tv Free Speech Nation GB News December 10, 2023 12:00am-2:01am GMT
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to bea to be a bumpy ride. you is going to be a bumpy ride. you know the ropes. each of us gets 60s to outline an argument about a chosen topic. there may not be any bushtucker trials here, but benjamin butterworth is, which is arguably worse. and of course we want to know your views as well. get in touch by emailing gb views at gbnews.com but before we get into it, it's time for your saturday night news with sophia wenzler. >> thank you, darren. i'm sophia wenzler in the newsroom. a 16 year old boy has been charged with the murder of leon gordon who was shot dead in east london on tuesday evening. the boy has also been charged with the attempted murder of a 20 year old man and a 16 year old boy. he was also charged with possession of firearm and possession of a firearm and possession of a firearm and possession to supply possession with intent to supply class a drugs. he will appear at barkingside magistrates court on monday . matt, police have monday. matt, police have
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arrested two protesters at a pro—palestine march in london today. thousands of people gathered to call for a ceasefire in gaza. the met police arrested a man on suspicion of racially aggravated public order offence for allegedly displaying a placard comparing israel to nazi germany. a second man was arrested for carrying an offensive placard . un officials offensive placard. un officials say there's enough food aid available in egypt and jordan to reach a million people in gaza amid fears of a humanitarian aid collapsing under a new system, suppues collapsing under a new system, supplies could come to the kerem shalom crossing on the border between israel, gaza and egypt . between israel, gaza and egypt. for the first time. the un says trucks need to be allowed to enter through the gaza , enter enter through the gaza, enter gaza directly to alleviate an increasingly desperate situation increasingly desperate situation in the enclave israel has so far rebuffed pleas from the united nafions rebuffed pleas from the united nations to access the crossing. deputy executive director of the world food programme, carl eskow, says the operation is critical. >> we need kerem shalom to open,
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you know , yesterday i think we you know, yesterday i think we were trying to use kerem shalom for the first time for verification, but not for entry . verification, but not for entry. we need that also so that we can have more order around the un convoys coming in and to some degree separate them from from the rest of the aid that is flowing in through rafah . and of flowing in through rafah. and of course we need a humanitarian ceasefire so that there is the space and the operational environment inside to deliver to all those that need it. and in a controlled and orderly way , controlled and orderly way, court documents reveal the late queen wanted protection for the duke and duchess of sussex after they abstained from royal duties i >> -- >> an extract from a letter written by the late queen's private secretary, sir edward young states it is imperative that the family continues to be provided with effective security in a statement, prince harry said he feared for his family's safety and felt forced to leave the uk . he is suing associated the uk. he is suing associated newspapers limited over an
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article about his legal challenge against the home office following a decision to change his security arrangements . s this is gb news across the uk on tv, in your car, on your digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's back to the . saturday five. >> it's saturday night and you're with the saturday five. i'm darren grimes and i can promise that you're in for a very lively hour. let's crack on with tonight's first debate. first up, it's albee. albee what are you kicking things off with tonight .7 tonight? >> darren, i've got something new for you this week. praise for suella braverman . now, look, for suella braverman. now, look, my views on suella braverman are very well known . whilst i don't very well known. whilst i don't think she was the best home secretary and that she got a lot of stuff wrong during her time in government, i do think she got one thing right that was got one thing right and that was in her debate westminster in her debate in westminster earlier let's take earlier on this week. let's take a tens of thousands of mostly
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>> tens of thousands of mostly young men, many with values and social mores , at odds with our social mores, at odds with our own pouring into our country day after day , month after month , after day, month after month, year after year. is right. >> suella is right to say that there are many migrants crossing there are many migrants crossing the channel who might not share british values. i heard an account from a woman working at an organisation helping channel migrants at hotels across the country where she said at the hotels she's working at, they've had to move women out of mixed accommodation because of the way the male migrants were treating women. we need to have a conversation about the average opinions of people from countries where a lot of these channel migrants are coming from. according to research from the pew research centre , the the pew research centre, the majority of muslims from countries in south asia, north africa and the middle east
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believe that sons and daughters shouldn't have equal inheritance rights, that they want sharia law to be the law of their country, that women must obey their husbands and that western popular culture is a threat to morality. now the majority of the countries where channel migrants are crossing from fall into the polling polling categories of the pew research centre's data . we need to have centre's data. we need to have a conversation about this. it's not an easy topic to talk about, but it's an important topic to talk about nonetheless . and talk about nonetheless. and moreover, why is it left to conservatives like suella braverman to talk about this issue ? why aren't the left issue? why aren't the left interested in this issue at all? is it not reasonable to think that people who are coming from countries where gay people are killed, where our women are expected to obey men, might be a threat to gay british people and women ? i think they could be. is women? i think they could be. is it not reasonable that you would think the left wouldn't want to
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have unlimited and uncontrolled migration from parts of the world where the average citizen has values so completely at odds with their own and not just left wing values, opposition to british values like fairness , british values like fairness, democracy, liberty, freedom and tolerance. it's not racist to have a conversation about the values of people moving to this country, and it's time we had that conversation . benjamin that conversation. benjamin i was absolutely horrified when i was absolutely horrified when i was doing the research for this part of the show at some of the opinions that people hold in some of the countries where people are crossing the channel from. now, of course , some of from. now, of course, some of the people crossing the channel might be coming to this country because those opinions. but because of those opinions. but are concerned what are you not concerned about what we bringing into this we might be bringing into this country abroad? we might be bringing into this couitry abroad? we might be bringing into this coui think abroad? we might be bringing into this coui think in abroad? we might be bringing into this coui think in truth,1? >> i think in truth, it's complicated because talked complicated because you talked about might not share about how they might not share values of liberty and freedom . values of liberty and freedom. well, i dare say those values are the very reason that they've escaped, because they are basic
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fundamentals to a free human life. and that's why they want to be in britain not yemen to be in britain and not yemen or afghanistan or a country like that. the idea that they're more likely to misogynistic is probably an understatement . you probably an understatement. you know, to hate women, to disrespect them, to hate gay people is obviously plausible. but the same time , you know, but at the same time, you know, there have been generations of migrants who have those migrants who have had those views. there been views. there have been generations of britain who've had views, and they've had those views, and they've changed they changed their views when they assimilated, know, many assimilated, you know, many people who came up from predominantly parts of the predominantly black parts of the commonwealth who moved here in the 50s and 60s would have had very similar social attitudes as well. would you say, as well. and would you say, as someone from background , someone from that background, that they shouldn't have come because kind where because that's kind of where this but i would this leads to. but what i would say what would you think say about what would you think about they would about that? because they would have i'm have similar views. i'm literally address that point. >> what i would say about commonwealth came commonwealth migrants who came here and the here in the 1950s and the societal towards women here in the 1950s and the sociigay towards women here in the 1950s and the sociigay people towards women here in the 1950s and the sociigay people in:owards women here in the 1950s and the sociigay people in thoses women and gay people in those countries, given that they were literally colonies, literally just british colonies, would probably actually quite similar societal similar to the societal attitudes had in attitudes that we had in britain. we were all
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britain. look, we were all pretty racist, misogynistic and homophobic 1950s. britain homophobic in the 1950s. britain isn't anymore. a lot of these countries that migrants are coming still are. so coming from still are. so i think is where my concern think that is where my concern would come. darren, how do you feel about this? i know you're very passionate about stopping the boats . illegal migration. do the boats. illegal migration. do you think it's a bit strange that left wingers don't really seem to care that people are coming from countries where there completely there are values completely different to their own? >> i on this very >> yes. i mean, i on this very channel had debate with channel had a debate with a nigerian guy who'd come and nigerian guy who'd come over and he said openly that actually he doesn't mind if more nigerians come over . doesn't mind if more nigerians come over. and they do hold views that run contrary to what is british legislation. so being anti—gay or being anti, whatever it might be, that's absolutely fine. and i said, who ? who have fine. and i said, who? who have you actually asked ? you know, you actually asked? you know, who have you said to the british people, have you pulled them? have you said, would you be absolutely supremely relaxed about people coming here who don't share your views and values that's i
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values? because that's what i find deeply. one morally reprehensible , because you're reprehensible, because you're bringing over a law to people who simply won't assimilate into wider british society because they don't agree with wider british society. so the likes of owen jones , you know, parroting owen jones, you know, parroting on about gaza every two minutes, well, you wouldn't last two minutes over there. so all of these things, i think, call into question even the morality , question even the morality, frankly, of the left and the fact that they don't care about minority groups in reality , they minority groups in reality, they care about the fact that the left wing project has been one that supports mass migration and they can't deviate from that narrative. >> belinda, as a woman, do you feel sorry i just assumed your gender? >> no. how about it? do i'm a lady? yes, you are a lady. a real lady. >> but belinda. >> but belinda. >> as. >> as. >> as. >> as a real lady. yes just for a second. to be serious. do you feel any less safe as a result of the increase in channel migrants that we have been seeing in this country? i think
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it was about 81,000 this year, up from 17,000 sorry, 81,000 asylum seeker applications this yeah asylum seeker applications this year. and there are 17,000 asylum seeker applications , i asylum seeker applications, i believe, in 2010. well well, look, i think immigration has worked so well in the past because it's been done at a pace that even if it's from countries with very different values from us, they've come in in small enough numbers and in a slow enough numbers and in a slow enough time that they've been able integrate because the able to integrate because the town village they've gone town or village they've gone into british into is still majority british held values . held values. >> unfortunately, now what we see so many coming over over see is so many coming over over such a small amount of time , such a small amount of time, often going to places where they're already in majority, they're already in the majority, that there's no onus them to that there's no onus on them to integrate anymore or to assimilate anymore . and for assimilate anymore. and for women in those areas , there's women in those areas, there's and i've had many occasions means that i haven't spoken about before or i haven't mentioned where i've i've been in a situation i felt a little bit more harassed and threatened. >> i have called the police in the past many i mean, i've got a long list, but but occasions
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once, for example, where a somali man was following me wouldn't leave me alone. >> and a very spoke very little english, but was telling, shouting at me, woman, woman, you need to teach me english. stay here. stop and following me and following me. you have to teach me english. i had to hide into a fabric shop of a lovely asian lady who me asian lady who gave me protection and. and actually sent to check on sent her husband out to check on the street after. so it's not about immigrants per se, because many have assimilated, many love our british culture. and in fact, through brexit, my experience is that many first, second, second generation immigrants are more patriotic about this country than the whole of westminster put together. so it's not about being scared of immigrants . it's being scared of immigrants. it's actually about as you so you put so well being more conditional about immigration. if we're having vast numbers coming over, is it wise to have them coming from cultures that once they're here and have the vote, they can start actually voting against the progress women have made
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against the progress the gay community have made because their vote will be as much their vote will be just as much as as mine is worth. and the government won't put in proper integration . integration policies. >> so much for >> belinda, thanks so much for sharing story. it must have sharing that story. it must have been difficult, poppy listening to has said, have been difficult, poppy listening to been has said, have been difficult, poppy listening to been through as said, have been difficult, poppy listening to been through somethingve similar? >> yeah, mean, i think most of >> yeah, i mean, i think most of the young women in this country have experienced some of have experienced some kind of particularly if they moved to london they come from london and maybe they come from somewhere london where somewhere outside london where there's immigration. there's been less immigration. so more, you so you think there's more, you think more sexual think there's more sexual harassment than think there's more sexual harassnofit than think there's more sexual harassnof london? than think there's more sexual harassnof london? certainly, outside of london? certainly, from experienced, you from what i've experienced, you know, i grew up essex, which know, i grew up in essex, which is particularly far away is not particularly far away from the last from london, but in the last year alone, i've been harassed on public transport, the tube, i think times, and i've had think four times, and i've had four separate police incidents . four separate police incidents. but comes down to we have to but it comes down to we have to be why people do be realistic about why people do actually to britain. and actually come to britain. and benjamin, you said earlier that people have a respect for liberal values the freedoms liberal values and the freedoms that from living in britain. >> they come here for the freedom. >> that's not true. well, it is the vast majority, the vast majority people and abused
