Skip to main content

tv   Headliners  GB News  September 24, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST

5:00 am
a budget to the foundations, a budget to deliver the change that we promised a budget to rebuild britain. and my budget will keep our manifesto commitments. every choice we make will be within a framework of economic and fiscal stability. you'd expect nothing less. we said we would not increase taxes on working people, which is why we will not increase the basic, higher or additional rates of income tax, national insurance or vat, and we will cap corporation tax at its current level for the duration of this parliament to the middle east. >> now where.7 492 people have been killed and more than 1000 left wounded in the most widespread wave of israeli airstrikes against hezbollah in the last year. residents in southern lebanon reported receiving calls this morning telling them to evacuate, with warnings also broadcast across lebanese media. meanwhile, israel's prime minister has sent a message to the lebanese people saying his country's war is not with you, it's with hezbollah . with you, it's with hezbollah. in other news, a mother and
5:01 am
daughter have been jailed for more than three years in total for taking part in a riot while out walking their family dog. 52 year old amanda walton and 24 year old amanda walton and 24 year old amanda walton and 24 year old megan davison admitted violent disorder during disturbances in middlesbrough on the 4th of august. video played in court showed davison jumping on the roof of a red car , while on the roof of a red car, while walton was seen throwing something. the judge jailed walton for 22 months and her daughter davison for 20 months, and parts of the uk are under water after more than a month's worth of rain fell in just 24 hours. flood warnings have been issued for areas across northamptonshire, bedfordshire and london, causing widespread travel disruption. school closures and damage to homes. a yellow warning remains in place in some areas where they're expecting 120mm of rain today , expecting 120mm of rain today, with more rain and warnings expected throughout the week. those are the latest gb news
5:02 am
headlines. 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 . slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners our first look at tomorrow's newspapers. with the help of three professional comedians, i'm always to told emphasise that professional aspect of our credentials. i'm simon evans . aspect of our credentials. i'm simon evans. tonight we have on two coffees josh howie and for hot chocolate's jojo sutherland i'm addicted to them. >> are you.7 oh, i'm addicted to them. >> are you? oh, i love the ones from the machine. yeah, they're great. it's funny how a little perk can make all the difference. i think i am on my fourth here late at night under strip lighting. it's a dystopian environment in many ways, but a hot chocolate will get you
5:03 am
through everything. excellent. let's take a look at those front pages. we have the telegraph light at the end of the tunnel. pm tells britain and the notorious donor. pm tells britain and the notorious donor . they're notorious donor. they're striding in the union boss says we'll seize control of the uk economy on the front page of the daily mail. same picture. guardian pm vows to end gloom as labour seeks to lift spending restrictions. and an illustration of hezbollah taking one on the chin. sun nick's strictly s.o.s. i'm not sure what that story is about. that's a recent arrival. the times labour to crack down on benefit fraudsters. and finally, the star. it's boaty mcboatface after the sudden floods. those were your front pages . so were your front pages. so starting us off with the daily mail . josh. yeah, there's a big mail. josh. yeah, there's a big story there. >> but at the very top they've
5:04 am
got the day i discovered my husband had a love child just like dave grohl. seesahai see page 21 i turn to page 21. let's just say the guy does not look like dave grohl. >> dave grohl is not in the frame for this one. >> yes. no, exactly. this. this is a guy who got very lucky that he had a love child and his reasons why i feel bad for dave grohl. >> because he's the nicest guy in rock, isn't he? and no, not anymore. he cheated on his wife. he's put one foot wrong. he's inaya. >> i don't think there was his foot wrong. >> it was something else. he put somewhere . somewhere. >> anyway, the big one is. >> anyway, the big one is. >> yes, we obviously we have the labour conference so this is the daily mail take on it. labour conference bombshell union boss will seize control of uk economy. >> now it's not really a bombshell because it's just, rmt boss mike lynch just being mike lynch. he's just saying like yeah, we're going to take control. we're going to have a union led country just because he wants it doesn't make it. so there's no actual plans for that to happen. of course, that's what he wants to happen . but what he wants to happen. but keir starmer and labour don't. >> do you think though, it's
5:05 am
going to rattle the windows and shake the walls of middle england, this fear that we're going back to the 1970s because it's kind of in the air a little bit. >> well, this is what yeah, this is what they've been trying to push the entire time. but there's no actual proof of any of it going through. whilst rachel reeves made her speech this today or yesterday, whenever you're watching this, they, the nurses , sort of they, the nurses, sort of rejected the offer of about 5%. yeah. you do kind of go. the train drivers got a 15% offer and was accepted. you know, they got 15%. nurses should be getting more. let's split the difference and take the train. >> drivers should be getting less or just no train drivers. >> or maybe the fact that king charles was given a 50% pay rise, the amount of 45 million. >> he's only one person. he's just one person. he's just one person. whatever he wants. oh yeah , but maybe that has yeah, but maybe that has something, probably doesn't spend it either, does he? >> that's the trouble. it just kind of gets reinvested back into the into the biscuits , into the into the biscuits, giving it to that one biological child. >> and, yeah. but it's just, it seems to be also somewhat, fear
5:06 am
