fellow gb er potentially well, i don't know, a little bit of a fellow gb newsentially well, i don't know, a little bit of a fellow gb news man,.y well, i don't know, a little bit of a fellow gb news man, lee with a fellow gb news man, lee anderson after it was alleged that the tory was offered that the tory mp was offered quite salary to defect to quite a good salary to defect to your party reform uk you denied this. i think what's going on, we've had a bit of a row. >> we've agreed to disagree and we're going to move on. but what i will say is what i said on another channel yesterday morning where said, look , morning where i said, look, conversations that i have with ministers as former ministers, tory mps who are fuming about the betrayal of the promises on immigration, on and stopping the boats, those conversations remain completely confidential. i won't even confirm who i have or have not spoken to. that's my position and i'm sticking to it. okay that's fine. >> i won't draw you on names, obviously, because it doesn't sound like there's any point. right. but are you talking to cabinet ministers at the moment about potential defection? >> that's as far as i'm going to
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go. i'm comfortable go. all right. i'm comfortable with that position. people need to know that they can trust me to know that they can trust me to keep conversations, confidential interest ing stuff. >> interesting stuff, right? well finally, london mayor sadiq khan has been giving evidence at the covid inquiry today. >> i can see no explanation at all why , you know, the gla the all why, you know, the gla the mayor of london. >> we weren't around that table. i think lives could have been saved if we were earlier. the very few cabinet members around there probably represent a diverse community. >> understand that people of black, asian and minority ethnic background have other illnesses, which get the which means if they get the virus, consequences are more virus, the consequences are more serious . serious. >> sadiq khan they're, i think trying to model himself as the saviour of ethnic minority dunng saviour of ethnic minority during the coronavirus crisis . during the coronavirus crisis. >> look, i think, frankly, given that that did not turn up to that that man did not turn up to the march yesterday organised by the march yesterday organised by the campaign against anti—semitism, i was there. it was deeply moving. i was very proud as a non—jewish person to
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be there. i think, frankly, that man, his reputation is trashed. he should be finished. there was an absolute disgrace and i think londoners need to realise who is currently in charge and frankly make sure just on that alone he should be hoofed out because he's not there on behalf of all londoners. if you are, if you are of jewish origin, then as an ethnic minority, he is not there to look after you. he doesn't care about you. it's absolutely disgusting . disgusting. >> i actually think there was an astonishing lack of political representation at that march yesterday . you know, this is yesterday. you know, this is a campaign against anti—semitism. march okay. all right. it was also very pro—israel. and that's by the nature of the people, the vast majority of the people who turned up. but that wasn't just what it was about. it was about a lot people very concerned a lot of people very concerned about astonishing about an astonishing rate of anti—semitism. it's taking place ever those october ever since those october 7 attacks and lack of attacks and the lack of perceived action well from perceived action as well from from police, lack of condemnation certain from police, lack of condemrquarters. certain from police, lack of condemrquarters. didtain from police, lack of condemrquarters. did think political quarters. i did think it shameful that was it was shameful that there was not political not more political representation there. representation in there. and i couldn't help but think that
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couldn't help but think if that had march another had been a march against another type that had been type of phobia that had been queuing . queuing up. >> you what to hear >> i tell you what to hear yesterday morning, labour mp yesterday morning, a labour mp say live on tv that he wasn't there because as some of his constituents had different views i thought was reprehensible , i thought was reprehensible, showed a complete failure of conviction of courage, of doing the right thing . the man should the right thing. the man should be ashamed of himself . be ashamed of himself. absolutely appalling. great news though, patrick. the number of people who came up to me and says, i watch you on gb news. i love gb news. it was remarkable . love gb news. it was remarkable. well, hugely, hugely significant i >> -- >> yeah, well, i mean, it was actually, i must say, very refreshing as well. and thank you to everyone who is watching and tuning in and showing that. i think, you know, there is at least one channel there with a little of common sense in little bit of common sense in all of madness. look, all of this madness. look, can i ask you a question before ask you a quick question before i let you get going? and it's about rishi sunak, a topic i'm going come later on. going to come on to later on. now later on, i'm going to be having a little look at whether
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or not there's any kind of vested interest from the vested interest there from the old business, old sunak family business, as it were, about keeping mass migration very, very high. we've reached out to sunak. we've reached out to the company involved. on involved. more detail on this later, sunak look later, but just rishi sunak look to like a man who is being to you like a man who is being kept awake at night by the realities. >> no, absolutely not. he's not being kept he doesn't being kept awake. he doesn't care. the home secretary doesn't care. the home secretary doesn't care. is the same home care. this is the same home secretary, who six secretary, the same man who six years singh said after years ago, singh said after the brexit vote, need to educate brexit vote, we need to educate people uk about people in the uk about the benefits of immigration action. he at all. he he doesn't care at all. he doesn't care about the rwanda plan. just likes, frankly, plan. he just likes, frankly, moving big cabinet moving around big cabinet positions. this lack of conviction. and he is . i tell conviction. and he is. i tell you what, that's a good nickname. captain calamity. calamity. cleverly all right. >> just very quickly, again, labour have come out whether or not meant to say it, i'm not they meant to say it, i'm not they meant to say it, i'm not sure. 200,000 apparently. is their their target net their is their target for net migration now. their is their target for net migyeah, now. right. well my >> yeah, that's right. well my target is, is one for so target is, is one for one so it's actually as it's actually net zero as opposed plus 200,000. opposed to net plus 200,000. that's right thing to do so that's the right thing to do so that we can actually get our own
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people back to work. that's that's what we should do. >> you much. richard >> thank you very much. richard tice. of tice. there is a leader of reform uk gb news presenter now coming labour claimed that coming up as labour claimed that they net migration coming up as labour claimed that they to net migration coming up as labour claimed that they to 200,000.t migration coming up as labour claimed that they to 200,000. cangration coming up as labour claimed that they to 200,000. can any on coming up as labour claimed that they to 200,000. can any of our down to 200,000. can any of our politicians trusted solve politicians be trusted to solve the crisis on some the worsening crisis on some strong accusations about rishi sunak? in an article that was published today? i hit out at published today? i do hit out at keir starmer , hit out at rishi keir starmer, hit out at rishi sunak hit at all those sunak hit out at all of those hand—wringing class. hand—wringing political class. very shortly. we'll also very very shortly. we'll also have exclusive celebrity have an exclusive celebrity reaction . an and yeah , i mean, reaction. an and yeah, i mean, seriously, from what i've heard , seriously, from what i've heard, it is actually quite interesting the lengths that itv are going to airbrush nigel farage out of the series, including not running something that our insiders tell us was absolutely sensational. telly from the camp today. sensational. telly from the camp today . i'll also have the most today. i'll also have the most entertaining paper review you will get anywhere on the tv. but next, king charles thinks harry is a fool. william is a villain, and royals are a nest of and the royals are a nest of racist explosive allegations in ahmed scobie's which ahmed scobie's new book, which will from will hit the shelves from midnight telegraph midnight top, daily telegraph columnist walden picks
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next now, the sussex's cheerleader in chief, omid scobie, has sparked uproar after a baseless assault against the royal family. in his new book end game will be released tomorrow. but some early release extracts have already prompted widespread backlash , including from the backlash, including from the daily express, whose front page today called on prince harry to hit out at the cruel attacks on the royals, basically saying, look, he's got to come out swinging here if he cares about his family. well, the latest scobie include scobie bombshells include a spunous scobie bombshells include a spurious that king charles spurious claim that king charles is a pampered who has his is a pampered royal who has his courtiers ironing shoelaces and squeezed onto his squeezed toothpaste onto his brush. scobie also accuses prince william of briefing the press against his brother, which allies of the future king have since blasted as outrageous, suggest as well. celia joins me
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now . is prince suggest as well. celia joins me now. is prince harry suggest as well. celia joins me now . is prince harry duty suggest as well. celia joins me now. is prince harry duty bound to publicly rebuke scobie ? do to publicly rebuke scobie? do you think he's got to come out swinging? >> yes, he really does mean because it's one of two things are going on here. either scobie has gone rogue and just decided he's he's going to i mean, we really hope this is his end game because i'm getting terrible sort of groundhog day feeling from all this. but so either he's gone rogue and he's just decided to, you know, try, try his luck or he is actually doing this, you know, in some way for meghan and perhaps harry to which is obviously worse. but but either way, you get the feeling that it's sort of getting out of control, really, because he's going to if he is doing this sort of with meghan or and harry, perhaps then then then what happens when they eventually have a falling out, which seems to happen with everyone and indeed happened with a previous sort of ghost—writer, didn't it ? um,
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ghost—writer, didn't it? um, because then it will become obvious that they, that they have been colluding with him, but it just seems to be a series of really sort of embarrass saying it's very much down in the weeds isn't it, this one, i mean the toothpaste , an inch of mean the toothpaste, an inch of toothpaste on toothbrush and toothpaste on his toothbrush and the the ironed laces . it's the and the ironed laces. it's just all so embarrassing . just all so embarrassing. >> um, i mean, that toothpaste toothbrush thing i'd heard years ago anyway is a kind of joke more than anything. i think a certain way he likes his egg cooked and things. it's not really new stuff. even if it is true to be honest. so, you know, it does make you question the quality of the book, which has not that received as not been that well received as well. mean, even the new york well. i mean, even the new york times have come out and absolutely so there times have come out and abs(go. aly so there times have come out and abs(go. but so there times have come out and abs(go. but you so there times have come out and abs(go. but you know, so there times have come out and abs(go. but you know, harry,e you go. but you know, harry, i just think if you did really care about your family, surely you would come out and distance yourself from some of the claims in there. you know, you would have to, wouldn't you? >> absolutely . and think i mean, >> absolutely. and think i mean, he needs to. but also she needs
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to because let's not forget that she was forced to admit it under oath , that she'd forgotten , as oath, that she'd forgotten, as it turns out, that she had , in it turns out, that she had, in fact, briefed scobie before for the first book. and she did say this was via an aide. but you see, this is what i'm worried about, is all this this language . if you're if you mean that there's one person in between you two, then i'm sorry, but you're still you're still briefing they're still briefing this so. so you know, as this person. so. so you know, as we know, sort of truth and transparency are not perhaps her strong points. well, possibly not. >> but look to another bombshell claim to emerge from this book. so, meghan claim not one, but two members of the royal household discussed archie's skin colour while she was pregnant. here is scobie speaking about this big royal race row . race i'ow. >> race row. >> do you know who made the comments about archie's skin colour? >> names were mentioned in >> the names were mentioned in letters between meghan and charles that were exchanged sometime after the oprah interview.
