tv Headliners GB News September 10, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST
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stay cancer said her focus is to stay cancer free. she made the announcement in a heartfelt family video showing her spending private time with prince william and her children . princess catherine children. princess catherine revealed in march that she was undergoing cancer treatment, and has been out of public view since then. she is set to carry out a few engagements this year, which could include remembrance events in november and her annual christmas carol concert. now, in other news, victims of domestic abuse are facing sleepless nights ahead of labour's early prison release scheme. according to the domestic abuse commissioner. speaking to the sunday times, nicole jacobs warned that some victims may not be aware that their attackers could soon be free. up to 1750 offenders will be released tomorrow under the ministry of justice's emergency plan to ease the overcrowding crisis in jails. now, in germany, they are tightening the border controls after growing pressure on the government following a knife attack which
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left three people dead in the town of solingen in august. the suspect is a syrian national who was facing deportation, and the attack was claimed by the islamic state group. the controls within what is normally a wide area of free movement, the european schengen zone will start on the 16th of september and initially for last six months. disgraced film producer harvey weinstein is in hospital in new york after undergoing emergency heart surgery. that's according to his spokesperson. the 72 year old was convicted of rape and sexual assault in 2020, in new york and jailed for 23 years. those convictions were overturned this april when an appealjudge overturned this april when an appeal judge ruled he did not receive a fair trial. he has, however, remained in jail because of another rape conviction in 2022. hollywood legend james earl jones has died at the age of 93. the actor , at the age of 93. the actor, best known for his roles as danh best known for his roles as darth vader in star wars and the
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voice of mufasa in disney's the lion king, died at his home in new york this morning . those are new york this morning. those are the latest gb news headlines for now. i'm sophia wenzler. now it's now. i'm sophia wenzler. now wsfime now. i'm sophia wenzler. now it's 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 . forward slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> it's your first look at tuesday's newspapers with three comedians slash oracles. >> i'm the wise one. andrew doyle josh howie is the youngish one. >> and know what i don't. >> and know what i don't. >> i don't want to hear it, >> i don't want to hear it, >> well, i was going to say no, i won't, because there's three. >> there's three oracles, aren't there? yes there's the wise middle, you know, there's the young good looking wise, and then there's the hag. the hag?
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yeah, there's the hag. that's not good. louis schaefer, you're not. >> you are anything but a hag. >> you are anything but a hag. >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> i think you're a very fine. >> i think you're a very fine. >> i think you're a very fine. >> i shouldn't have interrupted you. >> i forgot this was a comedy show. yeah, i forgot that someone jumping in before the punch lines is never good. >> yeah, but you don't write punch lines, so you don't know what that's like. no, i don't. >> i know, i know what it's like because i don't write it. >> yeah, there we go. well, look, we're going to have a look at tuesday's front pages before we crack on. >> the express is leading with your kindness is humbling. out of darkness can come to light. this is the story of about the princess and her overcoming her chemotherapy. >> the telegraph has got. i want to stay cancer free. >> same story there. >> same story there. >> the independent unions warning to labour over winter fuel row, as well as a picture of the royal family. >> the i has got pensioners in poverty, 770,000 set to lose winter fuel payments. the daily mail has another story about kate. >> out of darkness can come light. and finally, the daily star also has a story about kate. those will be front pages .
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kate. those will be front pages. okay, so with the news that kate has finished her chemotherapy treatment, that's obviously dominating all of the front covers on tuesday, we're going to start with the daily mail. yes, kate. >> out of darkness can come light. so let that light shine bright. >> during chemotherapy, she's been doing a lot of poetry. >> i understand is that. >> i understand is that. >> did she write that poem? of course she did. well, i mean, hey, i'm not i don't know, maybe she did. i yeah, why? >> she made this video as well. >> she made this video as well. >> it was very beautiful video or as a big team of people working for you are so cynical. >> i don't know, it could be one or the other. even in these most lovely of stories, you can find a cynical edge. it is great. >> of course it is. >> she's a young woman. she's our future queen of potentially. potentially. >> it's so we don't know, do we? the monarchy might be abolished by then. don't know . might be abolished. >> i think there's been a little bit but but they've sort of come
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out weirdly with it. so it's great that any human being it's great that any human being it's great that any human being it's great that she's got you know, she's got through this, you know, but then they made a sort of like video to, to sort of with the announcement. i've never seen anything. i don't know, did you see the video? >> i didn't see the video. what was it like? >> well, it was very sort of like, i don't know if you ever watched any sort of french. >> french avant garde art house films. >> yeah, well, it was like a little bit out, a bit fuzzy in corners, like it was like a dream. like a fairy tale. >> oh, it sounds quite good, actually. >> no, it's very good. very well made. >> you know what it looked like? it looked like an american drug. advertisement like everything turns out all right. you, with the use of chemotherapy, can live. and then walking in the woods , in the fields. woods, in the fields. >> it's not quite a positive message, lewis. >> no, it isn't a positive message because we learn nothing. we don't even know what the cancer is. >> and it doesn't have to tell us what she doesn't have to. >> but it'd be nice to know for people who knows when. what's her name? the american president got breast cancer. she went to the betty. was it the betty ford clinton? >> well, there hasn't been a female american president. yes.