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majority of people and abused and in a zone , the vast and in a war zone, the vast majority of people who are coming britain at the moment coming to britain at the moment are legal migration coming to britain at the moment are are legal migration coming to britain at the moment are are becoming igration coming to britain at the moment are are becoming forition schemes, are becoming for economic yeah, there's economic reasons. yeah, there's nothing with that. i'm not nothing wrong with that. i'm not saying as a pejorative, i'm saying this as a pejorative, i'm just we talking just saying we were talking about countries very about countries with very different cultures, people who are countries with are coming from countries with very have no very different cultures have no real to want to real reason to want to integrate. why would if integrate. and why would they if you're because you you're coming here? because you have better economic opportunities, you are not coming you have coming here because you have respect for the british rule of law. that quite quite. law. that is quite quite. >> would question that because >> i would question that because my grandparents for my grandparents came here for economic and can tell economic reasons, and i can tell you have respect for the you they have respect for the british rule of law. >> and way i've said >> and the way i've said this and they've integrated. so there's the there's no reason to say the immigrants wouldn't have immigrants today wouldn't have that of living if you that same way of living if you are, for example, as we're trying the most radical trying now, the most radical experiment in mass migration everin experiment in mass migration ever in history, i mean, to have over a million people coming in every year from all over the world put into communities, many of which are already made up of many, many migrant groups, the idea that you can then integrate these i mean, wouldn't these people, i mean, i wouldn't even to where start as a
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government. >> what would you even do? >> what would you even do? >> yeah, well, right. we're going out from you, going to find more out from you, poppy, up going to find more out from you, poppy, up next, is poppy, because up next, it is indeed, poppy, because up next, it is indeed, poppy. what's indeed, poppy. poppy, what's caught week? caught your eye this week? >> well, think the big story >> well, i think the big story this week is unfortunately, it's the of the covid inquiry the farce of the covid inquiry that's being led by baroness hanson . and johnson has hanson. and boris johnson has kind of been the focus of this at the moment. and i found it to be really, really distasteful watching the former prime minister essentially be harangued role in his harangued for his role in his culpability in the spread of the covid 19 pandemic. and it got me thinking, what is this inquiry actually about? because if you look at continental europe, almost every country has had an inquiry into how their nation responded to this unprecedented pandemic. they've already been wrapped up. ours is barely even begun. we have victim groups. we have lawyers. a lot of people starting to make a lot of money out of this. and it comes to down the fundamental problem, which is actually which is are we actually learning any lessons from this or pointing the finger at or are we pointing the finger at politicians as particularly conservative politicians, that certain and
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certain people may not like? and blaming something that blaming them for something that they may not have any personal responsibility doing for responsibility in doing so? for me, find it very, very me, i find it very, very frustrating that is frustrating that this is a wasted opportunity. wasting wasted opportunity. it's wasting a money, it's wasting a lot of money, it's wasting a lot of people's time and it's also, think, disrespectful to also, i think, disrespectful to the victim groups. so as you can tell, i've got quite few tell, i've got quite a few opinions on this one. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> mean, is it >> julie. i mean, what is it that annoyed the most that has annoyed you the most about the fact that about this? is it the fact that basically i think we focus more on boris johnson's whatsapps or lack and not enough on lack thereof and not enough on the fact that if we compare ourselves with sweden, for example . all right, there was example. all right, there was a perfectly different response . perfectly different response. >> darren, if another pandemic does occur and goodness knows it might occur while the might even occur while the inquiry still going it inquiry is still going on, it could for many, many, could be going for many, many, many you know, what many years. you know, what lessons are we actually learning from of from this? i mean, some of the data that's being thrown out is incorrect. seems much more to incorrect. it seems much more to me a finger me that this is a finger pointing exercise than a construct inquiry where we construct of inquiry where we will lessons. so if will learn lessons. so if something like this, heaven forbid, something like this, heaven forbidwhat better . that's know what to do better. that's what's irritating to me. >> what i've noticed is that
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>> and what i've noticed is that the scientists who, you know at the scientists who, you know at the start of the pandemic said we shouldn't masks . we shouldn't wear masks. >> then changed and said >> s who then changed and said we should wear masks are now trying to cover their own well behinds . and say that actually, behinds. and say that actually, you know, it's the politicians fault. they're the ones that were calling with their vaccine as well. >> remember the children aren't don't won't need the vaccine. oh yes. need the vaccine. yes. they will need the vaccine. i it's so that's what the i mean it's so that's what the question questions all question the questions are all wrong being at the wrong that's being asked at the moment . yeah, agree with poppy moment. yeah, i agree with poppy then. i with then. i agree. i agree with poppy. it's such a waste poppy. i think it's such a waste of money. i think there are no hard questions about can we hard questions about how can we avoid lockdown and who's to blame the harder , faster, blame for the harder, faster, longer, torturous lockdowns longer, more torturous lockdowns as a lazy, quick fix to a panic? i mean, that's what i feel, that nothing's going to come out of this. it's going to cost us millions. it's going to take ages. and really, it's about personalities, and it is personalities, ego and it is bofis personalities, ego and it is boris bearing mind boris bashing, bearing in mind he die. so the idea he did nearly die. so the idea the man was frivolous about everyone's lives didn't everyone's lives and he didn't
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kill anyone. killed kill anyone. covid killed people's people . and although people's people. and although my heart very much, heart goes out very much, obviously who lost them, obviously those who lost them, bofis obviously those who lost them, boris didn't anyone. but boris didn't kill anyone. but he's treated like a he's been treated like a murderer . murderer. >> we all look to benjamin . >> we all look to benjamin. >> we all look to benjamin. >> i mean, first of all, the terms of the inquiry were set by bofis terms of the inquiry were set by boris johnson. that moment was made clear when he made a suggestion saying, i don't think this inquiry is quite right. he said end of his testimony said at the end of his testimony to which person questioning to which the person questioning him well, you the him said, well, you set the terms the inquiry, maybe terms of the inquiry, so maybe you thought about you should have thought about that classically, you should have thought about thédidn't classically, you should have thought about thédidn't know classically, you should have thought about thédidn't know what ssically, you should have thought about thédidn't know what he ally, you should have thought about thédidn't know what he was he didn't know what he was doing. think these inquiries doing. i think these inquiries are so important clearly doing. i think these inquiries arcost, mportant clearly doing. i think these inquiries arcost, you rtant clearly doing. i think these inquiries arcost, you know, clearly doing. i think these inquiries arcost, you know, tens, clearly it cost, you know, tens, hundreds of billions of pounds. it was the biggest shock that we've had culturally and economically since second world war. the idea that you war. and the idea that you wouldn't over every last wouldn't go over every last detail would be a mistake in a democracy. and i think the fact 5000 whatsapps have gone missing and he can't explain why he really can't. the factory reset thing is obviously nonsense. i say we need a factory reset on bofis say we need a factory reset on boris and the tories, boris johnson and the tories, not on his whatsapps the fact is
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that someone is trying to that when someone is trying to lie the decision making lie about the decision making and process , that and the thought process, that should real concern. and should be a real concern. and this has exposed by the this has been exposed by the inquiry and that's very useful. >> but i just, i just feel like there's so much focus on boris johnson when actually the prime minister failure is so much bigger johnson bigger than just boris johnson in the whole whitehall machine was completely unable to deal with what happened during the covid 19 pandemic. the preparedness that we'd done before that we've been working on for decades, by the way, under labour conservative under labour and conservative governments, , only not governments, was clear, only not good enough. and all of this focus person and whether focus on one person and whether he or doesn't is he does or doesn't apologise is unhelpful in my opinion. all i care about is that there are lessons that are learnt. i agree that the inquiry is important. ben but think the focus is ben but i think the focus is that have been the inquiry at that have been on the inquiry at the moment, whether or not boris is apologised, or not is apologised, whether or not rishi the bodies rishi said let the bodies pile high sound harsh , but i high might sound harsh, but i don't about of that . don't care about any of that. all i care about is that lessons are learned this and that are learned from this and that it happens again. it never happens again. >> also, can talk about
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>> and also, can we talk about more broadly? i think this is important. inquiry. important. this is this inquiry. yes. as you said, there needs to be discussion about how be some discussion about how policy responded to the policy makers responded to the covid it was covid 19 pandemic. it was unprecedented. i completely agree. but that's the case, agree. but if that's the case, why it that since 1997, why is it true that since 1997, there have been an average of three running at any three inquiries running at any given every year? there was given time every year? there was . i mean, we have these inquiries for everything now aboutis inquiries for everything now about is carried on with it. poppy about is carried on with it. poppy then i don't i certainly don't agree with the process. it's just labour problem. it's not just a labour problem. it's not just a labour problem. it's not just a labour problem. i completely agree with you. it's partisan issue. we it's a cross partisan issue. we now need to reckon with when something goes wrong, how do we respond it? what will the respond to it? what will the lessons learned or are we lessons we learned or are we just lining pockets of lawyers? >> they always go about >> they always go on about a judge led inquiry and i think god judge led. he must be exhausted. you know, i think in a democracy it much better to a democracy it is much better to have these things exposed in the pubuc have these things exposed in the public sphere . but the problem public sphere. but the problem is that maybe we have a media and attitude to politicians and an attitude to politicians thatis and an attitude to politicians that is more interested in the
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soap opera than the details. and that ends up ends up with some of these things being kind of redundant and, you know , the redundant and, you know, the hours of boris johnson's questioning, i dare say the bits that most of us would have picked up the reports picked up on from the reports are likely to the soap are more likely to be the soap opera because what the opera because that's what the journalist for the headline. >> yeah, but i just still can't understand why you care so much about seeing boris johnson's whatsapp because that whatsapp as well, because that is in which is the process in which this government was making decisions that to live or that caused people to live or die, to have basic freedoms at certain and not others . certain times and not at others. >> you know, it sounds like the whole system was a in whole system was a mess in there. and there's nothing to there. and if there's nothing to hide those whatsapps, then hide in those whatsapps, then why being hidden? it's why are they being hidden? it's like says to that like that says to me that there's something important about process . about his thought process. >> tea on. that's >> he put the tea on. that's obviously there's obviously going be than just going to be more than just carrie, tea on. carrie, put the tea on. >> know, dealings >> you know, i know my dealings with from my dealings with i know from my dealings with i know from my dealings with a lot i just don't want with a lot of i just don't want to trawl through 40,000 or however you don't have to. >> don't have to. the >> you don't have to. the inquiry will think it is inquiry will and i think it is it's slightly almost that it's slightly almost like that
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rebekah whole rebekah vardy that whole situation pr dropped situation where the pr dropped her phone in north sea, her phone in the north sea, you know, all same kind of energy. >> it's all quite shady and i don't like it. >> okay. >> okay. >> well, still to come tonight, we're to find out what we're going to find out what beunda we're going to find out what belinda about male belinda thinks about male stoicism. we're going stoicism. and we're going to find think about find out what i think about ruining generations home, ruining my generations home, buying and take a wild buying plans and take a wild guess as who benjamin thinks guess as to who benjamin thinks should pay for harry and meghan's security . see you with meghan's security. see you with the saturday five live on .
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radio. >> welcome back to the saturday five. as always, cheers very much for your emails about tonight's topics. so we've had a fair few of you write in and well an to start us off says we do not know covid measures were a failure as there is no comparison . saintly sweden isn't comparison. saintly sweden isn't making a success of migration and other issues , for example.
