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tv   [untitled]    October 13, 2024 5:00am-5:31am BST

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change that you voted for. the next 100 days starts now. and i won't waste a moment. >> the prime minister there. and finally, for now, gb news can reveal that an average of 135 migrants have crossed the engush migrants have crossed the english channel in small boats each day since prime minister sir keir starmer took office. over 13,500 have arrived since the 5th of july, and today alone, more than 400 migrants made the perilous journey from france, pushing the total for the year to nearly 27,200. a home office spokesman insists they're committed to dismantling people smuggling operations, saying the government will stop at nothing to bring these criminals to justice. those are your latest gb news headlines. for now, i'm katie bown. now it's for now, i'm katie bown. now wsfime for now, i'm katie bown. now it's time for headliners for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone , sign up to news your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts .
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slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at sunday's newspapers. with the help of three comedians. i'm stephen allen. tonight we have a man who has just moved up one place in the greatest living scottish men. it's leo kearse and a non—mover at number two for the most famous dixon on gb news it's nick dixon. >> how dare you . >> how dare you. >> how dare you. >> who's the other dixon? >> who's the other dixon? >> stephen. >> stephen. >> so you didn't know? which proves i'm number one. >> oh is it though? i'm not sure. we do a survey. not on this show. and maybe. do you watch every weekend and see you still there and be like, oh, no, he watches me though. >> there's a there's another one at itv as well. there's loads. it's a big problem there. >> right. let's crack on to take a look at the front pages. we'll start with the mail on sunday with law chiefs pressured met to give taylor her vip escort. not that kind of escort sunday telegraph miliband waste cash on net zero pile on blight sunday
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times goes with alex salmond, titan of scottish independence , titan of scottish independence, dies aged 69 sunday express rapists and thugs to get bail. the observer says . starmer steps the observer says. starmer steps into cabinet row to rescue global summit and finally, the daily star sunday elvis has not left the building and those are your front pages. so leo will dig into the newspapers and find what we've got, starting with the sunday times. >> so the sunday times leads with the story, the sad story that alex salmond, the titan of scottish independence, has died aged 69. nicola sturgeon hails her mentor after the snp's ex—leader collapses following a speech abroad in north macedonia . speech abroad in north macedonia. nicola sturgeon. that's probably the only nice thing, she's said about him in the last 20 years. i mean, she, you know, was pretty. she she was part of the reason he got booted out of the booted out of the party. but
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yeah, alex solomon i mean, he had a huge impact on, on scotland and scottish politics, not all of it positive. i mean he really brought scottish nationalism into the mainstream. i remember when i was a kid growing up, scottish nationalism, it was all these like weirdos who, you know, hated the english. and turns out we've got loads of them and they'd all vote for this party. and he was out in north macedonia , which, ironically, is macedonia, which, ironically, is part of the balkans. and, you know, we could see britain balkanised into these, into these areas based on nationalism, you know, wales, cornwall , scotland, getting cornwall, scotland, getting their own areas and also by religion. i think we've seen a couple of generations we're going to have muslim areas and then the rest of england. >> yeah, it was a massive figure in british politics. people talked about his charisma on the earlier show and very effective at what he did, no matter what you think of his politics, because he took the snp from nothing, as people were saying earlier and then got kicked out a bit like steve jobs getting kicked out of apple. it's
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annoying when you take something from the ground up and then get kicked out of it, and he did sort of offer in later years, people, when i spoke to scottish people, when i spoke to scottish people, they were quite a few of them liked alba because it was an option for independence without some of the woke madness of the snp. is that fair? >> do you know what? weirdly, i, i work with him about a month ago, which means i probably work with him more recently than nicola sturgeon, and yet everyone's going to be speaking to her in the news. weird. and it was like a comedy thing we were doing funny man as well. like in the bit that we were doing, i said that he, you know, the baby reindeer interview woman. i said it was him in a wig and because he could do a really good impression of her. fair's fair. we all do impressions on this show. he could do a really well. >> she sounds like a scottish man. >> i mean, yeah, actually, i shouldn't say that. >> she'll sue me for $120 million. >> yeah, that happens quite a lot. but yeah, i mean, so it's the charisma that makes you good at speeches also means that you can you know, he did loads of punditry work recently. so yeah, it's shocking to die at 69 as well. i mean that is young these days isn't it. well in scotland do you know what. fair play.
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good. yeah. how many years is that in. >> we can't make that comment. but luckily you can say that. >> well we'll find out won't we on twitter. yeah . moving on to on twitter. yeah. moving on to the front page of the sunday telegraph. nick, what have they got? >> yeah. well of course they have salman as well. but they have salman as well. but they have miliband waste cash on net zero. pylon blight sees pylon blight. we've heard so much about and what it is miliband is so obsessed with pylons. he's it says here ideologically committed to pylons. it's just a weird thing to be. he is a bit of a pylon, isn't he? it's just a weird thing to be committed to. and he's so obsessed with 2030 that he wants to build these pylons, even though if they waited till 2034, they could do an underground cable system, which would come in £600 million cheaper. but everyone's like, oh, 2030 because they've just made up this arbitrary deadline. when the world has to end.so deadline. when the world has to end. so you have to hit everything by 2030. so imagine the damage that pylon is going to do. i've just come up with pylon ed, but i'm sticking with it. >> yeah i mean it does. i'm surprised that it's cheaper to put cables in than pylons. i thought that's why you did pylons in the air because it was
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a lot easier than burying all of those cables. it took forever when virgin media did it around where i live. so imagine doing that through the whole country. >> i think it's to do with with ongoing maintenance, because obviously you've got pterodactyls, you've got ukrainian drones flying into these cables. so, you know, it doesn't it doesn't work out . but doesn't it doesn't work out. but this is just part of labour's ideological attack on nimbyism. so they've decided that nimbyism is terrible at stopping, you know, big large scale projects getting underway. the investment in infrastructure is stopping new houses being built. so the punishment is part of the process for labour, the punishment is part of the appeal for, for ed miliband. he wants to punish people who don't, you know , people say, oh, we don't know, people say, oh, we don't want these big pylons, you know, and they're buzzing and they're giving us weird medical conditions . he, he, he, he still conditions. he, he, he, he still he wants to build them more . he wants to build them more. >> because of that, he gets to ruin people's areas on the way to ruining energy. >> so it's all a win to ruin the country as well. but we've got some of the highest this push for net zero is just completely bonkers, because britain's a
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tiny part of the world, a tiny part of world emissions. and we've got some of the most expensive electricity in the world, so we shouldn't be. and this is holding back as well as putting a cost on to people. and as well as killing people because people can't afford to heat their homes or chill their gin and tonics. it's, it's holding back our economic growth. and in a few years, like solar is becoming so efficient and so cheap that, you know, we're not going to need pylons going out to the north sea, we'll just be able to have solar panels on everything. >> you think solar is going to work in england? >> yeah. it's becoming so efficient that like, you could just put solar panels on everything. >> what's happening is global warming is giving us so much sun. this is how it works. the solar is going
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