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tv   Headliners  GB News  September 3, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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israel, the raymond connolly. in israel, the country's prime minister has vowed he will make hamas pay for the killing of six hostages in gaza. speaking at a press conference here in jerusalem, benjamin netanyahu said that hamas will pay a heavy price. it comes amidst a general strike as tens of thousands of israelis pressure prime minister netanyahu into accepting a gaza ceasefire deal. back in the commons , the government has commons, the government has announced it is to suspend the sale of some weapons to israel. foreign secretary david lammy said 30 out of 350 arms export licences are to end because they are a clear risk and could be used as a violation of humanitarian laws. former labour leaderjeremy humanitarian laws. former labour leader jeremy corbyn is to humanitarian laws. former labour leaderjeremy corbyn is to unite leader jeremy corbyn is to unite pro gaza mps here in the uk under a new banner in the house of commons. the mp for islington nonh of commons. the mp for islington north forms the independent
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alliance with four others, creating a parliamentary group with the same number of mps as reform to the tory leadership contest. now james cleverly has launched his leadership bid today, vowing to bring back the rwanda plan. the shadow home secretary also highlighted the need for the uk to remake the argument for capitalism. meanwhile, kemi badenoch launched her campaign too, calling for change in the conservative party. the shadow communities secretary said her party has to focus on renewal and transport for london has revealed it is dealing with an ongoing cyber security incident. tfl has not given exact details but says no customer data has been compromised . a transgender been compromised. a transgender athlete has said it is legitimate for biological females to question her place in the games. valentina petrillo failed to qualify for the t12
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400 metre final at the paralympics, falling short of a medal in paris. the italian had previously won 11 national titles in the men's category. and finally for you tonight, the filming of the final ever episode of gavin and stacey has begun, says the bbc. the british comedy, which became a national favourite, will return to tv screens one last time this christmas. that's all for now. time for headliners for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts . slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at tuesday's newspapers with three top comedians.
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>> i'm simon evans on my panel tonight. >> one hails from the land of fried mars bars. the other swears by raw meat. >> leo kearse and louis schaefer. the battle of the diets. >> it's actually a delicious way to eat mars bars. why you should never do. i went on a diet once and started steaming my mars bars. it's terrible . bars. it's terrible. >> you don't have to have them heated at all. >> you do know that, right .7 >> you do know that, right.7 well, if you say so. how can steaming them? sounds a bit gwyneth paltrow. go on. how could it not be delicious? >> it's a candy bar wrapped in breading. of course it's going to be delicious. it's pure sugan to be delicious. it's pure sugar, but it's not good for you. i mean, you manage to hold your looks for i had i did the edinburgh fringe this year and i have a ritual now at the end of every festival i go for the full from the one on on nicholson street, right? >> yeah. with the salt and sauce and the big spicy sausage and everything. i have the same ritual, but i call it dinnertime. yeah, well, you're neck and neck for health at the moment. anyway, let's take a look at the front pages, we have the daily mail to kick us off. labour are running scared over winter fuel backlash,
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apparently. telegraph have petrol cars rationed to meet eco targets . and i think that's kemi targets. and i think that's kemi badenoch. they're laying out her leadership claims guardian uk breaks with us to suspend 30 arms export licences to israel. a couple of film stars on their front page mirror keir versus oasis. there is no consensus so far on what the lead story is in news uk restricts sale. i'm sorry. yes inews uk restricts sale of weapons to israel due to clear risk of breaking international law . that's more international law. that's more of a paragraph than a headline. and finally, the daily star world's a bit too dodgy to go driving. well, that's been the case for a while. those were your front pages . so let's have your front pages. so let's have a closer look at those front pages. we'll start with tuesday's guardian leo varadkar.
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so the uk has suspended 30 arms export licences to israel after a two month review that obviously started under the tories. so this is conducted by the foreign office and the uk is broken, with the biden administration on a significant part of their tightly coordinated policy towards israel. by announcing it's suspending some arms export licenses to israel because of a clear risk that the arms may be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law, which i don't know, it seems it seems unfair because i feel like israel is having to fight a very awkward war against, you know, an asymmetric war against terrorists who are hiding behind civilians. so it's very difficult to , you know, to difficult to, you know, to actually defend their country without, you know , harming without, you know, harming anybody. it's like trying to pick ice cream out of a sandy beach, isn't it? i mean, it's, you know, the damage is already done.i you know, the damage is already done. i wouldn't use sand in the analogy because i don't want to go to jail and keir starmer britain. but also i would say , i britain. but also i would say, i mean, there's quite a lot of people sort of hinting as much. it's a domestic policy as much
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as an international policy isn't it? they're trying to keep you know, they're trying to keep a large section of their vote onside. basically. >> that's true. >> that's true. >> this is one of the those questions because in a future thing that we're covering, what's his name? >> jeremy starmer. corbyn, jeremy corbyn. sorry, they're not all jeremy starmer. >> yeah. no. he's like a big family. >> that was a joke. >> that was a joke. >> sorry a joke. >> sorry a joke. >> and i could just tell you couldn't tell. it was a joke. but. but he's taken off people. he's taking people to the muslims. there are four other muslims. there are four other muslims going off. so he has to do something. it's only. it's less than 10% of all of these licences, and it doesn't involve anything that important. but the truth is it's from the foreign office and even when i was in america, i used to hear about how islamophobic the foreign office was back in the day. and if they were involved in this, well, it wasn't seen as islam so much then. >> it was arabist was the word, but they were definitely arabist. in fact, there's a there's a famous scene from yes, minister. yes, prime minister that gets shared where sir
