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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  April 4, 2024 9:00pm-11:01pm BST

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gb news. >> it's 9 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight. a gb news exclusive. we expose two radical far left groups threatening to act next week. will the police stop them? also . i take you live stop them? also. i take you live to the falkland islands as residents tell argentina's president where to go and whilst having my coffee, i use this opportunity to update myself with the current news and reply to any urgent emails. with the current news and reply to any urgent emails . gps on to any urgent emails. gps on about £140,000 a year are set to strike. should they be banned from walking out on patients. plus, mr speaker, i said enough
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is enough and i mean it, and that means i am prepared to do what must be done . he said it what must be done. he said it before. he'll probably say it again. lee anderson tears into rishi sunak's empty words and why are people so angry about the new tours of buckingham palace and balmoral? also . the palace and balmoral? also. the woke home office is giving trigger warnings to people suffering from trauma of slavery hundreds of years ago. i've got all the front pages as well, with star telegraph columnist allison pearson , founder of allison pearson, founder of global britain, aman bogle, an ex—labour adviser. global britain, aman bogle, an ex—labour adviser . matthew laza. ex—labour adviser. matthew laza. oh, and meet the latest menace to society . you owe . get ready to society. you owe. get ready britain, here we go.
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jeeps are putting their pay over your health . next. your health. next. >> and just after 9:00 here on gb news, the very latest news headunes. gb news, the very latest news headlines . and the top story headlines. and the top story tonight is that civil servants at the department of business and trade dealing with arms exports, exports , have exports, exports, have threatened to go on strike after raising concerns over their degree of legal liability if israel is found to be violating international humanitarian law. it comes after three former supreme court judges called on the government to stop allowing the government to stop allowing the sales of arms to israel. three british aid workers, john chapman, james henderson and james kirby, were all killed in an israeli air strike on monday evening. they were working for the charity world food kitchen, which has independently demanded an investigation into their deaths. meanwhile, israel says it will adjust its tactics in
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the gaza war after killing a total of seven aid workers in those airstrikes, which its military has admitted was a huge mistake. and tonight the us president, joe biden, has told israel's prime minister during a phone call that the us support for israel will depend on the steps being taken to address civilian harm and the humanitarian suffering that's happening in gaza now. news here at home, the former tory minister, sir alan duncan, is being investigated for comments he made which accused two conservative peers of in his words, doing the bidding of israel's prime minister sir alan served as a foreign office minister under theresa may. he said two of its prominent members, lord polak and lord pickles, should be removed on that account from the house of lords. it's understood the party has written to sir alan to inform him of the investigation. he says the case lacks substance and could prove harmful to the tories reputation . the prime tories reputation. the prime minister said today britain
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could pull out of the european convention on human rights if it obstructs the government's rwanda plan. rishi sunak says controlling illegal migration is more important than membership of the echr , and he wouldn't let of the echr, and he wouldn't let a foreign court interfere in sovereign matters as . the sovereign matters as. the mastermind of an armed robbery in yorkshire nine years ago that endedin in yorkshire nine years ago that ended in the death of a police officer, has been found guilty officer, has been found guilty of her murder. if you're watching on television, footage has been released showing the moment the two police officers arrived to respond to the emergency call. arriving at the scene of the armed robbery in 2005, 38 year old sharon bethany elsey died. as a result of that, she interrupted a raid which was taking place at a travel agency in bradford. she'd only been a police officer for nine months. piran ditta khan flew to pakistan two months after her murder, and remained at large until he was arrested in 2020. and just lastly, the world's