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and other issues, for example. so. well, that's that's one view. a few others are agreeing with. i'll be actually quite a few of them saying that actually on suella braverman is absolutely right, but that they're disappoint . and we they're disappoint. and we didn't mention the grooming gang scandal, for example, as an obvious piece of evidence to suggest that there's been a massive failure of integration an and all those other things are also girls and women feel less likely to come forward if they're going to be accused of being racist. >> indeed. >> indeed. >> yeah , absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> wrote and >> and then julie wrote in and said she agrees with poppy said that she agrees with poppy and she suffered sexual and that she suffered sexual harassment what she deems harassment from what she deems to be a minor point and that actually she's deeply worried about the direction that we're going in. but, folks, it's time for our next debate. keep your emails coming in now then, darren, i hear for a change, immigration is on your mind. >> indeed . >> indeed. >> indeed. >> right? so i'm going to take you back to last year to start off with last year. england only managed to scrape together
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177,000 new homes . now let's add 177,000 new homes. now let's add a little bit of spice to those numbers, shall we? because britain's been on quite the immigration bender and is now suffering one hell of a hangover with net migration soaring to a record 745,000in 2022 . and record 745,000in 2022. and 672,000 in 2023. now, i'm not carol vorderman, right? i cannot crunch numbers and i certainly cannot afford the botox bill. but even i can see that there's a colossal gap between the trickle of housing supply and the tsunami of migrant demand . the tsunami of migrant demand. and we've got youngsters in our families eyeing up their first home. now they're likely singing hymns of open borders and all that malarkey . but i say it's that malarkey. but i say it's time for a bloody reality check. britain wasn't always as open as a prince harry memoir. this mass migration business. it's a recent fad, and here's a bit of wisdom for us if you're
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important . a manchester sized important. a manchester sized crowd yearly, well, guess what? you're going to need to start building extra manchester's every year , right? consider every year, right? consider london, where half of the social housing is filled by those not born on this fair isle for the comfy crowd detached from migration front lines, it's easy, easy to ignore. but what about a single mother hunting for a roof over her kids heads? do we just say, well, tough luck, pet . you're queuing behind luck, pet. you're queuing behind our diversity drive. professor matt goodwin received quite the kick in this week , and he notes kick in this week, and he notes that the migration adviser committee found in 2018 that a 1% rise in population from migration pushes up housing pnces migration pushes up housing prices by the same margin. and it's not just buying, of course, if the cost of housing goes up, then renting becomes a nightmare too. and it's the young ones who are up against it. the fix in my
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eyesis are up against it. the fix in my eyes is that we need an immigration freeze as we need more house building . yes, but we more house building. yes, but we also need policies that refuse to send brits to the back of an ever growing queue . it shouldn't ever growing queue. it shouldn't be controversial to say that it's common sense in order to unite britain, we've got to put a. to britain's mass migration madness . a. to britain's mass migration madness. now, a. to britain's mass migration madness . now, poppy, you a. to britain's mass migration madness. now, poppy, you had a really, really good piece for the telegraph recently . i forget the telegraph recently. i forget when it was the other week would have been about a week ago. and it was very good. and i listened to it intently. now you for saying that by your generation will accused of being will have been accused of being some of swivel fruit some kind of swivel eyed fruit cake. are you getting sick of the fact that we hear people like benjamin butterworth talk about how we need to build more housing whilst at same time housing whilst at the same time he supports it's not bus loads, it's ship loads coming into this country every year. >> well, i completely agree. >> well, i completely agree. >> the problem with the language around the mass migration debate
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is it often sees house building and massive immigration as two things that are totally separate from each other. but as you've said, you know, in an ideal world, particularly the world that a lot of like very liberal economists well, you economists will make. well, you know, having a million know, if we're having a million people year, people coming in every year, growth, we can just build growth, then we can just build a million houses. the problem million houses. but the problem is country, as we know, is in this country, as we know, and i'm sure as you will agree, benjamin, it's really bloody difficult it's difficult to build houses. it's very we a lot of very difficult. we have a lot of legislation in place. we have the 1945 town canning act, the 1945 town of canning act, which it very, very which makes it very, very difficult for government difficult for the government to actually a top actually intervene and do a top down of building lots of down scheme of building lots of houses. irregardless houses. and that's irregardless of a lot of voters of the fact that a lot of voters aren't happy house aren't happy to have house building going on near them. so you've got that one and you've got that one aspect and then you've the second then you've got the second aspect. we're told aspect. and we're told constantly immigration aspect. and we're told const forly immigration aspect. and we're told constforthe immigration aspect. and we're told const for the economy, ation aspect. and we're told const for the economy, it'sn aspect. and we're told const for the economy, it's good good for the economy, it's good for listen to for the economy. don't listen to the fact that productivity is flatlined for the last 15 years. it the economy. it is good for the economy. we're to keep it we're going to keep saying it until it happens. well, of course, is going to course, immigration is going to drive housing. drive up the cost of housing. i mean, know that that's basic
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at the same time, you've seen the number of people buying second and homes, not second and third homes, not necessarily to rent, but as a places to go on holiday. in the uk, that has gone up 800% in the last ten years. and so when you talk about housing crisis, you can't pretend that's not there. 15% of all houses in this country are rented. that's an enormous proportion and that's people buying up lots of houses. when you're talking about supply and demand that is having a profound effect on the cost. and full disclosure, my grandparents were buy to let landlords so , were buy to let landlords so, you know, that affects the economy. but now so many people do is causing do it that that is causing a problem . with 4 do it that that is causing a problem .with 4 million homes problem. with 4 million homes short. and fact is , i think short. and the fact is, i think there are a lot of people that would that you would like to say that it's, you know, the immigrants . that are know, the immigrants. that are causing this who also sit there going to the local council meetings complaining about their view of the park or the golf course when they don't want new houses people in houses built. lots of people in this country live in entire cities and towns that were built in 50s, the 60s and have in the 50s, the 60s and have nice lives there. that also go
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on and oppose anything remotely like that being built today. but even if people like your grandparents, for example , had grandparents, for example, had said, i'll let you build said, look, i'll let you build 4 million homes, let's have them all near me, right? >> we've got a crisis here. let's it next year, we're let's do it next year, we're going to have another 700,000 people come here and then we'll be square because of be back to square one because of the of policies that you the kind of policies that you liberals support. >> isn't good now that >> but isn't it good now that we're least admitting we're at least admitting that there relationship between there is a relationship between the two? right >> took us long enough. >> that took us long enough. i mean, not rocket science. mean, it's not rocket science. >> that's what the conversation comes to. about there comes down to. it's about there is relationship between the is a relationship between the two. don't in an ideal two. you don't live in an ideal world you can have or world where you can have one or the other. you've got to address both. let's liberalise both. i agree. let's liberalise house the same house building. but at the same time, we've got to make sure that we can deal with the backlog. >> i think when we talk about adding when we talk about adding more, when we talk about immigration, course, immigration, housing, of course, i agree benjamin and darren i agree with benjamin and darren in course, we're in that, of course, if we're going three going to be having three quarters of million people quarters of a million people coming year, that's going coming into a year, that's going to on housing demand. >> but even if we had an immigration freeze tomorrow,
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darren, which i don't agree with, say had an with, but let's say we had an immigration freeze tomorrow, there be a housing there would still be a housing crisis country. so let's crisis in this country. so let's not an not pretend that just an immigration alone is immigration freeze alone is going to solve the housing crisis this country. crisis in this country. it is not it is also not it. and actually, it is also true that if we are going to build the numbers of houses that we need this country in the we need in this country in the time we them all time that we want them all built, a year, we might built, 500,000 a year, we might actually some migrant actually need some migrant labour for a limited time to come build those houses come over and build those houses . an immigration . so i think an immigration freeze be bonkers, by the freeze would be bonkers, by the way, i think immigration should come i think come down because i think 750,000 in 1 year is bonkers, but a total immigration freeze would be, i think, because there are skills that we need in this country that we don't have in the native population, which is a investment in house a lot of investment in house building, city building, especially in a city like comes from like london, comes from businesses in the arab world, and of the people building and a lot of the people building houses in this country come from eastern europe. >> so the idea that there's not two of this involve two sides of this which involve immigration would be ridiculous. >> our green and >> i don't want our green and pleasant to be concreted pleasant land to be concreted over because immigration. no, over because of immigration. no, but saying,
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but i'm just saying, if it continues idea that, oh , continues the idea that, oh, we'll build more and more we'll just build more and more houses, not talking about houses, we're not talking about many oxfords beautiful bath many oxfords and beautiful bath crescents going crescents that are going to be built and down country, built up and down the country, that's going to happen. i'm that's not going to happen. i'm sorry, the idea of sorry, but i think the idea of immigration now is completely sorry, but i think the idea of immi stolen now is completely sorry, but i think the idea of immi stolen from is completely sorry, but i think the idea of immi stolen from us:ompletely sorry, but i think the idea of immi stolen from us viapletely sorry, but i think the idea of immi stolen from us via the aly been stolen from us via the ballot box. it's like we can't vote on it anymore. it's been taken from us. and i don't taken away from us. and i don't think it's the immigrants fault at i mean, they been at all. i mean, they have been welcomed and encouraged to come at all. i mean, they have been welc�*byed and encouraged to come at all. i mean, they have been welc�* by the nd encouraged to come at all. i mean, they have been welc�* by the government.�*d to come at all. i mean, they have been welc�*by the government. soo come here by the government. so anyone who frustration over anyone who has frustration over housing anger at the housing direct your anger at the government, about government, not about those coming where coming into your community where housing because housing is concerned because they've been encouraged to come here been reckless of here and it's been reckless of the to encourage the government to encourage so many when do many to come here when we do not have the infrastructure to house our , especially in council our own, especially in council housing. >> it's a betrayal of the british people at all. no, but it's not about having none at all. >> i think we should have a pause on the numbers. >> we have enough houses down to tens of thousands. >> we have enough houses down to ten i of thousands. >> we have enough houses down to ten i of th> we have enough houses down to ten i of th> i want to build some houses for people here, for those people already here, not people coming abroad. not for people coming abroad. no. we're going to on no. right. we're going to get on to more now. to more topics now. >> but still ahead, benjamin is
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going mystery of going to solve the mystery of who's for the duke and who's to pay for the duke and duchess of york's security. and beunda duchess of york's security. and belinda will why we belinda will explain why we should british should celebrate the british stiff lip . you're with the stiff upper lip. you're with the saturday five live on .
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listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to the saturday five, as always. >> cheers very much for your emails . back >> cheers very much for your emails. back to our covid inquiry chat earlier and has written in and she says, boris never wanted lockdown from day one, but cabinet did that . it is one, but cabinet did that. it is democracy . neil says look at the democracy. neil says look at the state of sweden's crime because of mass migration. watch out uk of mass migration. watch out uk of increased crime . yeah, i of increased crime. yeah, i think that's an important point . think that's an important point. lawless hellhole. steve says it's all down to the government allowing this to happen. it's not complicated. stop them coming in. right. that's well said . now it's time for our next
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said. now it's time for our next debate . we're going to talk debate. we're going to talk about harry and meghan, who are, of course, universal, absolutely unloved by the british people. so who better to defend the pair than benjamin butterworth? take it away. benjamin >> to be universally loathed. naturally. i'm on their side this week, documents released from the late queen showed that she believed harry and meghan should have their state funded security carry on. so in contrast to a lot of what we've been hearing, elizabeth, the second or elizabeth the great, as i think we should be calling her, said that it was of quote unquote, paramount importance that the security continue for harry and meghan because there were extremists out. there was her word. i'd use the word nutters who were going after them. now now, after years of hating on the duke and duchess of sussex , the relentless of sussex, the relentless attacks that this poor couple has faced, i think it's time that we heed the late queen's words . i that we heed the late queen's words. i mean, after that we heed the late queen's words . i mean, after all, it that we heed the late queen's words. i mean, after all, it is just nasty to remove the
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protection of this family. prince harry didn't ask to be born into the royal family. he didn't ask to be one of the most famous people in the world. and he can't stop that. that is already the case. he didn't ask to go and serve in afghanistan. he chose to do that and put his life on the line with other british soldiers. now i think we should respect veterans , and should respect veterans, and that includes prince harry. so the idea that we as a country would be so small minded and so venomous as to say that because we don't like some of the politics and cultural persuasions of harry and meghan , persuasions of harry and meghan, that they should remove the security that risks that keeps them alive . bearing in security that risks that keeps them alive. bearing in mind security that risks that keeps them alive . bearing in mind that them alive. bearing in mind that his mother was killed in a horrendous accident, not only is that wrong, but it wasn't the wishes of the late queen. so god forbid . and if we saw something forbid. and if we saw something happen to harry and meghan, or their kids, people would change their kids, people would change their mind. then so why don't we change now? darren you change our mind now? darren you relentlessly hate them. why
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shouldn't they have the taxpayers cover their security given that they didn't ask to be in this position? >> well, you keep saying that they didn't ask for all of this. >> they didn't ask blah, blah, blah and whatever else you said. but i'm afraid that actually no one asked harry to admit one asked prince harry to admit to how many people he'd killed whilst on tour in afghanistan . whilst on tour in afghanistan. right. we didn't ask him to write a tell all memoir that put people at risk who he then exploited to make a quick buck off of the back of his book. so you might think that all of that is perfectly fine and excusable, but i certainly don't. >> i think that is largely irrelevant because it irrelevant if none of those things you mentioned it as a security risk. none of those things had happened when this letter from the queen's private secretary was was already was written and he was already at risk. and the fact is at serious risk. and the fact is that cannot get rid of that. that he cannot get rid of that. one the reasons why he's had one of the reasons why he's had to do things like write the book is because the enormous financial his financial cost of covering his security and he got, what, tens financial cost of covering his
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se�*millionsj he got, what, tens financial cost of covering his se�*millions out got, what, tens financial cost of covering his se�*millions out of it, what, tens financial cost of covering his se�*millions out of diana's. tens financial cost of covering his se�*millions out of diana's inens of millions out of diana's in his inheritance from diana . his inheritance from diana. >> and then, of course, he still gets money from being the prince of wales, former prince of wales. so well, let me put this back to you. he can afford his own security. >> should boris johnson get security? >> well, boris johnson doesn't get kind of security that get the kind of security that prince harry getting round prince harry was getting round the former prime the clock security former prime ministers do. >> former home >> yes. so the former home secretary, so former secretary, so the former northern up secretary, so the former nc a hern up secretary, so the former nca point up secretary, so the former nca point that up secretary, so the former nca point that costs up secretary, so the former nca point that costs a up secretary, so the former nca point that costs a lot up secretary, so the former nca point that costs a lot of up to a point that costs a lot of money. do you think they should lose boris johnson hasn't turned around said sort this. lose boris johnson hasn't turned arorl'm said sort this. lose boris johnson hasn't turned arorl'm selive art this. lose boris johnson hasn't turned arorl'm selive in this. california. >> democratic. the guy the guy owns millions of pounds in his private pocket and doesn't do anything service anything of public service at this point in time. >> so your is flawed? >> so your argument is flawed? >> so your argument is flawed? >> no, it's not. >> boris johnson will pay for his security apparatus when he's abroad to broaden it. abroad and needs to broaden it. >> will harry and meghan. >> so will harry and meghan. >> so will harry and meghan. >> indeed. >> indeed. >> the question. the >> that's not the question. the question to the question needs to be on the british taxpayer, this country when here. i think when they're here. i think that's . that's nasty minded. >> we're missing an important detail and meghan detail because harry and meghan offered pay for home offered to pay for the home office security that they would
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receive in the united kingdom when in the country. when they were in the country. and issue was that people and the issue was that people didn't think they would be entitled, shouldn't entitled, they shouldn't be entitled, they shouldn't be entitled they're entitled now that they're not royals style of home royals to the same style of home office security that the rest of the royal family now. the royal family have now. i think totally spiteful. i think that's totally spiteful. i do. for what it's worth, think that should have the same that they should have the same security that the other royals get in the united kingdom when they are here. if they've offered to pay for it themselves, we should let them do it. >> do think our home office >> do you think our home office security for rent for security is up for rent for a royal? i do. royal? yes, i do. >> they're not working royals and i actually agree with you a little bit. >> benjamin. they are inescapably. >> think we should lay off >> i do think we should lay off the couple. they're just human. there is too much hate against them. nothing them. i personally feel nothing towards them. they've just been a but other a disappointment. but other than that, it's that, nothing. but i think it's wrong our home security wrong to allow our home security to rented out by a couple of to be rented out by a couple of hollywood celebs. is there no longer royals? longer working royals? >> in the street. >> harry was shot in the street. >> harry was shot in the street. >> imagine the horror rightly, and we he should pay for his own, but not office own, but not home office security, would have security. >> but still ahead. last but not
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least, it's belinda who will be responding our very own nigel responding to our very own nigel farage emotional reunion with his daughter last night. >> well, what a shock. i know . >> well, what a shock. i know. are you surprised? very didn't expect it so . you're with the expect it so. you're with the saturday five live on
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gb news. >> welcome back to the saturday five. now, folks, before we move on, i just want to give you a small reminder about our very own nigel farage, who's in the jungle. nigel got through another round on i'm a celebrity last he's in the final last night and he's in the final foun last night and he's in the final four. so if you want to vote for him, grab your phone scan the qr code, which is on screen now, and download the app . that app and download the app. that app enables you to vote for him five times per day for free. so let's make him king of the jungle.
