tv [untitled] October 14, 2024 9:30am-10:01am BST
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>> morning 930 on monday the 14th of october. live across the uk. this is britain's newsroom with andrew pierce and bev turner. >> good morning . thanks for >> good morning. thanks for joining us. world leading ceos and investors are in london this morning as sir keir starmer aims to secure investment for britain. but there was no invite for the world's richest man. the ceo of x, formerly twitter, elon musk . musk. >> trump in trouble. police in america foil a potential third assassination attempt against donald trump as a gunman
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presenting fake vip credentials. was arrested and taken into custody. >> and how are you getting on smashing those gangs, prime minister? labour's plans for ten more years of small boats with a £500 million contract set aside for migrant centres . for migrant centres. >> and we'll give you our reaction to ian hislop's sly dig @gbnews on the bbc. i've got news panel show this weekend. have a listen. >> you can't just say you've selected the audience. you've got no evidence for that. no proof. it'sjust got no evidence for that. no proof. it's just this isn't gb news . news. >> oh can't wait to get stuck into that. and we're going to be joined by the amazing adventurer ash . he's set a new world record ash. he's set a new world record two. in fact, after he kayaked the length of one of the world's most remote rivers in a 37 day journey, he's going to be here as well with his girlfriend, who had to wait at home for him .
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had to wait at home for him. oh, it's a good monday morning. there's a lot to get stuck into this morning. let us know your thoughts as well. gb news dot com forward slash your safe first though in the gb newsroom. here's tatiana sanchez . here's tatiana sanchez. >> bev turner thank you very much. the top stories this morning. sir keir starmer will pledge to get rid of regulation that quote needlessly holds back investment at a major business conference today, the government is expected to unveil investment deals worth billions in al , life deals worth billions in al, life sciences and infrastructure at its first international investment summit , its first international investment summit, a its first international investment summit , a row over investment summit, a row over criticism of p&o ferries that reportedly jeopardised a £1 billion investment by its owner, dp world, has been smoothed oven dp world, has been smoothed over, with the company saying it will attend the conference today. the government aims to show it's making progress on its mission to deliver economic growth after marking 100 days in
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office, and also ahead of the chancellor's first budget at the end of the month. shadow secretary of state for science and technology andrew griffiths says he fears the current government don't understand business left the economy in decent shape. >> it was our government that made the uk a science and technology superpower. there are 100 days in and what we're heanng 100 days in and what we're hearing about is a tax on jobs, which would break their manifesto promise. last week we had this whole slew of workers rights, which means you can turn up for work on a monday morning and then take your employer to and then take your employer to an employment tribunal in the afternoon. and now, the chancellor, ahead of the budget, we're hearing, is going to fiddle the definition of debt so they can go on a spending splurge splurge. so for business not all that great to be honest . not all that great to be honest. >> elsewhere, four idf soldiers have been killed and more than 60 wounded in a drone strike on an army base in northern israel. it's the deadliest attack on an israeli base since israel stepped up attacks on hezbollah in lebanon last month. lebanese
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terror group hezbollah have claimed responsibility for the attack. this comes as the un peacekeeping mission says israeli tanks have forcibly entered its base in southern lebanon. the health ministry says 51 people were killed by israeli strikes across the country yesterday that while palestinian medics say at least ten people have been killed and 30 injured in israeli airstrikes on a food distribution centre in a refugee camp in northern gaza. those casualties reportedly included women and children . now included women and children. now a potential third assassination attempt on former us president donald trump was reportedly thwarted on saturday night, local police arrested an armed man carrying multiple weapons and fake passports as he attempted to get into a trump rally in california . the 49 year rally in california. the 49 year old las vegas resident, varne miller , denied wanting to hurt miller, denied wanting to hurt the former president after being released on bail. and the inquiry into how a british woman
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was fatally poisoned after being exposed to the russian nerve agent novichok, is set to open today. 44 year old mother of three, dawn sturgess, was pronounced dead at salisbury district hospital on the 8th of july in 2018. she collapsed at her partner charlie rowley's home in june of 2018 after coming into contact with a perfume bottle containing novichok. the post—mortem indication caused that the death was novichok poisoning. mr rowley was also poisoned. he was discharged from hospital despite being critically ill for two weeks, and those are the latest gb news headlines. for now, i'm tatiana sanchez. more from me in half an hour for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone , sign up to news smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gb news .com . or go to gb news .com. >> forward slash alerts .
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>> forward slash alerts. >> forward slash alerts. >> good morning. 935 monday morning this is britain's newsroom live across the uk on gb news with me, bev turner and andrew pierce. >> well, i don't always watch have i got news for you? but i did see ian hislop on the bbc panel show the other day where he took a swipe, of course, @gbnews. have a listen to this. >> he'll come back won't he? >> he'll come back won't he? >> i don't think it's over for him. >> no. >> no. >> you don't think it's over? >> you don't think it's over? >> i still think boris was one of our better prime ministers. yeah.i of our better prime ministers. yeah. i see you selected the audience. >> you know, the people who don't like boris or conservatives. >> you can't just say you've selected the audience. you've got no evidence for that. no proof. it'sjust got no evidence for that. no proof. it's just this isn't gb news . news. >> oh, well, firstly, thank you for the publicity . hislop. it's for the publicity. hislop. it's nice to get the name of gb news out there . that was of course out there. that was of course dame andrea jenkyns who lost her seat. she did sadly in this
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election and actually you know that those audiences are chosen to be noisy . to be noisy. >> and it's the same with question time. let me look at the unanimous cheering and applause. >> well, i don't think they i don't think they well, to quote in his lot, we have no evidence of the fact that they are selected. but i think the point that andrea jenkyns was trying to make, really, is that the bbc audience is, i suppose, inherently anti—conservative. whether that makes them pro labour or pro lib dem. i would say she was right about that . say she was right about that. >> i would say especially anti, especially anti boris. >> oh yeah. absolutely. hey listen i am anti boris. you don't have to be a psychic to work that one out. >> bbc audiences never forgiven bofis >> bbc audiences never forgiven boris for brexit and i've never forgiven him for lockdowns. >> so look there's a lot of people who don't like boris johnson. but i think for me, what was so infuriating about that was this idea that gb news is always the punchline of the joke. when is that going to end? because what the bbc and ian hislop are effectively saying is that all of you out there watching and listening right
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now, the hundreds of thousands of you who watch this channel every single day, and we regularly beat sky news, we regularly beat sky news, we regularly beat sky news, we regularly beat bbc news. they think that that you are stupid. thatis think that that you are stupid. that is what they're saying. you don't know your own minds. you can't be trusted. >> stupid and probably bigoted . probably. >> you mean the assumption being that they're bigoted? yeah. yeah. well, again, he didn't say that. that might be the assumption, but what he did say was that you believe things that aren't true because we don't take our editorial standards seriously, and that is patently untrue. i can tell you that we sit here as journalists and we take our obligations to be factually accurate, very, very seriously. >> well, we have to conform with ofcom regulations and basic journalism rules. you check , you journalism rules. you check, you check your facts and just just move on in his life. >> just move on because it's nice to know we live in your head and you think about us. >> i think a year ago they wouldn't have even mentioned it. well, no, because we are breathing down their neck. we are overtaking them in many programs. this program , for programs. this program, for instance, regularly beats what's on the bbc at this moment.
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