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oldest man has died just two months before he would have celebrated his 115th birthday. juan vince perez was born in venezuela in 1909, nearly 20 years before the first radio station even started broadcasting in his home country. there were six british monarchs on the throne during his long lifetime, and even 20 us presidents . his death was us presidents. his death was announced by the governor of the state, where he lived, who described him as a humble, hardworking and peaceful man . hardworking and peaceful man. that's the news. for the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts . scan the qr code on your alerts. scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts . slash alerts. >> good evening. >> good evening. >> would you work three and a half days a week for £140,000 a year? yes. me too . so if gps go year? yes. me too. so if gps go on strike in the middle of an nhs waiting list crisis, will they have your sympathy ? well,
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they have your sympathy? well, that could be tested very soon because three quarters of gps in the nhs want to go on strike in 2022. a study commissioned by the department of health shows that 58.4% of family doctors were working six half day sessions, or less. the salary for a gp can range from somewhere in the region of 78 grand to £104,000 a year, but many of them are partners in their practice and therefore paid significantly more. their blaming their workload. so isn't it time gps started complaining about record net migration? our population has grown by millions and millions of people. do they think it's a coincidence that they've got more patients to see now? one anonymous gp said it's a shame that it has come to this, but i now feel that the government will not engage in meaningful discourse without understanding the level of dissatisfaction currently felt by about pay and working by gps about pay and working conditions. i think that's rubbish . 78% said they were
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rubbish. 78% said they were striking due to concerns about patient safety. more rubbish. they weren't concerned about patient safety when they refused to do face to face appointments dunng to do face to face appointments during covid, even after the pandemic was basically over, they had to be reminded by the general medical council that they had a duty their they had a duty to their patients that. you know, patients to do that. you know, you can tell that concerns over patient safety are rubbish because they might time it to coincide with an autumn election . yet again, with these strikes, you barely have to scratch the surface before you realise this is just political. the latest ons figures shows there are 3 million more people currently on nhs waiting list than previously thought. the ons survey found around 1.35 million people have been waiting over a year. gps also want to strike because of a lack of funding. all right, so apparently they've been given a 2% pay increase, £259 million more funding. the issue is less about funding and more about waste. i think one gp with 35
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years of service has bravely come forward as a whistleblower, doctor clare said. where do i start? i hardly recognise the nhs as it is now in comparison to when i started working 35 years ago in that time, the number of managers has increased exponentially and they have taken over from clinicians in running it. it is now neither effective or efficient. they are obsessed with filling forms, ticking boxes, hitting arbitrary targets, not caring for people. more than 50% of the nhs staff are now non—clinical . then are now non—clinical. then there's the huge waste and inefficiency which would be neither tolerated nor sustainable in any business. yesterday i exposed the radical, marxist, pro—palestine, race obsessed teachers union boss who wants teachers to strike in time for the new school year. well today you've got well paid gps potentially striking to coincide with a general election. is the pubuc with a general election. is the public sector really willing to sacrifice both education and lives for political reasons? it seems so let's get the thoughts
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of my panel this evening. i am joined by daily telegraph columnist allison pearson, the founding chairman of global britain uk, eamonn begum, and former labour party adviser matthew laza allison , i'll start matthew laza allison, i'll start with you. do you think these strikes, potential strikes , are strikes, potential strikes, are just political? >> oh, i think they're hugely political , but >> oh, i think they're hugely political, but i think many viewers at home will probably think, well, haven't they been on strike since march 2020? because chances of getting because the chances of getting to see a gp, i mean, even if, even if they pick up the phone at 8:00 in morning, you're at 8:00 in the morning, you're probably a an appointment probably given a an appointment in three weeks time on the phone.i in three weeks time on the phone. i mean , it has become a phone. i mean, it has become a bad joke and i think we've seen this . the gp bad joke and i think we've seen this. the gp used to be a tremendous figure of respect in society, and i think they've become the butt of jokes , bitter become the butt of jokes, bitter jokes, patrick, and real anger. now so i think that it would not be. they might they may think they've still got influence with they've still got influence with the general public. i think they are largely despised. and you do