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humphrey, you know, do you remember the sitcom? yes. where sir humphrey is explaining to jim hacker, the mp, you know, that the foreign office are strongly arabist in their sympathies. and it's interesting because there's very little evidence of that anymore these days. yeah i used to work for the foreign office, and they're certainly right on board with all the diversity, equity and inclusion nonsense. and it was i wish it was still there at the time when you were picking pronouns and stuff. it would have been fun. we got to think in 25 years time and we can already see the tilt, you know, britain being pulled leftward. but in 25 years time, with the growing muslim population, we're going to be arming hamas instead. well i mean, we know we're going to be hamas moving to the daily mail. lewis, have they got anything more cheerful ? yes. >> well it's nice. yeah, it's good news. it's all good news coming out of this stuff today. laboun coming out of this stuff today. labour. labour now are running scared over winter fuel backlash . scared over winter fuel backlash. starmer's mps panic over cash blow for 10 million old age pensioner. pensioners which of course i am. i've been here for
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25 years already. i've been here and not not as long or whatever it is. i've been here a long time. are you genuinely entitled to a to a subsidy now? i, i am my god, i am because i actually worked and i paid some taxes and i'm it's way more than i deserve. >> this is what annoys people is because it's like a blanket benefit. it's a blanket subsidy. you need a lot of there's a lot of so—called pensioners who are actually fat cats. >> you're totally right. because once you give money to people, you can't take it away. and that's happening all across in america too. >> and here it's sticky. that's what they used to say about wages. sticky. they only go in one direction. they ratchet. yeah. >> and look at how great. look at how great you look. >> yeah. thank you. yeah. this is not me. this is just shaving. >> well, maybe that's all you need to do. >> so, i mean, it's interesting. is it interesting? it's certainly a bold move. he's come out so hard against quite a few demographics, hasn't he, starmer i would assumed so that he can time it better than rishi sunak did. basically sunak blundered terribly, didn't he? horrific kind of measures taken
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economically. and then he could have even just waited for the summer to go. he like he basically called an election while everyone was still fuming. yeah. and it was just it was just a head off. reform which, which didn't, didn't even work at all. but i mean, it's great to see while i'm enjoying seeing laboun to see while i'm enjoying seeing labour, you know, dragged over the coals, which obviously the pensioners won't be able to afford, but, you know, 10 million eps, i'm sure wished they'd actually bothered getting out and voting for the tories now. but there is a point that, you know, our, our system has been geared towards, you know , a been geared towards, you know, a lot of the wealth in the country is held by, by older people. i know it's not all older people, but it does make sense to sort of means test some of these. some of these i think means testing for heating allowance is perfectly reasonable. and indeed for everything really. >> and you know what i would do? i'd use a thermometer. >> yeah, yeah. you got two choices. what's on the front of the telegraph, leo? so petrol cars are going to be rationed to meet eco targets or they already are being rationed. so car makers are rationing sales of
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petrol and hybrid vehicles in britain to avoid hefty net zero fines, according to one of the country's biggest dealership chains. this is robert forrester, who's the chief executive of vertu motors. he said manufacturers are delaying deliveries of cars until next year amid fears they will otherwise breach quotas set for them by the by the government. so if you order a car today, you won't get it until february and so basically everybody wants to buy a petrol or a hybrid car, but under these quotas, at least 22% of cars sold by manufacturers have to be electric from this year. and if they don't hit these quotas , they don't hit these quotas, they don't hit these quotas, they get the manufacturers get charged 50 or fine, £15,000 for each petrol car that exceeds their quotas. there's obviously no profit in doing that. they lose money on selling them. it's mad. and i've mentioned this before , but i'll say it again before, but i'll say it again living in brighton, i know it's just, you know, n equals one, but it's impossible to charge them. yeah. nobody's got driveways. nobody's even allowed to build driveways. there's like one charger per, i don't know,
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500 houses. i've seen queues building up in the, like double parked, you know , people just parked, you know, people just queuing for charges. well, it's the infrastructure is not there. >> it's not there. and people don't. people want they like gas cars. they're brilliant. yeah. i mean as cars go but there's a huge antique car world out there where people hate cars and this is a left wing commie thing. >> if it was all ready to go, if it was, if it was a smooth transition, then i'd be up for it. but they're quieter, it's cleaner. you know, it will bring interesting real estate in london, kennington road, some beautiful old victorian, early victorian terraces that have been filthy houses of multiple occupancy because of the traffic may become desirable again. there's all sorts of little. yeah, eventually if possible. no, no, no, it's not going to happen. >> it's not going to happen. what's going to happen? first of all, these electric cars, people don't want electric cars because then they can turn them off through the internet. yeah. more control right. >> social credits. well let's have a very quick look at the lewis at the lewis at the mirror lewis at the lewis at the mirror lewis mirror. >> kia versus oasis. starmer proposes clampdown on gallagher's dynamic pricing. this is this is oasis which i
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wasn't really involved with until until last year. i don't even know why. oh right. last yeari even know why. oh right. last year i started watching. it was 94 james hargreave i'm watching his youtube youtube videos about how great and they're amazing. >> and i saw and actually there were five great years. there were five great years. there were ten awful years. they lumbered on like punch drunk dinosaurs, unwilling to accept that they were over exactly . and that they were over exactly. and this is what comebacks always do. you go immediately back to the glory years, and you forget that there were ten years of everyone just going, oh my god! >> because the truth was, it was they've only had they only had three years of good times. >> no one wrote most of the songs on the first two albums in a single like long weekend. i think, you know, like dylan used to, you know, a couple of big hoots and but they were brilliant songs, and he's pretending that they were all they were nothing. >> i ran into him in. i actually saw him in. >> they were great, but it's no business of the prime minister, is it, to get involved in ticket sales? unless unless a law has been broken. >> but dynamic pricing is brilliant because it says, however, who wants to pay more