mongering going on there. >> what have we got on a less fear mongering note then, jojo, the telegraph. >> the telegraph is basically light at the end of the tunnel already. >> we haven't even entered the tunnel. we have got light at the end of the tunnel. and the, keir starmer has told britain, i mean, i hope the light from the end of the tunnel isn't the light from an oncoming train, an oncoming train? traditionally, it could be that normally said just before you enter, once you're actually in a tunnel, isn't it, that you've been traipsing through a tunnel for a while? >> yes. rachel reeves is about to lead us into that tunnel. yes. we haven't got into the tunnel yet, so there's no chance of seeing a light. no, it's an odd thing to say at this point. i don't know how long the tunnel is. >> so that's the key is how long is a piece of string. >> and they have been phenomenally gloomy, though, haven't they? and their messaging, i mean, they've really leant into the kind of brace yourself, but this could be short term. >> yeah. you know , this could be >> yeah. you know, this could be what they're doing. >> they're going right, let's do it now. get all of that stuff out of the way, set up our excuses, and then suddenly, when they chuck us a little morsel,
5:07 am
we're like , thank you so much. we're like, thank you so much. >> thank you, thank you. yeah. no, i think it is. it's that kind of like, oh, it's going to be awful. oh, it's going to be. oh it wasn't that bad. so but we don't know. but it is that thing of, you know, the thing that's been hitting the headlines, the whole time is the winter fuel payments and that being taken away. but i don't know why we're not concentrating as well on how much they are spending in other areas in terms of, you know, keir starmer has said 3 billion a year to ukraine for as long as it takes and 84 million to the middle east and africa, developing nations and so on. so we're spending a lot of money to help other people, which is admirable , but not if you're admirable, but not if you're going to do it at the expense of our own citizens. >> we are we do have a couple of the spending plans. but i take your point. absolutely. and ukraine just seems to be a given. now doesn't it? there's no discussion on that from either parties. no one. you could vote for. >> yeah, but also the fact that you make a statement like 3 billion a year for however long it takes is again, how long is the tunnel? yeah >> so maybe that's what that's the light that he sees at the
5:08 am
other end. >> yeah. i mean the tax burden is already at a 70 year high. they're talking about more taxes. so really this this is going to be his but not taxes on working people. >> crucially this is only going to be the tax is going to come come around through the back door and whatever. >> but but he is saying some of the right things, which is, you know, to improve the nhs and to giving any money to the nhs until the reform plans are in place. so again, it's like at least you kind of go, well, at least you kind of go, well, at least they want the country to be better. like we haven't got there yet. but at least there's a there's a lot of clinging, a lot of saying, oh no, there's another big story. we've got to move on. pubs may have to call last orders early. stop it. this is more nanny state. and what this all comes down to is a report that they're now trying to save money by. what? as you were just saying here. preventative stuff. so obesity alcohol. and one of the things is that but cigarettes but they're clamping down on smokers and alcohol and that's the thing and alcohol and that's the thing and huge story being oh because preventable deaths preventable deaths.
5:09 am
>> but they combined preventable deaths from smoking and drinking don't even touch the sides of preventable deaths from obesity . preventable deaths from obesity. nothing touches the sides. you know, we've done this sort of sugar tax and all the rest of it, which are you sure that's right. >> alcohol and tobacco together is not remotely 700,000 preventable deaths from alcohol and smoking combined. >> we're 1.2 and smoking combined. >> we're1.2 million deaths from obesity. >> that's why . notice how svelte >> that's why. notice how svelte she is, but how much she drinks and smokes. it's really overtaking. >> yeah, yeah. oh no i checked i mean i think worldwide obesity and smoking are sort of neck and neck, but i guess in this country with the extraordinarily high taxes and so on, they've had for a while and education programs , i'd just like to say programs, i'd just like to say at the very end of the article, it then says the government says there are no plans to do another one of those. >> it was one of those all the way through, although they did say the silver lining would be that there would be less domestic abuse if the pubs closed earlier. >> it's a it's a recommendation from some quango or something. well actually no it's saying it's coming from another part of
5:10 am
the government. >> but the but the government. but what they also say somewhere inside the house is they said since 2019, alcohol related deaths have risen. a third. well what happened in 2019? oh yes. you know come on guys, what happened. it's not because pubs suddenly opened longer in 2000 were allowed to decide how large a measure of whisky was at home. yeah, well that's the thing is. so it was actually really if they want to lower alcohol related deaths , keep pubs open related deaths, keep pubs open longer, that would suggest the evidence would be opposite . evidence would be opposite. >> don't let people drink at home. >> but they're also saying even that that that that bold assertion that they say currently 40% of deaths are, are avoidable deaths, deaths from avoidable deaths, deaths from avoidable causes will rise to 60%. it still kind of deceptive, isn't it, because people are going to die sooner or later. you're only delaying it. and it may be that those deaths come at a more appropriate point in life. >> well, there is an argument to be said that people who die from preventable causes, like smoking and drinking, will be less of a pressure on the nhs because they won't get old. >> well, it's got the what's
5:11 am
got, what's got the times. >> times yeah, a few things. well first of all labour to crack down on benefit fraudsters. there's a new bill that starmer is putting through. this is quite interesting. they're going to let people investigate anyone. they suspect of defrauding benefits. but like let them investigate their, their bank accounts . so you can their bank accounts. so you can sort of see if they've got any other income. i'm surprised that you wouldn't. that hasn't been going on anyway. it seems that would be a bit of a no brainer. so make you nervous? oh, totally. >> the fact that people can just, you know, pop into your bank, your bank account, i mean, it sort of is surveillance through the back door. yeah. and under the guise of. oh, yeah, but these terrible people that are cheating us, we all used to be a lot more sort of relaxed. >> remember in arthur smith in the 80s, used to compare a comedy gig and he'd go, good evening, my name's arthur smith. unless you're here from balham, dhs, in which case i'm daphne fairfax. yeah. it was the most famous opening line. everyone was quite relaxed about it, but that's a skill. >> yeah, well, that is problem. >> there was another line about no photographs for security reasons, social security reasons.