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have the, the gp you quoted have like the, the gp you quoted there, you do still have some who are dedicated who want to see their patients in person. but this lot, they're absolutely having a laugh because they haven't been doing their jobs. and we heard last week in the british social attitudes survey that more than 70% of british people are dissatisfied with the nhs and one of the main cause of dissatisfaction, inability to see a gp. >> yeah. i mean, do you think there would be public sympathy for people on about 140 grand a yean for people on about 140 grand a year, working a 3 to 3 and a half day week, going out over pay half day week, going out over pay and conditions? well, absolutely not. >> i think, on the contrary, i think people will finally start to, question whether this is our nhs, because if it is our nhs, then how is it that people getting paid more £140,000 a year are going on strike for what? are they simply going to be able to treat more people if they get paid more or whatever? but look, the problem here is that for far too long, our country has failed to grasp the
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bull by the horns. that is the socialist model of healthcare that we have in the united kingdom. i would rather cut gp's pay kingdom. i would rather cut gp's pay and pay more to junior doctors who slave away for far longer hours and treat far more people all hours of the day and night, gps , i think, really need night, gps, i think, really need to get a grasp of where public sentiment is. >> all right. matthew, how on earth are labour going to sort this out? because it looks like they might inherit it. >> yeah, i think that the >> yeah, well, i think that the gp's realise that they're gp's better realise that they're not get bonanza with not going to get a bonanza with a labour government that it's not wes streeting not catching, if wes streeting in of health, i in the department of health, i mean, got really great mean, he's got this really great phrase nhs needs to be phrase that the nhs needs to be a service, not a shrine that we need to needs deliver need to it needs to deliver for patients. alison is patients. and i think alison is absolutely there was absolutely right. there was a time biggest problem time when the biggest problem for gp, if they went to a party and they somebody they were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, 1ey somebody they were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, was somebody they were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, was people1ebody they were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, was people saying,they were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, was people saying, oh, were for gp, if they went to a party a|gp, was people saying, oh, can'e a gp, was people saying, oh, can you my bunions now? it's you look at my bunions now? it's and why do not do any work you look at my bunions now? it's and why can't not do any work you look at my bunions now? it's and why can't you>t do any work you look at my bunions now? it's and why can't you get» any work you look at my bunions now? it's and why can't you get an|y work and why can't you get an appointment? are at appointment? i think we are at this crisis. i saw the play the
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other about bevan, the other day about nye bevan, the founder nhs, and it founder of the nhs, and it reminded gps are reminded you the way our gps are structured last minute structured was a last minute compromise were compromise where they were allowed small allowed to keep their small businesses. the businesses. you know, all the stuff in nhs are stuff that in the nhs people are always saying no private sector, every single practice is every single gp practice is whether american whether it's run by an american health your health care company or by your three doctors is a three junior three doctors is a private so maybe private company. and so maybe it's that looked at it's time that we looked at that. did about that. labour did talk about doing polyclinics you doing polyclinics where you brought people together in specialist services on site because profit because they they're all profit making businesses. >> they up >> i think they could end up cutting the off spite >> i think they could end up cuttirface.e off spite >> i think they could end up cuttirface. i off spite >> i think they could end up cuttirface. i think>ff spite >> i think they could end up cuttirface. i think they spite >> i think they could end up cuttirface. i think they could their face. i think they could be bypassed entirely if they don't look out that we could easily so—called don't look out that we could eashospital so—called don't look out that we could eashospital sites so—called don't look out that we could eashospital sites and —called don't look out that we could eashospital sites and eradicate on hospital sites and eradicate the gp system. >> and i think in the old days people used to they had no other source of information. now people can, you know, actually go the website go on the nhs website and realise haven't you realise you haven't got, you know, in a minute. know, something in a minute. >> what would be >> i think what would be interesting how interesting to see is how many of the shadow labour cabinet come on the picket lines come out on the picket lines with have with these gps, where you have keir to balance himself? >> won't be. they're not >> they won't be. they're not allowed to go on on the allowed to go on the on the affiliated unions picket lines. do armand's point