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>> one of the wife of the president. betty. betty. ford. betty ford had whatever she had. somebody had something, and they got it checked out. she made a big impact on you. this thing i don't want to talk about this thing because i actually. because. because she seems lovely. and this guy seems a lot better than his father, and we don't know what he's going to turn out to be the. but the truth is, is that cancer is the cancer is chemotherapy. i don't believe that chemotherapy can cure cancer. >> well, there's a lot of people who have been through chemotherapy and it's done wonders for them. yes. yeah. >> i would suggest if you've got cancer and chemotherapy is recommended, that you should not listen to louis schaeffer. >> i wouldn't say i would say don't don't blame me, but but i am following the warburg method. yeah, i know, i would say follow. >> i would say blame louis schaeffer. >> i would say that an oncologist is more likely to know about this stuff than louis schaeffer. one knows something. i don't know what your area of expertise is, louis. i have yet to discover what it is. >> i would say it's that. i would say cancer. cancer is one of those things where i've
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actually i say cancer. >> very well. you say it very confidently. i don't like saying it. yeah. you know, this whole thing, how people don't like. yeah. because. >> because you think it's not curable. what is? cancer? it's a metabolic disease. it's caused by by an abuse of the metabolic whatever is the mitochondria and the way you you don't cure cancer. >> cancen >> but what you do is i want to say it too much. it's like it'll bnng say it too much. it's like it'll bring it. >> didn't you once tell me that it was okay to eat rocks? >> well, i eat rocks every morning. there we go. i have some magnesium and calcium that says it all. >> we're going to move on to. >> we're going to move on to. >> this is a rock. >> we're moving on now. >> we're moving on now. >> louis. >> louis. >> sorry to the telegraph. and obviously the telegraph is running with the same story, but they also have another story halfway down the page. what's this about pensioners? >> £1,700 better off with us, reeves tells future. says tells winter fuel rebels. this is reeves. she's the chancellor and she's supposedly the person in charge of the budget. and they decided to cut back on the £500. that £800 was it. is it only £300? how come? i got a check for £500? >> because you're not. >> because you're not. >> but for something different.
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that was for those films you made, right? >> so what? she's saying is because pensioners are getting the triple cap. triple triple lock, which is it's going to go up lock, which is it's going to go ”p by lock, which is it's going to go up by £1,700 automatically. is that they're still going to be better off than the £300 that they would be getting for the. >> okay, well, this sounds interesting, but you know, this has been hugely unpopular. i think it's fair to say, even within the ranks of the labour party. right. so this is the first major, but the only reason it's unpopular is because it's bad visuals. >> when you actually start looking at the details of it. yeah, it was only bought. and there's a level of hypocrisy because the labour party released a report when they were in opposition saying report, say 4000 people would die and all that stuff. so this is all just politics. but the reality is that it's they're making what they're doing now. they're making it means tested. they're just not giving it out a blanket. a quarter of pensioners are millionaires on paper. yeah. >> so they don't need the help. >> so they don't need the help. >> they don't need the three. >> they don't need the three. >> do you think that the this cancelling of the winter fuel allowance will result in the
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thousands of deaths? >> i hope not, they're saying, well, we all hope not. but you know . yeah, well they're saying, know. yeah, well they're saying, well, if labour said it, come on.the well, if labour said it, come on. the problem also is that of the 80,000 800,000 who would be eligible for it , only about 5% eligible for it, only about 5% of people have actually applied for it. so far. yeah, sure. so of course that there are. but even with the winter fuel that there are going to be people who are suffering. and even when they had it last year, there were reports of people staying in their room and in the cold. my in their room and in the cold. my grandma, she was loaded and she would just stay in her room and sort of suffer in silence because she didn't want to pay the extra. whatever it is. it's just, yeah, because she thought she was. but she could have she could have been gone crazy with the heat. >> the problem is, is your labour party, josh, they lied about it. well, yes it is. you voted labour is. they lied. is. they said they weren't going to cut it and then they cut it. so it's a lie, am i right? did i make that up? i think you are right. >> let's move on anyway, to the times. and the times, also, i presume is running with the
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princess kate story. >> yeah, that's the big story, you know, but and it's a lovely photo of the family. you know, i don't know if we've seen those kids, but they look like a happy bunch of kids. they look like a normal family, which is weird. i don't know if you want your royal family to look normal. i'd want to see them. they're straitjacketed. >> yeah, i want them with sceptres and sort of, like, dripping. >> just looking. just looking really miserable. like, then it makes it okay that they're, well , makes it okay that they're, well, no. just so then it's like, oh, you're going to be millionaires and everyone's gonna kiss your butt for the rest of your life. that's the price you should pay. like being raised by nannies look quite nice. >> they look happy. so what is there? another story? a really good story. >> go on then. it's a great story. germans halt open border policy amid migrant crisis. now, they let in about a million migrants. they were like, hey, everyone, come here because we need you. and then turns out crime went really bad and they've had, like, terrorist attacks, and it's been pretty terrible. so now they're closing all of the borders , which and all of the borders, which and austria have immediately said, well, if you send people back to us, we're going to have some problem. you don't want problems between austria and germany. yes. and also, what does this