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money? you agree? >> otherwise it goes to the touts, doesn't it? this is, you know, the ridiculous fact is touts make more money now out of selling tickets than than, you know, and half of the i mean, i bought some tickets off a company called viagogo once because i didn't understand how it worked. and they are essentially legal touts. they were, you know, four times the cover price and the thing hadn't sold out. i didn't, i didn't realise, i just thought this was the listed price. yeah, yeah. they buy the you know, they do the google search. yeah. the government doesn't need to get involved in free market decisions, voluntary decisions between people, the government. it's like the electric car thing. why is the government getting involved in telling people, no, you can't buy that. no, you've got to buy this because they're commies. >> that's what they are. >> that's what they are. >> i'm very relieved to hear that and requested it. >> yeah. they requested it says is this also this country doesn't like people making money. yeah. we need to get back to adam smith. >> that's the fact. that's the front pages done back shortly with the first fistful of innards. we have the latest in the the facebook one, and the actual rise of an actual far
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hello. welcome back to headliners, your first look at tuesday's newspapers, simon evans here with leo carson. louis schaefer. so the guardian leads us off leo with jeremy corbyn, as louis mentioned earlier, putting the insect into sectarian politics as it becomes clear what independent really means. >> so jeremy corbyn is to form an alliance with four independent pro gaza mps. >> so they were all elected on pro gaza platforms. and jeremy corbyn obviously bangs on about it a lot as well. i wish he gave.i it a lot as well. i wish he gave. i wish he cared as much about britain as he does about anywhere, anywhere in the middle east. yeah like iran, anywhere that's got, you know, a horrible authoritarian, islamist regime
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he absolutely loves. but the mps have come together . the group have come together. the group includes shawkat , adam, ayub includes shawkat, adam, ayub khan, adnan hussein and iqbal muhammad. a bit of a theme there and they say we were elected by our constituents to provide hope in a parliament of despair. already, this government has scrapped the winter fuel allowance for around 10 million pensioners , voted to keep the pensioners, voted to keep the two child benefit cap and ignored calls to end arms sales to israel. well, they haven't completely, as we saw today, but yeah, this is i think this is going to be more as a group. they've got the same number of mps as, as reform and more than the green party. and although considerably fewer votes than reform, who of course, like pitifully underrepresented, like something like a million votes per mp or something. i'm not sure if the pro gaza vote would have that much, that much fewer, to be honest . there's a lot of a to be honest. there's a lot of a lot of pro gaza mps or islamist mps came very close to unseating, like jess phillips. i think there were other ones. was
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wes streeting not far off, only a few hundred off. phillips is, is having to walk a tightrope. isn't she in heels at the moment? yeah, it's kind of funny, but yeah, it's not really a healthy democracy, is it? we are drifting towards something. well, it is like old fashioned sectarianism, isn't it? >> i don't think we're drifting. i think things are drifting towards us. yeah they're coming. they're coming on the water towards this thing. and there's 6% of the population are muslims. i don't know if i'm allowed to say that. and they vote as a bloc and they care about certain a lot of them care about. >> i mean, to be fair, they probably wouldn't have voted as a bloc like a year ago. it was i mean, october the 7th did change that dramatically, right? i think because they didn't have a reason to. >> yeah. now now they see and now they see that power is within their grasp. i guess it's a horrible it's interesting how and you know, just i don't know what your perspective is on this, but for most of my adult lifetime. >> but i've become more aware of it through twitter and stuff. there's a very sizeable contingent in america who think that israel leads them into foreign wars. >> well, because, yeah, i mean, that's that's that's the
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reality, right? yeah. yeah. it's anti—semitism, but it's not to do with the islam. >> it's not to do with islam. it's simply to do with aipac and the israel lobby in washington, which is a different calculation. >> right? people hate the jews. they hate the jews. and if you can admit that, i mean, you should tell people that you are a jew before people, right? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i'm a jew. thank you. >> i'm a jew. thank you. >> next up, next up, we have lucy connolly pleading guilty . lucy connolly pleading guilty. looks likely to have the book thrown at her. lewis, this is in the mirror. >> the facebook. yeah, yeah. lucy connolly, tory councillor's wife, pleads guilty to stirring up racial hatred during the riots. and this is a great story. it's a good story because basically she she got a little carried away online, as we all do in the privacy of our own homes. it's going to be my excuse. it's been my excuse. whatever and she, she was put in front of nottingham crown court. her husband is a councillor, a tory councillor. it doesn't matter. they threw the book at her. >> and do you think. do you
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think it doesn't matter? do you think it doesn't matter? do you think it doesn't matter? do you think it matters more? i mean, my sense is that she's going to be more of a of a like an example. >> you know what these people are so vicious that. yeah. which people? jeremy, jeremy starmer and whatever he is, you know. kira. kira. corbin. kira corbin , kira. kira. corbin. kira corbin, they they want to crush this. i mean, even if they don't believe it, they believe in crushing it. they are this is this is team world, which is i mean , her world, which is i mean, her comment was it was pretty i don't know, i want to say extreme inflammatory or whatever, but i guess the principle still stands, right? >> she wasn't standing in front of the hotel going. there it is. go and burn it down. yeah. she was. i mean, in fairness, she was. i mean, in fairness, she was basically inciting violence. she said. i mean, it was it was a post on the day when three girls were stabbed to death in southport. so emotions were obviously high. but she said mass deportation now set fire to all the effing hotels full of the b words for all i care. if that makes me racist, so be it. now that's obviously you shouldn't be telling people to set fire to hotels. however,