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do you think take armand's point which i'll stick with you do you think take armand's point wh this. i'll stick with you on this. >> mean, i think this poses >> i mean, i think this poses a big problem for labour because the being out on the the one thing being out on the picket it's picket lines. right. but it's another thing. do you actively support they bracket support gps? do they bracket them the angels, them all as the angels, the nurses nhs the nurses from the nhs and the people there during the people who were there during the covid that asked covid crisis that we've asked for, actually wealthy for, or actually quite wealthy individuals really, who are not necessarily working all the hours sends, do they hours that god sends, do they back them? >> exactly. it's a huge conundrum for the labour leadership. and think, look , leadership. and i think, look, let's be honest, labour rely on their backbone as from the unions. and so it's going to be a huge issue for the labour. >> i think the irony is that the tories have known this problem. i mean, a lot of gp's have been retiring early because they're giant pots are full, giant pension pots are full, over £1 million in their pension pots. so they've been, you know, leaving in droves. we've got more labour doing more chance of labour doing something about this situation because situation go because the situation cannot go on. terrified to touch it. yeah. because they're seen perceived as being uncompassionate , you as being uncompassionate, you know, compassionate know, not compassionate on the health should health service. they should have
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done more. yeah. health service. they should have dorshould,�*nore. yeah. health service. they should have dorshould, should. ah. >> should, should. >> should, should. >> look, we need reform. >> look, we need reform. >> gps be banned from >> should gps be banned from striking. i very striking. you know, i am very reluctant say this when it reluctant to say this when it comes to anything because i think, you know, at its core, i suppose is a human right to suppose that is a human right to withdraw labour. but in the withdraw your labour. but in the echr have got, we have got we echr we have got, we have got we have got a health crisis, okay. we have massive, massive we have got massive, massive waiting lists . you know, this waiting lists. you know, this lot i think do take an oath, don't they? i might be wrong on that. >> look, they take an oath and it's a given that you're there to provide a service to people for the very basic of things, which health care. which is health care. >> mean, they say >> i mean, they would say they're minimum they're put in place a minimum of service like they they're put in place a minimum of with service like they they're put in place a minimum of with hospitalervice like they they're put in place a minimum of with hospital doctors. e they they're put in place a minimum of with hospital doctors. butey do with hospital doctors. but how is obviously how effective that is obviously is question. is open to question. >> mean, remember back in >> i mean, i remember back in the that my grandfather used the day that my grandfather used to the 60s that to tell me that in the 60s that an doctor had to serve, an ordinary doctor had to serve, what, week and half what, 80 hours a week and half of was paid and half of it of it was paid and half of it was public. >> am confused what gps gps >> i am confused at what gps gps do all day. i mean, mean, do all day. i mean, i mean, i don't mean i'm saying don't mean that. i'm not saying that but i'd that they don't, but i'd actually know. actually love to know. >> play golf. they >> i think they play golf. they do sorts. they get load of
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do all sorts. they get a load of time their families. it was time with their families. it was fantastic. i mean, alison, do you there's you not think that maybe there's a say if you're ill and a case to say if you're ill and you can't gp and you get you can't see a gp and you get worse, you should be able to sue them? >> well, there certainly is a growing, case. and one growing, a growing case. and one of the fastest of the biggest, the fastest expanding is private expanding businesses is private gps. i've one gps. i mean, i've seen one and there all of people there are all sorts of people who are to these paying who are going to these paying out their income. out of their tax income. patrick. not rich people anymore. private gp said to me, you look in the car park. he said, it's not all the expensive cars anymore and it's the private prescriptions then become the because become the issue because of course, they just, course, you know, if they just, you you get you know, you