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mean for schengen, which is the open border european policy. so this is a sort of a bit too little too late springs to mind. well, well at least well arguably they're doing something but they have to be doing something because of course they did very well in these local elections. >> wasn't it always, always crazy? i mean, angela merkel admitted that multiculturalism, as in the idea of establishing parallel societies, you know, people sort of isolated hermetically in their cultures wasn't working , didn't work. and wasn't working, didn't work. and at the same time, she opened the borders completely and allowed mass immigration, which, of course, makes assimilation impossible. so she must have, well, clearly she didn't know. but this was always going to lead to disaster, wasn't it? >> it is always and this is the ultimate disaster because the whole point of, of the eu is we are going to have open borders. we're not going to have this and this goes against eu policy. so i think i'm not sure about this because i don't pay any attention to this. >> so do you think we should go back in the eu? that's what you're saying right. >> well, they're basically leaving the eu. and leaving the eu, germans are the eu. yes. if the germans are the eu. yes. if the germans are the eu. yes. if the germans are saying we're not having open borders, that means
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the germans. that means the eu. >> oh, well, is that true or not? no, no, let's move on. what about the star? what have the star got, well, the star has got the same story . the same story. >> the star? yeah. it's good news for the star. the star basically, what i do with smiles better. >> so this is the princess finishes chemo. but we expect more from the star. we expect a story about boffins normally . story about boffins normally. >> yes. normally boffins. it's normally some incredible snowstorm. and it's a picture of the royal family. >> it's a real sell out because of the star. we want aliens, you know, actually, to be fair, in the in the corner, there's a little picture of an alien. >> can you see it at the bottom? oh, they live on mars, but it's been relegated to a small story at the bottom of the front page. >> the truth is, is that the royal family are very important to this country. it's unfortunate that the king doesn't really is not fighting for the country he's fighting for, you know. >> is he fighting at all? >> is he fighting at all? >> he's fighting for the world economic forum that's he's on their team. >> i wondered how long it would be before you mentioned, oh my god, this has been this has been the worst show for me already. >> i think. >> i think. >> i think. >> i know it can only get better. >> it could get it could get
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welcome back to headliners. it's your first look at thursday's top news stories with me , andrew top news stories with me, andrew doyle and a couple of other blokes. anyway josh, we're going to start things off with tuesday's guardian. the met have a new policy. what's this? pro—palestinian marches. what's going on? >> yeah, we'll arrest people quicker at protests from now on. at protests from now on. met police deputy chief says so. quicker at protests from now on. met police deputy chief says so. yeah, this is the guardian and yeah, this is the guardian and they've sort of said, oh yeah, they've sort of said, oh yeah, maybe, maybe we should do our maybe, maybe we should do our job. >> well, who do they mean? do job. >> well, who do they mean? do they mean people who are they mean people who are breaking the law, or do they breaking the law, or do they mean. >> yeah, people who break. so. mean. >> yeah, people who break. so. right. well, hopefully not people who aren't breaking the right. well, hopefully not people who aren't breaking the law. >> well, you say that, but you law. >> well, you say that, but you see, you know, with these new see, you know, with these new powers that the police have to powers that the police have to arrest people for being, say, arrest people for being, say, noisy or this is more this is noisy or this is more this is
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more just like the traditional more just like the traditional jew hate stuff. right? >> this is things like calling for jihad, calling for jihad when swastikas and whatnot. >> but they said they said these protests are like they're almost entirely peaceful. only 36 people have been arrested because they don't arrest anybody for breaking . anybody for breaking. >> no, that's the thing. so this is in the guardian. and the guardian makes a brilliant couple of points. so super guardian, they say, oh look, they've been largely peaceful with there's actually been about 450 arrests. >> violence. >> violence. >> well either arrests general but 32 or 36 people have then been charged . but then the point been charged. but then the point is that they they haven't been doing their job. so who knows how many that be
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>> but why should that be illegal? i mean, i agree with you. i think it's horrific, but i don't think it should be illegal. >> well, it is illegal. you can't show support for a terrorist organisation. okay. so that's illegal. yeah, but lewis's point is that you don't think it should be right. >> you're saying that you should be able to express horrible views? >> i think you should be. i think if you're a citizen of this country, you should be able to. but if you're not a citizen, you should not. >> i don't believe you should. yeah, well, you can't. and the other thing i don't want the police. well, the guardian says here, it says also it says on the topic of two tier policing and then it says a theory falsely claiming that police treat white people taking part in disorder more harshly than minority groups. well, that isn't what two tiered, what is referred to what it's talking aboutis referred to what it's talking about is how there's a hypocrisy here about how different groups are policed. they're not just talking about, the disorder in terms of public protest. >> no, they're not just talking about it. >> it's across the spectrum here where you have a group of muslim men out with knives causing violence and no police at all as a deliberate policy that they've talked about. >> i mean , that's an obvious
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>> i mean, that's an obvious example, isn't it? because, you know, it's definitely to criminal be wandering the streets with machetes. >> with knives. yeah. but for the guardian to say a false theory, falsely claiming it's like, oh, where are you coming in with that information guardian when it's been proven in clips over and over again. are you suggesting something that's actually that the guardian lied? i mean, the guardian lied? i mean, the guardian outrageous. aren't representing the actual truth. sorry. anyway getting back to the story, but even the telegraph said the exact same thing . no, but getting back to thing. no, but getting back to the story. no, no, no, this isn't a story. this is in the guardian. so. but the point is that this is the deputy police commissioner admitting that they should have come down and done theirjob at come in october. and the problem is that then from that it emboldened these protesters to come out. and just with the most outrageous racism and whatnot, and also emboldened, set the tone of the policing of these type of marches where people can just get away with it. >> well, didn't the police arrest a guy for holding a sign saying hamas are terrorists? well, i mean, they say, i think they said they did it for his safety. yeah, yeah. is that right? >> that's the that's right.