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it's going to be the biggest upset since brexit, and personally, i can't wait to see benjamin in floods of tears . benjamin in floods of tears. now, britain's often criticised for having a stiff upper lip. is it not a keep calm and carry on attitude, but our very own beunda attitude, but our very own belinda de lucy says that ain't no bad thing. take it away. >> belinda nigel farage had a moving moment last night when he saw his daughter for the first time in three weeks on. >> i'm a celebrity. get me out of here. take a look. >> hello. i don't believe it. how are you? love you. all right ? >> 7- >> i'm just 7 >> i'm just happy ? >> i'm just happy to see you. >> i'm just happy to see you. >> oh, happy to see you, darling. you . okay yeah. yeah darling. you. okay yeah. yeah >> and sit down. oh, wow. what a shock. i know. are you surprised? very. oh didn't expect it so have you been? how is it? good. yeah >> i like the sleeping out. >> i like the sleeping out.
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>> that's nice. dad. you've done so well. we're all so proud of you. it's been so refreshing to just see you as you for once . just see you as you for once. everyone at home is amazed . everyone at home is amazed. like, shocked, but in the best way. couldn't . not be good. way. couldn't. not be good. >> how's everybody? >> how's everybody? >> everyone's good. everyone sends their love. grandma and grandpa. they watch it every night. loved seeing night. they loved seeing your bare the telly . bare bottom on the telly. >> now his reaction to seeing his daughter triggered the woke bngade his daughter triggered the woke brigade into a frenzy, all because he didn't unravel into an emotional lather or flip around like an emotionally incontinent, hypersensitive bbc approved man when he saw her. many on twitter responded in horror to his calm and reserved reaction , saying, oh, it was reaction, saying, oh, it was a sign this man was obviously a sociopath. he couldn't be less arsed to see his child and that he was cold and without feeling no, he wasn't. he has like many millions of brits , a stiff upper millions of brits, a stiff upper lip, much needed in moments when
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those vulnerable around you need strength. he was an anchor for his daughter to hold onto when she was visibly upset that seems pretty fatherly to me . imagine pretty fatherly to me. imagine if he had paddled into a bawling child at the sight of her and left her feeling worried . no left her feeling worried. no stiff upper lip is often an act of great selflessness . it can of great selflessness. it can save lives, give reassurance to those in fear, win wars, protect the weak, and provide sanctuary for those more vulnerable to unravel too. it could help in this current climate where the fixation with navel gazing on every offence or discomfort causes more harm than good. there needs to be a rebalance. so we should cheer those who show resilience, strength and good coping mechanisms alongside those who want to protect men's mental health. our young need it more than ever now, and i think ispeak more than ever now, and i think i speak for many women when i say that we feel safer being with steady ships over the woke, hyper emotional unravelling types like prince harry, especially in times we are pregnant or or or we have an
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intruder in the house. i speak from experience there, by the way. it is time to applaud the british character of the stiff upper lip that has helped forge a small island into one of the superpowers. the world sees today. bring it back and let's celebrate it. >> hmm. >> hmm. >> benjamin . i mean, benjamin. >> benjamin. i mean, benjamin. i don't agree. >> i mean, ijust thought. look, i'm questioning. that a i'm not questioning. that is a good you could good father, because you could see between the two. see the love between the two. and so that was rather nice to see. was another see. but there was another moment episode where sam moment in that episode where sam thompson, chelsea thompson, the made in chelsea youtuber his best mate youtuber guy, saw his best mate and cried and hugged and those two men told each other they love each other. and i thought, how fantastic to see, you know, straight men behaving like that, so comfortable with their own emotions. that was what i admired, know , that is a admired, you know, that is a modern man, someone who is able to communicate love to communicate their love but can't think there can't you? i think there are too, too many emotionally constipated this country constipated men in this country for whom they get torn apart inside because they can't level with other men. isn't there space for both types of men? >> god, every single man was >> god, if every single man was an record all the
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an emotional record all the time. no, i'm sorry. we would get nowhere in life. i'd feel really insecure a country if really insecure as a country if they'd at the slightest offence. >> i thought nigel >> i actually thought nigel seemed emotional in that seemed quite emotional in that interaction. nigel, he interaction. well, for nigel, he was, but he wiped away a tear to see him saying he genuinely see him saying he was genuinely quite . quite emotional. >> the idea you have to do this kind of mawkish, overwrought sentimentality. i think it's just awful. you can, if you like. >> he doesn't do it that way. >> he doesn't do it that way. >> fine. but i feel though >> it's fine. but i feel though now we've too far in the now we've gone too far in the opposite direction and there's a social pressure to be seen social pressure now to be seen as like being in touch with your emotions. i just think emotions. and i just think it's it ridiculous. it can be ridiculous. >> think a lot of men of >> but i think a lot of men of that you know, have really that age, you know, have really struck with connecting with struck gold with connecting with their because don't their family because they don't have the vocabulary, the emotional have the vocabulary, the em�*well, l have the vocabulary, the em�*well, i haven't that for >> well, i haven't had that for my very similar to my father, who's very similar to that. say he loves me that. he doesn't say he loves me in but he does it in in words, but he does it in actions. and i think that's far more important emotional history. >> to hi story. >> to leave history. >> to leave it there. but >> have to leave it there. but vou >> have to leave it there. but volt farage and thanks for aukus tonight. next up, the tonight. next up, it's the brilliant leo kearse with the saturday showdown. saturday night showdown. cheers for watching we'll see you for watching and we'll see you again week .
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again next week. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers spot hours of weather on gb news is . weather on gb news is. >> hello. welcome to your latest gb news weather. i'm ellie glaisyer . so a very unsettled glaisyer. so a very unsettled picture over the next couple of days with low pressure. very much in charge of our weather. the first system brought plenty of wet and windy weather named storm ellen by the irish met service with storm. fergus sat out west bringing further out to the west bringing further wet through sunday. back wet weather through sunday. back to saturday evening though, and a drier picture across parts of england wales that band england and wales as that band of pushed its way into of rain has pushed its way into northern england, scotland and northern ireland well, where northern ireland as well, where that continues that heavy rain continues to fall very saturated fall on some very saturated ground. some flooding is ground. so some flooding is possible clear possible here. under those clear skies, though further south, skies, though, further south, we could temperatures could see temperatures around 6 or degrees. but perhaps a or 7 degrees. but perhaps just a little across parts of little cooler across parts of scotland. a cloudy start scotland. so a cloudy start across scotland, but some sunny skies to begin with across england wales before england and wales before the next pushes from the next system pushes in from the west, some further west, bringing us some further spells heavy rain and some
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spells of heavy rain and some strong winds those strongest strong winds to those strongest winds along irish winds along those irish sea coasts through afternoon coasts through sunday afternoon and evening. but that rain continues to way north continues to push its way north and eastwards parts and eastwards into parts of scotland sunday scotland through sunday afternoon . temperatures here afternoon. temperatures here generally average , but a generally around average, but a little again across the little milder again across the southwest, around 13 or 14 degrees. it's a cloudy start to monday for most of us with outbreaks of light rain and drizzle times. but some drizzle at times. but some heavier across of heavier rain across parts of scotland the scotland pushing in from the east go through into east as we go through into monday . the best of monday afternoon. the best of the sunshine, though, again across wales and parts of england where we could see some sunny the sunny skies through the afternoon. temperatures generally the generally around average for the time and some time of year. and there's some hints something little bit hints of something a little bit more settled on the way through next week. looks like things are heating up . heating up. >> boxt boilers sponsor of weather on .
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>> hi there. coming up on this saturday night showdown, the medieval tradition of duelling returned to the streets of london this week. but with ladders, wig or woman, an mp is forced to apologise guys for misgendering one of her election rivals and doctor who or doctor woke the bbc spark a row over the new casting of isaac newton and a dj is forced to apologise to 7000 people for playing wham . to 7000 people for playing wham. discussing all this and much more, my brilliant panel joining me tonight are comedians chris in awaiting paul cox and darius davies. but first, let's get your latest news headlines from
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sophia . sophia. >> good evening. i'm sophia wenzler in the newsroom . a 16 wenzler in the newsroom. a 16 year old boy has been charged with the murder of leon gordon, who was shot dead in east london on tuesday evening. the boy has also been charged with the attempted murder of a 20 year old man and a 16 year old boy. he was also charged with possession of a firearm and possession of a firearm and possession with intent supply possession with intent to supply class drugs . he will appear at class a drugs. he will appear at barkingside magistrates court on monday . matt police have monday. matt police have arrested two protesters at a pro—palestine march in london today and are appealing for the public's help to identify a woman . it's public's help to identify a woman. it's part of an investigation into a placard carried at the protest earlier today. the met police released an image on social media and have appealed for the woman to come forward. thousands of people gathered to call for a ceasefire in gaza . the met ceasefire in gaza. the met police arrested a man on suspicion of a racially aggravated public order offence
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for allegedly displaying a placard comparing israel to nazi germany . a second man was germany. a second man was arrested for carrying an offensive placard . un officials offensive placard. un officials say there's enough food aid available in egypt and jordan to reach a million people in gaza amid fears of humanitarian aid collapsing under a new system, suppues collapsing under a new system, supplies could come to the kerem shalom crossing on the border between israel, gaza and egypt for the first time. the un says trucks need to be allowed to enter gaza directly to alleviate an increasingly desperate situation in the enclave israel has so far rebuffed pleas from the united nations to access the crossing. deputy executive director of the world food programme, carl skow, says the operation is critical. >> we need kerem shalom to open . >> we need kerem shalom to open. you know, yesterday i think we were trying to use kerem shalom for the first time for verification, but not for entry and we need that also so that we can have more order around the un convoys coming in and to some
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degree separate them from from the rest of the aid that is flowing in through rafah and of course we need a humanitarian ceasefire so that there is the space and the operational environment inside to deliver to all those that need it. and in a controlled and orderly way and five coastal homes in an erosion hit seaside community are being torn down today. >> demolition work begun on the clifftop homes in the village of hemsby in norfolk this morning. great yarmouth borough council said the decision was taken because the homes were not structurally sound are structurally sound and are unsafe after high and unsafe after high tides and strong winds have been eroding the cliff , the feeling locally the cliff, the feeling locally has been fluctuating from extreme sadness to extreme anger . this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on your digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news .