go, you get the appointment, you the appointment, they give you the antibiotics. than being £14 or >> but rather than being £14 or whatever they're the whatever it is, they're the actual price. >> totally unethical and immoral. to say, immoral. and i have to say, handing to matthew, it handing this over to matthew, it was government. was the last labour government. it big mistake. gave the it was a big mistake. gave the gp gold plated gp a absolutely gold plated deal gp a absolutely gold plated deal. couldn't believe it deal. they couldn't believe it was john reid who is a hero of mine. >> but he admits it was a big mistake, stuffed their mouths with gold and that's when they stopped evenings. with gold and that's when they st0|thei evenings. with gold and that's when they st0|the bottom evenings. with gold and that's when they st0|the bottom eisnings. with gold and that's when they st0|the bottom eis people at >> the bottom line is people at home see that they get home will see that they get sent to a gp at an urgent care
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centre, in, day out, rather centre, day in, day out, rather than having an appointment with their maybe that's their local gp. and maybe that's their local gp. and maybe that's the way forward, you know, build more centres with more urgent care centres with gps there that you can simply still walk into and see a gp because you can. yeah. what's the point of having these people who can't even see? >> i think i think, you know, if three quarters of them want to go on strike and they're on somewhere between 100 and £140,000 year, emerges £140,000 a year, and it emerges that working that a load of them are working a week. and we've got a three day week. and we've got record waiting lists, which record nhs waiting lists, which might actually million might actually be 3 million people initially people higher than we initially thought. there's thought. i do not think there's going degrees going to be huge degrees of pubuc going to be huge degrees of public about of public sympathy about all of that. doctor that. however, doctor katy bramwell, , gp committee bramwell, steiner, gp committee chairwoman at the british medical said we've medical association, said we've started the fight back, bringing our patients with us because patients want access to their family doctor and it's the only time they saw their patients. sorry, i can't say that the family doctor in a surgery that feels a well—resourced feels safe with a well—resourced team ready to meet the needs of our communities. okay, we will have to take her at her word.
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still to come . do you trust still to come. do you trust rishi sunak when he says that he'd be prepared to leave the echr? yes. all right. okay. and also whilst £0.30 li right when he was talking about children not being able to cook basic meals, reform uk star signing lee anderson . he joins me soon. lee anderson. he joins me soon. but next buckingham palace has thrown open its doors to the fee paying thrown open its doors to the fee paying public. i will reveal how much it costs, how you can get a ticket and then, crucially , have ticket and then, crucially, have the debate. look, should the pubuc the debate. look, should the public be made to pay to go on these tours, is it a good thing or actually, do we already pay for them? tv star nicola mclean goes head head with royal goes head to head with royal journalist sarah—louise robertson. that's next. stay tuned
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welcome back to patrick christys. tonight coming up, rishi sunak wants to be trusted with britain's borders. the evidence would suggest that he can't beat his former deputy chair, who recently defected to reform. lee anderson joins me soon and he's not holding back. but first, should the public have to pay to go on tours of buckingham palace and balmoral, it's buckingham palace and balmoral, wsfime buckingham palace and balmoral, it's time for tonight's head to head. yeah. so for the first time, the royal family will open up balmoral castle to the paying pubuc up balmoral castle to the paying public with tickets for guided tours being sold for £100 a pop. afternoon tea can be included for an extra £50. meanwhile, private areas of buckingham palace will also be open to the
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for public the first time, with new tours featuring the famous centre room which leads out onto the palace balcony. that famous balcony these tickets will set you back £75 per person, so the monarchy is thought to have made around £140,000 from ticket sales already, with demand for balmoral tickets crashing the website at one point. but many have been left perplexed by the price tag. so tonight i am asking should the public have to pay asking should the public have to pay to go on tours of royal palaces? let me know your thoughts. gb views at gb news. com gb news on twitter. go and vote in our poll. the results will follow shortly, but going head on this, our tv head to head on this, our tv personality nicola mclean and royal journalist sarah louise robinson. very much robinson. thank you very much for me, both of you. forjoining me, both of you. sarah, start you . sarah, i'll start with you. should we have to pay for this? don't we already pay them? don't we already pay for them? i don't understand why people have got a problem with this. >> you if you >> fundamentally, if you if you don't with just don't don't agree with it, just don't go. the money. at the go. don't pay the money. at the end of day, people will pay end of the day, people will pay in to go to