5:12 am
>> that's right. oh my goodness, thatis >> that's right. oh my goodness, that is a i haven't heard that from professional comedians. those are the front pages sorted. in the next section we have the return of the breakfast club. ed miliband is breaking out the candles again. and donald will do he doesn't
5:13 am
5:14 am
5:15 am
and welcome back to headliners. i'm still simon evans, and
5:16 am
despite their best efforts , we despite their best efforts, we still have josh howie and jojo sutherland with us. so josh, let's start with tuesday's daily mail. if you like the oasis reunion, you're going to love rachel reeves latest announcement. she's reviving her 80s brat pack movie, the breakfast club. amazing great film, great film. >> yeah, exactly. although i can't figure out what the breakfast club is, but we'll get to that. rachel reeves says £315 million free breakfast clubs programme for primary schools will begin in april. so this is part of what we were talking about a bit earlier. part of what we were talking about a bit earlier . stick in about a bit earlier. stick in the carrot coming through the tunnel, austerity saying austerity is over. we're going to start spending some money now , to start spending some money now, actually doing stuff. and this is the first thing that seems to be in announce the carrot. so yeah, we're sort of taking this. get those, kill all the old people and let's focus on the kids. feed the kids instead . so kids. feed the kids instead. so l, kids. feed the kids instead. so i, i don't know what a breakfast club. i think it means that they can go to school a bit earlier so that parents can get off to work. it's a free meal and a free meal, and that makes a big difference. and certainly in terms of people's attention, it's been shown that that does
5:17 am
have a massive impact on certainly kids who don't have parents who give a. yeah. so for 300, yeah, 300 million. like for a country wide scheme that seems like a pretty that seems like a bargain. why not feed the kids already? other companies , other already? other companies, other investing interests are sort of saying no, we will now scrap the two tier limit and whatnot. it's never good enough, but at least it's something. yeah. >> what do you think? >> what do you think? >> well, i was i didn't realise that the breakfast club had been scrapped. so i mean, i think it is a brilliant idea and certainly for parents who do have to go to work earlier and, you know, the breakfast club and the ready brek adverts, remember them so they can get a little heat as well. yes. so sort of glow of red around that. >> how you picture them. >> how you picture them. >> but yeah, children with a little red rooster glow around them. but i think, i think a breakfast club is a great idea. and breakfast is an important meal and it does stimulate the brain and helps you. >> there's no question in my mind whatsoever that children should have breakfast before they go to school in the morning. the only question is whose job is it? but i suppose it's there's i'm broadly
5:18 am
speaking, i think i'm behind it. there is that famous study where they said that the parents were being were failing to pick up their kids after nursery on time. and so they sent out a message saying, if you fail to collect your child before 4 pm, you will be fined $5. and immediately parents just stopped doing it because they regarded that $5 as well spent. they were more than happy to be able to pick up their kids at 430 and get an extra half an hour of childcare for $5. yeah, it's a little bit like that. i just wonder how many parents will go. great. that's another job off my to do list. yes, that says you drop the kids off at 730 and they can have breakfast at school . maybe that's fine. school. maybe that's fine. >> i don't know if it'd be good if they could also do like sleep club and say babysitting club and just everything and just see them pick them up friday, reassure about the monster under the bed club. just have all clubs take them for the week . clubs take them for the week. >> just leave them at school day and night. oh, boarding schools, we already have them, remember? >> oh well, if it's a slippery slope back towards boarding schools, i'm in favour. jojo ed miliband continues on his one
5:19 am
man mission for a green britain. one vicious, authoritarian and economically ruinous measure at a time. >> yes, well , landlords are >> yes, well, landlords are facing a ban on renting homes that are not energy efficient. so this is in the times. and so they will be banned from renting out the properties unless they meet minimum energy efficiency standards, which at the moment i think is level c, they want them all to be above c and above okay. which like my gcse great, fantastic. but what i want to know if they have the ability to ban landlords from renting homes because they don't have an energy efficient certificate, how come they can? why don't they ban landlords from renting homes that cost too much money or regulate rents? in terms of i mean, if they can make that level of you're not allowed to rent your home unless you have this certificate, you're not allowed to rent your home if you charge too much for it. >> well, i suppose one thing is the market setting a price, although i think labour are intending to interfere with
5:20 am
that. but that is that is at least a widely viewed efficient system for discovering the correct price, where supply meets demand. the other one is making sure that you're selling something that is that meets like trading standards, like you have a car that the wheels don't fall off. >> no, absolutely. but the cost to landlords, they reckon, is going to be about 25 billion, which you just know that if they've got to spend that much money on improving their house and, proofing them and insulation, all that kind of stuff, then that is then just going to be put onto the rents andifs going to be put onto the rents and it's going to be increasing. oh, it's going to be an increase in rent, you know. yes, of course it is. the landlords are not going to if they start from scratch, i expect. >> yeah, i don't know. >> yeah, i don't know. >> i mean they're saying there's going to be a maximum of £10,000, which actually means that the people who are going to be making up the difference will be making up the difference will be the taxpayer. yeah. but at the same time, it's it seems unfair that people are forced to pay- unfair that people are forced to pay. they, you know, the rents are out of control and they're having to pay for a bad product. >> well, you've got the two things, haven't you? because obviously it's ed miliband. so what he's what he cares about is
5:21 am