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>> we know from sources that charles was horrified that that's how meghan felt those conversations were and that he wanted to sort of as a representative of the family, have that conversation with her. and it's why personally think and it's why i personally think that they have been able to move forward with kind of line forward with some kind of line of communication afterwards, though, they may not see eye to eye on it quite a lot to unpack there. >> so if these letters were between meghan and charles and you've not been talking to charles, how have you got hold of these? i mean, do you believe anything he says? >> well, i mean, he's famously lied about his age, you know, to a which just not a journalist, which is just not a journalist, which is just not a apart from anything else, just not a smart thing to do, is it? so i suspect lot of. because so i suspect a lot of. because it's going to come out, um , so it's going to come out, um, so i think he you know, there's think that he you know, there's just going to be no it's all it's all it's he's i mean i'd like to say he's a figure of fun, but unfortunately it's not fun, but unfortunately it's not fun because he's needlessly vicious. and also it's tedious. it really is. it feels like when
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it really is. it feels like when i when i saw the paper and it had that on the front page about you know, not one, but two sort of felt like i was, you know, like 18 months had gone by and we're still discussing this one sort of rumour conversation . sort of rumour ed conversation. >> name it, just get it out there. everyone's sick of it, you know, just all this. oh you know, just say all this. oh it is like it's like, mean girls, isn't it? it's all this kind of talking behind each other's and very other's back. and then very often i know often when people i don't know about but, you know, in about you, but, you know, in life, whenever anyone tells you, oh, i can't tell you what oh, no, i can't tell you what i've about, i've just been talking about, it turns it dull. anyway, turns out it was dull. anyway, in you get to the in the end, you get to the bottom of it and you just think, well, what was the point of all of but look, moving away of that? but look, moving away from royals, stafford, from the royals, celia stafford, guys thomas hospital guys in saint thomas hospital and king's college in and king's college hospital in london owing london have been recalled owing the of newborn the gender identity of newborn babies forms instead of their babies on forms instead of their biological hospitals biological sex. so the hospitals have and have since apologised and attributed to an error attributed the issue to an error in it system. but in their new it system. but celia, you've been doing a bit of digging this you're of digging on this and you're going tell us what you found going to tell us what you found now, you? i think well, now, aren't you? i think well, what's this, what's alarming about this, i
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mean, the first thing that that is alarming because of course on every it's worrying is every level it's worrying is that was box for sex. that there was no box for sex. >> so there was only a box for gender identity . and now we're gender identity. and now we're being told someone, a spokesman for the nhs said that this was because , as they have just because, as they have just implemented this incredibly fancy new system for hundred and £50 million, we are spending on this and that it was an error, a systems error. now, i think that's a little bit too convenient given we know perfectly well what their stance has been . um, particularly has been. um, particularly recently despite being told off for this. so they have been, for example, as we know, calling it, chest feeding. um online on their various websites instead of breastfeeding. they have not called them. they're not saying mothers or women, all of that . mothers or women, all of that. um, a ridiculous wokery. and so this makes perfect sense. it's all the same narrative . um, and all the same narrative. um, and what worries me the most about this is that it feels as though
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even though they've been told expressly not to do this, they are now so ensconced in their own ideology that they're just going to ignore whatever anyone says. >> it's just remarkable. says. >> it'sjust remarkable. i mean, >> it's just remarkable. i mean, literally, the epicentre of biological fact that what sex is the baby , you know, the baby has the baby, you know, the baby has just come out of the womb and we're being asked to assign it a gender and not just look what's between his legs, but look. thank you very much. great thank you very, very much. great to have you on the show. i really hope to talk to you again very, walden, very, very soon. celia walden, who's columnist at the who's the star columnist at the daily telegraph salah al—din pearson she'll kill but pearson that she'll kill me. but coming lefty comedian coming up as lefty comedian stewart writes absolutely stewart lee writes an absolutely scathing calling for scathing column calling for nigel de—platformed nigel farage to be de—platformed while also claiming that ant and dec will have blood on their hands if he wins. the left hands if he wins. are the left and woke itv bosses scared of the gb news star winning i'm a celeb. we found something out from an inside source in the camp tonight that will bring to you shortly which appears to prove this. we get exclusive
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reaction from down under before our own belinda deluise our very own belinda deluise debates former labour adviser stella kidu. that's happening very soon. but course i'm very soon. but of course i'm going tee off on the shower. going to tee off on the shower. is political class on is our political class on immigration and that's coming your way next evening. >> i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news staying cold throughout this week. really frosty mornings will become pretty frequent and so will quite a bit of sunshine by day. it wasn't a lot of sunshine around today. quite a lot of cloud and still some outbreaks of rain coming into northern england eastern england england and eastern england and the northern scotland the showers in northern scotland will snow, but only will turn to snow, but only really over the tops of the hills might turn a bit icy, could turn bit foggy in could turn a bit foggy in places, temperatures places, and temperatures dropping freezing across dropping below freezing across northern britain, certainly in the further south, the countryside further south, just holding up a few just about holding up a few degrees on tuesday degrees above zero on to tuesday . we'll start with quite a lot of cloud over the midlands, the odd shower here and there. but that should clear away the showers northeast scotland showers in northeast scotland will wintry. will turn increasingly wintry. so snow coming in
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so some sleet and snow coming in here. certainly end of here. certainly by the end of the even to low levels. for the day, even to low levels. for many, it's dry and many, though, it's a dry and a bright day tomorrow. it's going to be cold, 4 or 5 degrees across the north, 7 8 further across the north, 7 or 8 further south. feeling chilly with south. but feeling chilly with the which will continue the winds, which will continue to in to bring wintry showers in across northeast scotland, but also southeast also maybe southeast scotland, northeast , we could see northeast england, we could see some sleet snow showers on some sleet and snow showers on tuesday night and into wednesday. so it could be a little icy here again for many wednesday is dry and fine. chilly, yes , but with quite chilly, yes, but with quite a bit of sunshine. temperatures though, well below average for the time of year. and with a cold air in place, eyes down to the south—west, because these low systems could low pressure systems could introduce and introduce some wet weather and that just that means the potential, just the of some snow in the the risk of some snow in the south later this week
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high means that if you're a young person who's graduated from a global top 50 university, you can just come to the uk . you can just come to the uk. >> rishi sunak takes us all for mugs and tells two different audiences, two different things on immigration, just hours apart. but labour thinks this is apart. but labour thinks this is a normal level of immigration. well the normal level is a hundred thousand couple of a year. hundred thousand couple of a year . yeah, not sure about that , year. yeah, not sure about that, but 53% of the public wants a total ban on new arrivals for the next five years. i tear into the next five years. i tear into the shower. that is our political class. shortly >> you've really created a big mess, nigel. >> if you believe in democracy and independence, fred, it's a liberation. >> well, the rumour is the itv execs are desperately trying to airbrush nigel out of the i'm a celebrity jungle, and i'll bring you an exclusive shortly , which you an exclusive shortly, which appears to prove just that unhinged lefty commentators in the guardian say that they will have blood on their hands if nigel becomes more popular. have
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they lost the plot? we'll go live down under with ben leo for exclusive live reaction in 15 minutes. you won't want to miss what he has to say. let me tell you also what the heck is happening chinese happening in china. chinese hospitals overflowing with hospitals are overflowing with people suffering pneumonia like symptoms. as they say. everything's ah we having everything's fine. ah we having deja . i've got the most deja flu. i've got the most entertaining newspaper preview on the telly and expect the papers to be full of stuff like this. >> do you know who made the comment? >> it's about archie's skin colour. the names were mentioned in letters between meghan and charles that were exchanged some time after the oprah interview . time after the oprah interview. >> well, omid scobie's new book is out tomorrow. kelvin mackenzie will tear into that. but on the sofa, it's a tremendous trio of carole malone, benjamin butterworth and beunda malone, benjamin butterworth and belinda de lucy patrick christys tonight. and it's live . tonight. and it's live. wow. wow wow. we may well have
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unearthed actual proof that nigel farage is indeed being airbrushed out of the jungle by woke itv bosses. now, we'll bnng woke itv bosses. now, we'll bring that to you just after quarter past. well they might be scared that he's actually going to win it. gb views or gbnews.com. is that email address? do you think he's being airbrushed? now? get on twitter at gb news. all revs back up at gb news. it all revs back up after your headlines . after your headlines. >> patrick, thank you and good evening to you. well, it's been a good night in israel tonight. 11 hostages, including eight children and three adults, have been released from gaza this evening. they've arrived now in israel and they're having medical check ups before being reunited with their families. catch was foreign ministry confirmed their identities and photographs were released of three french, two german and six argentinians, including an image of three year old twin sisters as israel says, 50 women and children are to be freed over