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in the hundreds to go to concerts the and other concerts at the o2 and other venues and think nothing of it. theatre tickets are expensive these , so really actually these days, so really actually it's in line with with what would people would pay on average anyway to go to something they wish something that they, they wish to see and just think of the sense of history, what you're getting for that £100 to go to balmoral and, and walk in the footsteps of, queen victoria, footsteps of, of queen victoria, i incredible . but this i think is incredible. but this is aimed really, i think at an american and japanese market and american and japanese market and american tourists have money to burn. so it's nothing to them. it's small change to them . it's small change to them. >> well, actually that brings me on to my next question. nicola. look, i understand you're look, i understand that you're you're you? you're against this, are you? what's you're against this, are you? wh yes . i personally i don't >> yes. i personally i don't think they should be opening up their sacred homes to the public, but if they want to, then think that they then i don't think that they should charging them should be charging them astronomical this cost astronomical prices in this cost of when we when of living crisis. when we when most can't it . as most people can't afford it. as you say, sarah, it's for the history. so we shouldn't then be alienating people that do want to go for the history, because
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most people can't afford £100 to go and walk around, and then £50 for some cucumber sandwiches. i mean, i'm not sure where they got that from. i could make them for a lot cheaper, but no, why don't we it up? but why don't we open it up? but why don't we open it up? but why don't we open it up for free to schools to around have schools to go around and have a look? know, for me, i just look? you know, for me, i just don't think there's many don't think that there's many people that i know that could afford family to afford as a family of four, to go and around balmoral. go and walk around balmoral. now, wouldn't want to go and walk around balmoral. no that wouldn't want to go and walk around balmoral. no that for wouldn't want to go and walk around balmoral. no that for the wouldn't want to go and walk around balmoral. no that for the people �*t want to go and walk around balmoral. no that for the people that nt to go and walk around balmoral. no that for the people that do 0 do that for the people that do want that can't afford do that for the people that do wa it's that can't afford do that for the people that do wa it's a that can't afford do that for the people that do wa it's a shame can't afford do that for the people that do wa it's a shame if can't afford do that for the people that do wa it's a shame if you'ret afford it. it's a shame if you're opening a historical cultural site up, then it should be accessible to people. it's not like going to watch beyonce, who charges a fortune . this is about charges a fortune. this is about our royal family that we do actually pay for. >> well, well on that then. sarah louise, would you say brits go free? >> yes, i think at the end >> yes, i think so. at the end of day , the royal family of the day, the royal family generates from the royal collection 400 million a year back to the taxpayer. that's an incredible sum of money. and the sovereign grant, we only give them 93 million. so actually
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king charles is gifting over 75% of back and i think £100, of income back and i think £100, i mean, afternoon tea at the ritz down, down the road, £75. so if you look at it in that way, people will if people have got the money, they will pay. i do see i do see your point, nicola. >> that's the sad point, isn't it? people don't have the money, but no one has the sort of money. so, you know, they've sold out. >> nicola, this is the. this is the thing. i mean i mean, you know people do obviously there's so much demand that they crush the website balmoral. so much demand that they crush the okay. te balmoral. so much demand that they crush the okay. they've ilmoral. so much demand that they crush the okay. they've sold'al. so much demand that they crush the okay. they've sold out. but i >> okay. they've sold out. but i guarantee you that there'll be lots of people that want to go that can't afford to go, but that can't afford to go, but that are still having to pay their taxes. so, you know, they're it classy they're making it a classy thing. again. thing. yet again. >> it's a class issue. >> no, i don't think it's a class issue, nicola, because people actually can go you can walk grounds for walk around the grounds for a lot i think it's around lot less. i think it's around about £26, £30 to walk around the . and you do see the ballroom. >> so sorry. one of one at a