net zero, but also there is the, you know, who accepts the burden of keeping a room warm when there's massive cracks in the window frame or whatever. yeah, that's a slightly different two different issues. >> and there are some more issues, which is do they have the people necessary to do the work. yeah, that that 25 billion extra into the economy could be part of the builders boom. so that could come back in tax i.e. make sure you pay it not in cash. so it benefits everybody. and the other thing is that part of reaching this grade c is that having it's not just sort of having it's not just sort of having double glazing. they're also talking about heat pumps and they're trying to push that heat heat pump legislation through. and that could be a sort of by the back door way of going up to the c is like putting in this heat pump. and that's much about the heat pump. we discussed heat pumps yesterday and i'm saying that i'm just saying that's part of their plan i reckon the guardian now josh the guardian say scottish labour are trying to put clear red water between themselves and their southern neighbours. >> yes. >> yes. >> so this is interesting. yes. scotland could extend winter fuel allowance. the scottish labour argues in the guardian
5:22 am
and, because they, you know, devolution , devolution laws that devolution, devolution laws that are coming in, they'll be able to say who's going to get this benefit or not. obviously, for all the uk it's been cut, but they want to , basically allow they want to, basically allow pensioners who have any kind of benefits to also get this money right, which is not the way it is now, because there's a good chance that the labour will win, they'll beat the snp out of local government, and this is a big threat to them. yeah, this is happening. it's all a bit of a moot issue, i think, because it's a necessary issue, because obviously scotland's colder. they've got longer winters, but at the same time they don't actually have any pensions. don't they don't live long enough to have an impact. >> i did love the fact that the scottish electorate electorate is volatile and could easily not vote labour. and yes, we are, but it's that thing as well that , but it's that thing as well that, you know, scotland always likes to say the opposite of whatever england does. i mean, well, they
5:23 am
also like to be more generous as well, though, don't they? >> generally they do regard themselves as being having their social conscience. they pay for education with the english people's money. yeah, yeah. >> oh, but this is where we scored a home goal or an own goal with, with the general elections. yes. you know, we sort of gave the snp a kicking. so but all that did was then reduce our seats in westminster. i know people didn't realise that the effects. so we don't have as big a voice in westminster now because good terrible unintended consequence. >> i've been saying they were the secret weapon for a long time. yes, exactly. >> but i think some of scotland thought they were getting a labour government in the last general election for scotland. >> that's possibly true. staying with the guardian, jojo angela eagle says overt racism has been caused by top trumps. i think is that right, >> top tories and trump. >> top tories and trump. >> oh, top tories and trump . >> oh, top tories and trump. >> oh, top tories and trump. >> sorry, top trump, top tories. although it wasn't mentioned by the name he was, it was saying that she , i think his former that she, i think his former ministers who were referring to she told the guardian i won't
5:24 am
name them, but you can probably guess. so do you think she means top tories, as in like senior tories or like top, top, top oh like top heckelmann . like top heckelmann. >> yeah, i think she probably means she probably means like top hate figures in the labour party, doesn't she ? party, doesn't she? >> oh, well, we don't know what she means because she won't say so. this is the problem. we always know when we're guessing that it's trump. but i can understand why they might say trump has created a certain amount of rhetoric which fed into the riots or whatever. >> i mean, you could argue the case, but i can't think of any tories that have done unless she means like suella braverman creating, saying that we have to stop the boats. but i don't think that was likely. >> i think they're talking to any of like, is that who it is? yeah, i think that i think there are other people, anybody who's any tories who have talked about immigration. >> yeah. i mean, so i mean, if the subject of that comes up, then that is seen as overt racism, the very fact that you mention it. so, yeah , yeah, i mention it. so, yeah, yeah, i it's like everything toxic discourse against asylum seekers gave yellow flashing light to racists, so i didn't know we had a lighting. >> no i didn't yellow flashing
5:25 am
light flashing is that it's like, you know, make your own mind up. it's a bit like late at night. >> sounds a bit racist to me. yeah. yellow flashing lights. >> they have those in america, don't they? where, where the, the traffic junctions between midnight and 5 am. they're just sort of flashing and you just use. >> use. >> it's actually a really serious story. angela eagle, she's the minister in charge of irregular migration. now, this is their new term or irregular. this is their new term or euphemism. it's not illegal immigration anymore. no, it's irregular . immigration anymore. no, it's irregular. territorial. yeah, exactly. and it's ironically the opposite of what she's saying . opposite of what she's saying. she's saying that people who dare talk about migration , dare talk about migration, particularly tories and trump or whatever, they're, they're all far right. they're making racist. that's the no . it's racist. that's the no. it's because we are not allowed to like we i say normal human people in this country are not allowed to talk about the valid concerns that illegal migration have caused in this country, that then it emboldens the right it leaves a space for the far right to then take in to take control of that space. whereas
5:26 am
whereas we can't well, i don't know if it's quite right. >> i think it's just frustration. i think people are frustrated at the fact that every time they go, can i excuse me, have i got can i have a question? go, shut up. oh yeah. i think people are just frustrated. no, i don't think they're far right. >> no, no, that's what i'm saying is i'm saying exactly that. and i'm saying by calling those people far right, then you then you make them far right. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> great times. now, josh and we stay with donald trump. apparently he won't be running again in 2028 if he loses with the important caveat that his loss is an impossibility. >> it doesn't make sense at all. yeah, donald trump says he won't run for president again if he loses. but as you as you say in your link, he he's he's like, i'm not losing. there's no way he has not legitimately. >> yeah. he does factor in the possibility. yeah. well he doesn't admit that he lost last time. >> so he's saying but he said i'm not going to run again. whatever it is i think you've got a two term limit in america anyway. so even if he wins, he can't. >> if he wins, he can't he can't do it. >> and if he's not, but he would