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speaker by saying play gb news. >> thank you sophia . the >> thank you sophia. the medieval tradition of duelling returned to the streets of london this week , but not with london this week, but not with flintlock pistols. this was with ladders and not over the honour of some fair maiden. but over the flag flying above this land. what is the flag of england? you'd be forgiven for thinking it's this one. as you see it so often. but it's not. it's this one. you can tell. it's this one because this is the one marked by self—loathing leftists. here's the clip . ukip. honestly here's the clip. ukip. honestly give this englishman a medal . give this englishman a medal. he's pulling down a flag that makes many of my jewish friends feel unsafe as they've seen people wearing it. chant for their extermination and the man who who pulled the ladder down could have killed him. he should be put on the naughty step. however this is sadiq khan's london and his police force of a two tier approach. so i'm fully expected the englishman to get 30 years in jail and the two hoougans 30 years in jail and the two hooligans who attacked him to get hate crime adviser
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get hired as hate crime adviser for the met police. but why are these palestinian flags flying in london in the first place? there are hundreds in tower hamlets alone. the council say they had no involvement with these placed in the these flags being placed in the borough. really why don't they pull down then? the flags borough. really why don't they pul blocking>wn then? the flags borough. really why don't they pul blocking lights an? the flags borough. really why don't they pul blocking lights andthe flags borough. really why don't they pul blocking lights and signsags are blocking lights and signs and they embolden anti—semitism . and they embolden anti—semitism. but then anti—semitism is the norm for some leftists . now, norm for some leftists. now, just this week we've seen the presence of elite universal 80s harvard, penn and mit make excuses for students who call for the extermination of jews . for the extermination of jews. and we've seen the blue haired non binary staff at a coffee shopin non binary staff at a coffee shop in california stop a jewish woman from entering the bathroom . the coffee shop has pledged to send staff on diversity training . i'm sure that'll solve the problem . if only someone had problem. if only someone had sent hitler on a tour of diversity awareness course , diversity awareness course, think of the tragedy that could have been prevented. added. it's so weird to see the people who'd call you a nazi for misgendering them, blithely calling for genocide like they're at a nazi
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rally in 1939. it's become a social media trend for these people. anti semitism is this year's ice bucket challenge, apparently, and people who are silent while hamas raped and killed civilians on october 7 are crying fascist and genocide because the israeli military is detaining suspects. won't someone please think of the raping, murderous child butchering terrorists ? and look butchering terrorists? and look at the state of these men ? i at the state of these men? i thought everyone in gaza was starving . well, i guess we all starving. well, i guess we all know where the missing aid rations have gone. it's not just hamas, but also perky bosoms . i hamas, but also perky bosoms. i feel like egyptian president mubarak is still with us. and is that palestinian president mahmoud abbas ? it must have led mahmoud abbas? it must have led to some confusion when someone asked, are you guys fatah ? and asked, are you guys fatah? and they had to answer yes. asked, are you guys fatah? and they had to answer yes . as left they had to answer yes. as left wing journalist screech , this is wing journalist screech, this is fascism. i mean, it's obviously not fascism. fascism is a system of government and social economic control that exalts
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nafion economic control that exalts nation and race above the individual . and it stands for individual. and it stands for a centralised autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader. severe economic and social regimentation and forcible suppression of opposition. it more accurately describes the leftist establishment who co—opt big tech into the application of their severe hate hate speech laws to control public opinion and subvert democracy . see these and subvert democracy. see these pictures from gaza . are some pictures from gaza. are some suspected terrorists with their tops off getting taken into custody there, fighting age men in areas where civilians are supposed to have been evacuated and they have to take their tops off because of their tendency to wear suicide vests and blow people up . something that seems people up. something that seems to be missed by all the western leftists who are acting like hamas bambi's mum. i know hamas are bambi's mum. i know there's pain and suffering on both sides, but that doesn't excuse flying a flag in london that causes pain to londoners. anyone who gets on a ladder and pulls one of these flags down takes a step up in my.
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pulls one of these flags down takes a step up in my . eyes takes a step up in my. eyes joining me tonight are comedian cressida wetton paul cox and danus cressida wetton paul cox and darius davies . have you been darius davies. have you been surprised that so many people on the left have been so anti—semitic? >> paul no , no, because it's >> paul no, no, because it's a cult, isn't it? and it's a cult against the establishment. they're not thinking about the context , so they're not thinking context, so they're not thinking they're pro—palestine because they're pro—palestine because they understand the history and what's gone on with israel and gaza and the west bank and all that sort of stuff. in fact, most of them, if you ask them, don't have any idea what's going on. they are seeing they're seeing this through the binary vision of and anti vision of pro and anti establishment israel being establishment israel being establishment palestine establishment and palestine being anti establishment and therefore good. but turns out that it's not quite that simple. >> how ironic that so many of these people are seeing it in a binary way. yeah, they probably describe themselves as non binary. >> exactly . well, there's gender >> exactly. well, there's gender fluidity is missing in this argument. >> yeah. it's also missing >> yeah. and it's also missing
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in gaza strip where hamas in the gaza strip where hamas run tight ship run a pretty tight ship regarding lgbtq issues. >> yeah, i don't think i'd fancy my there with with my chances there with with another type of flag with lots more colours on it i think. i think you to keep that here think you want to keep that here at sainsbury's safe at sainsbury's where it's safe and welcome. >> that's where to take >> that's where you want to take that flag. it's, don't that flag. yeah. it's, i don't know people calling for know people keep calling for a ceasefire. it's like we had a ceasefire. it's like we had a ceasefire didn't we? it ceasefire didn't we? and it didn't. it didn't really work out term. so and out long term. so yeah. and darris, you've, i know darris, i mean you've, i know you some support for the you have some support for the for the palestinian cause. >> that's right. >> that's right. >> that's right. i >> that's right. i do. >> that's right. i do. well >> that's right. i do. well well what's, what's the question . i what's, what's the question. i watched that. i thought the ladder video was hilarious like the did he remind you of like royal rumble? it reminded me of wwe, tlc tables , ladders, chair wwe, tlc tables, ladders, chair match. he got pushed off, which was crazy. but then he got another ladder out of nowhere. >> where does that come from? it's like, amazing. >> but the thing is, i have a feeling it's not because he was, you know, pro—israel. i have a
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feeling if that was an israel flag flying there, he have flag flying there, he would have taken down as well. taken that flag down as well. just his bobble hat just just from his bobble hat that wearing the big that he was wearing the big saint flag . yeah. but saint george's flag. yeah. but yeah, i mean, the palestinian flag doesn't bother me flying, but i understand it's not it shouldn't be flying like if they're flying illegally. but that's the council's job to fly, fly them. but it was funny to see those two guys. that first guy him off the ladder, guy pushed him off the ladder, though. have though. i could genuinely have killed the guy. yeah i was shocked when that happened, as it foley at royal it did to mick foley at royal rumble. now, foley would rumble. now, mick foley would have survived that. yeah but yeah. >> so seriously , you know, life >> so seriously, you know, life threatening. was that threatening. yeah, that was that was a genuinely dangerous assault. >> like even i was like, well that's, that's, that's too much. >> i mean, do you think do you think the police will actually do anything about it? you do anything about it? do you think the are not going think the police are not going to do anything? >> they going find >> how are they going to find they're not to do they're not going to do anything. was like you anything. if that was like you said, the pride flag, then there'd swat team there there'd be a swat team there instead. yeah, this this instead. yeah, but this is this is going go on. i just is going to go on. i mean, just because they only find out
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because they can only find out who is from video. right. who it is from the video. right. and video is to and the video is to not pixelated enough. you know, they can't zoom and see anyone's can't zoom in and see anyone's just going sure just going to go, i'm sure they've got other other cameras. >> i'm sure the ulez >> i mean, i'm sure the ulez cameras have caught that cameras would have caught that in crystal clear. >> was filming the numberplate? >> was that a woman? i think you could hear a woman speaking in the background saying, oh, my god, what god, i can't believe what they're call the they're doing. like, call the police, love. why are you police, love. like, why are you just letting this? you have to stop just letting this? you have to st0|so best is, though, >> so the best thing is, though, right the end of that video, right at the end of that video, like an advert plays. but it's so it's so funny. can't remember what i remember what it said, but i remember listening to that advert it's listening to that advert as it's playing. yeah. playing. it's crazy. yeah. so just watch the just if you go back, watch the video, the end and listen carefully. >> all right, paul, i mean, we've the we've seen the we've seen the we've seen the police tier police have this two tier approach where basically, you police have this two tier approtanti—israelasically, you police have this two tier approtanti—israel oil ally, you police have this two tier approtanti—israel oil protesters police have this two tier appidornti—israel oil protesters police have this two tier appido whateverl oil protesters police have this two tier appido whatever they 3rotesters police have this two tier appido whatever they 3rotestthey can do whatever they want. they can do whatever they want. they can whatever can shout whatever genocidal slogans. all over slogans. they can romp all over the memorials the war >> memorials drape the war memorials palestinian memorials and those palestinian flags which is flags that we've seen, which is a huge humiliate mission a it's a huge humiliate mission for be subjected to for britain to be subjected to see our, you know, in our capital city war memorials being desecrated if englishman
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>> but then if any englishman turn if any , if any anybody turn up, if any, if any anybody turns up in so much as, you know , turns up in so much as, you know i , turns up in so much as, you know , i saw somebody getting arrested for calling the protesters as terrorists when obviously a lot of the protesters were sympathising with with hamas. and a lot of them were actually dressed like hamas. so they're larping as hamas, but not just in their underpants out on the road. >> they're not not not how. >> now. >> hamas is current current outfit. >> but but yeah, they had the, you the bandana, the green you know, the bandana, the green bandana yeah, bandana and all the rest. yeah, you but you are you shocked you can. but you are you shocked by the of just by the by the sort of just blatant the flagrant two tier policing london. policing in london. >> not because we've worked >> i'm not because we've worked our over the our way towards this over the last 4 to 5 years where there are protected groups usually minorities and they fit within this . this is what i'm talking this. this is what i'm talking about with, you know, establishment and non establishment and non establishment . the, the pro establishment. the, the pro hamas, pro—palestinian non establishment people will be seen as part of the minority group and therefore protected by the police because they've done so much training that's pro armed them to believe that these
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people are in the right and anyone attacking them is not. i mean, go back that guy, mean, let's go back to that guy, by who not only has a by the way, who not only has a flag ladder, as a fighting flag ladder, but as a fighting ladder in back. ladder with them in the back. this is what what was fantastic about that is the guy who about that is as the guy who pulled away, went, pulled the ladder away, he went, mate, my mate, that's not even my fighting and he went fighting ladder. and he went back this other back and he got this other ladder somewhere. and when back and he got this other lad yeah , that's a really good >> yeah, that's a really good point. >> if he's if the police don't prosecute of prosecute him for removal of a flag, they'll definitely prosecute him for health and safety. they absolutely will >> well, they absolutely will because method because there was no method statement no health statement undertaken, no health and assessment and safety risk assessment undertaken where was undertaken where who was supposed to holding the supposed to be holding the ladder? that is a two man ladder? oh, that is a two man job. if you're going to climb up and pull flags down. yeah. and
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you've fighting ladder, you've got a fighting ladder, you've got a fighting ladder, you to help you you need someone to help you out, you? mean, he's you need someone to help you out,this you? mean, he's you need someone to help you out,this allou? mean, he's you need someone to help you out,this all wrong. mean, he's you need someone to help you out,this all wrong. he'szan, he's you need someone to help you out,this all wrong. he's in|, he's you need someone to help you out,this all wrong. he's in bige's got this all wrong. he's in big trouble. the other guys let trouble. the other two guys let him like you say. give him off. like you say. give him a sticker. him off. like you say. give him a styeah, i mean, danny, >> yeah, i mean, danny, is this. it's. interesting point it's. it's an interesting point that, people see that, like, people see palestinians as muslims sort of, you know , that side of things in you know, that side of things in this conflict as as a as a minority when they're not a minority when they're not a minority in, you know, on a worldwide scale and they're not a minority in a british and the british in britain compared to jews , there's far fewer jews. i jews, there's far fewer jews. i mean , i think look, basically mean, i think look, basically what a lot of people no one's complaining about hamas , you complaining about hamas, you know, getting their comeuppance . know, getting their comeuppance. >> no one's arguing for that. what people most of the people protesting and they're definitely there's some people who take it too and are anti who take it too far and are anti semitic. but most of the people that are protesting are saying, listen, the population that are protesting are saying, lisgaza the population that are protesting are saying, lisgaza children.pulation that are protesting are saying, lisgaza children. we're)n of gaza are children. we're protesting to protect their lives. like that's that's what that's what it is. we understand israel has a right to defend itself, but israel also, as a
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you know, a part of the west and western government, needs to defend themselves , but do it defend themselves, but do it responsibly and take all actions that they can to protect the civilian population, which , like civilian population, which, like i said, is half children. so that's what most of most people that's what most of most people that's what most people are standing up for, and that's when they're flying the flag, they're flying of those flying it in. support of those children. are there are children. now, are there are there in the 100? there anti—semites in the 100? are there idiots in the 100? they need to be condemned and shunned. most people are shunned. but most people are like, look, the they genuinely half the children, half the children is and it's and it reflects israel taking such a strong stance, which is their right. the thing is it ends up on our streets. now, if you're english, it should worry you because something's happening that we have nothing to do with and we, you know, end up on buses july 7th and we buses on july the 7th and we getting into their into getting dragged into their into their so that's the if their affairs. so that's the if you want it from a selfish uk point of view, that's a selfish you want it from a selfish uk poiipointyiew, that's a selfish you want it from a selfish uk poiipointyie\view.t's a selfish you want it from a selfish uk poiipointyie\view. but selfish you want it from a selfish uk poiipointyie\view. but then sh you want it from a selfish uk poiipointyie\view. but then you uk point of view. but then you