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she's a childminder. nobody's looking at her facebook and being like, oh, she said this, we better go and do it. whereas somebody like hope not hate, who are government advisers who have are government advisers who have a lot of credibility, they posted fake what they even admitted and what the police said was fake news but left it up, telling, telling people that far right thugs were throwing acid in muslim women's faces and that i've seen videos of muslim men incited to violence over that. men incited to violence over that . and they have credibility. that. and they have credibility. so they should be hauled in front of the courts and given much more, a much longer sentence than childminders and people who, you know, have just had a bottle of wine. nobody listens. and they i mean, they haven't, sentenced her yet, but they're saying it's going to be a long custodial sentence. well, we've already seen like 2 or 3 years handed out here or there. so i guess that's going to be what it's looking like. >> and you know what? somebody somebody should be screaming, this is not my country. my kids live here. maybe it is my country, but you know what it is. if somebody should be screaming about this because there is a war going on, which side are you on? and that's the
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thing. you can't say that. it's just, oh, it's something, it's just, oh, it's something, it's just this poor. it's this lady. >> it's a very strong principle. i agree with you. single german compound noun. now for the panic stricken post—election horse trading after far right make unexpected gains. i think there's a word for that. that's like a cryptic crossword clue. i've got no idea. i what on earth was that rubik's cube . earth was that rubik's cube. like the germans, they have these wonderful long compound nouns that mean, you know, like it's a single word and it means. i bet there is a word for, like, a stricken, like a panic stricken meeting in a smoke filled, i don't know, a smoke filled, i don't know, a smoke filled room anymore. all right. sandi toksvig , ping your next sandi toksvig, ping your next word is anyway. yes, the afd. yeah. partnering with germany's far left pro—putin party could keep the afd out. so this is basically they've had regional elections in germany and the far right afd won the vote in thuringia , securing a third of thuringia, securing a third of ballots, and came second in saxony. saxony on 31%, just behind the centre right
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christian democrats. but there's a cordon sanitaire around the afd, even when they're getting, you know, the biggest chunk of the vote. there definitely should be a german word for that. yeah disgraceful. they use a french word for cordon sanitaire mass fuming. so yeah, there's a cordon sanitaire around them. so the other parties will form alliances to keep the afd out of power and they say it's to preserve democracy somehow disenfranchising, you know , the disenfranchising, you know, the party that got the most votes is preserving democracy. although, to be fair and i don't i don't know if the full history of it, but the continental parties have had this for some time. right. there is a very explicit intent to make it only unlike britain, because they all, you know, obviously got involved in the war and to a greater degree. and also because they got proportional representation. yeah. so it's quite formalised isn't it. it's not just like a kind of nod and a wink. they really is an actual cordon. it's almost like a physical boundary. yeah. but it's just it's just pushing people further towards the afd. and also it's like in
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france, the parties that they do these deals with and this horse trading with, like the far left party that they're going to do a deal with, sound worse than the afd. they're pro—putin. they want to end weapon supplies to ukraine. and they're they're a populist group as well. and a lot of the far left have a lot of the same sentiments as the as the far right. >> well, eventually people will see what's going on and they're going to vote for this party and they're going to screw the other parties. they will they will go to in america. they just lie. and so maybe this is better. this is well, they've done that. >> well, they possibly have done that here as well. so, so basically in the german regional elections, if you get more than 33% of the vote, then you have actual power and they can't form veto power. they can't. the cordon sanitaire doesn't hold, but they they basically revised the results and said, oh, there's a software. we've discovered the software error, which has never been discovered before, and we don't know how it happened.so before, and we don't know how it happened. so you haven't quite got vetoes, so you haven't quite got vetoes, so you haven't quite got vetoes, so you haven't quite got veto power. >> do you know what it is. this is what i realised. the left lie because they think. they think what they're doing is for the
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greater good. so it's what's that, what's that saying. the machiavellian saying which is you do something bad because the goodis you do something bad because the good is what? >> well, c.s. good is what? >> well, cs. lewis has the famous quote that you see almost daily now about the tyranny of the well—intentioned being the worst kind, because their conscience won't interfere with them. >> well, this is different. this is different. this is saying that we know we're doing something wrong, but it'll be okay because it's going to have a benefit. justify means end. justify the means. >> eggs and omelettes. lewis. the tory leadership rivals are split over a cap. is it a sorting hat, perhaps? yeah. >> you know, i've been a bit extreme on this show, so maybe i should calm down a bit. i mean, it's just kidding. should calm down a bit. i mean, it'sjust kidding. i'm should calm down a bit. i mean, it's just kidding. i'm just kidding. people out there just i don't care. i don't care that much. good. anyway tory leadership candidates split over migration cap . and this is kemi migration cap. and this is kemi badenoch and james cleverly. and they're talking a lot of both of them are talking a lot of rubbish because there's this what i call it a war. i'm not saying you should take up arms, but we're in a battle between them. and let's say you and if you if you want, you want to
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fight them in a nice way. you've got to you've got to make a stand. and that's what it does seem. >> they've both been they have been off message, haven't they. they have so many barn doors they could be hitting. there can be so many own goals. own goals. >> there's only one barn door , >> there's only one barn door, which is we're fighting for britain. we're fighting for england, we're fighting for the kemi badenoch. >> recently she made like an entire video trying to reheat the battle with david tennant, who played the actor who said some mean stuff about her attitude to it. >> probably a good time for her. she wants to go back in time. that's why the tories are told, well, women do well, men do too . well, women do well, men do too. that's why the tories are irrelevant. because if they weren't tories, they would have already stopped. >> that is the end of part two. anyway, coming up, we have gender reassignment that's surging, but robert jenrick is determined not to get distracted. willy,
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welcome back to headliners for the second half and the third, fourth leo, back to the guardian. they are reporting that the vogue us weird tag is floating across the atlantic and attaching itself to our conservatives . yeah. that's conservatives. yeah. that's right. so voters are beginning to think conservatives are weird. research suggests, although this is in the guardian, look like.
