tv New GB News February 18, 2025 11:00pm-11:59pm GMT
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>> join us over the next hour. >> join us over the next hour. >> to find. >> to find. >> out. >> out. >> why farage wants us to. >> why farage wants us to. >> have more nookie. >> have more nookie. >> why is it unsafe. >> why is it unsafe. >> for girls to. >> for girls to. >> play. >> play. >> cricket .7 >> cricket? >> cricket? >> and doctor. >> and doctor. >> who meets his match. >> who meets his match. >> the woke daleks? i'm josh howie. >> and tonight i'm joined. >> and tonight i'm joined. >> by the tweedle dee and. >> by the tweedle dee and. >> tweedle, not. >> tweedle, not. >> dum of the. >> dum of the. >> comedy circuit, paul. cox and kerry. >> marx to take. >> marx to take. >> you through. wednesday's top stories. this is headliners. >> but before tomorrow's news, let's. >> go. >> go. >> to tonight's headlines with katy bowman. >> hi. >> hi. >> josh. thank you and good evening. the top stories from the gb news newsroom. president trump has said this evening that he is much more confident of a deal to end the russia—ukraine war after talks with russia
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today, and said if europeans want peacekeeping troops in ukraine, then that's fine. speaking at mar a lago a short while ago, the president reflected firstly on those talks in riyadh today with the us secretary of state and russia's foreign minister saying talks had been good. president trump went on to discuss the possibility of european peacekeeping forces in ukraine. >> i do that, that's great. i'm all for it. if they want to do that, i think that's that would be fine. i mean, i know france has mentioned it. others have mentioned it, uk has mentioned it. but yeah, if well, if we have a peace deal, i think having troops over there for from the standpoint of europe, we won't have to put any over there because you know, we're very far away. but having troops over there would be fine. i would not object to it at all. we're talking about this now. peace. we have either a ceasefire or a peace itself. and we're looking to do both. >> the president added that he will probably meet with
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president putin before the end of the month and questioned, where is all the money that has been given to ukraine? he also said it has been a long time since ukraine had had an election. >> here that, you know, they're upset about not having a seat. well, they've had a seat for three years and a long time before that. this could have been settled very easily. just a half a half baked negotiator could have settled this years ago. well, we have a situation where we haven't had elections in ukraine, where we have martial law or essentially martial law or essentially martial law or essentially martial law in ukraine, where the leader in ukraine. i mean, i hate to say it, but he's down at 4% approval rating. i would say that, you know, when they want a seat at the table, you could say the people have to wouldn't the people of ukraine have to say like, you know, it's been a long time since we've had an election. that's not a russia thing. that's something coming from me and coming from many other countries also.
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>> elsewhere, pope francis has shown the onset of bilateral pneumonia, and his respiratory infection continues to present a complex picture, the vatican said earlier this evening. the 88 year old pontiff has been suffering from a respiratory infection for more than a week and was admitted to rome's gemelli hospital on friday. the vatican said in a statement that laboratory tests, chest x—rays and the clinical conditions of the holy father continue to present a complex picture, but that he remains in good spirits. kemi badenoch and the government have responded to criticism from the lady chief justice today, with the conservative party leader saying that politicians must be able to discuss matters of public importance in parliament. a government spokesman also said that the prime minister has made clear that it prime minister has made clear thatitis prime minister has made clear that it is for parliament to make the laws and for the government to decide policy. the responses come after the head of the judiciary of england and wales said today that she is deeply troubled after the prime minister said a decision
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allowing a palestinian family the right to remain in the uk after they applied through a scheme designed for ukrainian refugees, was wrong and that the home secretary, yvette cooper, had got her team working on closing this loophole. kemi badenoch also raised the case in the commons. the lady chief justice, baroness carr, said it's for the government visibly to respect and protect the independence of the judiciary. >> let me be clear. i do not agree with me. >> those are the latest dup news headlines. now it's time for headliners. >> for the very latest gb news, direct your smartphone. sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code or go to gbnews.com/advent. >> jean—pierre marechal. >> jean—pierre marechal. >> hello and. >> hello and. >> welcome to headlines. >> welcome to headlines. >> your first look at. >> your first look at. >> the. >> the. >> best of tomorrow's newspapers with the best of today's comedians. first things first, let's have a look at the front pages. >> shall we? >> shall we? >> the telegraph.