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know, heard heard know, i've heard i've heard this put you britain, put around, you know, britain, america shouldn't be getting involved . involved in this conflict. >> but it seems like those people, they're saying, well, just israel, leave israel just leave israel, leave israel to be to be wiped out by the people around it. and the people, you know, sometimes within want to destroy within it, they want to destroy it. kill kill all the people it. and kill kill all the people there that doesn't seem like doesn't seem like morally defensive. >> no, i'm not saying that. i'm saying listen, support israel. but take a more a neutral but but take a more a neutral role, more a neutral stance so that , you know, the role, more a neutral stance so that, you know, the palestinians rights are protected as well. and actually that's better for israel and for british jewish people, because then british, jewish people aren't at the mercy of netanyahu who going crazy and to try to protect his presidency and i mean, surely they some organisation garson's they some organisation garson's the gazans are as much hostages as of hamas as the actual hostages. most of the gazans now have turned on hamas. i can assure you. assure you. >> assure you. >> we've got some. we've got some a graphic coming up that's
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going to show the level of support for hamas in in palestine. >> i know. well okay. well, let me have a at this graphic me have a look at this graphic here. >> so of palestinians say >> so 59% of palestinians say strongly support the october the 7th attack. that was an attack when people were civilians, were were murdered. just the most horrific , horrific stuff. horrific, horrific stuff. >> but who's and another 16% support it to some extent . who's support it to some extent. who's filling out this? who's who's filling out this? who's who's filling out this? they've got methodology. there's bombs raining on their heads. >> where's this being done ? >> where's this being done? >> where's this being done? >> they're going you're telling me they're going through gaza, going and going? excuse me. just wait did wait while this bomb drops. did you this not you support the this not happened place they went happened in the place they went in gaza. why they going into in gaza. why are they going into impulse? them aid they impulse? give them aid they don't do it. don't want to do it. >> and are stealing the >> and hamas are stealing the aid they're still supporting aid and they're still supporting hamas the same time. come on, man. that's not. man. no, that's not. >> listen, this online, darius. and surely. but mean and they surely. but mean shopping malls are shut. you can't there jangling the can't stand there jangling the you know, raise money for hamas on this. >> well, what's the you know
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what the 75% of palestinians support support for hamas. i wouldn't be surprised. >> it surprises i'd say >> it surprises me is i'd say it's about 98% of british woke people support hamas , but there people support hamas, but there really is. >> but they wouldn't say they support they? support hamas, would they? they'd support they'd say they support palestine, darius's palestine, which is darius's point. people are saying, oh, think children . i don't think of the children. i don't know what else israel can do other give you fair warning other than give you fair warning and out of the and say, look, get out of the area. a lot more warning area. it's a lot more warning than chris skudder. area. it's a lot more warning tha here's skudder. area. it's a lot more warning tha here's the dder. area. it's a lot more warning tha here's the thing, get >> here's the thing, right? get out right? let me out of the area. right? let me tell you. right. get here. you now. go from london, now. you got to go from london, from central from wherever we are in central london croydon. got to london to croydon. you've got to do the roads are all do that. the roads are all bombed. you've to bombed. awful. you've got to do that. all bombed that. the roads are all bombed and got to drag your and also you've got to drag your age old, your old age mum who's in wheelchair trying in a wheelchair are trying to stop because want the stop you because they want the civilians, stop you because they want the civi they want the civilians where >> they want the civilians where they're killed they're going to get killed because got more because then they've got more civilian dead civilians to parade the cameras. parade in front of the cameras. okay. we're going to leave okay. well we're going to leave that forget don't forget, on >> but forget don't forget, on a lighter forget lighter note now, don't forget that nigel farage bids reach that nigel farage bids to reach the celebrity final tonight. >> if you want to register to vote for farage, you'll need to
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grab scan. the qr grab your phone scan. the qr code screen download the code on screen and download the app. as nigel says , you can vote app. as nigel says, you can vote for him five times a day. it's not like a general election. this one. next up is the in trans starring melissa poulton, the illinois psycho championships and a trans refuge from saudi arabia is in trouble with the law. but first, what happened next? we'll reveal in a couple of minutes . come
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> hello and welcome back to the saturday night showdown with myself, leo kearse . and right myself, leo kearse. and right before the break, we asked what happened next. well, here's the reveal . i heard crack . you. reveal. i heard crack. you. >> that happens. the flat looked like the ladder fighter . like the ladder fighter. >> do you think people aren't learning the lesson? if you're
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going to climb up on something, don't put it on top of an unstable surface such as table. >> to be fair, i think that chair is pretty stable. it just wasn't made for that type of weight. it wasn't 200 level weight. it wasn't 200 kilo level stable . stable. >> why are you filming yourself putting up christmas decorations. the world's gone mad. yeah mad. so narcissistic. yeah >> maybe staged the fall. >> maybe staged the fall. >> yeah, maybe. >> yeah, maybe. >> yeah, maybe just for likes. imagine that broken leg. but 200 likes. >> well , it's likes. >> well, it's time for the weekend trends now. an mp has been under fire this week after posting a controversial tweet. redditch mp rachel mcclean has been accused of transphobic behaviour on social media. haven't we all, after liking a post on her, claiming her trans political opponent opponent ? you political opponent opponent? you can see now it's called melissa poulton not being born with that name. it's not funny. it's just a man who wears a wig. she then shared the post and replied , shared the post and replied, saying, well, the greens don't know what a woman is. my worst worcestershire neighbours. the people of bromsgrove certainly
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do . well, since then, rachel has do. well, since then, rachel has apologised and deleted the comment . quite apologised and deleted the comment. quite right. apologised and deleted the comment . quite right. melissa comment. quite right. melissa poulton is just as much of a woman as you or me. rachel cressida . is rachel right to cressida. is rachel right to apologise ? no. apologise? no. >> rachel never. apollo guys, when are we going to learn apologies don't work, do they? it just makes it go on longer. just don't apologise. do a little curtsy. no, i'm always right. move on right. and then just move on with do it again. with your life. do it again. >> ben& jerry's i mean, this. that was . that looked to me like i >> -- >> like a real woman, which one was the trans tereus scathing . i was the trans tereus scathing. i just saw two beautiful female politicians. >> that's what i saw. yeah. absolute stunning and brave. i mean , melissa says she's transitioned. >> i'm not sure what from and what to call that. >> that's a massive spectrum of transition. i think she's just nought point 3% along it. by the way, i'm from dumfries . way, i'm from dumfries. >> i've seen some scary looking women, is not fooling
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anybody. >> yeah, i mean , you know, what >> yeah, i mean, you know, what can you say? it's getting to the point now where i'm starting to get annoyed because i'm glad you said annoyed though. yeah. yeah get annoyed because i'm glad you saidnotioyed though. yeah. yeah get annoyed because i'm glad you saidnot aroused,»ugh. yeah. yeah get annoyed because i'm glad you saidnot aroused, that's'eah. yeah get annoyed because i'm glad you saidnot aroused, that's for|. yeah i'm not aroused, that's for sure. starting to sure. because i'm starting to wonder could a better wonder if i could be a better looking than i am. man looking woman than i am. man i keep seeing these people transitioning, thinking i'm in the market here. know the wrong market here. i know now i'm as a man, pretty now that i'm as a man, pretty much but i could be a much retired, but i could be a better looking woman than that. i'm i can. and rachel. i'm sure i can. and rachel. rachel. the don't rachel. by the way, don't apologise. don't apologise. you can't apologise for pointing out that that's a man in a wig when it's a man in a wig. >> i would like to apologise for anyone offended by paul's comments. that's comments. sorry yeah. that's clearly real. clearly a real. >> we're getting to a point now, though, where the though, where she feels the pressure because of pressure to do that because of the she's in. which one are the job she's in. which one are we talking about? not. not not the ninja turtle thing . the ninja turtle thing. >> the ninja nerf tin janelle sounds like a toy you can buy, doesn't it? >> so i think she's got one in there. yeah but. but you know. no, the mp because of course she
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can't. she's supposed to be above all this. but when all this is mental, how can you be above it? beside it in i above it? beside it in it? i mean, it doesn't sense, mean, it doesn't make sense, does shows you that does it? someone shows you that picture goes. what do you think? >> no, i think this is a sign think? >> i\this think this is a sign think? >> i\this all1k this is a sign think? >> i\this all week. is a sign think? >> i\this all week. no, sign think? >> i\this all week. no, it'sn over this all week. no, it's a sign that times are changing because a time when because there's a time when you've been shown that you would have brave woman you've been shown that you would hathe brave woman you've been shown that you would hathe and brave woman you've been shown that you would hathe and nowbrave woman you've been shown that you would hathe and now people oman you've been shown that you would hathe and now people are|n at the end. and now people are just that just starting to question that and what lesbians who dont? >> she's a trans lesbian. >> she's a trans lesbian. >> what are you talking about? >> what are you talking about? >> well, that's the debate, isn't it ? isn't it? >> correspondent that they . >> correspondent that they. janice you're more convinced anyway, yesterday greater manchester police revealed that a man and a woman were sentenced to a combined 16 years and nine months in prison for their roles in the sexual abuse of a child. >> naomi o'brien of ashton under lyne received a total of four years and three months in prison. but as twitter or xs community notes revealed, naomi's first name was nathan and naomi is male. but as identity ified as trans for the
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last ten years, the bbc news coverage of this story did not mention once that this person who identifies as a woman and is now in the sex offenders register was born male. i mean, paul, register was born male. i mean, paul , this is this is getting paul, this is this is getting ridiculous. i mean, this is so the first thing i did in researching this i'd seen this story earlier in the week and i thought, you know what? >> gonna have a quick look >> i'm gonna have a quick look at it to remind myself of at it again to remind myself of the the first thing the details. and the first thing i a fat check from from i saw was a fat check from from x that this story says x that said, this story says it's and a woman. there it's a man and a woman. there are only males in this it's a man and a woman. there are orso males in this it's a man and a woman. there are orso x males in this it's a man and a woman. there are orso x itselfes in this it's a man and a woman. there are orso x itself is in this it's a man and a woman. there are orso x itself is saying, by story. so x itself is saying, by the information is not the way, this information is not true . however, what do you do? true. however, what do you do? i mean , it's all right for us to mean, it's all right for us to sit here and sort of point out what should and shouldn't do what we should and shouldn't do here. we not a world here. but we are not in a world where is a baseline to where there is a baseline to work from. we used to be able to say there were two is say there were two sexes is wrong. not two wrong. now there are not two sexes. millions of sexes. there are millions of them. and if you get it slightly wrong, so wrong, you're out of work. so what? i'm not surprised that people the bbc or any news people at the bbc or any news channel or any journalist is no idea what do here. you are
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idea what to do here. you are best just to go along with it. yeah, your just to go yeah, your best. just to go along with it. they used to do these psychology experiments where they where they where they learn where they were, trying were, where they were trying to figure people get into figure out how people get into cults. is after cults. and what happens is after a people, you know, say a while, people, you know, say that's there. and that's a cup there. and there are people this room who that's a cup there. and there are what?yple this room who that's a cup there. and there are what? that this room who that's a cup there. and there are what? that isthis room who that's a cup there. and there are what? that is theroom who that's a cup there. and there are what? that is the first who say, what? that is the first nine people say that is a spoon . nine people say that is a spoon. the 10th person will say it's a spoon irrespective of what spoon to irrespective of what they because no they see because they will no longer their eyes and will longer trust their eyes and will follow group. follow the group. >> so this is we've >> no way. so this is we've almost been of as almost been sort of as a community, we've been gaslit, we have been fully gaslit on an international scale, but we still have to say cis this word that means, yeah, you're right, but well, just think it but well, i just think it doesn't make sense, does it? >> they stick the people >> they don't stick the people that believe in this stuff don't stick to their own logic because you need word you wouldn't need the word cis if if anybody if you didn't. which if anybody doesn't means identifies if you didn't. which if anybody doesn"gender means identifies if you didn't. which if anybody doesn"gender orzans identifies if you didn't. which if anybody doesn"gender or sex identifies if you didn't. which if anybody doesn"gender or sex that tifies if you didn't. which if anybody doesn"gender or sex that they as the gender or sex that they were you wouldn't need were born as. you wouldn't need that phrase at all if you didn't feel that there was some difference between woman difference between a trans woman and it could have and a woman. and it could have said woman, why it
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said trans woman, why doesn't it say that? said trans woman, why doesn't it sayand ? said trans woman, why doesn't it sayand we've seen this time and >> and we've seen this time and time a male time again where there's a male who's committed some sort of horrific sexual crime, it's horrific sexual crime, but it's just recorded by the bbc, recorded by the police as as being trans and sometimes sometimes men. there's an incentive for men to transition when they commit some sort of horrific crime like that because then they get a new identity. so anybody searching for their crime, committed under crime, if it's committed under their dead name or their under their dead name or their under their dead name or their old name, you know the details hidden. details are hidden. >> sip from >> let me just take a sip from my spoon . um do you know what is my spoon. um do you know what is this? so now , will that person this? so now, will that person be registered? naomi is the sex offender or will her own name be registered as a old name? be registered as a old name? be registered as a sex offender? because she could detransition then she'd be off the register. could live her life. that's actually serious. um. you actually a serious. um. you know, like point to consider . know, like a point to consider. but what's interesting is what i'd like to know is in the last few years, there's been an exponential rise of sexual assaults committed by women and or has there? yes, there has.