5:27 am
be 82, he's already getting a little bit doddery. please don't tweet me all you trump people, andifs tweet me all you trump people, and it's interesting that he's sort of saying that, i guess partly because he wouldn't want to run again is because he would then maybe go to jail in the meantime. so then there's no point him. >> there's no danger of him running again. i don't think at this point. >> no, but but i didn't realise. i know you can say i thought it was consecutive terms that you couldn't serve for. >> i've never seen it in print, but, i mean, it'll be a very unusual if he does win. i don't think there's been another one for a very long time. i think early days, one of them had a term and then there was a gap. and then came back like adams or something. i can't remember exactly, but not for a very long time. roosevelt famously took four terms sydney, and then died quite early on through the fourth term, having concealed illness of all kinds of like infirmity from the american people. that was when they brought the legislation in. yeah. >> so the but the interesting thing is, of course, here is who is then going to take over the republican party. is it going to be another maga type person, or is it going to be a sort of less controversial? >> it's going to be like jeremy
5:28 am
corbyn handing over to one of his four acolytes. oh but does it not automatically become jd vance or not? >> no, no, not in terms of oh, if he were, if he were, sorry. >> if he was, if he was to win and then and then so if he wins, that's the presumption. and then yeah. >> so would he not run for a second term because he can't. >> no. because that wasn't because biden was the vp to obama, wasn't he. but hillary clinton nevertheless was. >> yeah, yeah yeah yeah . >> yeah, yeah yeah yeah. >> yeah, yeah yeah yeah. >> we've hit the halfway point coming up. we have the court of mum and dad, kamala and the dangers the vanity snap. see
5:29 am
5:30 am
5:31 am
5:32 am
and welcome back to headliners. so, point of information from one of our online fans, grover cleveland, the only us president so far to serve two non—consecutive terms towards the end of the 19th century. moving on. jojo shocking outbreak of common sense in law enforcement circles , reported in enforcement circles, reported in tuesday's telegraph. >> yes , so teenage rioter was so >> yes, so teenage rioter was so sternly told off by his own parents that authorities chose to not prosecute, probably didn't want to get on the wrong side of the parents either. and i've dropped my pen, so yes, 14 year old rioter was told off so sternly by his parents that the authorities chose not to take further action against him because they don't really they they don't want to be
5:33 am
criminalising children and they want to find better ways in to order not have children be disruptive. but i mean, you just know a mother's look particularly is enough to well, if it's well directed, the interestingly, in the story, it said that on many occasions they encountered families that seemed to regard as intrusive of the law to get involved, that their kids had just been going out. >> you know, having a bit of a laugh or also that the families have taken the kids out. >> there's that one photo of a guy at one of the riots carrying a baby. yeah yeah. >> well, the story in the news about the mother and daughter have been jailed because they they've been taking the dog for a walk and then suddenly decided to jump on cars. but you can get easily. you get easily in these things. but conversely to the, the parents of the 14 year olds are marching them down to the police station and furious with them. and the another defendant, a 12 year old boy, hit the headunes a 12 year old boy, hit the headlines because his mother chose to fly to ibiza the day before he was supposed to be in court. so, you know, there's the yin and yang of parenting, but
5:34 am
what i find hilarious is that she's been ordered to pay £1,200 compensation, which i bet she regrets going to ibiza now, but. and go on a parenting course, which i think the parenting course should be run by these parents. yeah. >> nice idea. >> nice idea. >> yeah , absolutely. get a >> yeah, absolutely. get a little sister. >> although it could be a great double bluff, couldn't it? marching. right. we're going to take you down to the station. >> yeah, i know, maybe that's it. yes, we'll deal with them. oh, go to your room and shut up. >> what this article is, is this guy mr parkinson, who's basically he's the director of pubuc basically he's the director of public prosecutions, and he's been very pleased with themselves because they shut down the riots and the far right and, and the reality was, of course, there's a far right element to it. absolutely. but there was there was a somewhat of a mirage there as well. and so he's sort of going we did we stepped up and we did the quick sentencing. and that shut everything out. it's like, no, it just it was people who were very upset. rightly so. with the murder of these children. yeah. and far right people latching on to that and other people because there has people have not felt
5:35 am
heard on this issue and the idea that he's shut it down, i think is, is a real mistake to be going out with that kind of mentality because that sentiment is still there. >> well, if it gets getting back to what we were saying and if it's example that it is sort of families of people walking their dog, then that doesn't fall into far right, you know, sort of no thugs and rioters. >> i think also it was and this is like a traditional view of riots. but it was phenomenally hot as well. people's tempers get a lot shorter when the temperature goes over 30 in this country, you know, and people get carried away. >> i mean, people do when they are. it's like any kind of group thinking or herd mentality. when you were groups of people and getting sort of slightly giddy. jojo oh, first people to go first. the first people jumped on a car. >> the first people to go to prison were a gay couple who'd been at bingo, who were drunk and walking past. they were the first people to go to prison for this. >> that's very unfortunate. it is indeed. >> don't do bingo . daytime >> don't do bingo. daytime bingo. that's that's the motto
5:36 am