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think is that what i look like. but the other thing they are they pick on is they try and reflect back the fact that the right want to critique their moral standards, their behaviour, their genders and all of that business. so they go, you're weird. why are you so interested in in what i get up to in the bedroom? yeah. i mean, it's like, why are you questioning us transitioning children? are you weird? just let us maim this child. yeah. just let us tell. tell stories to children while we. while we're dressed as humans. no, i think you drag queens. >> you made the right point. the right point is. is that. is that the right? think of these people as being weird looking. and they just batted it and they just batted it back, and they said, i £140 to £5. you put the cost up. if you'lit really ”:”’:5* l. ,, w. l . £140 to £5. you put the cost up. if you'rit back, ,’::’ l. ,, fl. w, . £140 to £5. you put the cost up. if you'rit back, and 11: l. ,, e. w, , £140 to £5. you put the cost up. if you'rit back, and theyé. l, ,, e. w, , £140 to £5. you put the cost up. if you'rit back, and they said,,., ,, l... w, . mean, it doesn't really mean batted it back, and they said, i mean, it doesn't really mean anything. >> basically, i don't think it's anything. >> basically, i don't think it's going to stick to the tories going to stick to the tories though. maybe generic. though. maybe generic. >> that's it. i think i think i >> that's it. i think i think i think they are not weird. they think they are not weird. they are a bit louis, a number of are a bit louis, a number of people applying to change gender people applying to change gender nationwide has tripled from a nationwide has tripled from a tiny number to a very, very low tiny number to a very, very low number. yeah, well, this is good number. yeah, well, this is good news, i guess. i don't know, it news, i guess. i don't know, it was a tiny number about ten was a tiny number about ten years ago. it's about 300 and years ago. it's about 300 and now it's like 1400 people. yeah. now it's like 1400 people. yeah.
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so it's quite a it's, it's hard so it's quite a it's, it's hard to say. to say. >> i mean that is still to me >> i mean that is still to me like small in terms of, like in like small in terms of, like in a nation of maybe 70 million a nation of maybe 70 million people. now, i don't know if people. now, i don't know if we've lost count, haven't we? we've lost count, haven't we? but, you know, we can probably but, you know, we can probably assume most of these are not of assume most of these are not of not the ones that have come not the ones that have come across on boats to get across on boats to get transition, but that small. transition, but that small. >> it's saying 1400 people have >> it's saying 1400 people have come out and they said, no, no, come out and they said, no, no, no, this is this is applying for no, this is this is applying for the certificate. >> this will include people who the certificate. >> this will include people who are perfectly intact, i think. are perfectly intact, i think. right. this is this is just right. this is this is just because they have to prove that because they have to prove that they've been like a woman. they've been like a woman. >> and i think it's. >> and i think it's. >> and i think it's. >> and i think it's. >> yeah, but that doesn't >> yeah, but that doesn't involve doing any surgery or involve doing any surgery or anything. that just means like anything. that just means like coming out to get the milk and, coming out to get the milk and, you know, in your nightie. you know, in your nightie. >> but but the question is, how >> but but the question is, how do you get the certificate? is do you get the certificate? is there like a government thing? no, there's some woman, some there like a government thing? no, there's some woman, some woman up there who looks you up woman up the next and down. it's a vibe. are you. it's just a vibe. >> you don't have to have your knackers cut off. i do not think so. do you? no, no, no, not at all. and this is the thing they've dropped the cost of getting the certificate from £140 to £5. you put the cost up.