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time. i'll just stick with you, sarah, and then and then we'll come back to you. don't worry. so go on. sarah. >> yes. sorry. so there is options, obviously £100 and options, obviously the £100 and the £150 makes it a bit more of a selective process . yes. if you a selective process. yes. if you have got that money and you get a more for that. but as a lot more for that. but as i say, if you're wanting, if you're wanting that experience , you're wanting that experience, you're wanting that experience, you will pay for it if you will you will pay for it if you will you will pay for it if you want and you will find you want it and you will find the money. and to a of the money. and to a lot of people these days, that's that's in with, with what in keeping with, with what concerts things, concerts and what other things, other places charge. and we also have to look, as i said before, at what is being generated in terms of revenue for the tourism and the economy. it's millions and the economy. it's millions and they took over 70 and millions. they took over 70 million in tourism, which went to the british economy just two years ago. that's an incredible amount of money. it's not that king charles is keeping it in his purse . it doesn't go to him. his purse. it doesn't go to him. it's his private residence. >> we'll it there for now, >> we'll park it there for now, and come. come to you, and i'll come. i'll come to you, nicola, this. and people nicola, on this. and people do bang about the family bang on about the royal family and they're accessible and say they're not accessible enough pay enough and they don't pay their
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own way. >> opening it up. >> but he's opening it up. >> but he's opening it up. >> nicola. but this >> right, nicola. but but this is, a of them is, this is a way of them definitely doing that isn't it? i they are literally i mean, they are literally opening their homes opening up their own homes and you a bit you know, they're raising a bit of money for themselves. >> homes, of money for themselves. >>i homes, of money for themselves. >>i say, homes, of money for themselves. >>i say, for homes, of money for themselves. >>i say, for people homes, of money for themselves. >>i say, for people that homes, of money for themselves. >>i say, for people that can nes, as i say, for people that can afford it. and where afford it. and that's where i think it's sad. it's a, you know, you are putting it down know, if you are putting it down to place and to a historical place to go and look, think should be open look, i think it should be open to you know, you to everyone. you know, you don't go to the museums and you know, you only go this room if you can only go in this room if you've but you you've got the money, but you have stay room if you have to stay in that room if you don't. and that's what it feels like. so you take you can go like. so you can take you can go and walk around for £25 or whatever only whatever you said, but only if you've money go you've got the money can you go and the other and walk around the other places. and i don't think that's right. taxpayers paying right. when taxpayers are paying their can't, their money and they can't, you know, with of living know, with the cost of living crisis, people like choosing crisis, people are like choosing heating and eating, let alone going heating and eating, let alone goiiyes, do accept your point. >> yes, i do accept your point. but honest you do but to be honest though, you do pay a but to be honest though, you do pay a little bit. you know, like the tate modern think the tate modern people think that's mean, i've had that's free. i mean, i've had several experiences several shocking experiences in there, i think several shocking experiences in the|art i think several shocking experiences in the|art is i think several shocking experiences in the|art is naff i think several shocking experiences in the|art is naff and i think several shocking experiences in the|art is naff and doesn't nk several shocking experiences in the|art is naff and doesn't make the art is naff and doesn't make sense. but you can pay. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmoret you can pay. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmore to ou can pay. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmore to go can pay. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmore to go and 3ay. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmore to go and watch. can the art is naff and doesn't make sensmore to go and watch. see] pay more to go and watch. see yoko exhibit if you're