for old bingo . for old bingo. >> struggling enough as it is. doesn't need that kind of pubuchy doesn't need that kind of publicity , another example of publicity, another example of the met arresting people for their own good. josh. but are they grateful? no, they're not, are they? no indeed. >> this is a crazy story. christian preacher wins second 10—k payout from met police after she was wrongly arrested when she was surrounded by a mob chanting allahu akbar at speakers corner . so, this story speakers corner. so, this story is kind of insane. and actually it happened a couple of years ago.the it happened a couple of years ago. the incident itself, and it's a sort of microcosm of what we've seen over the last year with the pro—palestinian marches or, you know, peace marches on one side, if you want to call them or hate marches or the other people want to call them. but, the fact was that she was arrested. she spent the night in arrested. she spent the night in a cell, questioned till four in the morning, all of this. and she had done nothing wrong. and at speakers corner, which is the kind of the bastion of the frontline of free speech in in this country, there has been a
5:37 am
real problem for years now with islamists dominating that space. and someone came on andrew doyle saw the guy who runs free speech court, that area and talks about it, how the police don't get active. all they concerned about is maintaining the peace. and in this case, it was this woman's been stabbed before. they've arrested the police, arrested a bunch of times. it's like i say, the second time she's been warned it might be worth mentioning. >> she says she's a christian, which she is. but she's former muslim. former muslim? yeah, turkish. >> i think. turkish. >> i think. turkish. >> yes, yes. and so she is. she denounces. and it all started when she had her copy of the quran snatched from her and stolen or something. she was complaining about that. so she obviously uses a copy of the quran. >> she uses it to, to denounce it, which she has put deliberately put holes into the copy of the quran, because the islamic faith, she claims, has got holes in it, and so that has been stolen. >> so that's been provocative, >> so that's been provocative, >> and that's her. right? >> and that's her. right? >> yes, absolutely. and also the so she's now defend christ critique islam and that is that
5:38 am
is everyone's right. and i think i was actually really shocked and terrified by this in terms of that real sense of oppression thatis of that real sense of oppression that is at speakers corner. and that's not about having freedom of choice , not about free of choice, not about free speech. it's about oppression and trying to it's a mob. yeah. yeah, it really is. >> and because it never used to be, i remember going there in the 80s and 90s. it used to be just old eccentrics, wasn't it? yeah. >> she hasn't committed any crime. no. and they know that she hasn't. and they keep you know, whilst not in any way deaung know, whilst not in any way dealing with the other faction which is the islamist islamists, but we've seen this unfortunately with at these marches, at the peace marches for the radio people. >> i just did inverted commas there. yeah. and we've seen this iranian he's been arrested multiple times for holding up a sign that says hamas are terrorists . now, that is a fact. terrorists. now, that is a fact. robert jenrick was running the other day and pictured wearing that on his t shirt. is he going to be arrested or whatever? and it's just this is the two tier
5:39 am
policing that everyone talks about that supposedly a right wing, if you dare to mention it, but also being arrested for wearing a charlie hebdo t shirt. >> yeah, gangster. >> yeah, gangster. >> we do not have blasphemy laws, so we are, moving on, i'm afraid. >> tempting to introduce this telegraph story with a career ending slew of obscenity charges, but i will leave that up to you. >> oh, i ask a scottish woman to talk about swearing. are you mad? so this is kamala. kamala harris on track to be the scariest president in us history. and yeah, there are several clips of her, saying obviously , i can't tell you what obviously, i can't tell you what she said because there was one where she used the f word in quite surprising circumstances . quite surprising circumstances. >> yes. isn't it about about kicking down the door, down the door? yes. which i remember seeing that clip. >> and it does enhance the sentence. it makes it much. and i think that was the point that was made. it made it much more fortifies it, doesn't it? all that makes it a little bit more interesting, >> is she really the swearing in history though? there must have been some in the past. >> it's a new phenomenon, though. that's it, i guess. >> online swearing is like televised swearing. exactly. >> yeah. whilst there talks about how nixon and i mean, if i
5:40 am
was him in real life nixon, lbj, i bet he was very sweary, but not not in public. and that's what's going on now. >> and i think there was some sort of discovery of, was it george bush had maybe said something off air that had been heard and sort of got hauled up for. yeah, yeah. and it was, it was a george bush. yeah. i'd say that gets ofcom appalling. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> appalling. it's a big, big thing to do. and trump trump uses vulgarities rather than swearing doesn't he. >> a bit. but he is he's not. he uses using them quite a lot but not behind his podium. not when he's making a speech. no, a young entrepreneurs or whatever, but i do. >> i've always loved this thing with swearing, and i think it's something that, you know, because you don't. some people are sensitive to that type of language, but i always think it's don't, don't swear in front of the lady. yeah. quite often people also sorry for swearing in front of me or in front of the children, and particularly children. you go, you know what they listen to. i mean , the they listen to. i mean, the language from children is far worse than some of the swear
5:41 am
words i know. >> and i know my kid and i went mental. you know, so. but yeah, but is she doing it for effect? thatis but is she doing it for effect? that is the idea. she's doing it to be cool. which there's also someone makes the point that we don't do it in uk politics, which is interesting so far , so which is interesting so far, so far. hopefully it's a tradition that won't i don't know, i like swearing, i don't know, can you just mr farage not like a bit of the old swear? >> he swears not. >> he swears not. >> not on this channel. >> not on this channel. >> okay. >> okay. >> josh, the telegraph have an explainer why vanity photographers are a problem for the mps. i think the clue is in the mps. i think the clue is in the title. yeah, well, this is going to kick off to be a pretty big story. >> i think if the right wing press have their say, which they usually do, angela rayner drinking whisky through a straw and other images taken by £68,000 vanity photographer and you know what? it's upsetting because it's hypocritical . of because it's hypocritical. of course, they've unearthed a tweet of her saying why is boris johnson got a photographer? you know, this from a couple of years ago, like on his vanity. so she's of course doing exactly the same thing. they're trying to pretend or they're trying to say that, oh, no, he's a department photographer and all of that. but it's , it is