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if you're really
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rights. probably not if the next person is lewis schaffer. yeah, but but he says this is not what 90% of the public are thinking about. and he says he doesn't want the conservative party to be a one issue party or to just go down a rabbit hole of culture wars. and i think it's fine to, you know, talk about, you know, obviously the economy and things like that are the big picture. but if you don't deal with these issues, eventually they will spiral and they're already spiralling. we've seen some ridiculous things they did bring down the snp essentially, didn't they? and they and they continue to plague it. you're right. you've got to be absolutely clear on it. and then it's fine. thenit clear on it. and then it's fine. then it goes away. but just sort of going, let's not get distracted by culture war issues. 99% of women don't have a penis, that kind of thing. do you know what i mean? it's like, no, whoa, whoa whoa whoa, back up. if you don't want to have a culture war, then state clearly >> a movie called midsommar a couple war,ghts ago. — , , ,, , , >> a movie called midsommar a couple war, then ago. — , , ,, , , >> a movie called midsommar a couple war, then stateff—i , , ,, , , what your position is and then culture war, then state clearly what your position is and then move on. don't just kind of go move on. don't just kind of go well, it's not because because well, it's not because because at this time there is this war, at this time there is this war, which i've been saying for like which i've been saying for like years now. years how. >> years now. years now. >> there's a war. you're on one >> there's a war. you're on one team. and the other team, team. and the other team, unfortunately, you can't sit. unfortunately, you can't sit. there's no venn diagrams in the there's no venn diagrams in the
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war that we're in. there's only war that we're in. there's only these two silos, and one silo these two silos, and one silo says it's wrong. says it's wrong. >> and this is this is a vote >> and this is this is a vote winner for the tories. i'm winner for the tories. i'm convinced this is not something convinced this is not something on which labour have have won. on which labour have have won. you know, they've established themselves. there'll be an event you know, they've established themselves. there'll be an event like milly dowler. nobody cared like milly dowler. nobody cared about phone hacking until the about phone hacking until the milly dowler event. so there'll milly dowler event. so there'll be an event like that that draws be an event like that that draws attention onto this there. will attention onto this there. will lewis guardian have news from lewis guardian have news from sweden that doesn't involve sweden that doesn't involve grenades and armed gangs, which grenades and armed gangs, which is nice i know is that hard to is nice i know is that hard to believe because you think of believe because you think of sweden as a lovely, lovely sweden as a lovely, lovely place. place. >> not anymore. no screens, but >> not anymore. no screens, but probably in most places in probably in most places in sweden anyway. no screens before sweden anyway. no screens before age two. swedish health age two. swedish health authority tells parents. and authority tells parents. and this is the swedish health this is the swedish health health authority. and they're health authority. and they're saying you you shouldn't use saying you you shouldn't use screens. screens. >> isn't that absurdly young? i >> isn't that absurdly young? i would have thought like would have thought like newsworthy, like it should be newsworthy, like it should be ten at least surely, shouldn't ten at least surely, shouldn't it? no, no, no, because i mean, it? no, no, no, because i mean, they're talking about they're talking about televisions as well. oh they're talking about televisions as well. on tv screens. so you're not you're televisions as well. oh they're talking about televisions as well. on tv screens. so you're not you're not even allowed to stick not even allowed to stick frozen, not touch screens. frozen, not touch screens. >> no, it's not about allowed. >> no, it's not about allowed. it was. it's a suggestion. it's it was. it's a suggestion. it's sweden is a suggestion. so what? sweden is a suggestion. so what? i think this is good news. you i think this is good news. you shouldn't put a tv screen, shouldn't put a tv screen, >> a movie called midsommar a >> a movie called midsommar a
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couple of nights ago. couple of nights ago. me and the kids, i say kids, you know, like 20. they're all old enough. yeah. have you seen it? it's like about swedes. it's like a folk horror. it's like the wicker man. but. but in sweden, i think i did. >> what's the one with. they don't have screens. >> they, they have maypoles and dancing. and then somebody gets gutted and strung up like a, like a chicken. >> that's the one where the where the where there's another earth and it's about to hit. hit the earth. >> and it's not that one. no, thatis >> and it's not that one. no, that is melancholy melancholia . that is melancholy melancholia. yes. yeah. lars von trier. that's a slightly different one. terrible film, but this is. yeah.i terrible film, but this is. yeah. i mean, it's interesting that that, you know, screens have been identified as causing so much harm in children. but i think also what causes harm is if you're with your kid and you're staring at a screen and then you get there's a blank face thing. so the kid doesn't learn like emotional cues and all the cues off the screen instead. yeah, yeah. no, i absolutely agree with you on that. i think it's fine to leave your kid like with a babysitter. you know, a screen. like when you can't be permanently paying attention to the child , like,
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attention to the child, like, you know what i mean? but when you know what i mean? but when you are, you should be. yeah. do you are, you should be. yeah. do you know what i mean? that's what i think. >> the same country that said about covid lockdowns. >> sweden. on about covid lockdowns. >> sweden. oh yeah. no, they're good. yeah. they're sound daily mail now, leo. it sounds like getting off infant school is getting off infant school is getting easier. these days. so 60 children as young as four years old are sent home from school every day for racism, according to the to the study children. so, yeah, almost 60 children. so, yeah, almost 60 children a day last year, almost 12,000 children were sent home from school for alleged racist behaviour. this is up 25% on 2022. and jo studholme, obviously the left , have come obviously the left, have come out and said, oh, this proves that our children are racist and you know, there's such a problem with white supremacist britain. jo studholme, who's a self—appointed parenting expert, says children pick up racist views from their parents, and daniel kibedi from the national education union, said these figures should be a wake up call. but when you actually look at the figures, there should be at the figures, there should be a wake up call. for us,