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that's been going on like crazy. the truth is that this guy, this guy said he's a member of the police. the police are a questionable organisation. >> well, i mean, i think we can definitely all agree that there has been a two tier policing and this is flat out denial of it. it seems pointless. i mean, the example you gave of the jihad where they, you know, the police put out a tweet saying jihad is where they, you know, the police put out a tweet saying jihad is a peaceful. yeah, yeah. i mean, a peaceful. yeah, yeah. i mean, spiritual quest. we can have spiritual quest. we can have debates about the limits of free debates about the limits of free speech, but surely we can all speech, but surely we can all agree that the police shouldn't agree that the police shouldn't be lying about the content of be lying about the content of what people are saying, right? what people are saying, right? but but the police lie . but but the police lie . but but the police lie. >> they've historically. but but the police lie. >> they've historically. >> they've historically. >> and now you can see those >> they've historically. >> and now you can see those lies when you can see the actual lies when you can see the actual the footage and then you have the footage and then you have the footage and then you have the guardian, but go back 20 this they, you know, the police the footage and then you have the guardian, but go back 20 years. yeah. you're not going to years. yeah. you're not going to be seeing it. and that's the be seeing it. and that's the that's the world that we live in that's the world that we live in now. >> yep , yep. it's creepy okay. now. >> yep , yep. it's creepy okay. >> yep, yep. it's creepy okay. >> yep, yep. it's creepy okay. we're going to move on now to we're going to move on now to the times. times and yeah sorry the times. times and yeah sorry louis. what was that? louis. what was that? >> he looks like he's your hype >> he looks like he's your hype man. you know he's like a man. you know he's like a rapper. rapper. >> oh i get it. the times. the >> oh i get it. the times. the times. i'll try that again. times. i'll try that again. moving on to the times times. is moving on to the times times. is
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this going to be a theme tonight? oh, no. okay, okay. what's this one about anyway? >> louis says riots. riots show. why public must must be, be told more about mass terror attacks. >> talk me through the logic there. who's saying this? >> who's saying this? this? this guy? he wrote a basically a book. he's a barrister named jonathan hall. and he said and he wrote. so he wrote a book about about this. and he says, he says that the problem with the riots is that the people weren't told that it wasn't a muslim who did this, and it was just like a british person. it wasn't a guy who came on off the boat. it was. yeah. >> so he's talking about the false tweets. they they identified the wrong person in the southport and that's why. >> and that's why there were riots. there were riots because the people were fed bad information. and like i have said on this , on this program said on this, on this program that people need to be they need to know the truth. and this is not an open society, but it's also saying horribly that they're blaming, also saying horribly that they're blaming , they're they're blaming, they're blaming. they're saying, what are they saying? they're saying
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that people wouldn't have rioted if they didn't know, but they know because the public don't like this feeling of being played. >> yeah. and that's what's been going on. >> so, wait, are you saying it wasn't just the misinformation? no. >> this has been a long term thing where the public feel like they're not getting the information. they feel like the government are trying to manage everybody and go, no, we're not going to. and they're being played by the traditional media outlets where we can't reveal this stuff. and unfortunately, that allows bad faith actors to step in that allows misinformation to step in. we've seen this before with previous terror attacks where this information is held back. >> yeah . so when we've seen >> yeah. so when we've seen attacks where they don't identify, even when they know who it is, say it is a muslim asylum seeker or something, they will withhold that because they don't trust the public with that information. you also get a lot of people saying all the time, you hear it again and again. this person had mental health issues. yeah. we don't know why they did it. even when someone runs into a crowd screaming allahu akbar or what precisely why they hope that it goes away . why they hope that it goes away. >> so a few years ago, where you had three gay men killed,
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stabbed , and the man running stabbed, and the man running around showing shouting allahu akbar and they were killed in a homophobic attack? yeah. it just sort of was like no one really mentioned it in the media and we don't know why this was done . don't know why this was done. and it was kind of announced a year later in court, and the guy was shouting his motive. >> yeah, out loud. and so we and we at the time weren't savvy enough , i think, to pick up on these. >> no not savvy . we're savvy >> no not savvy. we're savvy enough. now what this guy is saying, he's saying there are conspiracy theorists and grievance merchants who are out there promoting this stuff when there promoting this stuff when there are, because they step in. but the truth is that people are i mean, i can't speak for the people, but the people are furious out there. they're worried and furious and that this guy is just making basically apologising. they're saying we need no, no, he's not apologising. >> he's i don't think he's saying i don't think he's saying more censorship. i think he's saying more transparency. yes. >> but he's still saying that these that this action would, might not have happened, but it would have happened because the people are. >> well, i think we don't we don't know for sure. but i think
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you can certainly say that the misinformation was part of it. but i think it's very interesting that people, when they were told that this was an asylum seeker, believed it straight away because that kind of thing has happened an awful lot and has been covered up an awful lot. so actually, i think there is something to be said that if we if we were just open about all the information, trust the public a little bit more, and there would still be riots, because the people there wouldn't necessarily be because the people have not their their needs have not been met if they've been given the information, arguably there would not have been those what we saw happen. all right. well, we'll never get to the bottom of this, will we? but let's move on. there's a recruitment crisis at the national crime
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on. there's a recruitment crisis at the naticlowest,ne on. there's a recruitment crisis at the naticlowest, sort of it's got the lowest, sort of happiness level or whatever it is for for us, lower than the in the civil service. right they're paid the least, and the job satisfaction. so they're losing a lot of people. they're losing a lot of people. they're losing a lot of senior officers who obviously the most experienced who can actually do their jobs . who can actually do their jobs. and this is this is a real problem because this is like a central tenet of starmer's plan to deal with the immigration, on the boats. and it doesn't matter now that they're going to put some money into it. well, is it too late? some money into it. well, is it too late? >> is it too late, louis? >> is it too late, louis? >> is it too late, louis? >> i think it's too late because >> is it too late, louis? >> i think it's too late because i think they they set this thing i think they they set this thing up to be like the fbi. and they up to be like the fbi. and they don't realise that in america don't realise that in america that the fbi has, has a 75 or that the fbi has, has a 75 or 100 year history of being 100 year history of being malevolent and being bad. and, malevolent and being bad. and, you know, they got a lot of bad. you know, they got a lot of bad. j. edgar hoover was a very bad j. edgar hoover was a very bad man, okay, a bad man. yes, he man, okay, a bad man. yes, he was a bad man. and who knows was a bad man. and who knows what else. the fbi can't be what else. the fbi can't be trusted in america. now so i trusted in america. now so i