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i've seen the results. i've seen them. the statistics myself. but them. the statistics myself. but the statistics need to do better. this toxic femininity that you're all getting from instagram , um, i can't put my instagram, um, i can't put my finger on what's what's causing this, but i know. oh, look at how boss, boss babes and all this. whatever and if i can't say the b word, i had to improvise . and this is what's improvise. and this is what's happening. so i think you need to do better, cressida. >> and, well, i'll take to >> and, well, i'll take that to our passit >> and, well, i'll take that to our pass it to , on our meeting and pass it to, on like, adam and eve, isn't it? we're getting the blame for someone else's mistakes. okay, well , we've got a someone else's mistakes. okay, well, we've got a saudi trans refugee who received a £100 fine for enthusing istically brandishing a sign at the london pro—palestinian protest passionately calling for israel to burn in hell in a courtroom plot twist that could headline a comedy special, plot twist that could headline a comedy special , she plot twist that could headline a comedy special, she claimed she stumbled upon the protest placard at a bus stop and due to her language barrier, didn't realise that her sign was offensive . offensive. >> it looks like someone misunderstood to the point of
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activism and instead thought of waving a placard around. it was just for the jokes. well laura davis found out that the placard party wasn't as thrilling as she thought . her adventure thought. her adventure took a nosedive when , to everyone's nosedive when, to everyone's surprise, up pleading surprise, she ended up pleading guilty help of an guilty with the help of an arabic interpreter to having caused racially , religiously caused racially, religiously aggravated harassment , alarm or aggravated harassment, alarm or distress. it seems that her crash course in sign language took an unexpected detour into legally confused land at london's west minster magistrates court. danny was this a good excuse? i mean , not this a good excuse? i mean, not really, because if she couldn't understand what it said, imagine if that had been a pro israel sign that she'd accidentally picked up and went to the. >> so she knew what the sign said, but she's a saudi arabian trans refugee here to do, you know, because she'd be persecuted in her own country. yet she's going to hold up a sign to persecute others. but the most kind of outrageous thing about that for me was her
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name, laura davis from saudi arabia . so . and laura davis. arabia. so. and laura davis. >> it's not does it does it work? >> i don't know. i think there's a possibility she might not have understood it because i don't believe that all the people in the pro—palestine demonstrations necessarily appreciate the significance of the signs. significance of all the signs. they're holding up. so i don't know. it's possible. not know. it's possible. i'm not saying legal saying it's a good legal defence. ignorance is no defence, but definitely possible. >> i mean, i think it's still probably the most informed protester at that parade . i've protester at that parade. i've seen some, some shocking people getting the chance wrong , not getting the chance wrong, not knowing what the what the chants mean . it's ridiculous. well, mean. it's ridiculous. well, don't forget that nigel farage bids reach the i'm bids to reach the i'm a celebrity final tonight , right? celebrity final tonight, right? if you want to register to vote for farage, you'll need to grab your scan the qr code on your phone, scan the qr code on screen and download the app. you can vote for him five times a day . it's can vote for him five times a day. it's just like the us election in joke did that to me
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radio. >> hello. and welcome back. this is the saturday night showdown with myself, leo kearse. right before the break, we asked what happened next. well, here's the reveal . all . nice and quick reveal. all. nice and quick there . i mean, did you i take it there. i mean, did you i take it you've all seen that ? you've all seen that? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> oh, yeah. they pixelated it, so i don't really know what happened. but yeah, i have seen it. yeah. >> pixelated on twitter. >> charleton up a parsnip. >> charleton up a parsnip. >> yeah , i just hope so. >> yeah, i just hope so. >> yeah, i just hope so. >> i saw you do it on headliners the other night. yeah.
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>> going to talk about >> we're not going to talk about that i didn't realise that because i didn't realise at the apparently the time, but apparently breaches ofcom rules, so. >> yeah. >> sorry. yeah yeah. >> sorry. yeah yeah. >> thought it making >> i thought it was making a pithy joke. and it turns out i could get fired. but this is. i mean, a lot of people have said that the bbc don't that this is the bbc don't respect viewers, i respect their viewers, but i mean, obviously, know, mean, it's obviously, you know, people in the studio. >> well, they don't respect studio. >> \acameraman, l't respect studio. >> \acameraman, obviously. it's their cameraman, obviously. it's just , isn't just an in—joke, isn't it? or having a in the break, having a laugh in the break, except she doesn't she doesn't know to count down. she's know how to count down. she's supposed to be counting down. and the way she and she that's the way she decided one. yeah. it's decided to do one. yeah. it's like, you shouldn't. decided to do one. yeah. it's likeshould you shouldn't. decided to do one. yeah. it's likeshould the shouldn't. decided to do one. yeah. it's likeshould the shouldn having >> should the bbc be having a laugh with our money? >> i mean, it's not my money. >> i mean, it's not my money. >> it's not my money either . >> it's not my money either. >> it's not my money either. >> who the tv licence? >> who pays the tv licence? >> who pays the tv licence? >> i pay mine. >> i pay mine. >> yeah, i pay mine. you pay yours. >> you don't pay mine. >> you don't pay mine. >> got a tv licence. >> i've got a tv licence. i mean, we do the bbc in our mean, we do watch the bbc in our house occasionally . so you kind house occasionally. so you kind of got it when you. >> i've just go around my neighbours if you go on the neighbours and if you go on the internet they say you can't watch unless you've watch the video unless you've got you know, got a licence and you know, i just won't law like that. >> right? yeah. >> right? yeah. >> yeah. what i do is i get
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>> yeah. well what i do is i get one of those for all one remote controls. i'll just go into my neighbour's it neighbour's garden and watch it through you? the >> would you? through the window? thinks his tv's broken, and i'm catching up on eastenders. >> can't they're >> i can't hear what they're saying, you could saying, but, you know, you could tell what's happening. >> she's iranian, that presenter. that's the traditional greeting. traditional persian greeting. that's alarm. that's yeah, that's alarm. yeah. that's yeah, that's alarm. yeah. that's say hello that's how we say hello in iranian . iranian. >> well, it's time for culture corner . me >> well, it's time for culture corner. me and my brilliant panel are going tell you panel are going to tell you what's been happening in the entertainment world. and the woke hypocrisy brigade is woke left hypocrisy brigade is at it again a person of at it again after a person of colour cast to play isaac colour was cast to play isaac newton in the new doctor who series . isaac was in fact series. isaac was in fact a white man. and had this casting been the other way round, i'm not sure. the argument that it's a work of fiction, not a documentary, would quite float . documentary, would quite float. here's a clip . odds bodkin here's a clip. odds bodkin. >> what the devil . oh, sorry .
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>> what the devil. oh, sorry. >> what the devil. oh, sorry. >> we just slide out of control, my friend donna. donna, donna noble just dropped some coffee into the console and cressida, is this like casting daniel craig as gandhi ? craig as gandhi? >> well, i don't know about that. i don't know . does it that. i don't know. does it really matter? you know, what would happen if there are some times when the woke are very concerned that everybody playing the part they're playing should have matching have the matching characteristics . and then there characteristics. and then there are other times they're are other times when they're very to match. i very keen for it not to match. i don't really mind what's his acting like? can the best guy get the job? >> no, i don't. but surely the best job is somebody best guy for the job is somebody who at least a bit like who looks at least a bit like sir isaac newton was you, sir? i don't even know. i mean, because he didn't even have the, you know, shape know, the same sort of shape facial newton. facial features as isaac newton. >> know isaac >> i don't know what isaac newton mean, newton looked like. i mean, i know he's a white bloke. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> if you look at him now, he looks ill. what you looks really ill. what do you expect? mean, sure it does. >> i don't think you understand the the situation. the gravity of the situation. >> oh, they said in this >> yeah. oh, they said in this story, by the that he was
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story, by the way, that he was the of gravity like. the founder of gravity like. >> establish some >> like he establish it in some way. always there way. like it wasn't always there before that, we were just floating ridiculous floating whatever ridiculous thing to say. mean, he's got a thing to say. i mean, he's got a touch of the markle's touch of the meghan markle's about well. if have about him as well. if they have told he was a person told me he was, he was a person of colour, i would had no of colour, i would have had no idea. right. yeah. this idea. yeah, right. yeah. this doesn't really. doesn't bother me really. i mean, it's doctor who at mean, it's. it's doctor who at the of the day, isn't it? the end of the day, isn't it? yeah. this doctor who. they're ruining their product. ruining their own product. they're. actively they're. they're actively trolling. you can see they're actively because actively trolling. yeah. because when they cast like when they, when they cast like that going, they'll that they're going, they'll be leo paul will be really leo and paul will be really annoyed about this and we we annoyed about this and we and we are. but but you know, at the end of the day it's doctor who. >> i think it a message >> i think it sends a message there bbc is saying, oh there is the bbc is saying, oh people of colour don't have any of history. we've of their own history. so we've got just make random parts of british history. >> well, a couple of things. >> well, a couple of things. >> one, i actually got cast for that role, but i refuse to shave my beard. so it went to this guy or woman . don't know. my beard. so it went to this guy or woman . don't know . yeah, it's or woman. don't know. yeah, it's just doctor who is going the
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same way as disney. it's just going to be a flop everyone i'm not a fan of doctor who so do what you want. it's going to flop anyway. but this is going to of monumental of to be a flop of monumental of all flops. every disney film that been released that have been released this year getting dwindling. year has been getting dwindling. they've gone, woke and they're going broke and bbc this is why you're not going to get your licence payers money you're licence payers money and you're not. doctor who, licence payers money and you're not. main doctor who, licence payers money and you're not. main franchise. or who, licence payers money and you're not. main franchise. you're , your main franchise. you're actively sabotaging it and killing it just right. good black characters. yeah, right, right. >> good new stuff. >> good new stuff. >> great new characters that aren't good historical black actors in there or historical black people in it. somebody like that. anyway, female theatre goers at the magic mike live show allegedly sexually assaulted staff, according to a complaint made to the police . complaint made to the police. police were made aware after groups of tipsy friends were said to have stripped and handled. sorry, i shouldn't laugh . handled ushers and laugh. handled ushers and waiters . according to the sun, waiters. according to the sun, the police are said to have dismissed at the complaint, cressida with this complaint
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have been dismissed. so quickly. if the roles were reversed . if the roles were reversed. >> absolutely not. absolutely i have to say i didn't realise that it was the extra staff in the venue that were i thought they were touching the goods. you know what i mean? like the performers that would make sense. judgemental . sense. and i'm very judgemental. that makes me feel differently about it. no, i mean, it's about it. but no, i mean, it's fascinating, isn't it? yeah, we know that men don't get as upset as women on average for this kind of thing. i've seen diaries crying in the toilet. >> well, that's worse on average, because there's always exceptions. i used to work as a stripper. of course. >> paint stripper. hey, stripper. of course. >> paint stripper . hey, yo, hey, >> paint stripper. hey, yo, hey, yo. but i mean, seriously, there's something when you're performing comedy, sometimes, you know, you get the. >> the cougars wobbling up to you with a glass of wine in their hand. >> yeah. they're happily, >> oh, yeah. they're happily, like, know, pinch. like, you know, pinch. pinch your do they, your bum. or do they, like, touch you're like, touch you up and you're like, this bit uncomfortable. this is a bit uncomfortable. well, yeah, definitely if it well, yeah, and definitely if it was other way around. but was the other way around. but but when it happens to a man, it's funny. it's just funny. >> you think it's because
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>> do you think it's because you're those leather >> do you think it's because you're though, those leather >> do you think it's because you're though, notyse leather >> do you think it's because you're though, notyse victim r chaps though, or not to victim blame but listen, i could perform naked and it still wouldn't permission wouldn't give them permission to touch wouldn't give them permission to tou absolutely. wouldn't give them permission to tou absolutely . >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> shaming me. well, >> stop victim shaming me. well, do all men? do you believe all men? >> yes, absolutely. >> yes, absolutely. >> i've been touched by the ushers, very ushers, and it's very uncomfortable. can tell you, uncomfortable. i can tell you, leo, living on last year. >> but that disturbing thought in our mind last year, bristol university quietly . nigel university quietly. nigel farage. don't forget nigel farage. don't forget nigel farage bids to reach the i'm a celebrity final tonight. if you want register to vote want to register to vote for farage, need to grab your farage, you'll need to grab your phone scan, scan the qr code, etcetera . where was thing etcetera. where was the thing that was reading ? suddenly it that i was reading? suddenly it was going so anyway, if you want to register to vote for farage, you'll need to grab your phone, scan the qr code on the screen and download the app. you can vote for him five times per day. it's part of it's the it's part of the democratic worry, democratic process. don't worry, you're anything. you're not breaching anything. next night show, next on the saturday night show, down or blessed, down and cursed or blessed, we'll of the week's we'll discuss some of the week's heroes villains, including heroes and villains, including whamageddon . but first, what whamageddon. but first, what
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a i'm leo carlson. this is your saturday night show down right before the break, we asked what happened next. well here's the reveal can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things that are killing people on a daily basis. >> and the daily basis, daily bafis >> and the daily basis, daily basis and i don't know if you caught that, but that was john kerry talking, funnily enough, about emissions, climate emissions , and he left a little emissions, and he left a little bit of methane go. >> he did a little which is actually a highly noxious greenhouse gas, much worse than carbon dioxide, but i guess, you know, when you get to that age where you don't have the sphincter control, you used to anyway, it's time for cursed or blessed. me and my brilliant panel three big
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panel will look at three big names news this weekend names in the news this weekend and decide whether they go on the naughty list this the nice or naughty list this christmas they be christmas should they be delivered presents under the tree do deserve a lump tree or do they deserve a lump of coal ? well, let's start with of coal? well, let's start with eddie izzard , the former eddie izzard, the former comedian who now sometimes self—identifies as susie, is standing to become the labour candidate for brighton pavilion. andy, aka susie said on x or twitter this week when elected , twitter this week when elected, i will live in brighton and make it my main home. i'm committed to being rooted in the communities i will serve. brighton pavilion local mp now and i mean , he says he's going and i mean, he says he's going to make it his main home and he's committed to being rooted in the communities. but his main home, many is he got? home, how many homes is he got? this hardly a man of the this is hardly a man of the people, is it? >> chris yeah, don't think >> chris yeah, i don't think eddie presents. eddie needs any presents. i think of coal is more think a lump of coal is more than enough, though, isn't it? i don't know. mean, it's don't know. i mean, it's probably right isn't probably the right place, isn't it? sure she he it? i'm sure i'm sure he she he will be very happy there. and
