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elizabeth, elizabeth elizabeth, elizabeth, elizabeth, elizabeth, elizabeth. during the laster desks, gray-eyed girls, a note arrives. but i’ll be waiting for you, if you don’t come , it doesn’t matter, i’ll be waiting for you, come at exactly seven, even if it’s raining, it’s dark, it’s completely new, a good movie, but in vain with blue tickets, i stood outside the club. the boy is with that girl again, that’s when a note arrives for lessons, come to the cinema, i’ll be waiting for you, if you don’t come, i’ll still be waiting for you, come exactly at seven, even if it’s raining and dark, this is completely new. good movie, i don't know how it will end, maybe it will all begin at first, but i want, oh, how i want the boy’s heart to knock, come to the cinema, i’ll be waiting for you, if you don’t come, i’ll still be waiting for you. come exactly, even if it’s raining and dark, this is completely new, this is completely new, a good movie, the sun is walking through everyday life, today the sun is in love. the ferry in love is on its way, it smiles, and the beterok sings and t
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would like to thank federalist society staff, as well as ftc staff sarah miller, and elizabeth, elizabeth, elizabeth wilkins for their assistance with today's events. i would like to thank everyone in the military for their service and wish them a happy veterans day. and lastly, on a patriotic note, to get credit, attendees must sign in and out once per day using the qr codes found in your program. the federalist society has been facing the proper roles of administrative agencies in a free market economy. we have an array of blogs, podcasts, and websites. we welcome those interested in antitrust policies to contact me for more information. i would like to walk up alina katz to introduce the fireside chat. >> i am the director of the freedom of thought project. why are we here? first, sadly, it has become safe to model good faith discussion. and my colleagues may disagree on some things. they may not fear that but they may embrace it. and i welcome this as part of the ongoing process, providing our own thinking. i have seen an increase in some of the themes in ftc chair lina khan 's work, that resona
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elizabeth elizabeth, now we know the who these have been active since and 1990. we know that they have been targeting the cargo ship since the last couple of months. but if you can just put things in perspective for us in context, who are the, who these exactly invite, obviously are relevant. or here's these, uh, a group that emerged in the northwest of yemen. that's just a corner of a vast country. so they might not seem that important box over the past 10 years, almost 10 years during a civil war that's been raging in the i'm and the who sees have managed to take of the territory on which about 2 thirds of the how many population lives. so that's about 20000000 people and their religious group, political groups, a military group, all the same time on that all the text is very much informed by the religious outlook. that political is cooled on sort of law, which means supporters, partisans of gold and the slogan is very similar to the wrong with you and they also share a she e based islamic face. i should just say that the who sees do have a slightly different brand, if she is them, but they have the same slogan, desk to america, dest israel, a cuss on the jews. and victories is slum. so having them in that area or if you haven't, that so heavily populated, feeling confident of to well, 9 years of civil war and well and supplied by iran. that's a very dangerous moment for us. thank you. now i know we could have a whole show on who the, who these are and how it started and what's happening right now. so thank you very much for very briefly explaining us what it is. and this is a very crucial route. so the american and british naval forces in the, let's see, have launched a series of strikes against will be to both dogs across given us president joe biden has said he will not hesitate to take photo military action if necessary. but the u. s. has also made clear that it does not want to see a bite and in conflict in the middle east. fighter jets are taking off their targets. the hooting melissa in yemen, cleanings, self defense, and the us, the great britain and other allies, are launching dozens of assaults against the who t's who are attacking international merchant ships on the red sea. the e u was back in the military operation with a naval mission set to stabilize the situation in the red sea. germany also wants to participate by sending a forget thousands of people have taken to the streets and young men to protest israel and the usa who they see as the real aggressor is. and who team leadership is showing signs that they are willing to escalate. in the, the american and british enemies, their full responsibility for this criminal aggression against us and our you many people, why don't you this will not go on punished or on answered the do not. you got the she had who to militias, supported by, you know, on controls, large parts of human since the beginning of the cause of war. the cruelties of position themselves as allies of home us or the us and its allies falling into a deal political trapped in human. let's go back to elizabeth again. elizabeth, do you think the rest is falling into your political trap and human? as it's really a strong possibility, now we have to understand the west is in a drawing of the the us especially this is really hard because on the one hand, they don't want to get some broiled and another bowl in the middle east. but only although they've run out of options other than military options. they've tried sanctions, they've tried cutting the flow of funds to use these. they've tried this international maritime falls in the red sea as a deterrent. and they've been messing away marseilles and drains. but it really hasn't done any good. so now we've moved to a situation of direct military action. i don't think it's going to work out well. so yes and not sense. it is a truck. we have to remember that the who sees often 9 years will have already sustained over 25000 strikes by saudi arabia. and it didn't make that much difference. also, the holden's bye to us, they've managed to keep out. the
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elizabeth elizabeth lara, que es precisamente de la dueña y parte de pues de esta familia que se dedica desde muy temprano a hacer estas roscas de reyes. >> sí, sí, claro, desde muy temprano estamos trabajando, de hecho este, eh, trabajamos durante toda la noche para que todo sea posible. >> a ver, muéstrame por favor, porque, miren, nos ha estado contando. ellos tienen prácticamente a todo el equipo listo aquí para trabajar. >> aquí tenemos. mira aquí, pásale. aquí tenemos aquí al, a nuestro maestro panadero. este que él es el que hace posible también. todo esto se levanta muy temprano para que todo esto sea posible. eh, aquí está. aquí tenemos el horno. aquí tenemos parte de la producción. eh, elizabethaba platicando que tiene a sus hijos, a su sobrina, todos trabajando. >> sí, sí, toda la familia aquí en el negocio familiar, toda la familia está trabajando aquí. aquí tenemos a mi sobrina, al señor que es ayudante de nuestro maestro panadero, a mi hija y mi hijo que que también este, pues nos ayudan con la decoración. >> a todos les tocó temprano a josé, a pineda y a isabel, que son los que están viendo aquí con la mano a todo lo que da. >> a todos nos toca a todos nos toca también este. todos son parte del proyecto. sí >> oye, pues vamos a conocer más de su historia esta tarde a las 6, porque como veían, pues es una familia que se dedica ya desde hace 12 años a esto precisamente me decías por por el gusto de tu hija que le gusta la repostería. >> sí, a mi hija. empezamos básicamente por ella, que desde muy chiquita este empezó con el gusto de la panadería y pues bueno, yo le seguí y nos dimos cuenta que nos gustaba y nos gustó. esto y y a esto nos nos dedicamos ahora, pues los conoc
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so i'm not supposed to follow up on the stumble and i didn't like the lock up. dora is elizabeth elizabeth, oregon off according to the world health organization. every year there are more than $10000.00 black market human organ. sales. prices vary depending on region the, the whole live uh costs from 152550000 euros. pods. from 40000 aconia is from 421-5000. a kidney from 182250000 bone marrow is owned by white wine gram costs about 22000. the hodge costs from 162300000 allowing me 260000 is 200000. prices in euro's cannot bundles with the support for you to do. ok, you know what? it's and yes, got a lot of categories, but do you like watching boyfriend business? it's a principal, it's all over here. we're at the, a, the, at the quote to clean up the build up is that i think get a minute that the government that the funds the, i mean what you think you just don't want me to cost but, but the most appreciative, of course, i can show him what you know, what you can like another to conceal tracks. trema children as well as other means are used the money that you all have been disappointed. d
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the is elizabeth elizabeth, oregon off according to the world health organization. every year, there are more than $10000.00 black market human organ sales. prices vary depending on region the, the whole live uh, costs from 152550000 euros. pod from 40000 aconia is from 421-5000. a kidney from 182250000. bone marrow is owned by wage. one gram costs about 22000. the hodge costs from 162300000. allowing me 260000 is 200000 prices in euro's cannot bundle with the support for you to do it. ok, you know what? it means a lot of categories, but do what you can buy for business. if the principal at the lower here, we're at the a, the, at the quote you can clearly take up the bill, is that i think give them money at the moment that the funds the i need, which is agency to someone that the cost. but what can i answer but to for us to appreciate it, because i just want to know which is going in love to conceal trans trema children as well as other means are used need. let's jump, have been disappointed to learn about even less easiest, just to let us know that there's a questi
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so i'm not supposed to follow up on the stumble and i didn't like the lock up. dora is elizabeth elizabeth, oregon off according to the world health organization. every year, there are more than $10000.00 black market human organ. sales. prices vary depending on region. the whole live uh, costs from 152550000 euros. pods. from 40000 aconia is from 421-5000. a kidney from 182250000. bone marrow is owned by wage. one gram costs about 22000. the hodge costs from 162300000 loan is 60000. apparel is 200000 prices in euro's cannot bundle with the support for you to do it . ok, you know what? it's and yes, got a lot of categories, but do what you can buy for business. it's a principal, it's a lawyer where at the, if the court to complete the build up is that i think get a minute come up with the funds the i need, which is agency to someone that the cost but but to, for us to appreciate it because i can show them what you don't want you to know and you love it to conceal tracks. trema children as well as other means. they used the money that you have been disappointed. delighted, but even let jesu
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elizabeth: nicole neely, always terrific. i am elizabethedit" on fox business. that doesn't press, have a good weekend. it's time for "the bottom line" we're going to send it over early, dagen and charlie and for sean. dagen: thank you. ♪
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this is elizabeth elizabeth around the house. i live in north shuttles. i feel comfortable if there's anything, the area of a closed amenities on verified footage and allegedly shows that he's really offices checking hospitals of i d's before, letting them into the medical facility as mold the full to the images of man. if you move those is destroying infrastructure. certainly in the 9th of operations, several passings would probably fit with the draft. the idea of playing with those people were holding exclusive hats is really so it's very focused is also a ripple of dc conducting numerous or us new westbrook neighborhood of jump out. i'll come a lot in classes broke out and looting gunfire. this will just showing is really full of dictating several people at the scene. we heard from the way, i'm for those who are honest, the 2 who had some very strong comments. they want to destroy how send you an infrastructure and they want to make sure that that infrastructure can never be rebuilt again. this is why they are deliberately targeting refugee camps becau
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elizabeth. but there is a problem, elizabeth quite suddenly disappeared. >> the hunt for elizabeth begins. lieve her story? coming up -- >> it's absolutely cold blooded, she would've done anything. >> when dateline continues. when moderate to severe ulcerative colitis takes you off course. put it in check with rinvoq, a once-daily pill. when i wanted to see results fast, rinvoq delivered rapid symptom relief and helped leave bathroom urgency behind. check. when uc tried to slow me down... i got lasting, steroid-free remission with rinvoq. check. and when uc caused damage rinvoq came through by visibly repairing my colon lining. check. rapid symptom relief... lasting steroid-free remission... ...and the chance to visibly repair the colon lining. check, check, and check. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tb. serious infections and blood clots, some fatal; cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least 1 heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take
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elizabeth: got t governor perry, thank you for joining us. good to see you. >> you're welcome, elizabeth. elizabethwe'll get you the update on this news, the house delaying contempt of congress citation because of hunter biden today. is it because the president's son will finally sit for a deposition in the biden impeachment inquiry? we have congressman carlos gimenez and escalated fight between white house and texas and lone star state not backing down from seizing control of it is own border security. we want to hear first from my buddies dagen and sean. we're excited to hear what you've got good-bying next hour on the -- cooking next hour on the bottom line. >> yeah, msnbc didn't take trump's victory speech and cnn cut away and can't let their viewers hear donald trump speak. kayleigh mcenany on that and houthi rebels continue to attack ships in the red sea. kt mcfarland joining us on that topic. >> john kerry's davos declaration that the green climate economic revolution is underway and despite green energy stocks collapsing, they're running out of cash if you look at electric vehicle compancom
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elizabeth, elizabeth, hoje eu canto amor por ti.st come, even if it’s raining and dark, this is a completely new, good movie, but in vain with blue tickets, a boy stood near the club. and again from that girl, that ’s when a note comes to lessons, come to kino, i’ll be waiting for you, if you don’t come, it doesn’t matter, i’ll be waiting for you, come exactly at seven, even if it’s raining and dark, these are completely new, good. at the cinema, i don’t know how it will end, maybe it will all start all over again, but i want, oh, how i want there to be an ache in the boy’s heart, come to the cinema , i’ll be waiting for you, if you don’t come, i’ll still love you i’ll wait, come, and everything will be fine, even if it’s raining and dark, this is completely new, this is a new , very good movie, the sun is walking under budba, today the sun is in love, there’s a couple in love, the street is smiling ano, go sirok sing and yes, the day is shining blue, i walk along the boulevards, a date with you, oh, i live like a sword, you have be
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elizabeth elizabeth is the man who has to be done now here in gaza is made what's to be done. can you, can you imagine a visa that you knew when you get this be done? it is at a her would be, i agree, i political does actually this would love to have a display of what all the adults are more this when would love to have it was not that time to get please. we are not. that's all to get boots. i don't know, i don't reside and they'll ridiculous the lines. and they didn't, they, when we did all the types of crimes and the, uh, the at that was to be 1000 schools every with. but this is, this is, i mean was to be the and. busy may not listed as us house, as of selves of goes, i hope this would not have been like i talked to you of this have been i can't tell you what the, the, the, you just get this little big situation. the don't to, i'm a grabbing, we know some unconfirmed reports of the moment of attempts to try and re open the i'll ship a hospital in gaza city. are you hearing any information about that? does that sound even possible? i actually i have uh, some friends uh that, you know, i was with all of the, my police uh spastic uh the department of bunch of house because some of them actually uh they 10 bucks to watch it most with others. they are trying now to put it on board with some fish on so i bunch of elizabeth and yeah, that is something that is actually to make it have the attention of elizabeth and as i hope so, of course i'm gonna grab it. you'll know if there's just having a massive impact on innocent people on women, and specifically children as well, bearing the brunt of this conflict. how is this impacting the very young oh yeah, actually i texted you a few by side of as a citizen here that's visited, you know, and fighting should read on roman and it's on people's. yeah. oral officials, obviously as men, most of them, she's a woman and civilians, the killing beautiful families to the in it all the studios. every day we, i told you how money boss have to do. i really didn't read hundreds of these is on people on the bus and go we, i don't know, i don't know how, what it is. do we have to go with the city situation? what about you personally? the, what about you personally, of course, this is a huge amount of strain is being placed on the you, but other medical stuff trying to do that