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think this is and i think it's a disappointment for keir starmer because he wants a police force that's going to back him up. and if it's not going to back him up, he's going to have a he's going to get rid of him. >> okay. we're moving on to the guardian now. and the good news is children will no longer be affected by the covid lockdowns. the bad news? it'll be in about a decade. >> yep, impact of covid lockdowns to disrupt england's schools into the 2030s, report says. wowzers so, this is, an analysis the association of school and college leaders, we've returned to this a few times over the last few years. it's maddening then. it's maddening. now they're specifically talking about children going into year seven with reading difficulties, poor personal organisation and whatnot from those
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personal organisation and whatnot from thola personal organisation and whatnot from thoi think to or whatever. and i think back to what how what a terrible teacher i was. and teaching is hard. so i was. and teaching is hard. so i don't blame the teachers as such.i i don't blame the teachers as such. i blame the unions who fully went in like we cannot hope and school, which is the purpose of what you're there for. >> well, i never i never understood it because we always knew that children weren't at risk of the virus. so i really, genuinely don't understand why the i mean, the unions are pretty much dominated by activists. yes that's the problem. and so we had this. >> well, the argument was that teachers were at risk. but a lot of teachers, certainly in primary schools, are young and so keep the at risk teachers at home who have underlying health conditions or who are older, but certainly the younger ones who also weren't at risk. yeah. that's your that's your job now, lewis. >> the thing is, it is true, isn't it, that once these kids fall behind, i mean, i've been a teacher myself. kids miss a couple of weeks. it really makes a difference. yeah. >> and it's been it was like it wasn't just a couple of weeks. it was months. it was years. it was years. and as, as you know, l, was years. and as, as you know, i, i at the time i said it's ridiculous. and they knew it was ridiculous. and they knew it was ridiculous. what it is, is, is this is the guardian. they
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should be punished for the lockdowns. they should be punished for covid. the guardian. the guardian. >> but the guardian totally did it. yes >> no, they totally believed in it. and. and what this is, this is one of those. safety first. let's not take a chance. who can we manipulate? we can lock the old people away so they don't see their families. and we can manipulate the young people away . manipulate the young people away. ihope manipulate the young people away. i hope they die. i hope anybody who believed in the covid i have not been vaccinated, is. >> what i will say to you is that everyone does. everyone will die. >> yes, will die. but i hope they die sooner than i hope they don't die. >> but i hope there is some level of accountability. there will be no everybody, including myself, even though i wasn't, you know. but the point everyone was scared. i get that, but but the narrative that was pushed and no one just stood up to and it was a narrative pushed in the media, particularly by places like the guardian and like the unions especially, there were some debates going on. no, they were they were shut down as like a you're a crank, you're an idiot. >> there were no debates. i remember being blocked on facebook. politicians should have. >> yeah, i remember yeah, i remember blocking you. it was great. >> yeah. good fun. okay, well
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the. >> welcome back to headliners. your first look at tuesday's newspapers luis. let's get straight into it with the mail now in the mail. >> yes . surrogate mother wins >> yes. surrogate mother wins access to biological son in landmark cases. this took place in in in is this in america? in the uk it's in place in london. >> in london, the gay couple who paid for the surrogate mother are claiming that the fact that the mother wants to see the biological child is homophobic is that homophobic? >> i don't think it's homophobic. i think it's just it's ironic that it's i hate to say it, but it isn't. you want to when you mess with women and children , you you better be children, you you better be careful. it's really bad. >> anyone has messed with women
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here. i think what's happened is there's been a surrogacy deal, which it's effectively about the ethics of buying a child. >> you can't, you can't. >> doesn't the child have rights? doesn't the child have the right to know its biological parents? i would say it does. >> and i don't think two gay guys should. sorry. should have the right to, to buy a baby, to buy babies . and i think that's buy babies. and i think that's that's what this surrogacy is. i don't think in this case, they bought a baby. >> i believe it was an arrangement with a friend's sister, and they had a deal, which was that she would have contact with the child after the birth, and they reneged on it. >> they're reneging on the deal? >> they're reneging on the deal? >> yeah, by saying it's homophobic and saying that this child is not homophobic. well no. exactly. they said there was no. exactly. they said there was no vacancy for her because they wanted same sex parents. they said she that the baby was being raised within the lgbt community. what does that mean? well, exactly. >> it means it means they didn't have a mother. and that's what makes this not born in the lgbt community, but raised in the lgbt raisi. >> okay, but but no , i mean, as >> okay, but but no, i mean, as anybody, i mean, i got i, you know , i've had problems with, know, i've had problems with, with seeing my children.
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>> yeah. >> yeah. >> but that's a totally different reason. >> but the truth is it's a horrible, horrible feeling, which is why which is why surrogacy might be illegal. well, this should be. >> well, you know, there are a lot of people calling for it to become illegal. there is the ethical issue. that child hasn't made the choice to be taken away from its biological parent. right. so it shouldn't that be something we should be talking about? >> men and women are important in the are different human different types of humans that provide different needs and fulfilments to a child? yes. >> so yeah. what about gay adoption? >> josh that's fine. but i think it's a female influence is still important in a in a child in a baby's life. >> yes. although, you know, there are many gay couples who raise kids brilliantly and there are many single parent families where the child is raised . where the child is raised. >> yeah, sure. >> yeah, sure. >> but that's not necessarily true, that just because it's optimum doesn't mean you can't do it a different way . i think do it a different way. i think the ethics of surrogacy is slightly different because you're effectively treating a baby as a commodity. to be bought. right.