5:42 am
of that. but it's, it is hypocrisy. it is a waste, arguably, of taxpayers money. and there are implications in terms of what it means for, press freedom because they use these photographers because they have control over those images that then go out and they don't invite the press photographers to these events because they don't want to look like idiots, like what happened with ed miliband eating the bacon sandwich. and since then they labour and all parties have been very scared of. >> oh, do you think that was it? do you think that was. >> i think that's part of showing the dangers of just what the clip. >> you think a good vanity photographer could have made ed miliband look like he was of no one. like no one could be paid that much. third dan expert at eating bacon sandwich. having a vanhy eating bacon sandwich. having a vanity photographer doesn't stop other people from taking photographs of them. >> and then being. >> and then being. >> but if they haven't been invited, if they just don't know whether the thing is. oh, i see what you mean. >> right. okay. but that's really risky because that runs the risk that the papers will just go, well, no, we're not going to talk about it. >> if you're not going to invite us and allow us to sort of
5:43 am
witness it, our papers still have to fill up their space. >> we still have to fill up our space again. >> you're right, josh, it is. it's the hypocrisy. and it's like, you know, it's blatant hypocrisy and it's like, how can you you must have known. you've said that. and in particular, there's just so many tweets. >> yeah, exactly. it's like, delete your twitter. you won't catch me in precisely three and a half years time. >> that's what worries me. that somebody doesn't actually remember that they've said that because. so it makes you wonder whether she actually believes it or not, or she just says what she thinks in the moment because what a politician saying what they know. i know if you tell they know. i know if you tell the truth, you don't have to remember. >> you've lied. we have the brits still suppressing their feelings. liverpool toys price at liverpool toy. but sorry, i don't know what word is supposed to be there. toy with pricing themselves out of the tourist buck and not want not is not want not is not wanted. we'll
5:44 am
5:45 am
5:46 am
5:47 am
and welcome back to headliners. so we start with those ambitious fiscal plans from liverpool . fiscal plans from liverpool. joj'0, fiscal plans from liverpool. jojo, reported in the telegraph , jojo, reported in the telegraph, >> yes. liverpool crying out. i'll see what they did there for a tourist tax to tackle deprivation. and this has been done quite a lot of places. i remember in tenerife they have a tourist tax and things. it's kind of a pop. >> so what places, places do you want to go to? >> yeah, edinburgh are talking about introducing it next year in the festival. >> tourists want to go to labour
5:48 am
run. >> oh, are you saying that . oh >> oh, are you saying that. oh you're rotten. honestly, i've got well i actually genuinely do love liverpool, but that's because i've got one of my best mates there, so i when i get to 90, mates there, so i when i get to go, but i don't know if i want to pay £1.30. well labour run liverpool has called for a tourist tax on visitors to tackle deprivation among residents, so the council leader, liam robertson, said the port city was crying out for a european style levy on visitors dunng european style levy on visitors during an event at the labour party conference being held there . so yes, so they're having there. so yes, so they're having their labour party conference there, right. and they want anybody that wants to go to liverpool to pay more, to go to liverpool to pay more, to go to liverpool to pay more, to go to liverpool to be there. >> i think i mean, the idea of a tourist tax suggests that otherwise tourists don't pay any tax, which is not quite true, is it? anytime you go into a cafe as a tourist or stay at a hotel, you're paying vat on everything? >> well, what they should do is what they do in edinburgh or anywhere else where something suddenly happens, they hike the pnces suddenly happens, they hike the prices up. then if you go live, just take an extra quid on the pint, surge pricing and then you get the vat on that surge taxing as well as taxing . so yes, like as well as taxing. so yes, like stealth tourists. >> but that's got to be the
5:49 am
calculation, isn't it? if as a tourist, if you've got a thousand tourists a year, let's say, and you put on a tourist tax and now you've only got 900 tourists a year and they're spending an extra 10%, it's roughly the same. i suppose. but do you know what i mean? >> it's like liverpool's city centre. you've got all the beatles stuff, you've got the marino, you've got the marina, you've got. yeah exactly. you've got the marina, which is pretty cool. i mean, i've spent many weekends in liverpool and had a nice time, but the idea that you're changing your tune. >> no, no, but the idea that it's like, you know, the people, the places that normally have this are rome, but barcelona, catalonia and venice and the canary islands and. >> yeah. yes it just is. it seems somewhat amusing to me that liverpool are saying, well, the very fact that they're saying we need to raise some to money deal with the extreme deprivation that we're the poorest city in england. >> that sounds like an interesting tourist offer. >> unless it's a tour of the deprivation . yeah. deprivation. yeah. >> oh, no, that's a good plan. yeah. >> daily mail now, josh, they have a story about one of the most tiresome manifestations of
5:50 am
urban philanthropy. >> oh, gosh. yeah. councils urged to go soft on middle class flytippers after residents handed fines for leaving items out in the street. so this is what's called free cycling. and all the little you've got your little whatsapp groups in your local area go. i'm just putting out my, cabinet or whatever it is. in this case, it was a cabinet. they got a £500 fine. wow. for leaving out this ikea cabinet. >> and you could buy a new one for that. you could buy you could buy ikea. yeah. >> so this is. but really what this is, is, is councils trying to get as much money as possible and being. >> is it not them trying to keep the pavements clean? i actually do bristle a little bit when they just people leave furniture in the middle of the pavement. you're right for the nimble likes of you and me, some people on the mobility scooters or with the push, you know, the prams and whatever. >> well, if you're leaving a sofa. yeah, but if you're leaving, like a toy or a like, i think there should be a standard size. >> i think things left on the wall is fine. okay. left on your own wall or in your own path. >> what about in the shop? >> what about in the shop?