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elizabeth: dr. jannette nesheiwat thank you for joining us, happy new year to you, we'll have you back. >> happy new year and happy birthday. elizabeth: thank you, i am elizabethhing the "evening edit" on fox business, we have another hot show tomorrow night, but now time for "the bottom line," helmsley dagen and charlie. >> happy birthday. elizabeth: thank you. dagen: than thank you, emacki
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elizabeth, back to you. elizabeth: steve harrigan, thank you so much. joining us now, former doj attorney hans von spakovsky. your take on that report, because here is what's going on. former president trump is saying basically there was, that fani willis' team met at the biden white house before she brought the indictment. house judiciary chair jim jordan is saying that the january 6th committee helped fani willis, you know, on the trump case, and then we hear17 encrypted final files -- 117 encrypted files were deleted by the january 6th committee. we don't know if she got those files. and then she's getting luxury trips with her boyfriend, allegedly, to go around the world after he hired him on the trump 2020 case. what's to your take on all of this? >> well, look, it's important to understand that she may have violated federal law. he got no approval from the county commission to hire her boyfriend as a special prosecutor. that's required by state law. and at the time that she's paying him with taxpayer money, he's buying luxury tickets for himself and her. that raises the issue of a vendor of the county giving kickbacks. that's a potential violation of federal law, the honest services fraud statute. this is very, very serious. and the fact that there was no approval to even hire him as a special prosecutor throws into question the legit massey of -- he mitt -- legitimacy of the dire grand jury and indictment. this is not insubstantial, this is a real problem for fani willis and the entire prosecution. elizabeth it's taken years to bring this case. so we don't know if they were charging it up behind the scenes against the u.s. taxpayer and the state taxpayer because jim jordan is saying that -- her office got millions of dollars in federal grant money. and then, you know, he -- nathan wade reportedly getting paid much more than other prosecutor- >> right. elizabeth: -- on the case. manager like $654,000 in salary. one report said it's up to a million, he's getting paid more than the prosecutors. and then they're going on luxury travel. is this -- should they just step down? what's going to happen with this case? >> well, remember, the judge presiding over this indictment and this prosecution has scheduled a hearing for mid february about these charges to fani willis. if she doesn't ten down -- step down, i don't think he's got any choice other than to recuse her from the if case. elizabeth: okay. quickly, i want to get this news in. new york state attorney general letitia james is saying in a
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elizabeth: got it. >> it is time to end. elizabeth: got it, gene hamilton, thank you so much and good to see you. >> like wise. elizabethrshal and top government watch dog, gao, warning that no one is watching the government on china buying up american farmland. that's up next on "the evening edit". first check in with friends jackie deangeles in for dagen and sean mcduffy on the bottom line. >> thank you, emac. the race in new hampshire tomorrow is getting shaken up. what's going to happen tomorrow and moving forward? we have kellyanne conway onto talk about that and democrat socialists that are losing millions of dollars in funding and there's xzavier derusso to discuss. >> corey deangelis, no relation to me and talking about california universities on strike. yes, the unions continue to be emboldened, and also liz peek is here and talking about how ice is romanticizing a terrorist. yes, that is a true story. we'll see you soon. when you're a small business owner, your to-do list can be...a lot. ♪ [ cellphone whooshes ] [ sighs ] that's why progressive makes it easy to save with a commercial auto quote online so you c
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elizabeth. elizabeth. heather you're cheshire. you're there in cheshire. elizabethike, regardless of the situation that might occur with worship, it's important that we should be prepared for war, no matter the circumstance. >> um , as it's not given that we >> um, as it's not given that we will always live in times of peace. after all, everything is typically quiet before a storm breaks out and but currently, the british army has less than 100,000 soldiers recruited, which is completely embarrassing . and instead of coming up with smart ways to solve this problem , the defence secretary has instead announced that he's launching an offence to tackle the problem by enlisting female recruits . of course, the problem recruits. of course, the problem is not female recruits. we've never had historically . they've never had historically. they've never had historically. they've never historically been in the military . it's the fact that military. it's the fact that british men are now see no reason to participate in the army. and who can blame them? the used to serve the
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elizabeth: jon levine you are terrific, thank you for joining us, thank you for watching the "evening edit" on fox business, i am elizabeth macdonald et e. time for my buddies dagen and sean. they are fired. dagen: it is our one year anniversaryism . elizabeth
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elizabeth affectionately elizabeth ii was affectionately known as lilibet by a select handful of her closest friends and most notably and family. most notably her husband philip. before husband prince philip. before the sussexes chose to name for their second born child back in 2021. but in robert hardman's new biography, charles the third new king, new court palace insiders unveil how the queen was left stunned by the suggestion that she had been supportive of this decision , and supportive of this decision, and she's described as angry . she's she's described as angry. she's reported to have told staff i don't own the palaces, i don't own the paintings. the only thing i own is my name. and now they've taken that well . lady c, they've taken that well. lady c, you were told at the time that the queen was furious over the sussexes decision to name their daughter, lilibet , weren't you? daughter, lilibet, weren't you? i you think that harry i mean, do you think that harry and lied when they said and meghan lied when they said that she'd been supportive? >> i think they had to >> well, i think they had to have lied because as i said at the time, my information was that they that harry asked her if he could name his his daughter after her and he she thought the name was going to be elizabeth the child lilibet , but named the child lilibet, but that he had already altered the birth in such a way that it was not possible for the name to be changed? uh, so she had to swallow it, so to speak . swallow it, so to speak. >> okay. and phil, what do you make of this? i mean, is it actually a massive deal? is it not, you know, quite cute , i not, you know, quite cute, i suppose they've named it after me of they deliberately mugged the queen off here. what? what do hey do you make of it? hey >> good evening. patrick. i just think sad to think it's very, very sad to learn, it ? in the think it's very, very sad to learn, it? in the final learn, isn't it? in the final few months of her life, this amazing this incredible amazing woman, this incredible reign she had she was reign she had that she was undergoing this heartache to the extent so angry extent where she became so angry that aides they'd never seen that aides say they'd never seen her think, lady, her angrier. i think, lady, s
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elizabeth schultz is in las vegas with more elizabeth. >> hey, andrew and rhiannon, we are inside ces, which is the biggest consumer electronics show of the year. thousands of small start ups to big companies showing off their latest tech here. more than 130,000 people are expected to come here to vegas over the next few days to see some of those latest and greatest inventions. one of the themes we're noticing is artificial intelligence. not a surprise. it's been a big focus of the past year. but how is artificial intelligence actually being integrated into products in your day to day life? here in the amazon booth, you can see that there's a big focus on ai for your products that you might find at home. we saw that in the case of samsung too, they're showing off a new refrigerator that can actually tell you when you load it and unload it, how many fruits and vegetables are left when you see it might add that to your list. it can pick up recipes to say, here's what you have in your fridge. here's what you need to buy. this idea that this technology ai that's developed so fast over the past year can actually improve your day to day life. we see it in cars. we actually saw it dancing car. that was pretty cool. personal robots who can turn lights on and off. a lot of this comes to gaming, to the idea that a lot of the technology that's been quickly developing over the past year can be used by businesses and consumers, but that it also needs to be regulated, be done in a safe way. we've been talking to top executives who say that as ai has developed so quickly, there also need to be guardrails in place to make sure that it's being used in a safe way for consumers. andrew and rhiannon, back to you. thanks elizabeth. >> now i'm questioning was that even elizabeth or was that just ai at ces? >> it does feel like ai has really come a long way very fast. >> our refridge. narrator i know what's in there. i know what's not coming up next. >> wait, what? >> i have to go grocery shopping. >> i'm john morgan of morgan and morgan. with so many mesothelioma lawyers on television, how do you choose the right firm for you and your family? our goal is to get you as much as you deserve. $30 billion was set aside for mesothelioma victims like you. if you've been diagnosed with mesothelioma, we'll come to you within 24 hours. so our team can get to work right away. call us now. there's only one. morgan and morgan. call one 800 602 3400. >> do you have a life insurance policy? you no longer need? now you can sell your policy even a firm policy for an immediate cash payment. >> we thought we had planned carefully for our retirement, but we quickly realized we needed a way to supplement our income. >> if you have $
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elizabeth, ekaterina elizabeth, we need to choose one of them. each of the girls, well, firstly, they are all attractive and they all have a lot of positive and negative qualities. there is a minus, you know what, they all have abnormal men. there were, if we compare everyone together, you’re just a bomb, really, how gorgeous, everything is with you, i won’t be too clever here, i’m exactly what you wanted, a beautiful car, beautiful woman, clothes, delicious food , this is the definition of elizabeth is without children, come on in, i’m very interested in who he is... i ’m just curious, yes, yes, we’ll wait for him to come into our home, i invite everyone to come out and support maxim, i really liked you, lisa, and why i liked you, i liked you because you are sincere, because you are feminine, because you... first they pulled out their little daughter my katya, then they pulled out vika, she managed to open it, but didn’t have time to get out, two died small children, they burned, yes , they suffocated, they were already taken out of the house dead , i didn’t see any drinking or partying, i always came in when she was always smoking, well , what condition is she in, yesterday she asked me, she says, bad, give me a dose, i say, no, what did she use to buy drugs? she received about 60 thousand for children , and she also gave birth to children under drugs during withdrawal symptoms , both one girl and the other, yes, she herself was so sick and her son was to blame, and he let her t
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happen -- elizabeth: well, voters want it to stop. >> it's hard for me to grasp, why would they do it? elizabeth: voters want it to stop. they want legal immigration. >> they sure do. elizabethit's unfair to border communities and cities to have to deal with biden's border crisis. this is a states' rights fight. this -- the white house is going to claim that federal laws take precedent when they do that threatened fight with texas. but this white house is accused of breaking federal laws here, that's what you're saying. because the constitution has what's called a take care clause. >> right. elizabeth: it stipulates the president shall take care, federal laws be faithfully executed. he's not doing it. >> no, he's certainly not. and that's, again, why as you said why texas is stepping up, doing what they're doing. because the problem is so, just so egregious, so wrong. so i think you're going to see more of that from texas, and god bless them for standing up and doing what needs to be done. we were here today, we just saw right behind me, we saw illegals come across as we're here, 60 some members of congress, and illegals are coming across the rio grande, walking up, pushing
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elizabeth: we'll try to have you back on soon. thank you, i'm elizabeth the "evening edit" on fox business, we stay on breaking news, now time for "the
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take the story of elizabeth beavhard who is here with us today. elizabeth, please stand. [applause] elizabeth was right across the river in troy. not long ago she was trapped in an abusive relationship. she and her pet suffered regular abuse at the hands of her ex-boyfriend. he killed one of her kit tense. maimed another and then one day her life changed. a veterinarian told her about unity house. a nonprofit that helps survivors of domestic violence. eventually she met russ clement. detective clement? [applause] thank you. thank you. he helped elizabeth find strength to pursue justice and file charges. he assisted with police reportses and -- reports and stood by her side at the garage jury. elizabeth has fled her abuser and is rebelled her life. let's give her a right now of applause. [applause] i want to hear more hopeful stories like this. and that's why we're dedicating $2 to million so district don't gather evidence to prosecute abusers and take their guns away. [applause] and we're committing more funding so police can protect those who are at risk of abuse and clamp down on repeat off
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before we get down to business, the big story really is a isabel's el isabel elizabeth , elizabeth, isabel's elizabethch she died, i died and then i watched myself die. yeah. so she died. woke up again, watched herself dying and did you fall asleep after that? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well, so james and dumfries , >> well, so james and dumfries, thank you for your dream analysis , james. of do you analysis, james. of this. do you realise , isabel, that you might realise, isabel, that you might have condition where you have the condition where you stop breathing sleep ? stop breathing during sleep? this could be the result of the drowned nightmare. this is why you drowning nightmare. drowned nightmare. this is why you is drowning nightmare. drowned nightmare. this is why you is calledirowning nightmare. drowned nightmare. this is why you is called sleep 1g nightmare. drowned nightmare. this is why you is called sleep apnoea,nare. this is called sleep apnoea, right ? really? yeah. so you. so right? really? yeah. so you. so you're minute. if you're you're one minute. if you're ever beside or ever lying besid
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elizabeth in florida. elizabeth. >> how you doing? >> i'm doing well, how about you, elizabeth? >> great. i would like to know your thoughts on the corporation's stock ticker nsc having the acquisition with the united steel corporation and what are your thoughts on if it's a good time to buy? >> i think they are overpaying but they are strong and they want to be in here. i don't want you buying the stock. if you're going to on a steel company, you will on the best company in the world. newport. we are in a battle under whether the fed should cut rates or cut rates really a hard. i learned that perhaps not cutting rates is the way to go. people thinking they are bound to be cut our knots. so many managers are betting that way but i have to start thinking about how wrong they may be. the come back for the supermarket and breaking down what makes -- mean so you can break some money. the trend of pcs. i will chat with a brand-new ceo. and a nap company and kaz extend just had the biggest ipo sense birkenstock. i review what its debut means for companies hoping to go public. and i will tell yo
