tv Patrick Christys Tonight GB News January 29, 2025 3:00am-5:01am GMT
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usa. usa. uk. he is on his usa. usa. usa. uk. he is on his way. >> radical islam. >> radical islam. >> is spreading. >> is spreading. >> uk. >> uk. >> oh my god. >> oh my god. >> home office advisers used this. >> are we can make peyton stearns. >> to minimise islamist terrorism and try to criminalise people for this. >> there is a growing feeling of angerin >> there is a growing feeling of anger in this country that we are living through. two tier policing and a two tier justice system. >> those home office staff need to be sacked now, and while we're at it. >> open the door. is the police. >> open the door. is the police. >> should children prosecuted for their role in the summer disorder have their criminal
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records quashed? also tonight. britain's population is set to rise by 5,000,000 in 10 years, all down to mass migration. should we have a one in, one out policy? plus. bin collections just once a month. potholes everywhere. yet your council tax might go up 25%. oh, and. >> the former treasury minister, stephen timms, is being treated for stab wounds in an east london hospital. >> a labour mp who was stabbed by a radical islamist, broke labour party rules and attended an event with the muslim council of britain. does this show how desperate labour are for the muslim vote? also tonight. >> sit down there. stop around.
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well, beth is here. you can see bofis well, beth is here. you can see boris johnson's speech when it happens around lunchtime. >> sky news is losing the ratings war. so they're going off linear telly. and the government might make people who don't even watch terrestrial television pay the bbc licence fee. what a time to be alive. oh, and disgraced referee david coote does a schofield and comes out as gay after a massive scandal and hollywood celebrities continue to embarrass themselves. >> just wanted to say that i'm so sorry. all my people are getting attacked. >> i don't think we arrested any families. we've arrested public safety threats and national security threats. bottom line. >> on my panel tonight, it's former tory minister for common sense. esther mcvey gb news presenter alex armstrong and journalist jonathan lees. oh, and why is this roly poly rapper in the news? >> i can fit in this car. >> not believe. >> not believe. >> me, you can't. yes i can.
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believe me. so i'm sorry. >> get ready britain. here we go. it's time to sack home office staff. next. >> very good evening to you from the newsroom. it is just after 9:00. the top story tonight. the uk's population is set to soar by nearly 5 million people over the next decade, driven almost entirely by net migration, according to new figures from the office for national statistics. that means that by the middle of 2032, the uk population will hit 72.5 million, sparking concerns over pressure on resources and services. campaigners are also sounding the alarm over social care, with the number of over 85 set to double to 3.3 million by
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2047. that's as the sector is already struggling to meet current demand. the conservatives are calling for a legal cap on visas, but downing street has rejected that idea, insisting their own policies will tackle the issue more effectively. a leaked home office report has revealed a proposal to classify conspiracy theories, misogyny and the manosphere as extremism, but the government is pushing back, insisting there are no plans to expand the definition. the home office minister, dan jarvis, says the leaked documents don't reflect current policy and were never meant to be implemented. the review, commissioned by the home secretary, yvette cooper, also suggests new laws to crack down on harmful online content. but critics warn it could overwhelm authorities and risk missing truly dangerous extremists. the scottish government has launched a review of child protection following the conviction of seven members of a glasgow child abuse ring. that case, which saw three children subjected to horrific abuse in a drug den in glasgow,
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has raised serious questions about how authorities failed to act despite clear signs of neglect. the scottish children's minister says the situation is a horrifying failure and stressed the need for urgent action. msps have now questioned whether child safeguarding in scotland is even fit for purpose. the government, though, has vowed to ensure lessons are learned and that such abuse never happens again. donald trump has approved lord peter mandelson as the uk's next ambassador to washington, despite concerns over his alleged links to china. a dossier reportedly handed to the fbi by american senators claimed mandelson had ties to state owned chinese firms, once branding trump a danger to the world. mandelson had recently praised the president's straight talking instincts in an attempt to mend relations with whitehall, whitehall sources tonight have told gb news the process is still ongoing, but that the decision brings relief after weeks of uncertainty over his nomination, he'll now
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expected to take up that role next month , and the government next month, and the government is considering a major shake—up to how the bbc is funded, with households using streaming services like netflix and disney potentially being hit with the licence fee. it's reported the idea is part of a menu of opfions idea is part of a menu of options under discussion, including a tax on streaming services or asking bbc radio listeners to pay the fee. ministers are also exploring alternatives like advertising or alternatives like advertising or a subscription model, as viewing habhs a subscription model, as viewing habits slowly shift away from traditional tv. and just before ihand traditional tv. and just before i hand you back to patrick, take a look at this boom. supersonic took to the skies earlier in a historic test flight over the mojave desert, setting the stage for a possible return of supersonic travel. it could redefine the way we take holidays and push the boundaries of speed, and marking a significant step toward breaking the sound barrier. once again, the sound barrier. once again, the xbi the sound barrier. once again, the xbi is expected to create a sonic boom and could potentially be heard 30 miles away. the
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milestone comes after some successful test flights, including one earlier this month where the jet reached 728 miles an hour. well after that successful test flight. a new 64 seat supersonic jet could soon take to the skies, marking the first of its kind since the concorde. those are the latest headlines. i'll be back with you in around an hour. now, though, it's over to patrick. >> 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/alerts. >> good evening. welcome along. it's time to sack home office staff. home office advisers looked at the southport incident and used it as an opportunity to downplay islamist extremism and class more people as far right. they spent five months writing a report into the counter—terror
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programme, prevent that ignored the fact that islamists are responsible for 95% of terror related deaths since 1999 and 88% of injuries, and they decided to class jihadi terror at the same level as the movement for sikh independence and the earth liberation front. at the same time, they wanted people who dare to mention two tier policing or hey, taxpayers money spent on migrant hotels to be classed as far right. they said that pakistani rape gangs were alleged grooming gangs and they only mentioned them in the context of far right people using them to whip up racial hatred. they are a disgrace and should be sacked for that alone in my view. shortly before gb news broke the leaked report before anyone else at 10 pm. last night, the government got in touch to tell us that they would be rejecting the findings of said report. so, at minimum, those who wrote it should be sacked for doing bad work, shouldn't they, like in any other business? former immigration minister, now shadow
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justice secretary robert jenrick has called for them to be fired. but for me, the real problem is deepen but for me, the real problem is deeper. it's cultural. former tory mp andrew griffiths was on gb news this morning, alluding to it. >> it's extremely disturbing that this home office report has reached this conclusion. the home secretary needs to publish this immediately so that we can all see for ourselves what and who it is that's saying these non—crime hate incidents, these attacks and waste of police resources, something a conservative home secretary stopped. it just keeps coming back. and there's clearly a cell within the home office that is not concerned about ordinary crime, ordinary policing, the sort of things that people are experiencing every day on our streets, mobile phones being stolen, burglaries not being followed up by police in favour of this ideological approach to non—crime hate incidents. >> so let's look at the circus
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going on behind the scenes. the permanent secretary of the home office is a diversity and faith champion. he can't even answer bafic champion. he can't even answer basic questions about illegal immigration. >> put foreign offenders aside and albanians aside. just forget about those numbers. how many people travelling on small boats has been refused asylum , have has been refused asylum, have been sent to a third country or back to their own country over the past three years? >> i don't think we have. i don't think we'll write to the committee don't
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