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four days. hamas for its part, says it's received a list of 33 palestinians to be released from israeli jails. in return, it said these included three female prisoners and 30 minors. a video posted online showed a bus arriving at an israeli military prison believed to be the moment that the palestinian prisoners will be picked up. that comes as a humanitarian truce between israel and hamas has been extended for two more days . extended for two more days. well, in news here at home, the home secretary has said the business model of people smuggling gangs must be destroyed . as he tried to destroyed. as he tried to underline the government's commitment to stopping illegal migration in james cleverly made the comments as he faced questions in the house of commons today for his first time as home secretary . mr cleverly as home secretary. mr cleverly said the government is doing all it can to stop small boat crossings for all who are being smuggled are seen as just products. >> they are expendable in the eyes of those people smugglers.
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we have to do everything that we can and we will do to break their business model. i commend their business model. i commend the work of my right honourable friend, the immigration minister, who has recently been to bulgaria, where in close cooperation with our international partners in bulgaria, we have seized boats, we have seized engines, we are breaking the business model . breaking the business model. >> james cleverly now nearly £30 billion is going to be invested in new business projects in the uk . the prime minister has told uk. the prime minister has told global summit today there's positive momentum in the uk economy, particularly in the science, tech and creative sectors. rishi sunak says the uk's low tax approach and culture of innovation give it a competitive advantage . and the competitive advantage. and the uk's first case of a new strain of swine flu has been detected in north yorkshire. the health security agency says the person contracted what's known as the h1n1 flu strain, similar to a virus found in pigs. the person
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has since fully recovered after experiencing a mild illness . but experiencing a mild illness. but there's increased surveillance now in surgeries and hospitals across northern england as the authorities work to establish the source of the infection in an agreement has been struck between the government and england's top doctors that could bnng england's top doctors that could bring an end to strike action. the government has agreed to increase the total pay award for consults . it's by 4.5. increase the total pay award for consults. it's by 4.5. union members will now vote on the proposal, which, if passed, will see strikes called off. drivers are being warned to drive carefully and avoid puddles after a record number of so—called pot hole breakdowns were reported . the aa saying it were reported. the aa saying it received more than 52,000 calls outs last month for vehicles getting stuck after driving over damaged tarmac. getting stuck after driving over damaged tarmac . that's the damaged tarmac. that's the highest number of call outs for any october they have on record . any october they have on record. well, earlier this month, the prime minister pledged to deal with the scourge of potholes, but the estimated cost of fixing
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them at around £14 billion. them is at around £14 billion. as and lastly, his majesty, the king has met with business and finance leaders from across the world at buckingham palace this evening to mark the uk's global investment summit . king charles investment summit. king charles was introduced by the prime minister to attendees from the wmmw minister to attendees from the summit. the reception comes ahead of the king's attendance at the opening ceremony of the world climate action summit at cop 28 in dubai on friday. that's the news from gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel. >> never before has so much damage been done to so many by so few . i have turned from so few. i have turned from disappointment to genuine fury at rishi sunak. i don't think this guy loses a wink of sleep worrying about the problems this country faces. i think he's using his position as prime
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minister as a line on his cv and a stepping stone to silicon valley. i'm starting a sweepstake on how long it is before rishi sunak moves his entire today entire family to america. today we saw one of the most dupuchous we saw one of the most duplicitous things i've seen from a prime minister on immigration and clip sums immigration and this clip sums up have such a big problem. >> well, i'm very clear that the levels of net migration are too high. they need to come to high. they need to come down to more sustainable levels . more sustainable levels. >> high potential >> our new high potential individual visa means that if you're a young person who's graduate from a global top 50 university city, you can just come to the uk and stay here with your family for two years to just explore work, study , to just explore work, study, invent nothing like that exists anywhere else in the world. those clips taken just hours apart. >> i mean , it's ridiculous. he's >> i mean, it's ridiculous. he's not even trying anymore, is he? opens mouth, sound bite over here. okay. different crowd opens mouth. completely different sound bite over here. okay. the only thing i've seen him get genuinely turned on about his artificial
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intelligence. he's more turned on by artificial intelligence than a bloke who actually owns an sex robots. kemi an arsenal of sex robots. kemi badenoch secretary of state for business and trade. since 2023. president the board of trade president of the board of trade and minister for women and equality 2022, has piped equality since 2022, has piped up today . up today. >> i'm certainly in favour of us doing whatever it takes to bring the numbers down to a sustainable level. this is not this is not something that i'm being mealy mouthed about. but what i don't want to do is go into the specifics when i don't know what the plan is, but i certainly be for certainly will be pushing for the measures possible. the strongest measures possible. >> oh, brilliant. so you don't know i mean, know what the plan is. i mean, you're flipping cabinet know what the plan is. i mean, you're �*thereg cabinet know what the plan is. i mean, you're �*thereisn't)inet know what the plan is. i mean, you're “there isn't actually minister. there isn't actually a plan, there isn't. and plan, is there? there isn't. and there unconfirmed there are some unconfirmed concerns. i think this is concerns. and i think this is something that's paying something that's worth paying attention sunak in attention to that rishi sunak in laws founded a company called infosys, which has garnered the sunak family incredible amounts of wealth, whose business model reportedly largely relies or certainly is helped by soft touch immigration laws and finding loopholes, so much so
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that there is this report from the us immigration and customs enforcement , which states indian enforcement, which states indian corporation pays record $34 billion fine to settle allegations of systemic visa fraud and abuse of immigration processes . and now they deny any processes. and now they deny any wrongdoing in all of this. and there is no evidence that the prime minister has been compromised . and number 10 and compromised. and number 10 and infosys are both yet to reply to our request for comment. so we'll have to wait and see on that one. i'll just say it again. rishi sunak doesn't strike me as a man who is kept awake at night worrying about how to solve our immigration problem. he certainly doesn't behave like one, in my view. let's to labour, shall we? let's turn to labour, shall we? yesterday, shadow yesterday, their shadow immigration said he immigration minister said he wanted net migration down wanted to get net migration down to it depends on to 200,000, but it depends on the needs of the economy. well there you they'll do there you go. they'll do absolutely nothing. then whenever they talk about mass migration being good the migration being good for the economy, nobody how economy, nobody tells you how much be per much better it will be per capita. because it's capita. why? because it's getting not better. getting worse. not better. labour says it's all about
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growth gdp. well, there growth growing gdp. well, there is they're going to cut is no way they're going to cut the immigration numbers their the immigration numbers of their own starmer was own accord. keir starmer was asked which song sums up the labour party and he chose the eu anthem ode to joy . the eu's anthem ode to joy. the eu's borders have the same consistency as wet cardboard. oh, course he also said oh, and of course he also said that he prefers davos to westminster. so he's hardly mr britain, is he? the labour leader in wales? mark drakeford even reports that he wanted to give seekers £1,600 give asylum seekers £1,600 a month. so i think that tells you everything you need to know there scotland. oh humza there up in scotland. oh humza yousaf called for scotland to lead the way and accept palestinian refugees. none of the neighbouring countries want them, which might tell you them, which might also tell you something. got this clown something. you've got this clown in ireland, leo varadkar, who seems content to sell his seems pretty content to sell his country down the river when it comes to both legal and illegal immigration. despite massive pubuc immigration. despite massive public culminating in public outrage, culminating in some unsavoury scenes some incredibly unsavoury scenes the other night during the dubun the other night during the dublin he then appears to dublin riots, he then appears to use that situation not to come out stronger immigration out for stronger immigration enforcement or tighter border restrictions. no he wants to