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elizabeth in florida. elizabeth. >> caller: boo-yah, jim. >> boo-yah, elizabeth!so i wanted to know what are your thoughts on caterpillar? >> some joker the other day had a sell recommendation. he cut his price target from 202 to 201 or something. it was lakmo. i think caterpillar is going to have a terrific year. and don't be dissuaded by china or oil prices or whatever. cap is about infra, and infrastructure's going to be big in 2024. the checks are in the mail. robert in florida. robert. >> caller: hey, jim. i just want to ask about ge's upcoming stock split. do you know when they're going to do that -- >> no, i don't cache. what i care about is larry culp is making money left and right as i predicted about a gazillion points ago. everyone doubted me except for larry -- no, larry may have doubted me at one point. but i knew he was money in the bank. he is a lock. and you hardly ever get locks. he's a lock of 2024. let's go to natalie in texas. natalie. >> caller: hey, jim, this is natalie from texas. i recently invested in gme energy based on ten-year performan
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take the story of elizabeth beechert, who's here with us today.he elizabeth, please stand. [applause] elizabethlives right across the riveret in troy. not long ago, she was trapped in an abusive relationship. she and her pets suffered regular abuse at the hands of her ex-boyfriend.he he killed one of her kittens, maimed another. then one day, her life changed. a veterinarian told her about unity house, a nonprofit that helped survivors of domestic violence. eventually, she met troy police detective russ clements, who's also joined us. detective clements. [applause] thank you. thank you. he helped elizabeth find the strength to pursue justice and filed charges. he assisted with police reports and stood by her side at the grand jury. with his support, elizabeth has made a clean break from her abuser and is rebuilding her life. let's give them both the round of applause. [applause] i want to hear more hopeful stories like this, and that's why we're dedicating $20 million so district attorneys can gather evidence to prosecute abusers and take their guns away. [applause] and we're committing more fu
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elizabeth: why do you say that? >> that's my take. elizabeth: that's your take. it'll have to be taken up by the doj, does that happen? >> doj is not the one that disbars you and office of attorney ethics. elizabeth: you're talking about the georgia state office would do it. >> i'm talking about ethics board that regulates attorneys misconduct. there's that level; right. liz, you're speaking about a prosecutorial misconduct and targeting a political opponent and political motivation and my answer to you on that, liz, is let me be broad and not just seeing it in georgia or new york and this is lee tee supra aural headphones james and a-- -- learfilearfield img tee supra al headphones james and it's not any kind of rocket science. this is just basic americans can see what is happening and racketeering it you look at it. that's not him, that's them. and ting not him, it's them. they're tearing him down because they're afraid and we'll clean it up. soros were lacking and finances from private sectors and private individuals that hate tram and people now using taxpayer dollars to go on vacation and charging back to get taxpayer dollars for meeting ands corrupt at highest level and i hope it's revealed
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elizabeth. anne is mother, elizabeth. anne is arguably the closest connection we still have to our late, great queen, so if i find myself sat to next anne the next time i'm on a ryanair flight, i might just share my complimentary bag of peanuts because anne is the best. meanwhile, the aeroplane manufacturers boeing suffer another safety scare as the door of a737 max nine falls off mid—air . var. it was very mid—air. var. it was very distressing for those on board, although pure luxury compared to being sat next to an overweight passenger or a crying baby. meanwhile, us car rental giant hertz is offloading thousands of teslas as weak demand forces it to replace 20,000 electric cars with petrol powered vehicles instead. can you believe it? it's almost like petrol cars are more reliable and convenient. who would have thought? who'd have thunk it? laura dodsworth. this move away from electric will cost the company £200 million. this news comes as it's revealed electric car sales are slowing in britain, with projections for future sales cut drastically . customers worry drastically. customers worry about something called range anxiety , with concerns that the anxiety, with concerns that the car is going to conk out before you reach your destination. in gerry's case, his local pub. >> oh , thank you very much. >> oh, thank you very much. >> oh, thank you very much. >> don't mind if i do. plus, where do you charge these vehicles? how do you insure them and how do you pay for their expensive repairs? means while you'll love this story, an electric bus in london exploded this week. not for the first time this has happened. given the volatile the combustible and volatile nature of battery technology . nature of battery technology. i'll tell you what i'm not happy . it takes precious rare materials to make these vehicles. the batteries are hard to recycle. these cars require fossil fuel energy to make them and fossil fuel energy to charge them up. far from being the answer to our prayers, it looks like electric cars are running out of road. and last but not least, jennifer aniston star of friends, has brought back her famous rachel haircut . take famous rachel haircut. take a look at this. actually a very fine woman. i think you'll agree. a brilliant actress. and there's the original rachel look alongside the updated version . alongside the updated version. isn't it fabulous? >> which one's which? >> which one's which? >> i had one of those. tell you something. there's a few years between, but i don't know, would you rachel or late rachel? >> jerry, i'll go for any rachel. >> i'm just going to say , >> i'm just going to say, listen, the guy , he's trapped in listen, the guy, he's trapped in a loveless marriage, he's not fussy . fussy. >> oh, laura, did you do something like that with your hair? >> i most certainly did. oh, come on, what woman that era come on, what woman of that era did into the hairdressers did not go into the hairdressers and rachel? had and ask for a rachel? we all had and ask for a rachel? we all had a i a rachel. yeah. a rachel. i had a rachel. yeah. and looking at the new and in fact, looking at the new rachel, go and for rachel, i might go and ask for a new rachel. well, it's quite inspiring, it. inspiring, i like it. >> i think you're rocking the laura works for me . laura and that works for me. >> people the dolan, >> people asking for the dolan, that's know. that's what i want to know. >> oh, not even wig >> sadly not. oh, not even wig man. mr mr vine has words about that. oh, yes. jeremy vine . oh, that. oh, yes. jeremy vine. oh, yes. with my hair. no, he said you've dead squirrel you've got a dead squirrel on your jealous. your head. i think he's jealous. >> listen , the rachel >> well, listen, the rachel hairstyle changed the world. it captured global attention, which is why we decided to bring you the friday night live with mark dolan. top ten countdown of best celebrity hairdos. come in at number 10. it's got to be bojo himself. look at that shock of blonde hair in at number 970 tv beauty farrah fawcett. oh i think she's doing a dodsworth there. >> oh, you're too kind . do you >> oh, you're too kind. do you know, i wanted to be the charlie's angels when i was a little girl, so i'm. i'm having that. thanks. >> well, you don't . and dolan's >> well, you don't. and dolan's angel tonight. number eight, legendary record producer phil spector. was that before or after he shot his other half? how about number seven? the former leader of the free world, the man that wants to go back to the man that wants to go back to the white house, the donald himself. look at the style. >> that's a dead animal the head. >> it is a dead animal. what about a number six, about the hair in a number six, lady gaga ? oh, you're on fire. lady gaga? oh, you're on fire. oh, she's gone with that one. >> look at that. that's gaga central, isn't it? meanwhile in at number five. what a great footballer he was, the late, great sir bobby charlton rocking the and of course , the comb over. and of course, there a when all men did that. >> they did. they did . uh, david >> they did. they did. uh, david coleman, do you remember david coleman? yes. >> colemanballs . >> colemanballs. >> colemanballs. >> yes. what a guy. >> yes. what a guy. >> and then suddenly bruce willis came along. yeah. and they thought, right, they just thought, right, shave it yeah. they just thought, right, shave it and yeah. they just thought, right, shave it and ye see latest poll, >> and you see the latest poll, which no for good people like which is no for good people like you and me say that more women prefer . prefer bald men. >> is that right? could you bear that out, laura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well laura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well ,.aura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how north? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how to th? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how to answer >> um, well, well, how to answer this? >> considering i'm. i'm engaged to someone who's bald, i think that if you're going to be bald, do it. don't do the comb over. no but if you've got hair, don't shaveit no but if you've got hair, don't shave it off. yeah. >> okay, well, let me tell you, this is not a comb over. not yet anyway. give five years. uh, anyway. give it five years. uh, next up in at number four. it's got to be david beckham, and he gets entries. first of all, gets two entries. first of all, the mohican and something called a cornrow. my producer nicola tried educate me. i thought tried to educate me. i thought it was white man's dreadlocks, but apparently not. >> that cultural >> isn't that cultural appropriation something? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel something? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him imething? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now1ing? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now in g? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now in at >> so cancel him now in at number three, a massive star gb news legend neil oliver. look at that luscious mane caveman look. it is really , isn't it flowing? it is really, isn't it flowing? he's got beauty , he's got hair. he's got beauty, he's got hair. >> a lot of women would be very jealous of. really thick and lustrous . lustrous. >> yeah, but that's died, isn't it? i know, how dare you leave everything with neil is real. >> i'm sure it is. everything with neil is real. >> i'm sure it is . uh, how about >> i'm sure it is. uh, how about in two? got to be in at number two? it's got to be kim jong un, and you've got to say you like his haircut or he'll shoot you . and last but he'll shoot you. and last but not least, celebrity haircuts gone wrong . oh, dear. oh, no. gone wrong. oh, dear. oh, no. who's that idiot ? who's that idiot? >> oh, and there was i, joking about the dolan . about the dolan. >> no. was that not that? was that your real hair then? >> yeah. i mean, would you pay for wig that looked like that? for a wig that looked like that? >> know. michael >> um, i don't know. michael fabncant >> um, i don't know. michael fabricant might . fabricant might. >> you on. that >> there you go on. that crushingly embarrassing note. that big opinion. that was my friday. big opinion. okay well, laura dodsworth and jerry hayes are going to weigh in on the big stories of the day. and, laura, can we start on a slightly note? the a slightly serious note? the post is a human post office scandal is a human tragedy. corruption . um, tragedy. so much corruption. um, but do think that there are but do you think that there are echoes the pandemic the echoes of the pandemic and the way that individuals who are concerned about covid measures were of silenced and not were sort of silenced and not allowed to debate things ? are allowed to debate things? are there any parallels between the post office scandal and the management of covid? >> i think that's um, i think that's an interesting hypothesis. it's a good comparison. and where i would see a link would be when people rely upon systems, computing, modelling , boffins basically modelling, boffins basically there's a mistrust of the individual of humans and an overreliance on systems . so you overreliance on systems. so you saw that in covid with modelling a lot of , um, dependency on a lot of, um, dependency on theoretical modelling, which which was still relied on even after there was real world evidence. so a bunch of just a bunch of sort of lonely boffins as sort of mathematicians and other sort of geniuses had these models which proved to be inaccurate . inaccurate. >> they were very pessimistic, which is what sparked don't let imperial here, you see, they're proved to be inaccurate. >> but of course, they were similar with climate change modelling. now, i know that's different to a computer system, but is similarity there. but there is a similarity there. so after people raised the so even after people raised the alarm, you know, over and over and over on the horizon system , and over on the horizon system, they squashed down by a they were squashed down by a system itself . system trying to protect itself. um, so that's that's one comparison. but you can take it beyond covid as well. i mean, you all know all about this. of course, as a barrister, but there was a case, wasn't there, with and excise. um supergun. >> you're thinking of the you well, you possibly . well, you possibly. >> possibly. i won't know the name of it , >> possibly. i won't know the name of it, but they they had their they had their power nickname bedroom. nickname in the bedroom. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> their power, >> they, they had their power, didn't um, prop suit didn't they, to, um, prop suit their own cases , taken away their own cases, taken away because this is the problem with the post office story is that they were able to go after the people they were accused directly and prosecute. >> it's appalling. but really, what find so utterly what i find so utterly disgusting , disgraceful. this disgusting, disgraceful. this has ticking along for has been ticking along for a long time . has been ticking along for a longtime. but you has been ticking along for a long time . but you have to have long time. but you have to have a drama on the tv. before mps start waking up, before ministers start saying we've got to stop all these convictions, we've got to quash them all. what was happening before and the role of ed davey ed davey , the role of ed davey ed davey, he will go. he is dead meat. but was he not lied to by post office management? >> and therefore who could blame him? he was advised by by by civil there's nothing civil servants. there's nothing to here. to see here. >> oh, his job is to make decisions. hisjob is to listen decisions. his job is to listen to advice and either take it or reject it. when bates went to alan bates went to go and see him. um, he should have said or appued him. um, he should have said or applied to see him . yeah. i'll applied to see him. yeah. i'll give this guy a go and let's have a look at it. don't close your damn fool. he's in your mind. damn fool. he's in trouble. and of course, some of the stuff that nigel farage is doing when was working doing on him when he was working at, uh, i can't think of that big solicitors company. oh, that's right, but these were the solicitors represented the solicitors who represented the post yes. and this post office. oh, yes. and this is big, big story to is a big, big, big story to come. >> but you feel it's a conflict of interest and then some. >> the problem is the culpable party is so wide ed davey does have responsibility. but but the management and the post office did wasn't a miscarriage did lie. it wasn't a miscarriage of justice. it's total of justice. it's a total perversion justice. but first perversion of justice. but first of the system capable of of all, the system is capable of failing. the computer system failed and then hid behind failed and then they hid behind it. that's the similarity it. and that's the similarity with that you brought with the covid that you brought up the beginning. up at the beginning. >> other words, up at the beginning. >> then other words, up at the beginning. >> then tried other words, up at the beginning. >> then tried during words, up at the beginning. >> then tried during covid,. people then tried during covid, it was during covid. it was follow the science. and i suppose during post office suppose during the post office scandal, was follow the scandal, it was follow the software, software. scandal, it was follow the soft yeah. software. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash ftware. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash there. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash the little >> yeah. and squash the little person who complains . you know person who complains. you know this they didn't send if we prison laura. >> we didn't send them. >> we didn't send them. >> well we did lock them in their home. we may and take away their home. we may and take away their rights they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga:s they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go y'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go to have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go to a ave to have a vaccine to go to a cinema. >> all right. >> all right. >> different from >> it's different from what i think. did commit think. a few people did commit suicide pandemic. suicide during the pandemic. well, is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ?also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ? is;o suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ? is it a war on ordinary people? is it the death of people power? this story ? story? >> ee. story? >> is nothing new in any >> there is nothing new in any of that's depressing of this. that's the depressing thing the supergun thing i mentioned the supergun case. was in, uh, about case. this was in, uh, about 1980, something like that . uh, 1980, something like that. uh, mi6 1980, something like that. uh, m16 said here are these people. they're building a supergun for iraq. yeah. um go to prison judges intervened. judges intervened , not parliament said intervened, not parliament said this is wrong. these men are innocent. but the executive live would have been perfectly happy for these guys to go to prison. that it is wrong. it's the judiciary who are the saviours of this country. >> see, it's so speaks the lawyer . uh, laura, do you own an lawyer. uh, laura, do you own an electric car ? electric car? >> of course i don't. first of all, a lot of ordinary people like me can't own an electric car because you have to charge it, which requires you having a garage and a driveway. anyone garage and a driveway. so anyone that has a, you know, house that has a, you know, a house that has a, you know, a house that doesn't have a parking space in front or a garage space right in front or a garage can't own one. so, you know , can't own one. so, you know, this was always a part. >> jerry hayes has got a moat. >> jerry hayes has got a moat. >> was always pipe. the >> it was always the pipe. the pipe >> it was always the pipe. the pipe dream. you know, the luxury. >> jerry goes home by ship. that's well—to—do that's how that's how well—to—do he yes , i know what he is. but but yes, i know what you you mean. >> you mean. >> it's luxury pipe >> it's a luxury belief pipe dream classes , dream of upper middle classes, rich elites and technocratic planners . rich elites and technocratic planners. ordinary rich elites and technocratic planners . ordinary people planners. ordinary people can't rely on electric cars. and, you know, i want to come back to something said your something you said in your monologue. something you said in your monolanxiety. is range anxiety. it is a ridiculous time to use the reason people are anxious about range is because the cars don't go far enough. it makes it range. it, it makes it. range. it makes it, it makes it. yeah, that yeah, but what that does is pathologize person who pathologize the person who doesn't car because it's doesn't want a car because it's not their not going to get them to their destination anxiety isn't destination range anxiety isn't something like up neurosis something like made up neurosis that have. because that people have. it's because the simply aren't good the cars simply aren't good enough. jerry, sometimes enough. jerry, do you sometimes worry that not going to worry that you're not going to be go all the way? be able to go all the way? >> oh, you are really. >> oh, you are really. >> it's of innuendo tonight >> it's full of innuendo tonight . you want and if you . and if you want and if you want innuendo, i'll give you one. >> and on that note, coming up, could suella braverman sync rishi sunak rwanda plan and with it, his premiership will get the views of britain's best known political double neil and political double act, neil and christine hamilton. that's . . earlier on, gb news radio . . earlier on, gb news radio. >> welcome back to friday night live with me. >> mark dolan . now coming up, >> mark dolan. now coming up, could prince andrew do a harry and split from the royal family and split from the royal family and wage war on the monarchy? could he go to california to live with his nephew ? god live with his nephew? god forbid. but moving on. speaking exclusively to gb news political editor christopher hope, former home secretary suella braverman has warned rishi sunak she will vote against his rwanda bill next week unless he accepts proposals to strengthen the prime minister's flagship legislation. the former home secretary braverman , gave the pm secretary braverman, gave the pm a stark warning as she said the current version of the bill does not work and if there are no improvements , she will oppose improvements, she will oppose it. when it comes to the crunch , it. when it comes to the crunch, take a listen. >> is about delivering >> this is about delivering a bill works and stopping the bill that works and stopping the boats. you know i'm here because i believe vividly in things. i'm here because i believe passionately in delivering for the british people. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with broken promises. this is our last chance to get it right . our last chance to get it right. and woe betide a government that fails the british people again. the nuclear button has been pressed. >> let's get the views now of britain's best known political double act. broadcaster and commentator christine hamilton, and the leader of ukip, neil hamilton . great to see both of hamilton. great to see both of you, neil. you're a lawyer as well as a politician . is suella well as a politician. is suella braverman right that the current rwanda legislation is dead on arrival? yes >> of course. >> of course. >> uh, the bill itself contains a clause which gives anybody who is affected by it the right to appeal against decisions about their refugee status so that will immediately lead to everybody , because there are everybody, because there are loads of lawyers who are rubbing their hands with glee at the legal aid implications . and the legal aid implications. and the cost of this bill to, to, to bnng cost of this bill to, to, to bring about appeals. the courts are clogged anyway. there'll be even more clogged after this bill goes through. if it does, sunak himself must know that the whole thing is a dead duck. sunak himself must know that the whole thing is a dead duck . and whole thing is a dead duck. and it's not just a dead duck, it's a dead cat. distraction from the real issue here, which is that sunak is, according to a spokesman from number 10, a few days ago , allergic to getting days ago, allergic to getting out of the european convention on human rights or the un refugee convention unless the government does both of those things, then they're effectively in the hands of international lawyers and whatever the british parliament says, they'll be in breach of their international law obligations. and he said that's unacceptable. so what they've got to do is to denounce those parts of the european convention and the un refugee convention, which make it impossible for a british government lawfully to control our border . government lawfully to control our border. but of government lawfully to control our border . but of course, they our border. but of course, they won't do that . and the last 13 won't do that. and the last 13 years is a long history of failures , lies and dissembling . failures, lies and dissembling. and this latest measure is in that un heroic tradition . that un heroic tradition. >> well, christine, you have to feel for sunak, though, don't you? he's walking a sort of tight legal tightrope. and those on the right of his party want to go further. those on the left are so—called tory wets. will object. between a rock and object. he's between a rock and a hard place . a hard place. >> yeah, absolutely. he's between the devil and the deep blue sea. but this is the tory party's own making. when cameron was prime minister, instead of allowing constituencies to choose candidate dates choose their own candidate dates when we would have had proper conservative and conservative candidates and therefore more proper conservative now they all conservative mps. now they all had to be in the cameron mould, which is why the tory party is basically a party of social democrats. but the whole thing, as can is as far as i can see, is a complete and utter waste of time. will take time. no single plane will take off, uh, between now and the next election. it simply won't. if it gets through parliament, it will be stopped by the european courts. and they are just. if excuse my just. if you'll excuse my french, fiddling while french, they are fiddling while rome burns. the immigration issue is a conflagration in this country . and although a lot of country. and although a lot of people say that the, um, the economy is more important than the nhs , if you look at those the nhs, if you look at those who voted conservative at the last time in 2019, the immigration is a massive issue for them . the figures come in at for them. the figures come in at 87, 92, etc. when you ask them questions about immigration. so this is literally a bonfire under rishi sunak and he is tacking it in completely. they are wasting they are wasting parliamentary time because this is never going to go anywhere . is never going to go anywhere. >> briefly, christine , aren't they. >> because they know this will fail and they know that the pubuc fail and they know that the public has long since given up any hope that this conservative government means what it says, and actually to do and actually intends to do anything migration. and actually intends to do anythi|the migration. and actually intends to do anythi|the legalnigration. and actually intends to do anythi|the legal migration mean, the legal migration figures are three times what they were five years ago, three quarters of a million people added to population last added to our population last year migration . year through legal migration. and we've added a city the size of birmingham to our population every two years. and this is a government which was supposedly committed reducing migration committed to reducing migration overall to less than 100,000. >> okay , neil, neil and >> okay, neil, neil and christine, stay where you are because have another lawyer because we have another lawyer slash politician with us in jerry hayes, practising barrister, former tory mp. the show is full of ex—tory and friends of the hamiltons. show is full of ex—tory and friends of the hamiltons . well, friends of the hamiltons. well, i'm glad to hear it. do you agree with neil that the tories should just renounce the echr and go it alone? >> no , it's completely insane, >> no, it's completely insane, actually , as a barrister, neil actually, as a barrister, neil knows that too. i mean , what one knows that too. i mean, what one of the things we're quite shocked me for embarrassed is neil suddenly says the most appalling or perhaps not the most appalling thing, but an appalling the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving] the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the right bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the right toll is giving people the right to appeal. well, it's basically the rule law . that's what we do. rule of law. that's what we do. but what about the laws of this country and our territory boundaries? >> why are we finding it so hard to stop those boats? we're finding it so hard to stop the boats because it's darn difficult to do to, uh, we've actually cut it by three quarters. >> and before anyone says it's to do with the weather, it's got nothing to do with the weather at all. uh, albania has helped, of course, albania has helped tremendously, actually, because we've said, look, albania is a is a safe country . we've got to is a safe country. we've got to get more cooperation with the french. i know neil and christine will say, oh, listen , christine will say, oh, listen, more cooperation with the french. >> i know you've had a drink tonight, seriously, no . can tonight, but seriously, no. can anyone seriously? are anyone take that seriously? are we rely on emmanuel we going to rely on emmanuel macron and brussels to help us out? that's the problem out? i mean, that's the problem with plan. with obama's plan. >> brussels , not >> is not brussels, not brussels, mean, okay, brussels, but i mean, okay, laura, what you think about this? >> because think we are >> because i think that we are have looming democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat looming democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat lthe|ing democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat lthe toriesemocratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat [the tories don't|tic crisis , that if the tories don't address this issue and if labour don't address it, they get don't address it, if they get in, think you're going have don't address it, if they get invery|ink you're going have don't address it, if they get invery angry u're going have don't address it, if they get invery angry population. have a very angry population. >> you will. i agree >> of course you will. i agree with what neil about with what neil said about it being cat. i don't think being a dead cat. i don't think this ever deliberately this was ever deliberately a dead cat strategy. i think people met it for the rwanda policy to work hit and hope that's true. but it has turned out be dead cat because out to be a dead cat because what we're not doing is talking about the problem of legal migration levels. yes. as neil said , yes. now the small boats said, yes. now the small boats are a problem and it appeals, of course, to people sense of unfairness, not knowing who's coming in. we basically have criminal cartels in charge of our immigration policy and i don't really see why those people should have the same right to appeal. i to say, right to appeal. i have to say, i have a different i think we'll have a different view i you view on this, but i think you have respect suella have to respect suella braverman's consistency on this. >> she wants the leadership . >> she wants the leadership. this is what it's all about. well, nothing to do with immigration. how long was immigration. how long she was she what she she home secretary for? what she achieved absolutely nothing. achieved? absolutely nothing. she shouts . she shouts. >> lots of want the >> lots of mps want the leadership . find me mp who leadership. find me an mp who doesn't leadership. but doesn't want the leadership. but she's consistent she's been completely consistent on issue. on this issue. >> consistently wrong . >> consistently wrong. >> consistently wrong. >> making >> well, she's making suggestions the amendments suggestions that the amendments this legislation will make it more robust, less liable to these individual appeals. is she right? >> well, if no, i don't think i don't think it does. she wants to get rid of the european court of human rights, which is absolutely silly. the real why is it silly? i'll tell you why it's silly. it was actually drafted after the second world war. >> how many times have i heard that by winston churchill ? that by winston churchill? >> okay, i'll tell you. all right. >> the world has changed. let's forget. >> let's forget that since then. what good does it do us now? >> i? shall i you the >> shall i? shall i tell you the problem ecr? and that problem with the ecr? and that is that it's given itself powers. court given powers. the court has given itself were never in itself powers that were never in the treaty, and the real problem is rule 39, where they can say, oh , um, you know, we're going to oh, um, you know, we're going to stop people without legal argument from leaving a country. we're going to injunct that country. now, there's a lot of people who want to reform that soonen people who want to reform that sooner. it wants to reform it, and a lot of people and a lot of other people and that way round that and a lot of other people and th the way round that and a lot of other people and ththe real way round that and a lot of other people and ththe real problem,d that and a lot of other people and ththe real problem, because: is the real problem, because under the ecr, we only have to take note of it. a lot of things we completely ignore it. >> you know, briefly, laura, i come back, the bottom line, the bottom line is in that 13 years they've done very little to tide they've done very little to tide the rising immigration. >> it is a problem for the british people. >> no government is ever achieved it. >> i'll tell you something to me, harry. let me tell you that this is a crisis for the tories. but it's a crisis for labour, too. i think if the political establishment sit on their hands for much longer, there will be a revolt. and i'll be honest with you, a new party, some new political force and labour and the tories will never see power again . uh, the hamiltons are again. uh, the hamiltons are back with us. and neil and christine. um, i've got a little bit of personal intel about your day, somebody me day, because somebody told me that you've been to see the film napoleon today. are there any parallels with the current prime minister? short man desperate minister? a short man desperate to power , for god's sake? >> well, i think there is a parallel, because i think he should sent to saint helena, should be sent to saint helena, don't you? that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwellj? that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell ,’ that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and|t's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a fewoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a few ofeon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a few of the >> well, and quite a few of the post office bigwigs could could join him. >> do you know, mark, i tell you, it makes me feel incredibly geriatric. we go to the 2:00 matinee in our local town hall, and it costs us a fiver , so we and it costs us a fiver, so we can't see a film the day it comes out. but it doesn't take long. mean , it's magical. long. and i mean, it's magical. so we're home by 5:00 for so we're back home by 5:00 for anchovy toast tea and then anchovy toast and tea and then bedtime, . bedtime, of course. >> let's let's on that . of that. >> let's let's on that. of that. yes, exactly. >> it's a family show, neil. um, listen, go, it's listen, before we go, it's around of year when around that time of year when people their new year's people give up their new year's resolutions. how are the hamiltons getting on with theirs ? >> ?