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>> and the pain in this case, and because they had this agreement. so i don't think that this child should be with these men at all, frankly, not because they're gay, a gay couple, but because they seem like horrible people, frankly, who reneged on this deal . this deal. >> you know what? it's not because they seem like horrible people. that's not because they said, oh, we're in the lgbt. no, no. >> but what they did was no, they kicked off, she came around, the mum said she'd come round to see they had a pre arrangement to see them. and then on the door they like flipped out and said no actually you can't come in. and then she, the police had to be called and she had actually all recorded and this happens she said it was terrible. >> it happens to, to every single father or mother has been divorced. this is what this is what happens. this is why you divorce should be illegal and so should surrogacy . should surrogacy. >> divorce should be illegal. yes, you heard it here first. we're going to move on. >> it says the man who's been divorced. >> well, yeah, you should be in prison. i'll agree with that. the mail again. what's this one? the mail again. what's this one? the mail. the mail, mail. >> british families are taking up putin's offer to escape the woke west. supposedly 17 people
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have been in touch with in britain , and with russian britain, and with russian diplomats. so he's saying we can save you? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> we'll save you from the woke. >> we'll save you from the woke. >> all the pronoun people. >> all the pronoun people. >> so leave this sort of totalitarianism to come to a different kind of totalitarian. >> well, exactly. i was going to say, like, i don't think putin's record on human freedom is particularly good. >> no, but but there's been people in america who have moved , people in america who have moved, have taken up this offer. there have taken up this offer. there have been people in canada saying that they're desperate to escape the mental illness that has been. >> yeah, but they'll all regret it. >> well, this is it. >> well, this is it. >> long term. this is what lee harvey oswald did. he went to russia thinking it was going to be a socialist paradise. he ended up working in some dodgy factory and hating it. yeah. you know. >> yeah, he ended up shooting president. >> well, i came to this country and i'm regretting it. >> well, well, we're regretting it too. but what are you going to do? you're stuck in it. you're stuck. and they don't want you back in america. let's face it. no who else would have you? >> why do you have to remind me of that fact? well because it's
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good for you. this is this is. this is. russia's got a huge population problem. the people are not having children. they're killing hundreds of thousands of people in the in the war, which could which could expand so they need people. >> and that's not what they're doing. it's all propaganda. it is fantastic. it is propaganda. >> but do you ever feel, louis, though, that the woke insanity has reached a point where actually fleeing to another country might be the only solution ? okay, no answer from solution? okay, no answer from louis. speechless for once. wow. yeah, i did it. >> how they considered it. >> how they considered it. >> that's all i ever wanted to do is to shut louis up. >> i can't, i can't say i can't say— >> i can't, i can't say i can't say what it is. really what? >> we're going to move on. this is a what's this one? it's telegraph now the telegraph adhd. what's going on. >> what's really behind the telegraph epidemic. and this is in this is in the telegraph. i'm reading it adhd epidemic, adhd epidemic adhd is certainly not an epidemic of the adhd. epidemic adhd is certainly not an epidemic of the adhd . what an epidemic of the adhd. what did i say? yeah. what did i say? they basically the guy basically wrote a book and he said he said that it's parkinson's law. is that it's parkinson's law. is that a job increases at the time allotted to it. there's now
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millions of social workers. there's now there's millions of drugs, and there's millions of kids who think, well, if i say that i have adhd, i can get a job, not just kids. >> i mean, the article talks about adults who are also being diagnosed increased 20 fold. yes. exactly. yes. now, there's a lot of every because it has to do with the victim society that we live in. >> everybody's a victim. >> everybody's a victim. >> so i mean there is a lot of discussion about adhd and whether it is a product of over diagnostic culture, you know, that, you know, i'm sure some people do have conditions, no doubt, but there's a lot of people who are a lot of kids who are badly behaved, who are diagnosed with this when they're not really well, more than that, there's also a lot of kids that are they're saying are doing it to get extra benefits. >> it turns out that a single mom with two kids and they all get diagnosed with adhd will get, instead of getting 20 grand in benefits, will get 33 grand. oh well, that makes it very much worthwhile. and there are people onune worthwhile. and there are people online actually teaching called disability influencers who will teach all the trick questions to game the system. but that's not to say that everybody is, but but with benefits going up to 6.4 billion in the next five
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years, and 17% of 15 to 16 year olds and already are classified as disabled. right. because they've got adhd. wait, wait , they've got adhd. wait, wait, can i just interrupt you second? >> josh? didn't i say that? >> josh? didn't i say that? >> didn't i say you didn't say it anywhere near as eloquently? >> i did it, but i'm not going to. but i made the point. >> yeah, you sort of made the point. and you're leaving the viewer to kind of decipher your ramblings, to work out what the point is. well, what are they to 11:00 at night? >> do you think they want to hear something coherent? >> yes they do. yeah they do, absolutely. >> but the crux of it is, is that there is no universal test yet recognised for test adhd because adhd does not exist. >> how did i know you would say that it doesn't exist ? that it doesn't exist? >> we're moving on to lewis has got it, by the way. >> of course he has. yeah, the telegraph again. josh, it seems like gen z all want to become comics. >> yeah, three quarters of gen z plan not to work their whole life in 9 to 5 jobs. so comedy is obviously worked out for you. yeah, exactly like that. yeah, actually, ironically, it's happened the other way round. for me. it has. i started as a
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comic and now i have a job. there you go, there you go. but. stop bragging. yeah, yeah. so this is because they all watch youtube and they see all the influencers and they're on tiktok, and they see so they think that they can all make a job either by creating some app or just taking photos of their food. >> but there's nothing new about this. i mean, kids have always thought, oh, well, i'm going to be a big star. i'm going to be able to do something that isn't the same. >> i grew up in the era where the dream was to be a channel presenter. >> that was a dream, was it? that was the thing. not nightmare. >> no, that was it. like, oh, if i work really hard, one day i'll get to be a channel 4 presenter, >> but you became a gb news presenter. >> i very close, very close. a few dots down on the dial. >> i'd say you're a few dots up. >> i'd say you're a few dots up. >> yes. absolutely. no, i agree with you. i think as things turned out. but this in terms of children not going to university as they become teenagers and whatnot , that i think very much whatnot, that i think very much so now we live in a culture where you're not expected to have the same job for life, right? and, and children now are sort of growing up with that
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expectation. >> but who would want to be an instagram influencer? lewis i mean, you're a kind of influencer on twitter with all your advice . you're continually your advice. you're continually posting images of your lunch. yeah. which is something you do a great yes. my ties, your ties. you're so you've got sartorial commentary. >> it's from banana republic. >> it's from banana republic. >> well, there we go. you've just advertised them as well. you're probably getting paid by them too. so this is you are very much a kind of influence. >> well, who wants to work and i think as britain becomes less feudal. and when i arrived here in 2000, it was feudal. it was people people don't want to work for. like josh is right. they don't want to work at a job. when they see all this money gushing around and who would want to be an instagram? >> you came to england when it was a feudal system? >> no, no. his career was futile. yeah i see that's what it is. >> and finally, in the telegraph, lewis gary lineker goes all gary lineker. telegraph, lewis gary lineker goes all gary lineker . why? goes all gary lineker. why? >> oh my god this guy is horrible. gary lineker i don't think i shouldn't say that. he's lovely. i love him on the tv, but i mean to hear him talk about stuff i'm not that interested in gary lineker, lee carsley he's, he, he's in that anthem row. >> what happened? anthem gate.