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>> the telegraph. >> zelenskyy could fall as a price of peace. >> the times. >> the times. >> typhoons may help to keep peace in ukraine and the guardian us. >> and. >> and. >> russia to seek economic opportunities after ukraine war. >> well. >> well. >> that's a. euphemism right there. so, paul. >> hello. >> hello. >> hello. >> daily telegraph. it's about ukraine. >> it is about ukraine. specifically about zelenskyy. >> zelenskyy could fall. >> zelenskyy could fall. >> as price of peace. >> as price of peace. >> and this is. >> and this is. >> this. >> this. >> is ukraine. >> is ukraine. >> are likely to be forced to hold an election. >> in which. >> in which. >> some are saying that zelenskyy might. >> not. >> not. >> be re—elected. >> be re—elected. >> now. >> now. >> this sounds. >> this sounds. >> i mean, there's a lot of things going on here. and up. >> until this. >> until this. >> point, i found trump's second. presidency quite a lot of fun. this stuff seems to be getting darker. >> and murkier. >> and murkier. >> now, because. >> now, because. >> this seems to. >> this seems to. >> be the. >> be the. >> american president's idea. >> american president's idea. >> he just said. >> he just said. >> on the. >> on the. >> news there that it was his idea. and other people. >> are expecting it. >> are expecting it. >> also, i've never. >> heard anyone say that. >> heard anyone say that. >> and perhaps he wouldn't. >> and perhaps he wouldn't. >> lose. >> lose. >> an election. >> an election. >> but one thing's. >> but one thing's. >> for certain. >> for certain. >> is. >> is. >> he's really not part of this deal at the moment, is he? and
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there's no deal. >> well. >> well. >> he's not you. >> he's not you. >> know. >> know. >> we just saw. >> we just saw. >> on the. >> on the. >> news there trump saying. >> news there trump saying. >> that his. >> that his. >> that his. >> that supposedly zelenskyy's approval. ratings of 4%. i don't know if i believe. >> that, but. >> that, but. >> no one's talking about putin getting having an election are they kerry. >> i'm not sure even what poll that would have been. you know, we don't know where the poll was. >> a russian. >> a russian. >> poll possibly. >> poll possibly. >> possibly. >> possibly. >> yeah. exactly. >> yeah. exactly. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> in russia, zelenskyy is at 4%. >> leaders don't generally poll well in. >> any country, you know. so it doesn't. >> tell us a whole lot. >> tell us a whole lot. >> i feel sorry for zelenskyy. he was like. the hero, you know, of europe and so on for a while. and now it's all. >> turning on him and. >> turning on him and. >> he's. >> he's. >> being kept out of the negotiations. and you got. >> putin saying. he doesn't. >> putin saying. he doesn't. >> recognise this. >> recognise this. >> is. >> is. >> you know. >> you know. >> someone who's. >> someone who's. >> a dictator. >> a dictator. >> who doesn't recognise someone who is actually an elected. leader saying, i don't. that's incredible. but at the same. >> time, i do have. a little. >> time, i do have. a little. >> reservation waiting to see where it's going. i think, you know, with trump, it's all business deals and so on. and he's making some business deals with, with putin, which let's
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see what's going to go on the table, because whether it's going to be giving away donetsk or other areas of ukraine, or whether it's going to be if the price is that zelenskyy has to step down and they can't go into nato, and that's a different discussion entirely. >> so i think it'd. >> so i think it'd. >> be i mean. >> be i mean. >> it would seem incredibly. unfair if the deal. >> was that. >> was that. >> russia got all the land that they stole. >> from ukraine. yeah. >> from ukraine. yeah. >> and the. >> and the. >> leader in. ukraine had to step down. so that would be a. >> win for russia. >> win for russia. >> and i. >> and i. >> don't think up until this point that russia have been. >> winning at all. >> winning at all. >> maybe i'm just seeing it through the prism of western media, but. >> it. >> it. >> doesn't feel to me like the, the russia has been winning. >> yeah, i say russia, russia is not winning it. but it's a case of this war could go on forever because it's. >> a war. >> a war. >> they can't be stopped either because they can find more and more soldiers. >> they have more resources. >> they have more resources. >> and there. >> and there. >> are more north koreans out there. and. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> and without. >> and without. >> america's backing. >> america's backing. >> it's inevitable. >> it's inevitable. >> unless europe steps up in way. >> that. >> that. >> we have not seen. >> we have not seen. >> so the argument is. >> so the argument is.
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>> for peace, isn't it? basically. >> and the. >> and the. >> collateral damage of that could be. zelenskyy and 20%. >> i wonder if he would give. >> i wonder if he would give. >> up, say, yeah, if we're going to get peace, but what guarantees is he going to get for. >> it's the it's the caveats that happen. because what i wouldn't want to see is the same that happened with israel—palestine, where you say, okay, they get to keep certain areas, you know, west bank, gaza and so on, but then those areas become a future war and they can become a future war and they can be used to arm up and so on. so it would 1640 00:08:25,32
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