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rush through facial recognition technology that would identify rioters quicker and clamp down more so—called hate speech more on so—called hate speech online. i mean, this guy couldn't even say that. a girl freed by hamas has been taken hostage . he got community noted hostage. he got community noted on twitter for saying that she was lost and now she's been found . it wasn't hide and seek, found. it wasn't hide and seek, mate . a load of jihadi mate. a load of jihadi terrorists took her when they went on a genocidal rampage. now, when i look around and a variety of geographically close leaders, all i see is a group of people doing their to best distance themselves from a crisis as opposed to actually solving it. but to respond now i'm joined again by daily express columnist carole malone , express columnist carole malone, journalist and broadcaster benjamin butterworth , and former benjamin butterworth, and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy . carole, i'll turn to you first on this one. you know , it just on this one. you know, it just doesn't seem to me as though any of our politicians there have any desire whatsoever to solve the migration. >> just there is no one to vote for in this country. if what you
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want is controlled immigration, there's no one, you know, and labour certain certainly can't be trusted with it. you know, they, you know, they started back in 2004 when they opened the doors, when tony blair got into power and he let in many more eu migrants than he needed to by dropping transitional to by dropping the transitional restrictions. then, restrictions. and since then, it's been, you know, and labour don't have a coherent plan every time, you know, you hear starmer , starmer said something which i found astonishing. he said he was talking about we have to stop reliant on foreign stop being reliant on foreign on, employees . yeah. on, on foreign employees. yeah. foreign labour. that's a brexiteers argument , for god's brexiteers argument, for god's sake. you know that's not the argument. no, let me, let me just. just say before he gets in, because he'll take all the thing actually , i've forgotten how. >> now. >> i mean this is that's an absolute classic of the waving benjamin . i absolute classic of the waving benjamin. i can see a absolute classic of the waving benjamin . i can see a future. benjamin. i can see a future. i can see a future. the way the european union is going. well we have to get back into the eu to control our immigration. >> yes. well, where i might agree with the other panellists is that clearly rishi sunak and
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the lied to the the tories have lied to the country i don't like the country because i don't like the idea of really low immigration. >> don't this >> i certainly don't want this five freeze idea. but they five year freeze idea. but they went to the country both at successive elections and successive general elections and in referendum in the brexit referendum and said immigration said that immigration figures should i'll tell should be lower. well, i'll tell you what, it's triple the numbers was when brown numbers it was when gordon brown left office. and gordon left office. and what gordon brown was actually a lot brown said was actually a lot what keir starmer said, which was british british was british jobs for british workers. i think bring workers. i think i think bring back brown. back gordon brown. >> , can i can i >> but belinda, can i can i bnng >> but belinda, can i can i bring you on this? and i just bring you in on this? and i just want to as well, we've gone want to say as well, we've gone to number 10 for comment. we've gone to company for gone to the company infosys for comment in any comment as well. are you in any way about idea way concerned about the idea that there is a company that has links to the sunak family ? we, links to the sunak family? we, you know, that appears appears to make quite a lot of money out of lax immigration laws and lax immigration rules. >> i think people are absolutely bewildered as to the reason why the tories keep year after year fibbing about their immigration policies, because that's what it is in the manifesto. not only do
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they not do it, they triple it . they not do it, they triple it. and why not look into possible links? because there has to be an explanation as to why they're committing political kamikaze over this mass aggressive hyper immigration issue. they've got going. and you know what? democracy depends on trust to function right ? if there's no function right? if there's no trust over immigration, people won't go to the ballot box and see it as a way to alleviate their stress on it. and there will become a time civil unrest across europe will happen if our leaders don't take this. >> going to read an extract from this article in conservative post. again want to stress we've gone of this gone to comment on all of this to all the relevant people. we're yet hear back to fulfil we're yet to hear back to fulfil their promise, which is basically they get basically that they can get people into a variety of different countries for work , different countries for work, like infosys like companies like infosys employ of employ huge numbers of immigration lawyers to out immigration lawyers to hunt out the easiest visas migration the easiest visas and migration loopholes their loopholes once they get their staff in, the lawyers help them push more visas for push for more visas for children, spouses, siblings, uncles, aunts in—laws with uncles, aunts and in—laws with the aim of gaining citizenship as soon as possible. that is a
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company that was founded by rishi sunaks, father in law . rishi sunaks, father in law. benjamin. should we be concerned by this ? by this? >> no. i want people to be coming to this country to do the jobs that we need filling and to create businesses and fulfil, you know, very skilled labour like company may well need like that company may well need those types workers for all those types of workers for all you the truth is that we you know, the truth is that we have serious shortages in have had serious shortages in areas like health care, social care, lorry drivers, hospitality and we needed people to come into the country to do this. >> we have 5 million, a lot of the people who are coming into this on on immigration. this country on on immigration. >> that's 750,000. they're low skilled workers, very and skilled workers, very low, and they're pay very they're on low wages, pay very little. not all health workers, that's why that's for sure, which is why it's they're going to it's good that they're going to raise why? and listen, raise this bar. why? and listen, no, listen, i think the no, but listen, i think the thing sunak he does not thing about sunak is he does not understand of understand the anxiety of the british about british people about immigration. actually, british people about immigsuella actually, british people about immigsuella said actually, british people about immigsuella said it:tually, british people about immigsuella said it wasly, british people about immigsuella said it was a. british people about immigsuella said it was a slap know, suella said it was a slap in the face. i think it's a little bit think it's a spit little bit i think it's a spit in the face. he is not understanding their anxiety and their very real concerns. you
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and and we live in the and i and we don't live in the areas that are affected by mass. i live in london. but you are not london more not affected. london has more mass anywhere, mass migration than anywhere, maybe the world. maybe anywhere in the world. work is affected work that you do is not affected by mass migration. the work and lots of other parts of the country is and you will never feel ivory tower feel that it's ivory tower syndrome. feel that it's ivory tower syndronliberals never really >> the liberals never really face impact of mass face the impact of mass immigration, is why they immigration, which is why they keep it. well keep promoting it. well fantastic hour . fantastic start to the hour. >> a proper, proper rip roaring battle they're having a bit of battle. they're having a bit of a contest going on. but yes , our a contest going on. but yes, our nigel got his guns out once again. oh and it seems as though the gb news star is enjoying himself down under before i give you a little bit of an exclusive insight into the lengths the itv are allegedly going to airbrush nigel out of this series, we've got an inside in the camp who's been revealing some things for us. i'm going to make you watch this. >> you do get used to a routine in life and whilst there are 1 or 2 discomforts, it's actually
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really rather pleasant and rather nice . you wake up and rather nice. you wake up and it's natural light and it's beautiful. i mean, it is a very beautiful. i mean, it is a very beautiful place. there's no question about that . question about that. >> well, let's cross live now to australia where our reporter ben leo is beachside, obviously for the inside track on on the latest from the jungle. ben, there you go. now you've actually gone and got a little bit of a scoop for us i think what's going on. yeah >> the afternoon. morning, evening , patrick whatever time evening, patrick whatever time it is in the world, i have discovered a rather bombshell revelation , which i am fairly revelation, which i am fairly certain is true. i have good sources from inside and the i'm a celebrity camp. if anyone's watched tonight's show of i'm a celebrity, they'll probably be wondering why the only contribution from nigel was that clip you just played where he said, oh, i love the jungle. it's beautiful. literally, for the the show. didn't the rest of the show. i didn't see or hear him speak see him once or hear him speak again . and happened a
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again. and that's happened a couple in recent days. couple of times in recent days. and of course, he has been barred from some bushtucker trials medical trials because of medical reasons. dodgy back. reasons. he's got a dodgy back. however, you would expect conversations at or conversations at least, or discussions with other camp mates interactions to at mates and interactions to at least i've least be broadcast. i've discovered that a couple of days ago, and this is on very good authority. remember that nigel had a out his good friend and political ally donald trump , political ally donald trump, where he was talking about how he campaigned with trump during the 2016 election, how he thinks he's a great guy and all the camp mates, the camp mates seemed very interested in what he had to say about it. we've not seen that interaction on telly. and i have to say , why telly. and i have to say, why not? even if it's just a 2030 second clip in an hour plus show of i'm a celeb, why haven't itv played that interaction? you would have thought donald trump being one most popular being one of the most popular and controversial figures in the world. they played world. why haven't they played that it kind of plays that clip? and it kind of plays into seen in into reports that we've seen in recent that left the itv