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>> what happened? anthem gate. >> yeah. he basically the guy who was the manager of england didn't want to sing the british national anthem, so he stood in the row and he just didn't, he just didn't sing it. and what's his name? gary lineker says i, you know, i don't want to sing it either, and i don't. i wouldn't want to sing it either. but the fact is, it's your team. this is the motto of the team. we got to sing the motto of the team. >> well, hang on a minute. what if you're a footballer and you're in the england team, but you're in the england team, but you're a republican saying, i think you should sing it because anthem, if you're fighting for the england team as i'm a republican, i think the royal family is football. >> yeah. don't fight. >> yeah. don't fight. >> but josh, you can be a patriotic english republican. you can be someone who believes we shouldn't have a monarchy, but you still care about your country. what's wrong with that? why not? >> no. you've got to sing that song. no way. sing that song. >> and what if you're a bad singer? how about that? >> well, this is this is actually, as the article turns out, it is because he's saying, oh, i have a oh, that's an excuse. i'm a bit insecure with my voice, but it is him making excuses. >> so no, i'm sorry, he's not making it. if you're a bad singer and you sing the national
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anthem, that's like an insult directly to the king. >> interesting. i think that it actually shows your love of the king more. if you sing and you get overcome your insecurities. >> no, i don't think so. what's the american national anthem like, >> it's unsinkable. and what's her name made it even more unsinkable. roseanne barr, she likes, screeched it, and it was a major thing. the truth is, i don't want to be told anything by gary lineker. >> the best thing about this article is the second half of it. he starts talking about football and you're like, oh, this is what you should be. i mean, that's where i tuned out. >> he rarely talks about football, but you're like, oh my gosh, this is this is what please just stop. >> yeah. stop talking about israel and all this other stuff. just talk about football, mate. >> football and stop bragging that you read the second half of the article. he's always like showing off to the people because you don't prepare. >> i have no idea why we hire you. >> didn't read the first half? >> didn't read the first half? >> well, because i'm working cheap. no you're a diversity hire. yeah. okay. just the final section to go and then oblivion. but before that , hogging goonies part two and
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>> welcome back to the final section of headliners. >> your first look at tuesday's newspapers. we're going to kick off with tuesday's telegraph now, and there's no such thing as a free lunch. indeed cafes pull the plug on laptop table huggers. >> these are two cafes, once called milk and bean. the other one is called the collective . one is called the collective. exactly what you would think. sort of pretentious cafes would be called . and they basically be called. and they basically said, yeah, during lunch from 1130 till 130 and also at
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weekends they're not allowing people with laptops, okay, to go there because they, they say they're like table huggers. >> yeah, they have one cup of coffee and they stay there all day and they can't get the turnover. well, you can understand that. i mean, when you book a restaurant, you only have a window, don't you? you have a window, don't you? you have two hours maximum. >> just shove that food down. yeah. >> well, i mean you can eat leisurely in two hours. >> they want people to come. they want them to, like, bring musical instruments, didgeridoos, whatever. do they to, like, hang out and be cool? >> oh, is that what hipster plays? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that's not what they are. >> that's not what they are. >> no. >> no. >> i mean, on the other hand, you know, surely cafes the whole point of cafes is that you can go there. and i mean, you know, j.k. rowling wrote her harry potter books in a cafe because she bought a cup of coffee and stayed there all day writing. what's wrong with that, lewis? >> there's nothing wrong with it. you could if you if you own a cafe, you could have laptops. yes. and if you don't have, if you have a cafe, you could not have laptops. this is like the total non—story. non—story? it's a non—story because businesses can say, you know, i think that they should, but they should charge like a premium, like charge like a premium, like charge a couple of quid extra. >> they could do a laptop, a
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laptop fee. yeah. >> yeah, they could do that too. or they could say, you know what? right now you don't have a laptop, but other times you can and they don't have a big sign and they don't have a big sign and no one would be upset about it. >> laptop day. you're right. it's a non—story. let's move on to another one. now this is the independent lewis. his goodbye. the hardest word. >> yeah. this is john cleese. says goodbye to twitter or x, as they call it. but his daughter is unconvinced. and this is my good friend john cleese as you know, andrew's good friend as well. didn't i introduce you? who is he? >> better friends with? >> better friends with? >> andrew. >> andrew. >> who does he like more? >> who does he like more? >> well, i mustn't comment, but, you know, he did speak to you a fair bit on set, didn't he? >> i think he did. i don't think he had. i think i think you felt an affinity perhaps. no, i think by the end of it i realised this guy thought i was an idiot. but yeah, he's very discerning, to be fair, but okay, so he's left twitter. he was on twitter. he has 5.5 million followers and he wanted to make a thing and people wanted. he didn't say why he's leaving twitter. well i guessis he's leaving twitter. well i guess is this not a non—story as far as it's up to him. >> what social media platform he uses? >> no, but the reason why it's part of a larger story is
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because there's been a sort of spate of celebrities, sort of. i'm not saying he flounced off, but who sort of like, this is just too much for me. now i'm out of here. >> yeah, but i read the tweet. it didn't seem like a fan. it seemed like, no, it seemed like i just don't want to do this. >> i don't want it. and he's like, thank you, elon for lunch. so or lunch. so he obviously feels guilty like elon lunch elon musk i mean i think i think we make way too big a deal on people what they choose to do online. >> he has 5.5 million followers. yeah. that's kind of a lot of money. that's a lot. he probably makes a lot of money off of twitter and he monetised. >> we don't. he might. >> we don't. he might. >> and even if he doesn't he's still selling stuff to them. and he wants to communicate. >> i mean i would say i would advise to stay on because i think twitter is when you've got 5 million followers, is good to promote things. look at the way lewis promotes. yeah. promote me. >> this is my twitter thing. my twitter. and i was twitter before elon musk took over. yeah you're big and he's great okay. >> yeah. but do you follow lewis schaffer. keep him happy lewis. >> schaffer lewis schaffer .co.uk. >> yeah. and send him send him compliments because he does need them. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> today was a bad day.