5:51 am
>> yeah, it's too hard. or even to the dump where they actually have a shop there. >> that's the whole point. if you want something to be picked up because someone else can get a use out of it, take it to a place where someone would know, i don't know, to go to number 33 wall on you know. >> but it's hard work, isn't it? they're just, you know, they're lazy. >> but anyway, this is a nine page guidance guidance form that's saying , okay, go easy on that's saying, okay, go easy on the guidance we have. >> no not go easy on them. pay for the uplift or take it to the charity shop . charity shop. >> we have one moment to go. news from sweden now about snowplough priorities that i sense might be slightly academic for brits. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so yes , councils should >> so yes, councils should prioritise women by clearing snow from pavements first because apparently women walk more and men drive more. so women have more accidents due to snow from walking on uncleared pavements, which especially if they're cluttered up with furniture and or drunk. exactly. if you can't get past the ikea bookcase , i'll just walk past bookcase, i'll just walk past this snow drift. >> oh no, it's solid.
5:52 am
>> you can't see it because it's white, so it is, yeah. again, i just how do they do these studies and how do they find out that more men drive and more women walk? >> and i guess maybe in sweden it's a more old fashioned. well, actually, it's not, is it? that's the interesting thing. sweden is a very free society in which both genders have reverted to their most. this is why 80% of nurses are women, and 80% of engineers and men are sort of because they're going to have enormous freedom. >> but if they don't know the roads, they've got all the blokes are going to run over all the women on the pavement. >> that's it. yeah because they're dreadful drivers. >> well, that's about all we have time for. sadly, we didn't get on to the new dating trend, which is for book nooks , but which is for book nooks, but maybe we can do that tomorrow for our bookish viewers, the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at tuesday's front pages . we have the front pages. we have the telegraph light at the end of the tunnel, pm tells britain and snappily dressed lord alli. there male union boss will seize
5:53 am
control of uk economy. the commanding heights guardian pm vows to end gloom as labour seeks to lift spending restrictions . the sun nick's restrictions. the sun nick's strictly s.o.s. the times labour to crack down on benefit fraudsters. and finally, the star. it's boaty mcboatface. those were your front pages, that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie and jojo sutherland . we're howie and jojo sutherland. we're back tomorrow at 11:00 pm with andrew doyle and the big c, kerry marks and scott capurro, whose guests, if you're watching at 5 am. stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise, thank you very much for your company. thank you. for those who alerted me to the president thing. cheers. good night . cheers. good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news >> thanks for joining on gb news >> thanks forjoining me on gb news >> thanks for joining me for your latest weather updates from the met office here on gb news. it's been another very wet day, but the rain will at least be easing for many areas overnight
5:54 am
and generally much drier day tomorrow, although there will still be some rain across scotland, scotland , northern scotland, scotland, northern ireland been largely dry today. it's been across england and wales where we've had the heavy and persistent rain from this area of low pressure still. met office yellow weather warning remains in place as that rain does start to ease from central parts, but staying pretty soggy across eastern england well into the night. drier elsewhere. but we will see some rain just creeping into northern scotland. temperatures in scotland with some clearer skies dipping to single figures but most staying in double digits onto tuesday. overall, a much, much drier day, particularly where we've seen the heavy and persistent rain today over these central areas, it will be a wetter day, though, in northern scotland and with the wind coming in from the northeast, feeling pretty cool as that rain sets in across the moray firth in particular, a few scattered showers coming into northern ireland during the morning and the odd one over northern england too, and the remnants of today's rain still clinging to the coasts around to east anglia and kent. but generally speaking, across
5:55 am
england and wales are much, much dner england and wales are much, much drier day. thankfully, compared to today, the rain will keep going across northeastern scotland . if you see a few more scotland. if you see a few more showers coming into southeast scotland and across northern england and north wales too, across the midlands, southern england quite a bit of cloud, but some bright spells coming through. bit of sunshine in northern ireland is possible. also on the cool side, temperatures struggling up into the low, teens across the north, maybe high teens further south. a chilly start to wednesday , by a chilly start to wednesday, by and large a dry start, but we will see more rain creeping in from the southwest as the day goes on. some showers in northern scotland, but many areas dry and bright for much of the morning until this next area of rain comes in. and that is a sign of things to come for much of this week, before things then turn colder towards the end of the week. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on
5:56 am
5:57 am
5:58 am
5:59 am
6:00 am
under her watch. >> so it will be a budget with real ambition, a budget to fix the foundations. a budget to deliver the change that we promised. a budget to rebuild britain . britain. >> well, with the black hole and pubuc >> well, with the black hole and public spending, the prime minister will pledge to crack down on benefit fraudsters heard it all before. her view is starmer, a broken record as a month's worth of rain falls in one day. >> schools and businesses in central and south england are left picking up the pieces . left picking up the pieces. >> from today, it becomes illegal to own zombie knives. gb news talks to a campaigner who worries it doesn't go far enough. >> it's an absolute waste of
6:01 am
time

10 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on