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overpolicing and being oversensitive to racist comments. so a child, said that his friend had brown skin and curly hair. that's racist. he said an even worse one than that. there's a chocolate one. yes. another kid, a child under 11. so obviously, you know, a young kid used the word chocolate when describing a classmate's skin colour, he said when asked to describe. yeah, when asked to describe. yeah, when asked to describe, i mean, how how less, how more benign can you get? >> it's like the laser beam trapped. >> my favourite chocolate. it's like that colour. yeah. it's like that colour. yeah. it's like the literally my favourite thing. yeah. and another, another one. a five year old girl was deemed racist after she made comments about a classmate's different hair. yeah, different hair. and that's racist. i mean, this is ridiculous. these teachers should be taken out in the ceremonial. i mean, i was subjected to worse racism than that when i was like five years of age. just for being welsh. i mean, literally, evans . evans. mean, literally, evans. evans. >> i was attacked for being jewish at the, at the yeshiva, at the yeshiva that i went to. it's an old joke. don't do that. >> but it is crazy. absolutely right. and as one of the teacher
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says, they said as a black headmaster who refused to be named, but he said, this is the way you have created the bad incentives because people would need to log this stuff because otherwise they need to cover their backs, because if it escalates and somebody said, didn't he say that? and you go, oh, i didn't write that down, then you're in trouble. it gets logged and then yeah, it's very similar. >> i was reading something about east germany and this is what's happening in east germany, where they just where the people are fed up with being told, you know, or they're being told what they can say in public lives of others. >> so, lewis, we'll squeeze this one in before the break. it sounds like harrods is becoming short for harassment. odds >> yeah, well, this is kind of interesting. this is harrods staff told to intervene if shoppers harass women. this is the same thing. like what you said. it's the same thing where? where they're making harris. harris department store. this is the big thing down there in knightsbridge, i guess. said that said that there was there was a nine year old girl who was kidnapped and they don't want that to happen again. so they're telling everybody and they're telling everybody and they're telling everybody, and it was
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outside the store anyway, but near enough kind of in the shadow of the awnings or something. >> she wasn't like snatched inside the store.
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next. and welcome back to the final section of headliners. we have the daily star now, for leo, what i think is generally recognised as coke , my ugly recognised as coke, my ugly privilege keeps unwanted attention from men away. but enough about me. let's look at the story now. this is a woman who has gone viral after she explained the concept of ugly privilege on tiktok, and lots of people have agreed with her, saying that being ignored by men is actually a positive thing. i agree with her that she's ugly. yeah, yeah, i think they've said i'm ugly too and it's great. so they say it's great because men aren't flirting with them. they're not hitting on them. they're not hitting on them. they're not hitting on them. they're not trying to get their phone number. they're not asking her out, men in real life mostly leave me alone. it's very rare that i get male attention in real life. so i'm surprised at that, because, you know, there's a lot of desperate men out there, so she must be really ugly. that's true. but then, on the other hand, men have sort of become very, cautious, haven't they? and hesitant and so on. so i wonder whether that combines
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and whether, if a woman is extraordinarily attractive and flirtatious looking, they kind of go, well, that's an obvious signal . okay, that's in play. no signal. okay, that's in play. no it's not. >> first of all, first of all, men are way more likely to hit on an uglier woman than they are to hit. think so? yeah. and number two, this is a lie because all women want to be hit on. that's what they want. they're attention seekers and they can't go, hey, look at me. they might put on a fancy dress or something that shows the bazooms, but they this woman is like? >> but remember the there's a famous photograph. i saw it in a movie the other day and i can't remember what it was. it was like hanging in a restaurant in a scene and, it was, mid—summer, in fact, what i mentioned earlier. yeah early scene where they're in a diner and it's sophia loren and, and another blonde actress, i can't remember. i don't think it was claudia cardinale. maybe. anyway, she's very, very obvious. sophia loren is looking kind of sophisticated, and the blonde has got her boobs, like, really hanging out. and sophia loren is giving her this really filthy look. it's a very famous photograph . yes, because you're photograph. yes, because you're like, sophia loren is like one
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of the world's greatest, most beautiful, iconic stars. but she's still caught up in this intrasexual jealousy thing with this kind of trashy starlet. you know , it's i mean, it's baked in know, it's i mean, it's baked in and men are no better, obviously. yes, we are . obviously. yes, we are. >> i don't hang bakhmut and thus i am. and you have to . did you i am. and you have to. did you have to say that soledar louis daily mail have a story of potemkin office staff that probably presages the coming war with the machines? yeah, this is the fantastic daily mail . high the fantastic daily mail. high end aussie copy advertises fake jobs to fill an office ahead of their boss coming in. and so this is basically a lie to make it seem like things are going better in sydney, australia. and i'll explain the story because maybe the business wasn't going that well and they want to show to the boss we've got people working and this is this is the new staff and he's paying them £150. but this unfortunately was posted in reddit and it didn't mention the company's name. it didn't mention anybody there. so this is a complete not even a non story. it's a non non non story. >> vapour i mean it doesn't
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really make sense does it. to pay really make sense does it. to pay people to kind of just come in. and this is the entire pubuc in. and this is the entire public sector. this is haringey council right here. there's you know david graeber. have you heard of him. no he was he's dead now sadly. very interesting guy, very intelligent anthropologist who applied his anthropology to sort of left wing politics. he was one of the founders of occupy wall street, which i thought had a point. occupy wall street was interesting how goldman sachs got really behind lgbt issues. yeah, yeah, occupy . but anyway, yeah, yeah, occupy. but anyway, he wrote a book, which i don't think i can say the title of on their bs jobs, but bull bull jobs. yeah, but what it was, was about the degree to which the private sector is full of these jobs as well. it was basically hitting back at the suggestion, which is fairly commonplace, that the public sectorjust that the public sector just inflates, you know, ceaselessly, regardless of where the jobs need to be done. it's like, believe me, banks do as well. corporations, oil companies , corporations, oil companies, they're all full of it. >> you know, you want to have people under you. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> that's it. i prefer to have one woman under me. >> independent. now, leo. and a