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>> today was a bad day. >> follow me at john cleese. >> follow me at john cleese. >> there you go. that was that was worse than yesterday. it was really okay. >> we're on to the mail now, josh, what is this the most important sequel announcement since godfather part two. >> indeed, godfather, the goonies fans all issue same passionate plea after sequel announcements and social media into meltdown. goonies part two is coming out. goonies. do people remember the goonies? yes, i mean, i that's one of the first films i played my kids like. that's just an iconic family movie. it doesn't get better than that, really. arguably, all the pixar stuff came later, but that is just goonies is a very good film, great film, it's a good film. >> but the problem with doing a sequel, apparently they're talking about getting the original cast on board, but the trouble is, chunk is no longer fat. yes chunk's a lawyer now. sean austin actually is fat . sean austin actually is fat. fat? yeah. so unless they could switch characters, they could switch characters, they could switch characters. i mean , that switch characters. i mean, that would be quite an interesting avant garde way. >> i don't know what they're going to do about chunk. yeah, chunkis going to do about chunk. yeah, chunk is now a very successful hollywood lawyer and skinny and skinny as well. >> but that's real life they can make in real life, but they can make in real life, but they can make that a feature of the film. oh, look at chunky's lost lots
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of weight. you see, it writes itself. look at fatty short. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> shaun woodward. i'm not shaming sean austin for some of them have gone on to big, you know, they're big stars. >> yeah. and now the guy who played, gadget. was it gadget? yes. is it gadget? is that the guy with the gadgets? yeah, the guy with the gadgets? yeah, the guy with the gadget. i don't know if it was called gadget. anyway. he was. he won an oscar, wasn't he? >> called gizmo? oh, no. that's gremlins. we don't know. the point is, this is quite exciting. >> if they don't mess it up because it's a classic. >> okay, well, look, the show is unfortunately nearly over, so, let's take another quick look at tuesday's front pages. so we've got the express, they're leading with the story about kate finishing her chemotherapy. your kindness is humbling. the telegraph has the same story. i want to stay cancer free. the independent also has a story. unions warning to labour over winter fuel rules, as well as a picture of kate's family. the i has got pensioners in poverty, 777,000 set to lose winter fuel payments. the daily mail also has the kate chemotherapy story . has the kate chemotherapy story. out of darkness can come light to let that light shine bright. bit of poetry from the mail
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there. and finally, the daily star also has the kate story. those were your front pages . those were your front pages. that's all we've got time for. thanks so much to my wonderful guest , josh howie and lewis guest, josh howie and lewis schaffer. we're back tomorrow by the way, at 11:00 with simon evans, steve n allen and leo kearse. oh yes, i, i thought you were hosting tomorrow. is that not right or lewis when are you back on lewis i don't know thursday wednesday wednesday is it wednesday. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well make sure you follow lewis schaffer. send him some compliments and check out when he is hosting. >> very bad. i want to apologise. i should apologise. and even to josh who's gotten better and better. >> okay. well, look, that's all that's all we've got time for. thank you for watching very much. thanks for putting up with lewis schaffer's bizarre comments. and by the way, if you are watching the 5 am. repeat right now, do stay tuned because right now, do stay tuned because right now, do stay tuned because right now it's time for breakfast. yeah >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> hello and welcome to the latest update from the met office for gb news. some clear spells overnight and a cool night compared with recent nights, but it is turning increasingly unsettled towards the north of the uk with weather systems arriving from the atlantic. it's not something we've seen for a week or so and that means heavy and at times persistent rain across scotland, northern ireland, northern england and north wales through the night. cloudy skies sinking south as well. but we keep some clear spells towards the east midlands, east anglia , southeast midlands, east anglia, southeast england, 11 or 12 celsius first thing here, but high single figures, low double figures, typically elsewhere and lower humidity compared with the last week or so. so a more comfortable night for sleeping even if it is an unsettled start to tuesday with wet and windy weather sweeping through northern scotland , i think northern scotland, i think shetland and orkney could see some disruption from heavy rain and strong winds during the day, as well as blustery weather for
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western scotland. northern ireland heavy showers and gusty winds. an area of rain sinks south during the morning across northern england, reaching north wales and parts of the midlands by lunchtime ahead of that, we've got thickening cloud for southern parts, with a few showers moving into wales and the southwest. perhaps 1 or 2 developing later in the southeast. so effectively it's a showery day. but with some longer spells of rain at times. for example, the end of the day across southern parts, 19 celsius in the south, 11 in the far north and northeast with 50 mile per hour wind gusts and the wind coming from the arctic. now that arctic wind is going to sweep across all parts by wednesday, that means it's going to feel cold in the wind. unusually so for the time of yeah unusually so for the time of year. frequent showers moving through as well, particularly in the north and northwest. but some sunshine in between. so it's not going to be a complete washout. fewer showers on thursday and friday. more rain in the north this weekend, a
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the princess of wales has announced her chemotherapy has worked, but acknowledges the journey has been complex, scary and unpredictable for everyone. >> in a heartfelt video released on social media surrounded by family , catherine expressed how family, catherine expressed how illness has given her a new perspective on everything and the prime minister faces a rebellion as mps are set to vote on the scrap to winter fuel payments today. >> it comes as the government refuses to rule out cutting bus passes for pensioners . passes for pensioners. >> time for another tory
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