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recent days that left the itv producers and people working on the show don't want to give farage that airtime because they don't agree him. and trump politically. >> well , that is a fascinating >> well, that is a fascinating revelation , ian, as well. i revelation, ian, as well. i think we've gone to itv for comment on this and we will be heanng comment on this and we will be hearing back from them in due course. of course, we're also going to be having a discussion a little bit later on as to whether or not whether or not itv bosses are flapping a bit now because of this. but ben , now because of this. but ben, thank you very, very much for bringing that to us. we're going to chat with our panel to have a chat with our panel now. ben leo, they're beavering away behind the scenes of imaceleb look last imaceleb for us. look last night, show spokesperson night, a show spokesperson said it intention to it is always our intention to broadcast show that is a fair broadcast a show that is a fair and accurate representation of life camp. for our life in the camp. for all our celebrities. so that was that comment just just comment there. look, just just quickly belinda, can quickly on this, belinda, can you you believe that itv you can you believe that itv would be would potentially be be airbrushing out something like, you know, a conversation between nigel farage about donald trump? et cetera . let's be honest, it's et cetera. let's be honest, it's probably more interesting than half of the stuff that goes on
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there, and looks like they've there, and it looks like they've just on the cutting room floor. >> i can totally believe it. in fact, i was watching it last night i was was shocked night and i was i was shocked because nigel was barely it because nigel was barely in it at one moment he at all. and the one moment he was asked a question, which was tell exciting story, tell us an exciting story, nigel, was asked the fred nigel, he was asked the fred french fred chap just butted in and he could and talked over him and he could barely have a word in. so barely have have a word in. so listen, they've him a lot listen, they've paid him a lot of money to do this. people are going to tune out they feel going to tune out if they feel like airbrushed and like he's being airbrushed and i wouldn't past them at all wouldn't put it past them at all to it. to do it. >> i mean, there are these rumours that itv are flapping a bit because they've people bit because they've got people we're going to have a discussion about actually. about this in a second actually. so the comedian, so stewart lee, the comedian, writing the guardian and writing in the guardian and some will blood on their hands will have blood on their hands if wins will be if nigel wins the itv will be will some kind of will be creating some kind of next minister and they're next prime minister and they're going find a way of going to have to find a way of living with that. we aren't gonna have time to talk about that we'll do when that now. we'll do it when i come back. but coming up, the uk's entertaining uk's most entertaining paper review. bored as my review. you won't be bored as my panel of news experts chew through the latest headlines,
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hot press. but yes, as hot off the press. but yes, as i was saying, comedian stewart lee writes column calling writes a scathing column calling for to be for nigel farage to be de—platformed are the left and itv the gb news de—platformed are the left and itv winning the gb news de—platformed are the left and itv winning i'm the gb news de—platformed are the left and itv winning i'm athe gb news de—platformed are the left and itv winning i'm a celebs news de—platformed are the left and itv winning i'm a celeb armand star winning i'm a celeb armand down under. ben leo has more exclusive for us. exclusive information for us. plus former labour adviser stella tachikiru and former brexit party mep belinda de lucy . they're going to battle it out on all of that next. don't miss it
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news channel. the liveliest pay per view on the telly coming up. >> first, they were sent into meltdown when gb news superstar nigel farage announced that he was heading into the jungle and the rabble rousing left just couldn't seem to let it go. so—called comedian lee so—called comedian stewart lee has none other than the has taken to none other than the rag the guardian , of course, rag of the guardian, of course, to sensationally accuse itv of providing , to sensationally accuse itv of providing, i'm quoting to sensationally accuse itv of providing , i'm quoting now, an providing, i'm quoting now, an uncritical platform for a dangerous demagogue to present himself as a man of the people without being held to account in any meaningful way. it goes on. ant and dec will have blood on their hands if the gb news presenter wins . all right, so presenter wins. all right, so all the left scared of nigel winning i'm a celeb. and if so, why ? to debate this now, i'm why? to debate this now, i'm joined by former brexit party mep belinda de lucy and former labour aide stella chennai six at belinda. i'll start with you. some of these comments are about nigel being de—platformed. okay ant and dec and itv having blood on their hands. he said that the
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apprentice gave america trump have i got news for you? gave britain ? boris johnson i mean, britain? boris johnson i mean, this is unhinged, isn't it? >> i think there are many on the lib left who have literally worked themselves up into an emotional for years emotional lava for years over nigel victim to their nigel falling victim to their own hysteria , first demonising own hysteria, first demonising him beyond all recognition and then being terrified of the monster they've created. it's his sterical and they sound deranged , clearly. but what's deranged, clearly. but what's really interesting is clearly they're worried . they're worried they're worried. they're worried that someone like nigel, who has very centrist, moderate point of views, like a country governing itself and making its own laws and having sustainable immigration and controls borders, these are globally recognised centrist views. and a lot on the left hate them, so they need call him the devil. they need to call him the devil. and because he hasn't shown his horns on i'm a celebrity, they're really angry that people are like him and find are going to like him and find him charming pussycat him the charming pussycat he is. >> look, stella, know, >> but look, stella, you know, he says it's an uncritical view. i the cameras rolling i mean, the cameras are rolling 24 seven, right? i mean, 24 over seven, right? i mean, they easily just stitch they could easily just stitch
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him up, and they clearly haven't found way to do at the found a way to do that at the moment. so editing him found a way to do that at the monlsit. so editing him found a way to do that at the monis that) editing him found a way to do that at the monis that the editing him found a way to do that at the monis that the that iting him found a way to do that at the monis that the that really|im out. is that the is that really the nice face of the platform? de—platforming patrick the de—platforming patrick yes, the itv known home of the itv, that well known home of the radical left full of marxists, that itv , i'm sure. that itv, i'm sure. >> i'm sure the decision on to show less or more of nigel farage has anything to do with that. listen, if they were that left wing and if they agreed with the guardian article, well, then they wouldn't have him on on the first in the first place. the nigel farage is the reason why nigel farage is on there is because he's a very good broadcaster . he's on there is because he's a very good broadcaster. he's he's good tv. they are a business. they are doing this because they want to get more views. >> well, they're trying to airbrush him out now, it appears. our exclusive tonight was great conversations. was some great conversations. >> not. they're >> no, they're not. no, they're not. nigel donald not. with nigel about donald trump itv trump and itv. >> we can't have that. no >> okay. we can't have that. no they're not. >> it makes him look nicer. >> it just makes him look nicer. if it makes him look more endeanng if it makes him look more endearing to the public, if people are saying, oh, for people are saying, oh, poor for nigel, don't want to nigel, us, they don't want to show enough. so
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show him enough. he's doing so well, afraid he's going show him enough. he's doing so well, and afraid he's going show him enough. he's doing so well, and theyaid he's going show him enough. he's doing so well, and they don't 's going show him enough. he's doing so well, and they don't want ng show him enough. he's doing so well, and they don't want to to win and they don't want to show him. well, yes, you know what? i cannot speak for the entirety of the left, but for myself as a left wing person, i am scared of nigel farage not necessarily winning . i don't necessarily winning. i don't care whether he wins or loses. i am scared of the celebrity ification of politicians. i am afraid of having more donald trump figures in the uk. >> okay, but is this not the point? which is that, you know what? what are people so afraid of? if this guy goes on national television and it emerges that he's not a monster, isn't that what they're afraid of? >> they're terrified of it. i remember back in the brexit days when i went into sort of bbc world to do interviews, people were shocked horrified that were shocked and horrified that i was a normal person. i genuinely think they believed i was come in with horns was going to come in with horns and same nigel and and the same is with nigel and they've so long demonising they've spent so long demonising brexiteers people who who brexiteers and people who who care immigration care about sustain immigration that don't like that that now they don't like that the face of ordinary brits the real face of ordinary brits is much like nigel, much like myself. we love immigration, but
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as long as it's sustainable and nigel is not far right? nigel is not this far right? crazy fascist person that lots of people the left say he is, of people on the left say he is, he really is far right. he's not fascist. >> he is far right. i mean, come on, guys. >> right. just shown up to >> all right. just shown up to your politics. >> come it's right >> i mean, come on. it's right about him. >> about him. >> write about him. >> write about him. >> ask if you genuinely >> could i ask if you genuinely sell it? if you genuinely think that itv thought despite what people say, that was people might say, that he was actually far right, they wouldn't put not a chance wouldn't have put not a chance they'd have him. they'd have had him. >> they already know his politics. >> his politics is not is not something that he created this year or last year. he's been a politician for decades. we already know what mean. politician for decades. we alreno, know what mean. politician for decades. we alreno, no ow what mean. politician for decades. we alreno, no brandat mean. politician for decades. we alreno, no brand actuallyn. politician for decades. we alreno, no brand actually , if he >> no, no brand actually, if he genuinely believed that someone was not pay was far right, you would not pay them 1.5 million. >> we're getting into some anfics >> we're getting into some antics now, right? we're getting into semantics. it depends on what you think. far right, far left. and the left have gutted the term far right. >> they called rowling far >> they called jk rowling far right thinking maybe i don't right for thinking maybe i don't talk over me. the left have been calling people like j.k. rowling, me, david lammy has