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story that reminds me of an onion headline. a few years back. internet down, huge surge in productivity. yeah. so brazilians reveal what life is like without x or twitter. after elon musk's platform was banned, there . so brazil's shutdown of there. so brazil's shutdown of elon musk's, of x started on saturday, and it was it's basically i mean, the left wing establishment there, this judge in particular, justice alexandre de moraes, he's saying that there's all this disinformation and fake news and stuff spread on twitter, but then the right wing opposition are saying no , wing opposition are saying no, you're trying to silence us. you appued you're trying to silence us. you applied to silence us and musk wouldn't wouldn't allow it. so this is being used politically to boost the left as they as they do all over the place. but musk refused to play ball with him at all. right. yeah, yeah yeah, absolutely. and what's what's also interesting is musk's other company, starlink, provides a lot of internet to remote communities in the amazon. so starlink what's that? clarice. clarice starling from silence of the lambs. sorry. all right. yeah i knew it was
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joke. >> i'm sorry. no, it was a good joke. he's been away for a month. he doesn't. i like this, i like this, this is here. >> that's the most random interruption. i'm sorry. carry on. starling. yeah. so. yeah it'll be interesting to see if they're going to, you know, punish their communities by
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most expensive shops cutter, the most expensive shops even cutter, the most expensive shops ever, ever to cut his i love timpson, i love the smell. the smell smells great. but the price is unbelievable. anyway, i'm in. i'm in a cave. that's it.— i'm in. i'm in a cave. that's it. it's all over. >> but sadly, we'll have to ship you off to a care home. russ show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at tuesday's front pages. we have the daily mail now. labour are running scared over winter fuel backlash. we have the telegraph petrol cars rationed to meet eco targets. we have the guardian uk breaks with us to suspend 30 arms export licences to israel. the mirror keir versus oasis i news uk restrict sale of weapons to israel due to clear risk of breaking international law. and finally, the daily star worlds a bit too dodgy to go driving. we'll never find out what that was about. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest leo kearse and leo schaefer. louis schaefer i will be back tomorrow at 11:00 pm with josh howie and carrie marks. if
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you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news >> good evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office here on gb news. we've seen some big thunderstorms through the day today. still a few rumbling on at the moment but they are going to fade overnight tomorrow. a mix of sunshine and showers and it is steadily turning fresher from the west. quite warm and humid though in places at the moment our air is coming up from the south. this low pressure generating the heavy thundery showers steadily clearing from north—east scotland and then the northern isles, but some storms rumbling on as well into this evening over parts of the midlands, northern england and wales. they should start to ease through the early hours. still quite warm and humid and murky over central and eastern parts, but turning fresher and cooler further north and west. temperatures in parts of scotland well down into single
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figures, generally a fine and a sunny start across scotland tomorrow as well. certainly a much brighter, drier day across the north—east, but in western scotland a line of cloud and rain is creeping back in. that's extending down into northern ireland. so a pretty glum start to proceedings tomorrow here. quite a lot of mist and low cloud still across parts of england and wales as well. and still a few showers here. still keeping going through the morning, so you may wake up to a bit of a wet start here. and as we go through the day we could see some further heavy showers developing over parts of east anglia and maybe the far south—east of england still hit and miss, but some heavy downpours possible , particularly downpours possible, particularly in the early afternoon. much of northern england, wales , northern england, wales, southwest england, though drier and brighter compared to today, and brighter compared to today, and we'll still have some outbreaks of rain coming into the far north—west, turning cooler and fresher. we could still get into the 20s across east anglia in the south—east and certainly a cooler, fresher start across eastern areas for wednesday morning. again, many places seeing plenty of sunny spells, but we will see more
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showers developing as we go through the day, particularly for wales and england. northern ireland not too many though. across scotland and temperatures much fresher. feel by wednesday. high teens for most, a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 9 pm. patrick christys tonight. >> change begins now . >> change begins now. >> change begins now. >> keir starmer is absolutely tanking in the polls. will he even last the full five years? >> and i am worried about the far right. i'm worried about populism and nationalism and the politics of the easy answer. this starmer, the european leaders, are getting an absolute kicking from anti—illegal immigration parties. >> when will he wake up? >> when will he wake up? >> but i will use my contacts and my reputation with rwanda to resurrect that incredibly important partnership . important partnership. >> today, james cleverly said he'd bring back the rwanda plan. is that the right move? plus, i absolutely hate the winter. >> i absolutely hate the winter. the arthritis is badly affected by the very, very cold weather. >> old people could freeze to
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death this winter should starmer put the winter fuel allowance to a vote in parliament and whether it's a knife or acid, whatever it's a knife or acid, whatever it is, and these are things that are a genuine concern for me. >> it's one of the reasons why i won't bring my wife back to this country. >> well, now, apparently prince harry wants a return to the royal family. should king charles tell him to where go? >> plus, it's a strange noise coming through the speaker. >> astronauts stranded in space hear weird noises in their space capsule. what's going on? on my panel tonight, it's express columnist carole malone, ex—chairman of the tory party, sir jake berry. and journalist benjamin butterworth. oh, and what happens next? here eight seven. six five cat ready britain. here we go .
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