- >>a ? >> a brilliantly, 7 >> a brilliantly, 100% brilliantly. we haven't broken them at all. no >> well, christine makes mine for me . for me. >> we didn't make any. we didn't . we don't make them. we're far too to old fall into that trap. we just. >> can i just say bring along . >> can i just say bring along. >> can i just say bring along. >> that's forget about dry >> that's it. forget about dry january , the hamilton dry january, the hamilton dry january, the hamilton dry january, hamiltons are january, the hamiltons are looking wet tonight . yeah, looking quite wet tonight. yeah, absolutely . absolutely. >> to hell with dry january . >> to hell with dry january. >> to hell with dry january. >> and i can't believe. well, look. >> cheers to both of you. >> cheers to both of you. >> an umbrella. you. >> an umbrella. you. >> oh, my goodness, i'm glad you freaked me out there by suggesting go suggesting you were going to go alcohol knew that alcohol free. i knew that wouldn't happen. >> can i just say >> i would just can i just say one thing? it does me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say it does me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that es me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that these me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that these european|en people say that these european outfits, the echr, were put outfits, like the echr, were put in place to control everything. they were not put in place to keep control. we don't keep us under control. we don't need of control. they need that sort of control. they were in place stop france were put in place to stop france and fighting each other and germany fighting each other and germany fighting each other and lesser nations. so the and other lesser nations. so the idea we should still be a idea that we should still be a member. what was brexit? we're not under? >> last word, last word >> okay. last word, last word not not under not under not we're not under not under control by them. >> because the european >> because unlike the european court, can ignore them . court, we can ignore them. advisory do advisory . advisory do its advisory. >> that's the whole point. >> that's the whole point. >> no , that's so wrong. >> no, that's so wrong. >> no, that's so wrong. >> there you go. >> there you go. >> 100 guineas for that piece of advice . advice. >> kicked off the >> it's all kicked off the rwanda flights. >> there you go. this show's all about opinions. thank you so much hamiltons. see much to the hamiltons. we'll see you go and that you soon. go and finish that bottle jacob's creek and bottle of jacob's creek and we'll see you very soon. brilliant stuff. neil and christine hamilton. always a treat to have them on the show. looking forward to this. next up, prince andrew do up, could prince andrew do a prince harry and split from the royal family? write a book and wage war on the monarchy? we'll be hearing from a top royal insider . listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to friday night live with me. mark dolan. your weekend starts here. don't forget mark dolan tonight tomorrow and sunday with all your favourite elements, including big opinion. mark meets and take at ten coming up before 9:00. why does this war in the red sea matter to you and me? we'll be hearing from britain's most entertaining historian. but first, it's only the 12th of january. but it's already been an annus horribilis for prince andrew, with his former virginia giuffre, former accuser virginia giuffre, claiming she was. she was paid £12,000 by the late convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein to sleep with prince andrew. meanwhile his brother the king is preparing to withdraw private funding for security at the royal lodge. andrew's 30 bedroom home in windsor, where he has resided since 2003. but here's a question for you is there a risk that king charles could be too tough on andrew? could andrew do a prince harry leave the country , write a book and spill the royal beans? let's get the views now of one of the best connected royal journalists in the country. royal expert biographer and editor in chief of majesty magazine ingrid seward . ingrid, magazine ingrid seward. ingrid, lovely to have you back on the show. happy new year treated show. happy new year if treated badly by his own family, could prince andrew fight back . prince andrew fight back. >> well, he could fight back, but i don't think he has actually got the guts to do it. i think he's so , uh, surrounded i think he's so, uh, surrounded with his royal life and always has been . i mean, he's nearly has been. i mean, he's nearly always lived in a palace, and he's certainly living in a pretty nice palace now . i don't pretty nice palace now. i don't think he would do it. i mean, he could go and write his story from his point of view, but he's already made a mess of that. on his newsnight interview. and unless he has a very good ghost—writer outer, no one is going to really be that interested in his single point of view. so he could do it. there's nothing to stop him , but there's nothing to stop him, but i think i've now , every so many i think i've now, every so many columnists have said , what are columnists have said, what are we going to do with prince andrew? but i think what prince andrew? but i think what prince andrew should do is say to his brother, the king, look, i've made an absolute mess of everything. i think the gracious thing would be here are the keys of royal lodge. you pay me the money that i've already put into it, which is , you know, several it, which is, you know, several million pounds. i'm going to go off, find somewhere much quieter and smaller to live . i don't and smaller to live. i don't even want frogmore cottage. i'm going further away and just do the decent thing . and then the decent thing. and then i think he would get some serious brownie points from people, instead of people thinking that he is just somebody that seems to be on the take all the time. >> um , ingrid, can we afford can >> um, ingrid, can we afford can you afford to go it alone ? you afford to go it alone? >> can you afford to sell up, move to a smaller place and see out his days in a comfortable fashion ? fashion? >> oh, absolutely. he can, because he's put an enormous amount of money into royal lodge. and that would be taken into account. he's paid rent up for another 25 years or something. that would be taken into account. his brother is not going to see him starve. and i think everyone says, though andrew has no money, but it's inconceivable the queen wouldn't have made some provision for him. she would have worried about him. so if he if he's all the trust that all the royal family have had run out, she would have made provision for him . so he has money. he may him. so he has money. he may pretend he hasn't, but he definitely has money. >> let's think that's what he can. >> ingrid, my fantastic friday friends in on this conversation , friends in on this conversation, broadcaster and writer laura dodsworth , barrister and former dodsworth, barrister and former tory mp jerry hayes and let's p0p tory mp jerry hayes and let's pop everyone in boxes if we can, because i just want to ask you, laura, how do you solve a problem with with prince andrew? he's genetics . problem with with prince andrew? he's genetics. he's he's got good genetics. he's going to be around with any luck for how does for many years to come. how does he approach the next couple of decades? i agree with decades? well, i agree with ingnd decades? well, i agree with ingrid he should be as ingrid that he should just be as quiet and inoffensive as possible. >> it's seen as in his few pubuc >> it's seen as in his few public photo opportunities . >> it's seen as in his few public photo opportunities. his, um, you know, he was he was seen going to church with the rest of the royal family. and even that then causes a debate. or should he go to church? well he probably to bit of probably needs to do a bit of penance of prayer. but penance and a bit of prayer. but it could be in a church on his own um, own somewhere, couldn't it? um, i think it's just such a difficult generation for the royal family. he's weighing like an anchor around an embarrassing anchor around their with your language. their ankles with your language. >> and he he should, he >> and he should. he should, he should really. he should put what's your mouth? >> institution first. >> the institution first. >> the institution first. >> tower. >> the institution first. >> he tower. >> the institution first. >> he put tower. >> the institution first. >> he put the ar. >> the institution first. >> he put the institution first. >> and go and retire somewhere very quietly. is that feasible , very quietly. is that feasible, jerry hayes? >> well , no, not with him, >> well, no, not with him, because he's got no judgement . because he's got no judgement. >> prince andrew doing the decent thing. as ingrid said, i just can't see that happening . i just can't see that happening. i really can't see that happening . really can't see that happening. all the people i know who know him, particularly in the navy, in the falklands , saying he was in the falklands, saying he was just an arrogant piece of s, you know, sort of thing. he was know, that sort of thing. he was absolutely dreadful. he doesn't take advice from people . he's take advice from people. he's not going to take advice from people . now, the good thing in people. now, the good thing in his favour, he's got the king and i know the king not particularly well, but i know him. when i was an mp and he's a good, kind, decent man who loves his brother and won't see him destitute. but, well, andrew, do the it's like the decent thing. ah, it's like well, boris, well never mind. yeah, that's. >> i think we can read between the lines there and ingrid. what of the relationship between the king and prince andrew? it's obviously strained , but do they obviously strained, but do they have a history getting along ? have a history of getting along? >> they have a very big history of getting along. i mean, when prince andrew was born, uh, charles was away at school, but he was absolutely delighted with his and really, his little brother. and really, you know, took of him, you know, took care of him, looked after him, read him, looked after him, read to him, and they haven't been particularly close . but charles particularly close. but charles is a kind man and also i don't think he would want to throw his brother out of out of, of his, of his own home, his home. i just think he won't want to do it. but i mean, i think he shouldn't have to do it. he really , really shouldn't. and i really, really shouldn't. and i feel so strongly about this. andrew's man up . i think andrew's got to man up. i think we should be a campaign to make andrew man up. >> yeah, that's the campaign i can behind. can get behind. >> well , let's let's talk can get behind. >> well, let's let's talk ingrid about story that you've drawn about a story that you've drawn my attention to . it's in my team's attention to. it's in the it's just a i think the mail. it's just a i think popped the mail. it's just a i think popped onto their website and it's the late, great queen it's about the late, great queen elizabethys. >> yes. the mail is serialising a book by robert hardman , who a book by robert hardman, who is, you know, one of their main, uh, royal commentators and he has, uh , had incredible access has, uh, had incredible access and he has got this story of the queen's final hours , apparently, queen's final hours, apparently, according to sir edward young, who is her private secretary, she died very peacefully. so no agony. you know, we've read that, you know, she was in agony, but she died very peacefully. sad early. uh, charles wasn't there because he'd popped over to his house near balmoral . you know, which near balmoral. you know, which used to belong to the queen mother to pick mushrooms and think which is. mother to pick mushrooms and think which is . sounds really think which is. sounds really weird, but it's very charles. and anne was at her mother's bedside , and charles had the bedside, and charles had the news when he was driving back that actually the queen had died . and i thi
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elizabeth. anne is mother, elizabeth. anne is arguably the closest connection we still have to our late, great queen, so if i find myself sat to next anne the next time i'm on a ryanair flight, i might just share my complimentary bag of peanuts because anne is the best. meanwhile, the aeroplane manufacturers boeing suffer another safety scare as the door of a737 max nine falls off mid—air . var. it was very mid—air. var. it was very distressing for those on board, although pure luxury compared to being sat next to an overweight passenger or a crying baby. meanwhile, us car rental giant hertz is offloading thousands of teslas as weak demand forces it to replace 20,000 electric cars with petrol powered vehicles instead. can you believe it? it's almost like petrol cars are more reliable and convenient. who would have thought? who'd have thunk it? laura dodsworth. this move away from electric will cost the company £200 million. this news comes as it's revealed electric car sales are slowing in britain, with projections for future sales cut drastically . customers worry drastically. customers worry about something called range anxiety , with concerns that the anxiety, with concerns that the car is going to conk out before you reach your destination. in gerry's case, his local pub. >> oh , thank you very much. >> oh, thank you very much. >> oh, thank you very much. >> don't mind if i do. plus, where do you charge these vehicles? how do you insure them and how do you pay for their expensive repairs? means while you'll love this story, an electric bus in london exploded this week. not for the first time this has happened. given the volatile the combustible and volatile nature of battery technology . nature of battery technology. i'll tell you what i'm not happy . it takes precious rare materials to make these vehicles. the batteries are hard to recycle. these cars require fossil fuel energy to make them and fossil fuel energy to charge them up. far from being the answer to our prayers, it looks like electric cars are running out of road. and last but not least, jennifer aniston star of friends, has brought back her famous rachel haircut . take famous rachel haircut. take a look at this. actually a very fine woman. i think you'll agree. a brilliant actress. and there's the original rachel look alongside the updated version . alongside the updated version. isn't it fabulous? >> which one's which? >> which one's which? >> i had one of those. tell you something. there's a few years between, but i don't know, would you rachel or late rachel? >> jerry, i'll go for any rachel. >> i'm just going to say , >> i'm just going to say, listen, the guy , he's trapped in listen, the guy, he's trapped in a loveless marriage, he's not fussy . fussy. >> oh, laura, did you do something like that with your hair? >> i most certainly did. oh, come on, what woman that era come on, what woman of that era did into the hairdressers did not go into the hairdressers and rachel? had and ask for a rachel? we all had and ask for a rachel? we all had a i a rachel. yeah. a rachel. i had a rachel. yeah. and looking at the new and in fact, looking at the new rachel, go and for rachel, i might go and ask for a new rachel. well, it's quite inspiring, it. inspiring, i like it. >> i think you're rocking the laura works for me . laura and that works for me. >> people the dolan, >> people asking for the dolan, that's know. that's what i want to know. >> oh, not even wig >> sadly not. oh, not even wig man. mr mr vine has words about that. oh, yes. jeremy vine . oh, that. oh, yes. jeremy vine. oh, yes. with my hair. no, he said you've dead squirrel you've got a dead squirrel on your jealous. your head. i think he's jealous. >> listen , the rachel >> well, listen, the rachel hairstyle changed the world. it captured global attention, which is why we decided to bring you the friday night live with mark dolan. top ten countdown of best celebrity hairdos. come in at number 10. it's got to be bojo himself. look at that shock of blonde hair in at number 970 tv beauty farrah fawcett. oh i think she's doing a dodsworth there. >> oh, you're too kind . do you >> oh, you're too kind. do you know, i wanted to be the charlie's angels when i was a little girl, so i'm. i'm having that. thanks. >> well, you don't . and dolan's >> well, you don't. and dolan's angel tonight. number eight, legendary record producer phil spector. was that before or after he shot his other half? how about number seven? the former leader of the free world, the man that wants to go back to the man that wants to go back to the white house, the donald himself. look at the style. >> that's a dead animal the head. >> it is a dead animal. what about a number six, about the hair in a number six, lady gaga ? oh, you're on fire. lady gaga? oh, you're on fire. oh, she's gone with that one. >> look at that. that's gaga central, isn't it? meanwhile in at number five. what a great footballer he was, the late, great sir bobby charlton rocking the and of course , the comb over. and of course, there a when all men did that. >> they did. they did . uh, david >> they did. they did. uh, david coleman, do you remember david coleman? yes. >> colemanballs . >> colemanballs. >> colemanballs. >> yes. what a guy. >> yes. what a guy. >> and then suddenly bruce willis came along. yeah. and they thought, right, they just thought, right, shave it yeah. they just thought, right, shave it and yeah. they just thought, right, shave it and ye see latest poll, >> and you see the latest poll, which no for good people like which is no for good people like you and me say that more women prefer . prefer bald men. >> is that right? could you bear that out, laura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well laura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well ,.aura dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, dodsworth? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how north? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how to th? >> is that right? could you bear that well , well, how to answer >> um, well, well, how to answer this? >> considering i'm. i'm engaged to someone who's bald, i think that if you're going to be bald, do it. don't do the comb over. no but if you've got hair, don't shaveit no but if you've got hair, don't shave it off. yeah. >> okay, well, let me tell you, this is not a comb over. not yet anyway. give five years. uh, anyway. give it five years. uh, next up in at number four. it's got to be david beckham, and he gets entries. first of all, gets two entries. first of all, the mohican and something called a cornrow. my producer nicola tried educate me. i thought tried to educate me. i thought it was white man's dreadlocks, but apparently not. >> that cultural >> isn't that cultural appropriation something? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel something? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him imething? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now1ing? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now in g? >> isn't that cultural appropcancel him now in at >> so cancel him now in at number three, a massive star gb news legend neil oliver. look at that luscious mane caveman look. it is really , isn't it flowing? it is really, isn't it flowing? he's got beauty , he's got hair. he's got beauty, he's got hair. >> a lot of women would be very jealous of. really thick and lustrous . lustrous. >> yeah, but that's died, isn't it? i know, how dare you leave everything with neil is real. >> i'm sure it is. everything with neil is real. >> i'm sure it is . uh, how about >> i'm sure it is. uh, how about in two? got to be in at number two? it's got to be kim jong un, and you've got to say you like his haircut or he'll shoot you . and last but he'll shoot you. and last but not least, celebrity haircuts gone wrong . oh, dear. oh, no. gone wrong. oh, dear. oh, no. who's that idiot ? who's that idiot? >> oh, and there was i, joking about the dolan . about the dolan. >> no. was that not that? was that your real hair then? >> yeah. i mean, would you pay for wig that looked like that? for a wig that looked like that? >> know. michael >> um, i don't know. michael fabncant >> um, i don't know. michael fabricant might . fabricant might. >> you on. that >> there you go on. that crushingly embarrassing note. that big opinion. that was my friday. big opinion. okay well, laura dodsworth and jerry hayes are going to weigh in on the big stories of the day. and, laura, can we start on a slightly note? the a slightly serious note? the post is a human post office scandal is a human tragedy. corruption . um, tragedy. so much corruption. um, but do think that there are but do you think that there are echoes the pandemic the echoes of the pandemic and the way that individuals who are concerned about covid measures were of silenced and not were sort of silenced and not allowed to debate things ? are allowed to debate things? are there any parallels between the post office scandal and the management of covid? >> i think that's um, i think that's an interesting hypothesis. it's a good comparison. and where i would see a link would be when people rely upon systems, computing, modelling , boffins basically modelling, boffins basically there's a mistrust of the individual of humans and an overreliance on systems . so you overreliance on systems. so you saw that in covid with modelling a lot of , um, dependency on a lot of, um, dependency on theoretical modelling, which which was still relied on even after there was real world evidence. so a bunch of just a bunch of sort of lonely boffins as sort of mathematicians and other sort of geniuses had these models which proved to be inaccurate . inaccurate. >> they were very pessimistic, which is what sparked don't let imperial here, you see, they're proved to be inaccurate. >> but of course, they were similar with climate change modelling. now, i know that's different to a computer system, but is similarity there. but there is a similarity there. so after people raised the so even after people raised the alarm, you know, over and over and over on the horizon system , and over on the horizon system, they squashed down by a they were squashed down by a system itself . system trying to protect itself. um, so that's that's one comparison. but you can take it beyond covid as well. i mean, you all know all about this. of course, as a barrister, but there was a case, wasn't there, with and excise. um supergun. >> you're thinking of the you well, you possibly . well, you possibly. >> possibly. i won't know the name of it , >> possibly. i won't know the name of it, but they they had their they had their power nickname bedroom. nickname in the bedroom. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> their power, >> they, they had their power, didn't um, prop suit didn't they, to, um, prop suit their own cases , taken away their own cases, taken away because this is the problem with the post office story is that they were able to go after the people they were accused directly and prosecute. >> it's appalling. but really, what find so utterly what i find so utterly disgusting , disgraceful. this disgusting, disgraceful. this has ticking along for has been ticking along for a long time . has been ticking along for a longtime. but you has been ticking along for a long time . but you have to have long time. but you have to have a drama on the tv. before mps start waking up, before ministers start saying we've got to stop all these convictions, we've got to quash them all. what was happening before and the role of ed davey ed davey , the role of ed davey ed davey, he will go. he is dead meat. but was he not lied to by post office management? >> and therefore who could blame him? he was advised by by by civil there's nothing civil servants. there's nothing to here. to see here. >> oh, his job is to make decisions. hisjob is to listen decisions. his job is to listen to advice and either take it or reject it. when bates went to alan bates went to go and see him. um, he should have said or appued him. um, he should have said or applied to see him . yeah. i'll applied to see him. yeah. i'll give this guy a go and let's have a look at it. don't close your damn fool. he's in your mind. damn fool. he's in trouble. and of course, some of the stuff that nigel farage is doing when was working doing on him when he was working at, uh, i can't think of that big solicitors company. oh, that's right, but these were the solicitors represented the solicitors who represented the post yes. and this post office. oh, yes. and this is big, big story to is a big, big, big story to come. >> but you feel it's a conflict of interest and then some. >> the problem is the culpable party is so wide ed davey does have responsibility. but but the management and the post office did wasn't a miscarriage did lie. it wasn't a miscarriage of justice. it's total of justice. it's a total perversion justice. but first perversion of justice. but first of the system capable of of all, the system is capable of failing. the computer system failed and then hid behind failed and then they hid behind it. that's the similarity it. and that's the similarity with that you brought with the covid that you brought up the beginning. up at the beginning. >> other words, up at the beginning. >> then other words, up at the beginning. >> then tried other words, up at the beginning. >> then tried during words, up at the beginning. >> then tried during covid,. people then tried during covid, it was during covid. it was follow the science. and i suppose during post office suppose during the post office scandal, was follow the scandal, it was follow the software, software. scandal, it was follow the soft yeah. software. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash ftware. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash there. scandal, it was follow the softyeah. squash the little >> yeah. and squash the little person who complains . you know person who complains. you know this they didn't send if we prison laura. >> we didn't send them. >> we didn't send them. >> well we did lock them in their home. we may and take away their home. we may and take away their rights they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga:s they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to they'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go y'd have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go to have their home. we may and take away their riga vaccine to go to a ave to have a vaccine to go to a cinema. >> all right. >> all right. >> different from >> it's different from what i think. did commit think. a few people did commit suicide pandemic. suicide during the pandemic. well, is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary is also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ?also suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ? is;o suicide during the pandemic. wwar on ordinary people ? is it a war on ordinary people? is it the death of people power? this story ? story? >> ee. story? >> is nothing new in any >> there is nothing new in any of that's depressing of this. that's the depressing thing the supergun thing i mentioned the supergun case. was in, uh, about case. this was in, uh, about 1980, something like that . uh, 1980, something like that. uh, mi6 1980, something like that. uh, m16 said here are these people. they're building a supergun for iraq. yeah. um go to prison judges intervened. judges intervened , not parliament said intervened, not parliament said this is wrong. these men are innocent. but the executive live would have been perfectly happy for these guys to go to prison. that it is wrong. it's the judiciary who are the saviours of this country. >> see, it's so speaks the lawyer . uh, laura, do you own an lawyer. uh, laura, do you own an electric car ? electric car? >> of course i don't. first of all, a lot of ordinary people like me can't own an electric car because you have to charge it, which requires you having a garage and a driveway. anyone garage and a driveway. so anyone that has a, you know, house that has a, you know, a house that has a, you know, a house that doesn't have a parking space in front or a garage space right in front or a garage can't own one. so, you know , can't own one. so, you know, this was always a part. >> jerry hayes has got a moat. >> jerry hayes has got a moat. >> was always pipe. the >> it was always the pipe. the pipe >> it was always the pipe. the pipe dream. you know, the luxury. >> jerry goes home by ship. that's well—to—do that's how that's how well—to—do he yes , i know what he is. but but yes, i know what you you mean. >> you mean. >> it's luxury pipe >> it's a luxury belief pipe dream classes , dream of upper middle classes, rich elites and technocratic planners . rich elites and technocratic planners. ordinary rich elites and technocratic planners . ordinary people planners. ordinary people can't rely on electric cars. and, you know, i want to come back to something said your something you said in your monologue. something you said in your monolanxiety. is range anxiety. it is a ridiculous time to use the reason people are anxious about range is because the cars don't go far enough. it makes it range. it, it makes it. range. it makes it, it makes it. yeah, that yeah, but what that does is pathologize person who pathologize the person who doesn't car because it's doesn't want a car because it's not their not going to get them to their destination anxiety isn't destination range anxiety isn't something like up neurosis something like made up neurosis that have. because that people have. it's because the simply aren't good the cars simply aren't good enough. jerry, sometimes enough. jerry, do you sometimes worry that not going to worry that you're not going to be go all the way? be able to go all the way? >> oh, you are really. >> oh, you are really. >> it's of innuendo tonight >> it's full of innuendo tonight . you want and if you . and if you want and if you want innuendo, i'll give you one. >> and on that note, coming up, could suella braverman sync rishi sunak rwanda plan and with it, his premiership will get the views of britain's best known political double neil and political double act, neil and christine hamilton. that's . . earlier on, gb news radio . . earlier on, gb news radio. >> welcome back to friday night live with me. >> mark dolan . now coming up, >> mark dolan. now coming up, could prince andrew do a harry and split from the royal family and split from the royal family and wage war on the monarchy? could he go to california to live with his nephew ? god live with his nephew? god forbid. but moving on. speaking exclusively to gb news political editor christopher hope, former home secretary suella braverman has warned rishi sunak she will vote against his rwanda bill next week unless he accepts proposals to strengthen the prime minister's flagship legislation. the former home secretary braverman , gave the pm secretary braverman, gave the pm a stark warning as she said the current version of the bill does not work and if there are no improvements , she will oppose improvements, she will oppose it. when it comes to the crunch , it. when it comes to the crunch, take a listen. >> is about delivering >> this is about delivering a bill works and stopping the bill that works and stopping the boats. you know i'm here because i believe vividly in things. i'm here because i believe passionately in delivering for the british people. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with the boats. they are fed up with broken promises. this is our last chance to get it right . our last chance to get it right. and woe betide a government that fails the british people again. the nuclear button has been pressed. >> let's get the views now of britain's best known political double act. broadcaster and commentator christine hamilton, and the leader of ukip, neil hamilton . great to see both of hamilton. great to see both of you, neil. you're a lawyer as well as a politician . is suella well as a politician. is suella braverman right that the current rwanda legislation is dead on arrival? yes >> of course. >> of course. >> uh, the bill itself contains a clause which gives anybody who is affected by it the right to appeal against decisions about their refugee status so that will immediately lead to everybody , because there are everybody, because there are loads of lawyers who are rubbing their hands with glee at the legal aid implications . and the legal aid implications. and the cost of this bill to, to, to bnng cost of this bill to, to, to bring about appeals. the courts are clogged anyway. there'll be even more clogged after this bill goes through. if it does, sunak himself must know that the whole thing is a dead duck. sunak himself must know that the whole thing is a dead duck . and whole thing is a dead duck. and it's not just a dead duck, it's a dead cat. distraction from the real issue here, which is that sunak is, according to a spokesman from number 10, a few days ago , allergic to getting days ago, allergic to getting out of the european convention on human rights or the un refugee convention unless the government does both of those things, then they're effectively in the hands of international lawyers and whatever the british parliament says, they'll be in breach of their international law obligations. and he said that's unacceptable. so what they've got to do is to denounce those parts of the european convention and the un refugee convention, which make it impossible for a british government lawfully to control our border . government lawfully to control our border. but of government lawfully to control our border . but of course, they our border. but of course, they won't do that . and the last 13 won't do that. and the last 13 years is a long history of failures , lies and dissembling . failures, lies and dissembling. and this latest measure is in that un heroic tradition . that un heroic tradition. >> well, christine, you have to feel for sunak, though, don't you? he's walking a sort of tight legal tightrope. and those on the right of his party want to go further. those on the left are so—called tory wets. will object. between a rock and object. he's between a rock and a hard place . a hard place. >> yeah, absolutely. he's between the devil and the deep blue sea. but this is the tory party's own making. when cameron was prime minister, instead of allowing constituencies to choose candidate dates choose their own candidate dates when we would have had proper conservative and conservative candidates and therefore more proper conservative now they all conservative mps. now they all had to be in the cameron mould, which is why the tory party is basically a party of social democrats. but the whole thing, as can is as far as i can see, is a complete and utter waste of time. will take time. no single plane will take off, uh, between now and the next election. it simply won't. if it gets through parliament, it will be stopped by the european courts. and they are just. if excuse my just. if you'll excuse my french, fiddling while french, they are fiddling while rome burns. the immigration issue is a conflagration in this country . and although a lot of country. and although a lot of people say that the, um, the economy is more important than the nhs , if you look at those the nhs, if you look at those who voted conservative at the last time in 2019, the immigration is a massive issue for them . the figures come in at for them. the figures come in at 87, 92, etc. when you ask them questions about immigration. so this is literally a bonfire under rishi sunak and he is tacking it in completely. they are wasting they are wasting parliamentary time because this is never going to go anywhere . is never going to go anywhere. >> briefly, christine , aren't they. >> because they know this will fail and they know that the pubuc fail and they know that the public has long since given up any hope that this conservative government means what it says, and actually to do and actually intends to do anything migration. and actually intends to do anythi|the migration. and actually intends to do anythi|the legalnigration. and actually intends to do anythi|the legal migration mean, the legal migration figures are three times what they were five years ago, three quarters of a million people added to population last added to our population last year migration . year through legal migration. and we've added a city the size of birmingham to our population every two years. and this is a government which was supposedly committed reducing migration committed to reducing migration overall to less than 100,000. >> okay , neil, neil and >> okay, neil, neil and christine, stay where you are because have another lawyer because we have another lawyer slash politician with us in jerry hayes, practising barrister, former tory mp. the show is full of ex—tory and friends of the hamiltons. show is full of ex—tory and friends of the hamiltons . well, friends of the hamiltons. well, i'm glad to hear it. do you agree with neil that the tories should just renounce the echr and go it alone? >> no , it's completely insane, >> no, it's completely insane, actually , as a barrister, neil actually, as a barrister, neil knows that too. i mean , what one knows that too. i mean, what one of the things we're quite shocked me for embarrassed is neil suddenly says the most appalling or perhaps not the most appalling thing, but an appalling the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving] the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the the bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the right bill most appalling thing, but an apgiving people the right toll is giving people the right to appeal. well, it's basically the rule law . that's what we do. rule of law. that's what we do. but what about the laws of this country and our territory boundaries? >> why are we finding it so hard to stop those boats? we're finding it so hard to stop the boats because it's darn difficult to do to, uh, we've actually cut it by three quarters. >> and before anyone says it's to do with the weather, it's got nothing to do with the weather at all. uh, albania has helped, of course, albania has helped tremendously, actually, because we've said, look, albania is a is a safe country . we've got to is a safe country. we've got to get more cooperation with the french. i know neil and christine will say, oh, listen , christine will say, oh, listen, more cooperation with the french. >> i know you've had a drink tonight, seriously, no . can tonight, but seriously, no. can anyone seriously? are anyone take that seriously? are we rely on emmanuel we going to rely on emmanuel macron and brussels to help us out? that's the problem out? i mean, that's the problem with plan. with obama's plan. >> brussels , not >> is not brussels, not brussels, mean, okay, brussels, but i mean, okay, laura, what you think about this? >> because think we are >> because i think that we are have looming democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat looming democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat lthe|ing democratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat lthe toriesemocratic crisis >> because i think that we are hthat [the tories don't|tic crisis , that if the tories don't address this issue and if labour don't address it, they get don't address it, if they get in, think you're going have don't address it, if they get invery|ink you're going have don't address it, if they get invery angry u're going have don't address it, if they get invery angry population. have a very angry population. >> you will. i agree >> of course you will. i agree with what neil about with what neil said about it being cat. i don't think being a dead cat. i don't think this ever deliberately this was ever deliberately a dead cat strategy. i think people met it for the rwanda policy to work hit and hope that's true. but it has turned out be dead cat because out to be a dead cat because what we're not doing is talking about the problem of legal migration levels. yes. as neil said , yes. now the small boats said, yes. now the small boats are a problem and it appeals, of course, to people sense of unfairness, not knowing who's coming in. we basically have criminal cartels in charge of our immigration policy and i don't really see why those people should have the same right to appeal. i to say, right to appeal. i have to say, i have a different i think we'll have a different view i you view on this, but i think you have respect suella have to respect suella braverman's consistency on this. >> she wants the leadership . >> she wants the leadership. this is what it's all about. well, nothing to do with immigration. how long was immigration. how long she was she what she she home secretary for? what she achieved absolutely nothing. achieved? absolutely nothing. she shouts . she shouts. >> lots of want the >> lots of mps want the leadership . find me mp who leadership. find me an mp who doesn't leadership. but doesn't want the leadership. but she's consistent she's been completely consistent on issue. on this issue. >> consistently wrong . >> consistently wrong. >> consistently wrong. >> making >> well, she's making suggestions the amendments suggestions that the amendments this legislation will make it more robust, less liable to these individual appeals. is she right? >> well, if no, i don't think i don't think it does. she wants to get rid of the european court of human rights, which is absolutely silly. the real why is it silly? i'll tell you why it's silly. it was actually drafted after the second world war. >> how many times have i heard that by winston churchill ? that by winston churchill? >> okay, i'll tell you. all right. >> the world has changed. let's forget. >> let's forget that since then. what good does it do us now? >> i? shall i you the >> shall i? shall i tell you the problem ecr? and that problem with the ecr? and that is that it's given itself powers. court given powers. the court has given itself were never in itself powers that were never in the treaty, and the real problem is rule 39, where they can say, oh , um, you know, we're going to oh, um, you know, we're going to stop people without legal argument from leaving a country. we're going to injunct that country. now, there's a lot of people who want to reform that soonen people who want to reform that sooner. it wants to reform it, and a lot of people and a lot of other people and that way round that and a lot of other people and th the way round that and a lot of other people and ththe real way round that and a lot of other people and ththe real problem,d that and a lot of other people and ththe real problem, because: is the real problem, because under the ecr, we only have to take note of it. a lot of things we completely ignore it. >> you know, briefly, laura, i come back, the bottom line, the bottom line is in that 13 years they've done very little to tide they've done very little to tide the rising immigration. >> it is a problem for the british people. >> no government is ever achieved it. >> i'll tell you something to me, harry. let me tell you that this is a crisis for the tories. but it's a crisis for labour, too. i think if the political establishment sit on their hands for much longer, there will be a revolt. and i'll be honest with you, a new party, some new political force and labour and the tories will never see power again . uh, the hamiltons are again. uh, the hamiltons are back with us. and neil and christine. um, i've got a little bit of personal intel about your day, somebody me day, because somebody told me that you've been to see the film napoleon today. are there any parallels with the current prime minister? short man desperate minister? a short man desperate to power , for god's sake? >> well, i think there is a parallel, because i think he should sent to saint helena, should be sent to saint helena, don't you? that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwellj? that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell ,’ that's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and|t's napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a napoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a fewoleon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a few ofeon. should be sent to saint helena, dorwell , and quite a few of the >> well, and quite a few of the post office bigwigs could could join him. >> do you know, mark, i tell you, it makes me feel incredibly geriatric. we go to the 2:00 matinee in our local town hall, and it costs us a fiver , so we and it costs us a fiver, so we can't see a film the day it comes out. but it doesn't take long. mean , it's magical. long. and i mean, it's magical. so we're home by 5:00 for so we're back home by 5:00 for anchovy toast tea and then anchovy toast and tea and then bedtime, . bedtime, of course. >> let's let's on that . of that. >> let's let's on that. of that. yes, exactly. >> it's a family show, neil. um, listen, go, it's listen, before we go, it's around of year when around that time of year when people their new year's people give up their new year's resolutions. how are the hamiltons getting on with theirs ? >> ?- >>a ? >> a brilliantly, 7 >> a brilliantly, 100% brilliantly. we haven't broken them at all. no >> well, christine makes mine for me . for me. >> we didn't make any. we didn't . we don't make them. we're far too to old fall into that trap. we just. >> can i just say bring along . >> can i just say bring along. >> can i just say bring along. >> that's forget about dry >> that's it. forget about dry january , the hamilton dry january, the hamilton dry january, the hamilton dry january, hamiltons are january, the hamiltons are looking wet tonight . yeah, looking quite wet tonight. yeah, absolutely . absolutely. >> to hell with dry january . >> to hell with dry january. >> to hell with dry january. >> and i can't believe. well, look. >> cheers to both of you. >> cheers to both of you. >> an umbrella. you. >> an umbrella. you. >> oh, my goodness, i'm glad you freaked me out there by suggesting go suggesting you were going to go alcohol knew that alcohol free. i knew that wouldn't happen. >> can i just say >> i would just can i just say one thing? it does me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say it does me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that es me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that these me when >> i would just can i just say one thi say that these european|en people say that these european outfits, the echr, were put outfits, like the echr, were put in place to control everything. they were not put in place to keep control. we don't keep us under control. we don't need of control. they need that sort of control. they were in place stop france were put in place to stop france and fighting each other and germany fighting each other and germany fighting each other and lesser nations. so the and other lesser nations. so the idea we should still be a idea that we should still be a member. what was brexit? we're not under? >> last word, last word >> okay. last word, last word not not under not under not we're not under not under control by them. >> because the european >> because unlike the european court, can ignore them . court, we can ignore them. advisory do advisory . advisory do its advisory. >> that's the whole point. >> that's the whole point. >> no , that's so wrong. >> no, that's so wrong. >> no, that's so wrong. >> there you go. >> there you go. >> 100 guineas for that piece of advice . advice. >> kicked off the >> it's all kicked off the rwanda flights. >> there you go. this show's all about opinions. thank you so much hamiltons. see much to the hamiltons. we'll see you go and that you soon. go and finish that bottle jacob's creek and bottle of jacob's creek and we'll see you very soon. brilliant stuff. neil and christine hamilton. always a treat to have them on the show. looking forward to this. next up, prince andrew do up, could prince andrew do a prince harry and split from the royal family? write a book and wage war on the monarchy? we'll be hearing from a top royal insider . listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to friday night live with me. mark dolan. your weekend starts here. don't forget mark dolan tonight tomorrow and sunday with all your favourite elements, including big opinion. mark meets and take at ten coming up before 9:00. why does this war in the red sea matter to you and me? we'll be hearing from britain's most entertaining historian. but first, it's only the 12th of january. but it's already been an annus horribilis for prince andrew, with his former virginia giuffre, former accuser virginia giuffre, claiming she was. she was paid £12,000 by the late convicted sex offender jeffrey epstein to sleep with prince andrew. meanwhile his brother the king is preparing to withdraw private funding for security at the royal lodge. andrew's 30 bedroom home in windsor, where he has resided since 2003. but here's a question for you is there a risk that king charles could be too tough on andrew? could andrew do a prince harry leave the country , write a book and spill the royal beans? let's get the views now of one of the best connected royal journalists in the country. royal expert biographer and editor in chief of majesty magazine ingrid seward . ingrid, magazine ingrid seward. ingrid, lovely to have you back on the show. happy new year treated show. happy new year if treated badly by his own family, could prince andrew fight back . prince andrew fight back. >> well, he could fight back, but i don't think he has actually got the guts to do it. i think he's so , uh, surrounded i think he's so, uh, surrounded with his royal life and always has been . i mean, he's nearly has been. i mean, he's nearly always lived in a palace, and he's certainly living in a pretty nice palace now . i don't pretty nice palace now. i don't think he would do it. i mean, he could go and write his story from his point of view, but he's already made a mess of that. on his newsnight interview. and unless he has a very good ghost—writer outer, no one is going to really be that interested in his single point of view. so he could do it. there's nothing to stop him , but there's nothing to stop him, but i think i've now , every so many i think i've now, every so many columnists have said , what are columnists have said, what are we going to do with prince andrew? but i think what prince andrew? but i think what prince andrew should do is say to his brother, the king, look, i've made an absolute mess of everything. i think the gracious thing would be here are the keys of royal lodge. you pay me the money that i've already put into it, which is , you know, several it, which is, you know, several million pounds. i'm going to go off, find somewhere much quieter and smaller to