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been calling brexiteers nazis. they've been calling us far right for just saying the truth. common sense, centrist positions. it's a tool the positions. and it's a tool the left used because they have no argument will win. they argument that will win. they know so they know they won't win, so they demonise i won't gaslight you. >> belinda there are some people who do what you're saying, but. but this is not the case for itv . i do but this is not the case for itv .1 do not but this is not the case for itv . i do not think the itv is the place where you have all of these left wing extremists. >> but do you think the left wing have gutted the term far right, made it meaningless? >> i do think there is. there is a handful people who are a handful of people who are emotionally , who not emotionally unstable, who do not know express themselves know how to express themselves and know how to and do not know how to hold normal political and who, normal political views and who, as say , are out of touch. as you say, are out of touch. they live in a bubble. should we be a tiny, tiny amount of people? >> he de—platformed? >> should he be de—platformed? >> should he be de—platformed? >> no, but should be the >> no, but this should be the platform. the platform? no >> i already what you >> and i already know what you think. belinda so need think. belinda so i don't need to but both of you, to ask. but look, both of you, thank you very, very much. short and sweet, but i think it was lively. so that former lively. so that was former brexit party belinda
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brexit party mep belinda de lucy, stella lucy, former labour aide stella aikido coming up, aikido as well. now, coming up, fleet street legend kelvin mackenzie live in the mackenzie joins me live in the studio to his unrivalled studio to offer his unrivalled analysis of tomorrow's top stories. yeah, stories. but next, yeah, tomorrow's front pages tomorrow's newspaper front pages . coming in to me .they're just coming in to me right , hot the press. right now, hot off the press. and my panel as we bring and so is my panel as we bring you the entertaining paper you the most entertaining paper review frankly, won't you the most entertaining paper revi anywhere ankly, won't you the most entertaining paper revi anywhere else , won't you the most entertaining paper revi anywhere else on won't you the most entertaining paper revi anywhere else on the on't you the most entertaining paper revi anywhere else on the telly. get anywhere else on the telly. plus, unlikely new christmas plus, the unlikely new christmas advert that's taken john lewis by storm. i will play you this heart wrenching video. i'll be back in three. don't move .
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earlier on gb news radio . earlier on gb news radio. >> well , let's earlier on gb news radio. >> well, let's bring you tomorrow's news tonight now in the most entertaining paper of you anywhere on telly, the very first front pages have just been delivered for my press pack . delivered for my press pack. >> i'm going in with the metro trans teenager murder trial obsessed as the headline friends aged 50 been preoccupied , tied aged 50 been preoccupied, tied with torture, violence and
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death. a court is told a girl first tried to kill brianna , 16, first tried to kill brianna, 16, with an overdose of painkillers . with an overdose of painkillers. this is, of course, the story of transgender teen brianna gay, who was stabbed 28 times with a hunting knife. the trial continues there. we move on now to the i interest rates will stay high into 2025, say economists . they've also got economists. they've also got a story at the top there which i will be zoning in on in a minute, which is the princes and the pr man, william and harry's relationship damaged beyond repair after an spare rift unleashed by cabinet secretary simon case . next, we've got the simon case. next, we've got the sun gone to var var. of course, there is the pun corners and free kicks . next on liz. var free kicks. next on liz. var could be extended to checking corners free kicks and yellow cards under barmy plans , which cards under barmy plans, which will enrage fans. i mean, it will enrage fans. i mean, it will enrage fans. i mean, it will enrage fans, actually, to be honest with you, because how much slower can a game of football get? the best of christmas revealed. and kylie christmas tv revealed. and kylie stars the 10th stars in a december the 10th cracker get you mood
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cracker to get you in the mood and a rather raunchy picture of kylie go to the mirror. kylie there we go to the mirror. britain's got to pay walliams star acts after leaking of his x—rated show rants , he gets an x—rated show rants, he gets an apology in cash. david walliams has cashed in £1 million, apparently to end a legal battle. i move on to the guardian now. deal to extend truce raises hopes of dozens more hostages being released. and teenagers wanted to kill five children and teenagers accused of murdering a 16 year old girl in a park in warrington had a list of five kids they wanted to kill . so those are the wanted to kill. so those are the front pages for you. there there is a story that we're going to zone in on, though, that's on the front of the eye. and it's inside the book as well, which is omid scobie, william and harry rift was widened beyond repair secretary simon repair by karen secretary simon case, , do make case, benjamin, what do you make of do you make of this? of what do you make of this? well this is the suggestion that basically simon case, the cabinet hired cabinet secretary, who hired a pr from william and kate's pr man from william and kate's office, and then was doing the bidding from in government. >> so you might remember harry
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and got criticised for and meghan got criticised for taking john's private jet, taking elton john's private jet, i to the south france . i think to the south of france. and at the same time a story appeared that harry pardon me, william and kate had got a £73 flyby flight . well, it turns out flyby flight. well, it turns out that flight had been sent 500 miles to get them for 5000 miles, maybe empty to go and pick them up. and there was some hypocrisy. that's what amidst the author of this new book is claiming . and i think, you know, claiming. and i think, you know, the idea that that government is playing that role, that they're kind of that they're trying to twist things in that way, that it was intentional to harm harry and meghan. think think so and meghan. i think i think so that's that's the claim that's that's that's the claim then, which is basically then, carol, which is basically then, carol, which is basically the has gone into bat the government has gone into bat for kate. for william and kate. >> must not forget scooby >> people must not forget scooby is lackey . he's is meghan and harry lackey. he's their has been their mouthpiece and has been for time. and he's for a very long time. and he's saying that basically simon case promoted prince william as a king in waiting. promoted prince william as a king in waiting . well, he is the king in waiting. well, he is the king in waiting and yeah, yeah, it's pretty obvious. and he's trying to blame breakdown of trying to blame the breakdown of the relationship on on
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the brothers relationship on on simon case, the breakdown of the brothers relationship is entirely down to meghan and harry spilling the beans on very private details about the royal family. william family. and the reason william will to him again is will never speak to him again is because of the very private things he released about him. this is again, meghan this is this is again, meghan and him stuff, and harry feeding him stuff, trying the victim, trying to play the victim, trying to play the victim, trying say that, you know, trying to say that, you know, this never happened . this would never have happened. now case. who's now it's simon case. who's the devil ? devil? >> when they are, harry and >> but when they are, harry and meghan have said that there are dark forces, trying to dark forces, is trying to manipulate them to damage them in life , that that was in public life, that that was happening working happening when they were working royals. and i think what you're seeing here is an of seeing here is an examples of that. not exactly the that. this is not exactly the dark forces i saw were harry and meghan throwing kate under the bus. >> exactly. disrespect putting the monarch while her husband lay dying, accused sing awful , lay dying, accused sing awful, horrible accusations of racism against the royal family. that was a dark force at work, far darker than than someone got a helicopter and someone got a plane. that's sour grapes as
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carol said, victim mentality. these two, they caused the rift. >> never take responsibility for what done. and have >> never take responsibility for wha feeling done. and have >> never take responsibility for wha feeling nowre. and have >> never take responsibility for wha feeling now that1d have >> never take responsibility for wha feeling now that they're'e this feeling now that they're trying to get back into the good books of people in britain saying want to come to saying they want to come to britain and britain for christmas and all the of it. hope the royal the rest of it. i hope the royal family them to one. family tell them to do one. i really do, because we know they're just coming get they're just coming to get information for next book. information for the next book. maybe next book, maybe maybe scobie's next book, maybe one meghan's books. one of meghan's next books. >> be on the >> i think to be on the receiving end of an institution like the royal and the like the royal family and the british receiving trying british state receiving trying to one of the to undermine one of the most privileged men in britain. >> let quote let me quote >> let me quote let me quote something here from this article right. in the right. william is firmly in the role a decisive in role of a decisive king in waiting harry been cast waiting and harry has been cast by palace press as by the palace and the press as a perceived loss soul. scobie writes , he goes on, you know, writes, he goes on, you know, talking about but how how the government have basically gone into bat big time for william and not true william sorry. >> harry had a fantastic position in this country. he was the darling of this country when he was working with the military
