tv Farage GB News February 11, 2025 12:00am-1:00am GMT
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or work in britain. live or work in britain. however, only a tiny fraction of the thousands of deportations include those who crossed the engush include those who crossed the english channel illegally on small boats. home secretary yvette cooper says rules need to be respected. >> well, we need to prevent these dangerous boat crossings in the first place. that's why we are today in parliament debating new counter—terror style powers to go after the criminal gangs. and we also need to clear the ridiculous backlog that we inherited from the conservatives, so that also small boat arrivals who have no right to be in the uk can also be returned as part of the increase in returns and enforcement that this labour government has been setting out, we have to make sure rules are respected and enforced. >> chancellor rachel reeves has faced calls for meaningful tweaks to planned inheritance tax on farmland from labour backbenchers. farmers from across the country descended in
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westminster today in protest against the government's family farm tax. that rally, organised by the save british farming, comes as a petition calling to keep current inheritance tax exemptions for working farms has reached almost 150,000 signatures. labour has previously insisted it will not make a u—turn on its inheritance tax plans, saying that farmers are the backbone of britain. a second labour mp has been are the backbone of britain. a second labour mp has been suspended from the party for suspended from the party for comments made in a whatsapp comments made in a whatsapp group that saw a minister lose group that saw a minister lose his job. group that saw a minister lose his job. group that saw a minister lose hisjob. burnley group that saw a minister lose his job. burnley mp oliver ryan hisjob. burnley group that saw a minister lose his job. burnley mp oliver ryan has been suspended by labour has been suspended by labour over his membership of the over his membership of the whatsapp group, containing whatsapp group, containing offensive comments. mr ryan has offensive comments. mr ryan has apologised for unacceptable and apologised for unacceptable and deeply disappointing comments. deeply disappointing comments. ashley dalton, labour mp for ashley dalton, labour mp for west lancashire, has been west lancashire, has been appointed as a minister in the appointed as a minister in the department of health and social department of health and social care after andrew gwynne was care after andrew gwynne was sacked over the weekend. he was sacked over the weekend. he was also found to be a part of that also found to be a part of that whatsapp group, and us president whatsapp group, and us president donald trump is set to impose donald trump is set to impose 25% tariffs on all steel and 25% tariffs on all steel and
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aluminium imports into the us. aluminium imports into the us. steelmakers in asia have warned steelmakers in asia have warned the tariffs will impact the tariffs will impact profitability and volumes of profitability and volumes of steel. it's unclear whether steel. it's unclear whether president trump will make any president trump will make any exemptions on tariffs. labour minister dame angela eagle said dame angela president trnnrrr will make drw earlier this morning it's in the dame angela eagle said minister dame angela eagle said earlier this morning it's uk best interests of both the uk and the us that the two countries carry on with their balanced trade, and those are the latest headlines for now. more from me in an hour. >> 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. >> ncuti gatwa now. welcome back to farage with me martin daubney. i've transitioned from nigel into morgan tonight. now, thousands of illegal workers have been arrested as part of the government's bid to tighten border security. they were found to be working illegally in
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it terrifying in >> i find it terrifying in a world of trump's and dare i say it, with the big man missing farage is that they are allowing the tail to wag the head of the dog in this way. it's happened before. we talk all the time at the moment of, you know, is reform going to overtake the mainstream parties.7 frankly, it doesn't matter. well, it has, because reform first of all, in its ukip form, with farage once again at the helm, managed to dictate brexit for us insofar as that referendum would have never happened had it not been for the power of farage outside the parliamentary system. and now take two, this time against the migrant and i for one, there are huge numbers of things we could do. >> legal workers aren't migrants. >> there's a huge. >> there's a huge. >> number of clampdown on illegal workers. don't confuse that with asylum seekers, those who come here legally and peacefully. but these are illegal. they've got no right to be here. >> but there's a huge narrative, isn't there, around migration being out of control and actually where it impacts on the population, i.e. 650 net migrants coming into the
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country. you can restructure the economy. you can make your university system less dependent on foreign money, all sorts of deeply unsexy things that don't catch the headlines. so instead they are chasing the voters know, chasing criminal chasing voters who are probably watching right now, who tend towards reform. they're not really criminals. they're vulnerable people at my local car wash. incidentally, have you had your car done over it very nicely? yeah. you know, nicely done for £15. >> lot of people have done. >> lot of people have done. >> over, but nicely done at the local car wash or your nails done for cheap and taken the money and said thank you very much. and at the same time it's those cheap services that are being targeted and the most vulnerable people who work in those places. >> go amy dowden. >> go amy dowden. >> it's always lovely to hear that somebody's concerned that they're not going to get cheap nail job. they're not going to get cheap nailjob. i'm sorry, that they're not going to get cheap nail job. i'm sorry, that is not acceptable. you're talking about people like that. i'm sorry. it's not acceptable. it's not good enough. and the fact is, is we have. and you say if the if immigration was under not under control. out of control over a million people last year, that's out of control in a country the size we are. it has an impact on
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so many things, on housing costs, on employment, also safety, security. if you think of the amount of people working, for example, in the food delivery business, at least according to police reports, at least half of those that they stop for basic traffic offences are illegal migrants. they should not be here. end of story period. there is no reason, no justification. none whatsoever. legal migrants, refugees. then they have. there is an argument. but for these people, they aren't that. and they they have no working rights. well, there's a reason for that. but they can be exploited. they shouldn't be here to be exploited. end of story. >> one of the big problems with the current migration system as it stands is there are very few safe passages we make. >> yet a million people arrived legally. how can there be no safe way in which a million people arrive safely? >> no, no, but we're talking about refugees. you said it's okay. you can be a refugee. no, but the point being is those sitting in calais often are from very vulnerable circumstances. war in the likes of syria. >> is a. >> is a. >> safe country and. >> safe country and. >> france is a safe country. >> france is a safe country. >> but at the same time, we
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allow people in from ukraine, for example, or from hong kong. >> because in. >> because in. >> the. >> the. >> case of the hong kong, we had a duty. they held british passports, for goodness sake. >> we went to war in iraq and afghanistan, and it was very hard to get in from. >> australia and from afghanistan. we'd never turn them down. guys. >> guys, it's worth pointing out we had a visa scheme specifically to deal with these individual crises of hong kong, of ukraine and afghanistan, which we honoured. in fact, the uk pulled above and beyond its weight when compared to other european union member states, particularly with hong kong and afghanistan. not not. >> not ukraine. actually, in certain cases, we've let down the afghans and the. >> precious few. to be honest, the fact over 90% of those people from there, the. >> fact of the. >> fact of the. >> matter in pakistan waiting for their cases to be served. >> we can't we can't all shout over each other. this the fact of the matter is you all talk about safe passages. we already have safe passages. i've just pointed out three of them. this. no, we have three clear, safe passages. people coming from france or coming from a safe country. you may say they've come from a country that isn't safe, but they've travelled through multiple safe nations.
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