live . i don't and smaller to live. i don't even want frogmore cottage. i'm going further away and just do the decent thing . and then the decent thing. and then i think he would get some serious brownie points from people, instead of people thinking that he is just somebody that seems to be on the take all the time. >> um , ingrid, can we afford can >> um, ingrid, can we afford can you afford to go it alone ? you afford to go it alone? >> can you afford to sell up, move to a smaller place and see out his days in a comfortable fashion ? fashion? >> oh, absolutely. he can, because he's put an enormous amount of money into royal lodge. and that would be taken into account. he's paid rent up for another 25 years or something. that would be taken into account. his brother is not going to see him starve. and i think everyone says, though andrew has no money, but it's inconceivable the queen wouldn't have made some provision for him. she would have worried about him. so if he if he's all the trust that all the royal family have had run out, she would have made provision for him . so he has money. he may him. so he has money. he may pretend he hasn't, but he definitely has money. >> let's think that's what he can. >> ingrid, my fantastic friday friends in on this conversation , friends in on this conversation, broadcaster and writer laura dodsworth , barrister and former dodsworth, barrister and former tory mp jerry hayes and let's p0p tory mp jerry hayes and let's pop everyone in boxes if we can, because i just want to ask you, laura, how do you solve a problem with with prince andrew? he's genetics . problem with with prince andrew? he's genetics. he's he's got good genetics. he's going to be around with any luck for how does for many years to come. how does he approach the next couple of decades? i agree with decades? well, i agree with ingnd decades? well, i agree with ingrid he should be as ingrid that he should just be as quiet and inoffensive as possible. >> it's seen as in his few pubuc >> it's seen as in his few public photo opportunities . >> it's seen as in his few public photo opportunities. his, um, you know, he was he was seen going to church with the rest of the royal family. and even that then causes a debate. or should he go to church? well he probably to bit of probably needs to do a bit of penance of prayer. but penance and a bit of prayer. but it could be in a church on his own um, own somewhere, couldn't it? um, i think it's just such a difficult generation for the royal family. he's weighing like an anchor around an embarrassing anchor around their with your language. their ankles with your language. >> and he he should, he >> and he should. he should, he should really. he should put what's your mouth? >> institution first. >> the institution first. >> the institution first. >> tower. >> the institution first. >> he tower. >> the institution first. >> he put tower. >> the institution first. >> he put the ar. >> the institution first. >> he put the institution first. >> and go and retire somewhere very quietly. is that feasible , very quietly. is that feasible, jerry hayes? >> well , no, not with him, >> well, no, not with him, because he's got no judgement . because he's got no judgement. >> prince andrew doing the decent thing. as ingrid said, i just can't see that happening . i just can't see that happening. i really can't see that happening . really can't see that happening. all the people i know who know him, particularly in the navy, in the falklands , saying he was in the falklands, saying he was just an arrogant piece of s, you know, sort of thing. he was know, that sort of thing. he was absolutely dreadful. he doesn't take advice from people . he's take advice from people. he's not going to take advice from people . now, the good thing in people. now, the good thing in his favour, he's got the king and i know the king not particularly well, but i know him. when i was an mp and he's a good, kind, decent man who loves his brother and won't see him destitute. but, well, andrew, do the it's like the decent thing. ah, it's like well, boris, well never mind. yeah, that's. >> i think we can read between the lines there and ingrid. what of the relationship between the king and prince andrew? it's obviously strained , but do they obviously strained, but do they have a history getting along ? have a history of getting along? >> they have a very big history of getting along. i mean, when prince andrew was born, uh, charles was away at school, but he was absolutely delighted with his and really, his little brother. and really, you know, took of him, you know, took care of him, looked after him, read him, looked after him, read to him, and they haven't been particularly close . but charles particularly close. but charles is a kind man and also i don't think he would want to throw his brother out of out of, of his, of his own home, his home. i just think he won't want to do it. but i mean, i think he shouldn't have to do it. he really , really shouldn't. and i really, really shouldn't. and i feel so strongly about this. andrew's man up . i think andrew's got to man up. i think we should be a campaign to make andrew man up. >> yeah, that's the campaign i can behind. can get behind. >> well , let's let's talk can get behind. >> well, let's let's talk ingrid about story that you've drawn about a story that you've drawn my attention to . it's in my team's attention to. it's in the it's just a i think the mail. it's just a i think popped the mail. it's just a i think popped onto their website and it's the late, great queen it's about the late, great queen elizabeth. >> yes. the mail is serialising a book by robert hardman , who a book by robert hardman, who is, you know, one of their main, uh, royal commentators and he has, uh , had incredible access has, uh, had incredible access and he has got this story of the queen's final hours , apparently, queen's final hours, apparently, according to sir edward young, who is her private secretary, she died very peacefully. so no agony. you know, we've read that, you know, she was in agony, but she died very peacefully. sad early. uh, charles wasn't there because he'd popped over to his house near balmoral . you know, which near balmoral. you know, which used to belong to the queen mother to pick mushrooms and think which is. mother to pick mushrooms and think which is . sounds really think which is. sounds really weird, but it's very charles. and anne was at her mother's bedside , and charles had the bedside, and charles had the news when he was driving back that actually the queen had died . and i think
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elizabeth: congressman burchett, thank you for joining us. good to see you. >> great, liz, have a good night. elizabeth: we have the washington examiners and chris bedford and former boeing engineer peter lemme. news coming in, the president is about to float yet another new narrative trying to attack trump's tax cuts because bidenomics is not selling with the u.s. voters and major development in the shocking story and midair on the boeing airplane. you want to hear about this. plus, nikki haley with more on the gop race for the july convention and former texas governor rick perry back with us and growing number of former border officials and governors saying texas must stand its ground at the border against the white house for the sake of the united states. plus, former president trump says he is elected and he will send texas reinforcements and not a restraining order like this white house did and we've got far and left billionaire george soros sending big bucks into texas. all of this next on "the evening edit". ♪ at ameriprise financial our advice is personalized based on your goals, whatever they may be. all that planning has paid off. looks like you can make this work. we can make this work. and the feeling of confidence that comes from our advice... i can make this work. that seems to be universal. i can make this work. i can make this work. no wonder more than 9 out of 10 clients are likely to recommend us. because advice worth listening to is advice worth talking about. ameriprise financial. after advil: let's dive in! but...what about your back? it's fineeeeeeee! 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(laughing) look around you. you deserve to know. as we navigate a future unknown. i'm glad i found stability amidst it all. gold. standing the test of time. when people come, they say they've tried lots of diets, nothing's worked gold. or they've lost the same 10, 20, 50 pounds over and over again. they need a real solution. i've always fought with 5-10 pounds all the time. eating all these different things and nothing's ever working. i've done the diets, all the diets. before golo, i was barely eating but the weight wasn't going anywhere. the secret to losing weight and keeping it off is managing insulin and glucose. golo takes a systematic approach to eating that focuses on optimizing insulin levels. we tackle the cause of weight gain, not just the symptom. when you have good metabolic health, weight loss is easy. i always thought it would be so difficult to lose weight, but with golo, it wasn't. the weight just fell off. i have people come up to me all the time and ask me, "does it really work?" and all i have to say is, "here i am. it works." my advice for everyone is to go with golo. it will release your fat and it will release you. elizabethformer texas governor rick perry and governor, good to see you. texas is standing strong. it's standing up. it's not backing down in securing the border and border crossings in texas have plummeted and the far left billionaire george soros is pumping $3 million into texas over the last year to elect democrats here. what do you say to this? >> it's a pretty poor use of money and texas race in the state of texas and we know how to stop george soros and it's good candidates and texas rent. >> back to the story and the texas national guard governor and this weekend with more razor wire in shelby park and just one week border patrol there called a convicted murder and two child sex offenders and another felon trying to cross illegally and terrorists were caught last quarter trying to cross illegally and tracking 1300 terrorists under the biden white house and ports of entry and in between and get your reaction to south dakota south dakota governor kristi noem, watch. >> texas should stand t
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let's go to elizabeth in florida. elizabeth. >> hi, how are you? >> i'm good. how about you? >> i'm good. i had some thoughts on this particular stock that's been down for the last two weeks, what are your thoughts is it a good time to buy now? >> the ceo, 169 quickly to 189 setting up the points in a heartbeat so i think that it's two in the middle range. i want to hear what steve would have to say. he's a straight shooter. let's go to chase in south carolina. >> hi jim, how are you doing today? >> doing great. >> i wanted to talk about campbell's soup these days. >> i think the company is doing well. they've got is best of a hand as you could have. they don't pair well. could it rollover like it coin. i'm coming to you from arrowhead stadium ahead of tomorrow's dolphins-chiefs wildcard game on peacock. talking to kansas city chiefs about the business of football. the 14 teams that made the playoffs i realize many were reminiscent of my favorite stocks. i will give you my comparisons and the record three nfl playoff teams from the super wildcard weekend. i've got the exclusi
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elizabeth: senator eric schmitt thank you there thank you. elizabeth: thank you for watching the "evening edit" on fox business, i'll be out a couple of days, david asman will take over for me, now time for my buddies dagen and sean. on "the bottom line." dagen: you are not allowed to leave. elizabethre. dagen: kidding thank you. elizabeth: thank
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elizabeth beavhard who is elizabeth, please stand. [applause]■[ht across the river in troy. not long ago she was trapped in an abusive relationship. she and her pet regular abuse at the hands of her ex-boyfriend. he killed one of her kit tense. maimed another and then her life changed. a veterinarian told her about unity house. a nonprofit that helps survivorf eventually she met russ detective clement? [applause] thank you. thank you. he helped elizabethjustice and e reportses and -- reports and stood by her si at the garage jury. elizabeth has fled her abuser andlled her life. let's give her a right now of applause. [applause] i want to hear more hopeful stories like this. and that's why we're dedicating $2 to million so district don't gather evidence to prosecute abusers and take their guns [applause] and we're committing more■ polit those who are at risk of abuse and clamp down on repeat offenders. because every survivor can break the chain ofd a new life. across our nation and our state retail theft has surged creating fear among the customers and the workers. thieves braisingly pear items off the shelves and owners go broke replace broken windows and stolen goods driving manycks are nothing more than a breakdown of the social order. i say no more. the chaos must end. [applause] for the very first time we're getting a joipe down on organized retail them as i said we'll use this approach with. and i'm also proposing to help those o
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elizabeth, him. and elizabeth keeps a diary. and elizabeth's diary has an entry for february in 1861, where she noticed that the steward for the ship, who was a free black man, was taken off the vessel and arrested and that her husband had to pay a very large sum to get him out of jail. so that tells me like so i know even though the quantitative stuff is not there, that's certainly being enforced. now, as problematic as new orleans is with its records, it's far better than that. just about every other port city in the south. so i have a very conservative estimate of about 20,000 total arrests over the antebellum period for all port cities. but if i had to guess, that number is considerably higher and this helps us sort of this suggests that the numbers are definitely much higher than than what i've tabulated. all right. no more numbers. there's a really great historian. her name is amy mural taylor. she once quipped, we must move beyond the enduring impulse to think about people in the aggregate. and i agree wholeheartedly. and so i want to ge
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elizabeth, back to you. elizabeth: what a story. steve harrigan, thank you so much. always great journalist. joined by federal prosecutor katie cherkasky. what is your opinion about that? >> the walls are closing in and quite obvious that there's been collaboration between fani willis' office and congressional members since the beginning, which in and of itself is not necessarily that extraordinary but seems the level of involvement was way far beyond what you would typically see with a congressional committed tee of that sort and that's another angle this case can be attacked by all the defendants in georgia. elizabethy 6 committee and fani willis' team got documents from them. it's -- katie, this georgia case and messier by the day and could fall apart. codefendant jeffrey clark saying this 2020 case is tainted. his team is demanding da fani willis office turn over any records that potentially reveal the prosecutor's working with the biden white house to prosecute tram and help biden reelection -- prosecute president trump and help bind's reelection and that's a bomb shell. >> absolutely and any about fani willis' motivation and the judge might be apt she turn over a significant amount of information that would not necessarily otherwise be discoverable but because the entire propriority of the prosecution is in question at this point, the defendants are going to be able to get into a significant amount more information than they'd typically would. elizabeth: break it down, there's been allegations as we talked about that. fani willis' team met at white house several times before the grand jury hand
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elizabeth cook] stories of overcoming. - you know, i grew up being a thug and a criminal, and now, god has blessed me to be a part of the solution. - [elizabeth] to build a better world for future generations. - it was a bad experience. there was nothing good about it. - [ryan] we honor those who lived through some of the most harrowing times in our history. - [elizabethhe owner of the property chose not to sell to my grandfather. - [elizabeth] we celebrate community, heritage, and family. - [antonio yepez] this is my son, my wife, myself. - [ryan] as we roll into the new year. - [elizabeth] join us as we look back at the stories that define us. - well, thanks for joining us. i'm ryan yamamoto. - and i'm elizabeth cook, coming to you from san francisco's union square. - you know, 2023 has been a great year for us at cbs news bay area, celebrating 75 years of telling stories in the bay area. - and we wanna take some time to highlight some of the stories that helped define us as a community. one of the big events of the year, our weather. 2023 started off with a record-setting parade of storms, unlike anything we've seen before. as mary lee shows, us almost a year later, one coast side community is still recovering. - i first met david morris back in january when a powerful atmospheric river and monster waves destroyed his business on the capitola wharf
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