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veterans. people adored him . veterans. people adored him. this is this is all just a wonderful life, this whinging from a prince, i think, is getting on people's nerves . he's getting on people's nerves. he's on the back end of all this. if he's one of the most privileged men on the planet, he's had the most incredible life because he has no responsibility. yes, has no responsibility. and yes, it is william was once it is true. william was once seen as a lazy, for nothing seen as a lazy, good for nothing but that was the point where but that was the point of where he against the he was kicking against the responsibilities king. responsibilities of being king. he's those responsible. >> think, on the >> i think, to be on the sinister backchannels of the british state, to undermine your marriage he's going marriage to yourself. he's going to pretty profound effect to have a pretty profound effect on you. and think that on you. and i think that probably explains how this on you. and i think that prwhaty explains how this on you. and i think that prwhat this)lains how this on you. and i think that prwhat this story how this on you. and i think that prwhat this story says. this on you. and i think that prwhat this story says. when1is on you. and i think that prwhat this story says. when he is what this story says. when he married is attacking when married meghan is attacking when he meghan, country he married meghan, the country worshipped him when he was working with the vets, we were the minute we stopped wishing him well, he started accusing us all being racist. mean, all of being racist. i mean, it's worth mentioning that omid scobie admits in court to having spoken meghan for spoken with harry and meghan for his book, and meghan denied. >> no, we're going to >> no, no, no. we're going to have put a in this, have to put a cork in this, okay. because i've got some more
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front pages coming your way. very but after yet very very soon. but after yet another lewis advert, very very soon. but after yet another advert is advert, very very soon. but after yet another advert flop vert, very very soon. but after yet another advert flop ant, very very soon. but after yet another advert flop an irish christmas advert flop an irish pub has given the retailer a run for its money with their own christmas ad charlie's bar in northern ireland has gone viral for this tearjerker starring a lonely elderly gentleman apparently only cost them £700. take a look . i'm not crying. you're crying. yeah. there you go. much, much better than anything that some of the other lot i've managed to come up with coming up. why is
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the bbc easy for me to say? spending £600,000 of taxpayers money diversity inclusion money on diversity and inclusion staff ? we will debate that as we staff? we will debate that as we crown tonight as greatest britain union jackass . but britain and union jackass. but first, icon kelvin first, fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie joins me live for some more reaction to more of tomorrow's front pages. don't miss them
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let's get stuck into more of tomorrow's front pages . and tomorrow's front pages. and fleet street legend, former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie, joins me now. kelvin, i'm going to start with the telegraph. there we go. britain faces un blacklist for blocking trans laws. equalities watchdog may lose place at human rights meetings after stonewall lobbying. i'll go into a little bit more detail on this quickly. the uk's equalities do you have two human rights commission? one is facing a special review of its international accreditation after lobbying trans rights
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after lobbying by trans rights groups , basically that groups, basically saying that we're enough . and there we're not good enough. and there we're not good enough. and there we go at the times, hamas demands higher price to set soldiers free. israel in talks to secure more hostages. liberty as truce in gaza is extended for two more days . as a few other two more days. as a few other bits and bobs, there at the bottom of the paper as well. vr for free kicks, the fractured firm on the royal's legal advice warns pm of full fat rwanda plan. basically essentially, the prime minister has been legally warned that rwanda essentially won't work. calvin which one do you want to tee off on there? >> well, one of the more interesting aspects will be actually down here saying that william hague is saying that the daily telegraph takeover plan is disturbing. >> so the government have a massive problem, don't they ? do massive problem, don't they? do they say yes to abu dhabi , who they say yes to abu dhabi, who is the sixth largest producer of oil in the world and therefore important right. oil in the world and therefore important right . and owns the important right. and owns the shard and various other things in this country or does it actually say no , thank you very
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actually say no, thank you very much to your money and the rest of the middle east say really? so you like our energy, but you don't like our investment, is that right ? that right? >> so you think that the sale of the telegraph might essentially reveal that the arab world has got us by the. >> i think so. i think so. >> i think so. i think so. >> and actually, at the end of the day, i don't care who owns the day, i don't care who owns the telegraph. >> media owned by the >> media is owned by the consumer. now as actually gb news proves , it's the people at news proves, it's the people at the bottom who decide what they're going to watch, what they're going to watch, what they're going to buy and what they're going to buy and what they're going to listen to. >> so actually, whether the telegraph some mad telegraph is owned by some mad person or by the way, some muslim person or by some christian person, i don't think it matters because there's enough media out there to sink a battleship. so i don't think it matters all that much. but what it do , it causes a massive it does do, it causes a massive problem for number 10. and it'd be fascinating see way be fascinating to see which way they jump. bet that rishi, they jump. my bet is that rishi, i before this i heard this way before this happened. doesn't want to know about price. and about this at any price. and he's prepared to nod this
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through. so just you wait, he's going to carry on saying i'm in favour of free press. right favour of a free press. right right to the minute. he says, right up to the minute. he says, i'll tell you what, abu dhabi, welcome aboard. think welcome aboard. so you think that sum the that that would possibly sum the man though, wouldn't it? man up, though, wouldn't it? >> i don't want know. >> i don't want to know. >> i don't want to know. >> do know rishi is going >> do you know rishi is going through shocker. so. through an absolute shocker. so. so we have him saying we so we have we have him saying we have the greatest visa system in so we have we have him saying we havworld.ireatest visa system in so we have we have him saying we havworld. comet visa system in so we have we have him saying we havworld. come on sa system in so we have we have him saying we havworld. come on down.:em in so we have we have him saying we havworld. come on down. yeah. the world. come on down. yeah. and the immigration guy saying that country is being torn that our country is being torn apart by having excess migration. i don't care which one they go for, but for god's sake, go for one of them. how can you be a tory government and not have one view about immigration? something is going seriously wrong at number 10 and i say to rishi, don't spend your time worrying about this , that time worrying about this, that and the other. sort out migration and you might might only lose by 10. the way you're going, you could lose by 30% and destroy the conservatives which is great. if there's any socialists out there, by the way. right but but 30% right
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would likely to vote against you and destroy the conservative party for a generation and a half. right. >> talk about someone who does want to control migration. and i think actually genuinely means it and could be bothered to deal with man's in the with it at this man's in the jungle. nigel farage, i want to talk a bit about this, talk to you a bit about this, but we're going to play a little clip. first him arguing with clip. first of him arguing with french. fred, what's the three benefits brexit benefits of brexit self—government , which we self—government, which we already had , we did not have. already had, we did not have. >> okay , fred, there's no point >> okay, fred, there's no point if you believe that if you believe that you don't understand what the european union is. so what is the second benefit? well, hopefully take back waters. benefit? well, hopefully take bac but waters. benefit? well, hopefully take bac but when waters. benefit? well, hopefully take bac but when i'm waters. benefit? well, hopefully take bac but when i'm talkings. benefit? well, hopefully take bacbut when i'm talking about >> but when i'm talking about benefits, i'm talking about something tangible. all right. >> the nuclear submarine deal with australia could not have been done a european been done as a european union member already member because france already had as. had a contract simple as. >> but we could done >> but we could have done it with france. >> made me laugh . >> that made me laugh. >> that made me laugh. >> in fact, the french were really pissed off about that. >> of course they were good. >> of course they were good. >> you think fred's a bit thick? >> no. but fred has had a great
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career. who gave him that career? later and gentlemen, uk television gave him that career when he came over here, he was washed up and eventually he got got himself a job working in a restaurant. and from then came first dates and then came this. we are a great embrace ing country. and for him to be worried about anybody else is totally beyond me. >> i think it's actually interesting for nigel, who, let's be honest, know, let's be honest, you know, speaks with mps, other journalists, most, journalists, etcetera most, most days. kind of days. and that's kind of although he gets out and about, there of a bubble there there is a bit of a bubble there naturally given is political life to actually you know, life to actually hear, you know, a, maitre d from , you know, a a, a maitre d from, you know, a bang average channel 4 tv show sticking it to me. >> it's quite an enjoyable show, actually, isn't it, compared to most what channel 4 put out, most of what channel 4 put out, which is basically left wing tosh, to be honest. but yeah, but it's better than the but look, it's better than the nigel done himself no nigel nigel has done himself no harm at all. he looks in pretty good. nick right. his rear end would be attractive to members of. okay. all right. thanks very