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i'm sure the residents of brighton will be very happy to have eddie there as well. >> do you think >> do you think do you think brighton will will go for him because stood to because he stood for he stood to get list or stood to get get on the list or stood to get elected sheffield last year. elected in sheffield last year. >> it wouldn't have to live >> it wouldn't have been to live in like would in sheffield like that, would he? it straight . you he? let's have it straight. you know, dressing he? let's have it straight. you kncthe dressing he? let's have it straight. you kncthe he dressing he? let's have it straight. you kncthe he wants,1ressing he? let's have it straight. you kncthe he wants, whichg he? let's have it straight. you kncthe he wants, which is for the job he wants, which is to of brighton . so of to be the mp of brighton. so of course . yeah. good on you, course. yeah. good on you, eddie. i mean, what does he do? he just does anything to become powerful in some way. and i find that quite terrifying. he spent now what must be 5 to 10 years trying to get into power. those are not the people you want in power. people desperate for power. people desperate for power that dress like power that will dress up like that. but do you? >> so you think it's power dressing with those shoulder pads? >> well, of course he is. i mean, who wouldn't employ a strong, powerful woman like that? think powerful that? but do you think powerful is the word? that? but do you think powerful is t do word? that? but do you think powerful is t do wordthink that? but do you think powerful is tdo wordthink people >> do you think you say people who should shouldn't who want power should shouldn't have . do you it have power. do you think it should be being being in should be like being being in politics like politics should be like jury service ? service? >> e“ n w- e i don't, actually. >> well, no, i don't, actually. i mean, that's a good point,
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because some people do want power for power. power and are good for power. but i mean is done but what i mean is he's done absolutely anywhere but what i mean is he's done abscpretended anywhere but what i mean is he's done abscpretended be anywhere but what i mean is he's done abscpretended be anything; and pretended to be anything, anywhere . to the job anywhere. yeah. to get the job so and so he wasn't wandering around sheffield like that, was he? get into toilets as >> and to get into toilets as well there's a queue at the well if there's a queue at the men's i'm susie and men's he's like, i'm susie and get straight. >> i'm not sure we want people who power. i'm not up who don't want power. i'm not up for gets badge in for everyone gets a badge in politics very much. politics thank you very much. i want desperately want people who desperately want to done. to get the job done. >> i want see diarist have a go. >> yeah, i want to have a go. i wouldn't be happy if i lived in brighton. your second brighton. what were your second choice? in choice? because you flopped in sheffield. don't sheffield. get lost. i don't want. want. we don't want. i don't want. we don't want. i don't want. we don't want you either. that's not because you're not good enough for you're because you're not good enough for enough you're because you're not good enough for enough for you're because you're not good enough for enough for brighton. j're because you're not good enough for enough for brighton. this good enough for brighton. this dress doesn't make you a good politician. >> up, ask donald trump, politician. >> 45th up, ask donald trump, politician. >> 45th president)nald trump, politician. >> 45th president of|ld trump, politician. >> 45th president of the “rump, politician. >> 45th president of the united the 45th president of the united states, hoping to be the 47th as well. >> trump says that if he's elected as president again next november, he will be a dictator for from day one. when asked by fox news whether he's a dictator, he answered , no, no, dictator, he answered, no, no, no. other than day one, we're
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closing the border and we're drilling, drilling, drilling. after that, i'm not taking after he killed all the people. >> yeah, there'll be nothing to dictate. >> i'll be fine. he's gonna have a big day. one. yeah. he's gonna have a huge day. >> a bit sorry for donald trump, which not sentence ever which is not a sentence has ever very he's bit like a very said he's a bit like a comedian at a corporate event because he's trying he is because he's trying to. he is very to get the very much trying to get the audience have of audience going, have a bit of fun. don't for fun. i don't believe for a moment that man thinks he's moment that the man thinks he's going be a dictator. he is going to be a dictator. he is comedic in many he knows going to be a dictator. he is comytoc in many he knows going to be a dictator. he is comyto playnany he knows going to be a dictator. he is comyto play up|y he knows going to be a dictator. he is comyto play up|y crowd nows going to be a dictator. he is comyto play up|y crowd and how to play up to the crowd and that's what he was doing there. if you are slightly worried about donald trump, that statement will worry you, though, many though, however, because many dictators their dictators don't give up their dictatorship do they? >> they tend not to be putin, for example. >> they tend not to be putin, for yeah ple. >> they tend not to be putin, for yeah .le. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, he's he's really held on one. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> for 20 odd years. yeah. but i mean do think do you think mean do you think do you think donald a dictator. it's donald trump is a dictator. it's not scaring people. it's not you know , donald trump. you can say know, donald trump. you can say anything , call know, donald trump. you can say anything, call him anything. and it doesn't people off it doesn't scare people off because lot people because i think a lot of people
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are democracies us. are democracies failed us. you're representing we you're not representing what we want know, if i'd be slightly >> you know, if i'd be slightly serious, accuse serious, everything they accuse donald trump of doing and being is what they do and what they are. they say, oh, he's a dictator. he, he, he he's going to make investigations and throw us into prison. and they actively doing that right now against him . so what they're against him. so what they're actually saying is they are scared that will do what scared that he will do what they're doing him, they're doing against him, against , i like against them personally, i like donald trump. i find him funny. he's got good hair, hot wife . he's got good hair, hot wife. he's got good hair, hot wife. he's been there. he's been in there. >> do you want? >> what more do you want? >> what more do you want? >> but the thing about the thing is, because of donald trump and they're still obsessed with him today, not been in power today, he's not been in power for we're just for four years and we're just turning a blind to all the turning a blind eye to all the terrible, terrible things that biden is actively doing . and if biden is actively doing. and if you're on the left and you're woke, you should be ashamed of biden. what he is doing right now, pulling out of afghanistan, leaving all of the civilians, all of the women to under the taliban and supporting israel. if you're on the left and you
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support that should be support biden, that should be clicking own head just clicking in your own head just ransacking country. you are ransacking the country. you are actively poorer. inflation has gone through the roof. biden is a hopeless president, but you can't say it because they just. oh, but trump, life oh, but trump, trump, trump life under . if you could deal under trump. if you could deal with him eating a massive taco bell he likes bell saying saying he likes mexicans, . there was mexicans, right. and there was no war. there was peace in the middle east. there was no war in ukraine. money wasn't wasn't worthless to you. and you could afford to buy your groceries. i like trump and i like him . like trump and i like him. >> he's on the nice list. >> so there is still very much on the on the fence regarding donald trump there. >> but finally, quickly, we've got matt facer. he was forced to apologise for playing last christmas by wham, potentially knocking more than 7000 people out of cult game whamageddon. this is where players tried to avoid george michael and andrew. andrew ridgeley's 1984 hit for as long as possible before christmas eve and are eliminated once they hear it. don't worry, we're not going to play it. i mean, what do you think? have
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you heard wham last christmas yet? >> no, i haven't. not only in my head. paul had to explain this game to me earlier. i don't do sport as a rule, so turns out sport as a rule, so it turns out so i'm winning. i'm so glad so far i'm winning. i'm so glad it and not me. it was him and not me. >> haven't heard it yet. >> i haven't heard it yet. i think this is quite funny. and if you actively take it that seriously, that you're going to get that overheard it get angry that you overheard it at football match. you're at a football match. you're probably idiot . yeah. probably an idiot. yeah. >> doing this to the >> so he's doing this to the 7000 at the football 7000 people at the football match. didn't the stands >> they didn't storm the stands and hang the morrissey. >> he did moan and it has made the national news. >> it's made the national news. >> it's made the national news. >> it's made the national news. >> i mean, there's not much else happening the world right how. >> now. >> so, you know. anyway, right up mark dolan tonight. up next is mark dolan tonight. mark. hey listen, i'm loving the whamageddon chat. >> let me tell you why i listened to last christmas every day of the year. and it causes me to question my sexuality . me to question my sexuality. see, listen, leo, we got a really busy show. first of all, i'll be exposing the british institutions that hate britain.
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that's my take at ten. and in my big opinion , could it be that big opinion, could it be that rishi sunak will be out by christmas? the speculation that kemi badenoch is being lined up for the top job. so massive show for the top job. so massive show for you. we've also got a big story in the united states. s kate middleton, princess catherine beats meghan markle to become america's top royal. all of that plus much more. we're live at nine. >> amazing . that sounds that >> amazing. that sounds that sounds fantastic . and thank you sounds fantastic. and thank you sounds fantastic. and thank you so much to my brilliant panel tonight, chris. and awaiting paul cox darius davies. paul cox and darius davies. darius, have you got any gigs you the one you want to plug like the one mark just over there. mark dolan's just over there. >> it's great. it's a treat losing television. >> i'm done for the year anyway. >> i'm done for the year anyway. >> see you again next week. here's your latest weather from ellie. goodbye >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sports layers up. boxt boilers sports layers of weather on gb news is . of weather on gb news is. >> hello. welcome to your latest gb news weather. i'm ellie glaisyer so very unsettled.
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picture over the next couple of days with low pressure. very much in charge of our weather. the first system brought plenty of wet and windy weather named storm ellen the met storm ellen by the irish met service fergus sat service with storm fergus sat out west, bringing out to the west, bringing further wet weather through sunday. back to saturday evening though, drier picture though, and a drier picture across england across parts of england and wales as that of rain has wales as that band of rain has pushed northern pushed its way into northern england, and northern england, scotland and northern ireland well, where that ireland as well, where that heavy continues to fall on heavy rain continues to fall on some very saturated so some very saturated ground. so some very saturated ground. so some here. some flooding is possible here. under those clear skies, though, further south, we could see temperatures around 6 or 7 degrees, but perhaps just a little parts little cooler across parts of scotland . so cloudy scotland. so a cloudy start across scotland , but some sunny scotland. so a cloudy start acrosrto cotland , but some sunny scotland. so a cloudy start acrosrto begind , but some sunny scotland. so a cloudy start acrosrto begin witth some sunny scotland. so a cloudy start acrosrto begin with acrosse sunny skies to begin with across england and wales before the next system pushes the next system pushes in from the west, bringing further west, bringing some further spells rain and some spells of heavy rain and some strong winds to those strongest spells of heavy rain and some strong along to those strongest spells of heavy rain and some strong along those )se strongest spells of heavy rain and some strong along those irishtrongest spells of heavy rain and some strong along those irish seajest winds along those irish sea coasts through sunday afternoon and evening. but that rain continues to push its way north and eastwards parts of and eastwards into parts of scotland through sunday afternoon. here afternoon. temperatures here generally , but a generally around average, but a little milder again across the southwest, around 13 or 14
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degrees. it's a cloudy start to monday for most of us with outbreaks and outbreaks of light rain and drizzle times. but some drizzle at times. but some heavier rain across parts of scotland from scotland pushing in from the east through into east as we go through into monday afternoon. the best of the sunshine, though, again across wales and parts of england could see some england where we could see some sunny skies through the afternoon. temperatures generally the afternoon. temperatures gene of ly the afternoon. temperatures gene of year. the afternoon. temperatures gene of year. and there's the afternoon. temperatures gene of year. and there's some e time of year. and there's some hints little bit hints of something a little bit more on the way through hints of something a little bit moreweek on the way through hints of something a little bit moreweek with| the way through hints of something a little bit moreweek with a he way through hints of something a little bit moreweek with a brighterhrough next week with a brighter outlook with boxt solar spell chances of weather on gb news as
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afternoon after reports that a newborn baby had been found on norwich road. the death is being treated as unexplained but is under investigation . two men and under investigation. two men and a female have been arrested on suspicion of murder in connection with the incident and remain in police custody for questioning . police have also questioning. police have also urged the public not to speculate on social media for met. police have arrested 13 people after thousands gathered for a pro—palestine march in london today. the metropolitan police have also released an image appealing for the public's help to identify a woman . it's help to identify a woman. it's part of an investigation into a placard carried at the protest . placard carried at the protest. earlier today, thousands , earlier today, thousands, thousands of people gathered to call for a ceasefire in gaza . call for a ceasefire in gaza. scotland's first minister has said the uk is complicit bit in the killing of thousands of children after the uk abstained from voting on a ceasefire in gaza. from voting on a ceasefire in gaza . posting on the social gaza. posting on the social media site x, mr yusuf , who has media site x, mr yusuf, who has palestinian in—laws , said it was
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palestinian in—laws, said it was incomprehensible that the uk abstained from a vote at the un security council . it comes after security council. it comes after former home secretary suella braverman said the uk's abstention from the un security council ceasefire vote is disappointing. the ballot that would allow aid into the enclave and people to flee was vetoed by the united states. they stood alongside israel saying the proposed resolution would only plant the seeds for the next war. a 16 year old boy has been charged with the murder of leon gordon, who was shot dead in east london on tuesday evening. the boy has also been charged with the attempted murder of a 20 year old man and a 16 year old boy. he was also charged with possession of firearm and with possession of a firearm and possession with intent to supply class a drugs. he will appear at barkingside magistrates court on monday and the royal christmas card is here with the king and queen choosing a coronation day photograph taken at buckingham palace . the formal image showing
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