tv [untitled] October 12, 2024 10:30pm-11:00pm BST
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69. pm scapegoats minister to save £1 billion deal and ed miliband wastes cash on net zero. pylon blight. the observer now starmer steps into cabinet row to rescue global summits. a monumental figure. salmond dies at 69, is in the observer sunday express now. rapists and thugs to get bail. hundreds of suspected rapists, violent thugs and drug traffickers could be freed on bail ahead of trial because of a cutback on part time judges and vanessa feltz, good friend of mine . front page good friend of mine. front page of the express. mum put me on a diet when i was just nine. sunday mirror now. pm on first 100 days in office keir starmer. judge me on how we fix britain . judge me on how we fix britain. starmer says his government is just getting started. sun on sunday i'm a celeb. well, actually we're not going to give
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this one away. we're going to save that for a couple of minutes time because it's a big surprise. mail on sunday boost your health forever with michael mosley's daily just one thing lifestyle tweets brilliant health guru. of course we miss him very much. and labour sleaze latest row engulfing home secretary over taxpayer funded motorcade for pop superstar deepens as it's revealed. lord chief pressurised metz to give taylor her vip escort. daily star sunday the last one. have we got that folks .7 okay, we'll we got that folks.7 okay, we'll come to that in just a moment. but first, let's get reaction to all of the big stories of the day with our lovely pundits and delighted to have fleur , delighted to have fleur, elizabeth, nina, myskow and neil wallis. nina 100 days of labour. what a disaster. >> they've really screwed it up, haven't they? you know , it's haven't they? you know, it's been quite extraordinary to watch and i think part of the problem is that rishi sunak
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called the election far earlier than anybody thought, and i don't think they were ready for it. >> that's an interesting theory. >> that's an interesting theory. >> i don't think they were ready. they were ready to win an election. they weren't ready to take power. it's a very different being in power. and, you know, 14 years, you know how you know, 14 years, you know how you deal with whitehall. you don't learn that in two seconds. >> fleur. elizabeth, will the next 100 days be worse? >> well, it says they're just getting started, and i do not want to see what happens next. it's every day you're just like , it's every day you're just like, what is going on? it's like we're living in a nightmare. i'm. i'm just hoping that we get a great. the best leader of the opposition coming from the conservative leadership contest, who can give a bit more rebuttal than, than rishi is giving at the moment? >> and who is that best leader, by the way? is it badenoch or is it jenrick? >> it's bobby jay, is that right? >> what's what's bobby jay got oven >> what's what's bobby jay got over. over. kemi. >> he is . immigration is the >> he is. immigration is the biggest issue in the country . biggest issue in the country. and he is the only one that is
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committed to leaving the echr, meaning that we can deport foreign criminals , we can secure foreign criminals, we can secure our borders. yeah , but respect our borders. yeah, but respect fleur. >> if we leave the echr , then >> if we leave the echr, then you compromise the good friday agreement. and you're far too young to remember the troubles in ireland. but part of that good friday deal depends on our being both being in the echr. and note that that's been rarely discussed. >> there has to be a legal workaround. do you object to the idea, as suggested by robert jenrick today, nina, of a million foreign migrants who are criminals being deported from this country? >> are there a million criminals in this country? >> that's a big figure. in this country? >> that's a big figure . but >> that's a big figure. but they're illegal people here in they're illegal people here in the country illegally, illegally. so that makes them criminals, doesn't it? >> but how do we come by this figure of a million illegal migrants in this country? we don't. we've got a backlog of it's 80, 80 odd don't. we've got a backlog of it's 80, 80 odd thousand. we haven't got a backlog of a million. >> okay, well, what do you think
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about this, neil? it's a bold headune about this, neil? it's a bold headline from trump. headline robert jenrick that he will deport a million people when he becomes prime minister. >> i think the figures are very difficult. i think though however i don't think that's right. nina. there's only 8020 thousand, but the point being the point being something has to be done. but it's not a million people. >> that's a trump headline, right? it's nonsense. >> fine. well, we accept every asylum application. >> then what would you say? >> then what would you say? >> it's 120,000. it's not million. >> what would you say to our viewers and listeners who would welcome the idea of kicking a million illegal migrants out of britain when he becomes prime minister? why isn't that a good thing? if they're not supposed to be here, they're using british resources. >> show me the million people that are not supposed to be here. >> well, what if it's half million? >> what if it's a quarter of a million a quarter? >> and how is he going to do that? by leaving the echr echr and showing the political to will really do something about it.
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>> by the way, now, with this line, it's a headline in the express robert jenrick vows to kick a million illegal migrants out of the country in hard line. tory leadership pledge is robert jenrick out foraging nigel farage, neil. >> well, he's probably having a good go and i'm not a great fan, to be honest, of jenrick, i'm not sure. i mean, i wanted cleverly to get it, but because i am worried about you have to the similarity between the two contestants, they both right of centre. i'm right wing and i actually i actually have a vote in this, but i think it's yes, i take your point entirely about it being the tory party, but the tory party, like most parties, has to be an amalgam of things. and you have to take part of it. absolutely. well, yeah. tories have only ever for 14 years and the public rejected it . the public rejected it. >> the cosy liberal consensus to which the tories have signed up
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these days the conservatives are glorified liberal democrats without the sandals or the toyota prius. >> so ? so that is the liberal democrats. >> so they will not have that said about the liberal democrats. >> yeah. so that's bullying . so >> yeah. so that's bullying. so the point being i guess is everything you say is right, including what you just said about the liberal democrats being sort of sat there just cruising on everybody else's coattails with not a policy between them, don't you? they are completely useless. >> don't you want to reverse two seats? >> don't you want to have 120? don't you want a robust conservative leading the party? yes, i do. i want margaret thatcher back. unfortunately, i can't have robert jenrick second best. his conversion to the right seems to me to have been. he in many ways ticks my boxes. but his quite recent conversion to the right comes as a bit of a surprise to me. i don't think he's had a great history to it. >> conservatives have only won from the centre ground. they're mad to have two candidates from the right. they cannot.
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nonsense. they cannot go up against so how how did how did bofis against so how how did how did boris johnson win from the centre boris johnson. >> no, he won on breakfast. >> no, he won on breakfast. >> no, he won on breakfast. >> no he won. >> no he won. >> he won because of brexit. because he's boris. >> he won because of brexit is the ticket to right wing badenoch versus jenrick. is there a lack of choice there for voters? >> no. these are where we have gone, where the conservatives have gone wrong as a party is being a broad church. we they had this great majority in 2019 because people lent their votes from labour to do brexit and they have now lost those votes back to labour to and reform. and these are two groups that care about they're not these are two groups that care about immigration. >> unite around the ultimate winner . >> unite around the ultimate winner. given that both candidates are on the right. yes. and given that the tory backbenchers are as wet as they come, 100%. >> when jenrick said that he would make sure all future candidates would also agree with leaving the echr and that anyone
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in the cabinet, i think is right. that's what he said about the cabinet. that is uniting them. it's saying if you are not with me , you're out. with me, you're out. >> never win the next never, never win. get anywhere near the next election with those two candidates. >> well, that's an interesting suggestion. >> firm lack of leadership. there from robert jenrick, which we saw for many , many years in we saw for many, many years in alex salmond , who was the leader alex salmond, who was the leader of the alba party when he sadly, tragically passed away at the age of 69. today after a speaking engagement in north macedonia. you knew alex salmond and
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