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much. to say members much. i was going to say members of staff, but i won't say anyway anyway. and would genuinely. jenny finley has been very helpful to his political ambitions . it's the and not only ambitions. it's the and not only that, your travels are a million and a half quid. >> right? but apparently they're rushing him out. right. kevin, we're to draw a land right we're going to draw a land right now. thank you very, very much. that's there, that's kevin mckenzie there, fleet legend, a man who fleet street legend, a man who cannot and not shackled cannot and will not be shackled by broadcasting by conventional broadcasting rules. to reveal rules. now it's time to reveal today's greatest britain and union us. okay so i will union jack us. okay so i will start with you. carol is your greatest britain okay? >> i've got a lot of greatest brits. it's 100,000 >> i've got a lot of greatest brits. it's100,000 people in brits. it's 100,000 people in the weekend who who were at the anti—semitism march. unlike the pro—palestinian marches , no pro—palestinian marches, no aggression, war cries, no aggression, no war cries, no threats , no calls the deaths threats, no calls for the deaths of anyone, just of of anyone, just a group of people, lots of them celebrities chanting the hamas hostages chanting for the hamas hostages to be brought home. that's how to be brought home. that's how to peace process. to do a peace process. >> start okay, ben. well >> lovely. start okay, ben. well inever >> lovely. start okay, ben. well i never thought i'd say this, but my greatest britain is boris johnson. >> oh, wow. yeah, maybe i'm
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trying to curry favour with new colleagues, but he gave an interview to news saturday interview to gb news on saturday or sunday, on sunday about the anti—semitism march in about the return of anti—semitism and why we should have no truck with it, why it must be explicitly confronted. it was confronted. and i thought it was extremely put. and i just extremely well put. and i just wish that current prime wish that the current prime minister have been able to minister would have been able to articulate minister would have been able to artiyeah, quite agree. linda >> yeah, quite agree. linda >> yeah, quite agree. linda >> well, my greatest brit is nigel farage this week. yes, he has stood up for 17.4 million people on i'm a celebrity by defending brexit and putting up with a relentless, highly emotional french fred, who seems determined wind to try and create conflict. and he seems pretty ignorant . poor fred. so pretty ignorant. poor fred. so thank you, nigel, for giving him a little lesson on brexit. >> this week's winner is because i think that if he was prime minister right now, we would have had a barnstorming speech and would have put all this and he would have put all this nonsense anti—semitism nonsense in the anti—semitism to bed. that. bed. we haven't had that. i think that's disgrace. boris think that's a disgrace. boris johnson, any time you johnson, come back any time you like greatest britain, right like. greatest britain, right uniand like. greatest britain, right uni and quite endorse that. >> but you is
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>> but thank you mine is i'm a celeb's hideous. >> nella rose this is the so—called influencer who is influencing everyone in the country that she's the thick, nasty, spiteful piece of work. she's a perfect example of how some of the younger generation have no resilience, no guts, just an attitude . she's been just an attitude. she's been horrible to nigel. she's been horrible to nigel. she's been horrible to nigel. she's been horrible to fred. i hope they make her do every single trial until the very last one. >> you know , some people do say >> you know, some people do say that nella is the voice of a generation. she's not actually, you know, she, she she's she's doing very well in there right. benjamin, your views on who is your union? jack asked. >> my union, jack ass is all british pigs because they are spreading swine flu to humans. and i don't want another covid. so i think the pigs should stop it. >> this is not their fault. >> this is not their fault. >> i blame the pigs. linda. linda >> mine is the bbc. it has been reported they're spending over £600,000 on diversity and inclusion officers woke nonsense at the expense of the taxpayer. and we all know what it means.
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it means anti—women spaces and anti white people. so no, not down with the bbc. >> a bbc spokesperson has told us that the bbc, just like most organisations, has staff working to ensure we reflect the diverse communities of the uk, both on and off the screen. diversity and off the screen. diversity and inclusion is part of the bbc's public purposes, as set out our charter, we will out in our charter, we will continue to deliver our plans, balancing the need to attract and highly skilled staff and retain highly skilled staff while value for licence while offering value for licence fee payers winner is the fee payers and the winner is the bbc. the bbc is union jack carson and for that now, thank you very much to my wonderful panel you very much to my wonderful panel. you've been an absolutely amazing firecracker of a panel from tonight. from start to finish tonight. thank of my wonderful thank you to all of my wonderful guests. implore guests. also, can i just implore you, if you've missed out on that exclusive that we brought to nigel down under to you about nigel down under or you hear eviscerating you want to hear an eviscerating take how we're being let down take on how we're being let down or mass migration, go to youtube, watch it and i'll or mass migration, go to yotback, watch it and i'll or mass migration, go to yotback from:h it and i'll or mass migration, go to yotback from 9 it and i'll or mass migration, go to yotback from 9 pm. and i'll or mass migration, go to yotback from 9 pm. tomorrow. be back from 9 pm. tomorrow. and up next, it's headliners. see tomorrow at oh, see you tomorrow at nine. oh, wow. good night. >> evening. i'm alex deakin. this weather this is your latest weather
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update office for update from the met office for gb news. staying cold throughout this week. really frosty mornings become pretty mornings will become pretty frequent and so will quite a bit of sunshine by day. it wasn't a lot of sunshine around today, quite a lot of cloud and still some of rain coming some outbreaks of rain coming into england and into northern england and eastern england and the showers in turn in northern scotland will turn to , but only really over to snow, but only really over the tops of the hills might turn a bit icy, could turn a bit foggy places and temperatures foggy in places and temperatures dropping across dropping below freezing across northern certainly in northern britain. certainly in the further south, the countryside. further south, just holding up a few just about holding up a few degrees above zero on to tuesday . we'll start with quite a lot of cloud over the midlands, the odd shower here and there. but that should the that should clear away the showers north east scotland showers in north east scotland will wintry. will turn increasingly wintry. so snow coming so some sleet and snow coming in here. certainly end of here. certainly by the end of the even to low levels. for the day, even to low levels. for many, though, it's a dry and a bright day tomorrow it's going to be cold, 4 or degrees to be cold, 4 or 5 degrees across 7 or 8 further across the north, 7 or 8 further south. feeling chilly with south. but feeling chilly with the will continue the winds, which will continue to wintry showers in to bring wintry showers in across northeast scotland, but also south—east scotland , also maybe south—east scotland, northeast could see northeast england, we could see
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some and snow showers on some sleet and snow showers on tuesday night and into wednesday. so it could be a little here again for many , little icy here again for many, wednesday's dry and fine chilly , wednesday's dry and fine chilly, yes, but with quite a bit of sunshine . temperatures, though, yes, but with quite a bit of suns belowtemperatures, though, yes, but with quite a bit of suns below average :ures, though, yes, but with quite a bit of suns below average fors, though, yes, but with quite a bit of suns below average for the |ough, yes, but with quite a bit of suns below average for the time, well below average for the time of year. and with the cold air in place, eyes down to the south—west, because these low pressure introduce pressure systems could introduce some and that means some wet weather and that means the potential , just of the potential, just the risk of some snow the south later some snow in the south later this week . who is it? this week. who is it? >> we're here for the show . >> 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. >> haha, that was married to a therapist and you survived. i thought we were getting hugh laurie second best laugh. >> at least you interviewed saddam hussein . 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. >> my cds need to be put in alphabetical order. are are you going to be problematic again , going to be problematic again, the dinosaur our sundays on .
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gb news. >> good evening. the top story from the newsroom, 11 hostages, including eight children and three adults, have been released from gaza this evening and they've now arrived back in israel . they're having medical israel. they're having medical check—ups before being reunited with their families . qatar's
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with their families. qatar's foreign ministry confirmed their identities and photographs were released. of the three french, two german and six argentinians, including an image of three year old twin sisters with their mum. israel says that 50 women and children are to be freed over four days. hamas says it's received a list of 33 palestine orphans to be released from israeli jails. in return , it israeli jails. in return, it said these included three female prison cells and 30 teenagers. a video posted online shows a bus arriving at an israeli military prison . and that comes as the prison. and that comes as the humanitarian truce between israel and hamas has been extended for two more days as well. the news here at home, the home secretary has said the business model of people smuggling gangs will be destroyed. as he underlined the government's commitment to stopping illegal migration. james cleverly made the comments as he faced questions in the house of commons for his first time as home secretary. mr cleverly said the government is doing all it to can stop
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