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yoko ono's exhibit if you're a nutter you don't have to pay nutter and you don't have to pay to enter that right. and so you know it does. does happen. know it does. it does happen. sarah. that uncommon. sarah. it's not that uncommon. the of sarah. it's not that uncommon. the car of sarah. it's not that uncommon. the car parks of sarah. it's not that uncommon. the car parks £16 of sarah. it's not that uncommon. the car parks £16 pop. their car parks are £16 a pop. >> would like to say that >> i just would like to say that the upkeep of, of the residences and comes to the and palaces comes to the taxpayer of around about 500 million year. however 2.5 million a year. however 2.5 billion generated back to us. billion is generated back to us. so actually spending 500 million to get 2.5 billion back. okay, that's a fantastic investment . that's a fantastic investment. you can't argue with those figures. they speak for themselves. >> let's cut to the core of this then. nicola, are you a fan of then. nicola, are you a fan of the royal family or not, i'm not a royalist. no, i mean, i wouldn't be paying to go and look around myself. so, you know, i'm lucky that i won't need to find that money. >> yeah. and whereas you are so. so maybe maybe this is it, isn't it? she's basically just like, look, you are massive look, if you are a massive royalist, probably royalist, you'll probably find £100 and you might go and you might, might want it. if might, you might want it. if not, suppose no one's not, then i suppose no one's holding to your but holding a gun to your head. but both thank you very both of you. thank you very much. cracking head to head as
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even much. cracking head to head as ever. was nicola ever. that was nicola mclean there. personality, royal there. tv personality, royal journalist sarah louise robinson. agree robinson. look, who do you agree with? should the with? all right. so should the pubuc with? all right. so should the public tour the palaces? public pay to tour the palaces? richard says this is not richard onex says this is not about uk public. this is about the uk public. this is about the uk public. this is about tourists paying top dollar into economy . all right. into the uk economy. all right. jean says if people have £100 to waste, then that's their business. stacey says it doesn't matter how much they charge. what matters is thousands of people silly enough to part with their visit. pity their money to visit. i pity humanity , i don't think, i don't humanity, i don't think, i don't think with it. i'd pay think i agree with it. i'd pay £100 to look around balmoral. i mean, how often are you there? maybe. maybe that's just me. anyway, your verdict is now in. let's find out, shall we? 68% of you think that the public should pay you think that the public should pay tour royal palaces. pay for to tour royal palaces. there say that there we go. 32% of you say that we should not pay to tour our palaces. look, coming up, you may be familiar with argentina's no nonsense president melaye . no nonsense president melaye. well, he's planning somehow to
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return the falklands to argentina. but why now? i've got a treat for you. because we're going to talk to roger spink, who's a politician on the falkland islands. he joins us live from stanley. i am taking you to the falklands. he's going to explain it all. but next, as rishi sunak finally opens the door leaving the door to britain, leaving the echr , do you actually trust him? echr, do you actually trust him? okay. he says that nothing is more important than protecting our borders should gps be our borders and should gps be teaching parents how to cook bafic teaching parents how to cook basic meals for their kids? reform uk's lee anderson says absolutely not. but his life and that's next. i'll see you in
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tick. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. now, coming up next. should britain go to war. to keep hold of the falkland islands ? i will take you live to islands? i will take you live to the falkland islands. but first, rishi sunak's been talking tough on britain's borders, vowing to pull the uk out of the echr if that's what it takes to stop the small boats crisis. now look , small boats crisis. now look, this is technically a strongest warning yet the meddling warning yet to the meddling european courts, the prime minister told the sun. i believe that border security and controlling illegal migration is more important than our membership of any foreign core. well, that's interesting because when robert jenrick and suella braverman aside, braverman were pushed aside, last , he was saying last resigned, he was saying that that can't be the case because rwanda will pull out of the but anyway, things the deal. but anyway, things change. with dismal change. and with a dismal new poll predicting the 11 cabinet
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ministers their seats ministers could lose their seats in landslide labour victory at in a landslide labour victory at the general sunak the next general election, sunak needs up with some eye needs to come up with some eye catching policies to woo disillusioned tory voters . well, disillusioned tory voters. well, i'm joined now by reform uk mp lee anderson. lee, i thought that we were told that rwanda would pull out the deal if we ignored a foreign court. i mean, this is ridiculous. do you do you believe rishi sunak now? >> well, well, no, i don't , >> well, well, no, i don't, patrick. and yes, we was told that rwanda would pull out of the deal. i think that was a bit of jiggery the deal. i think that was a bit of jiggery pokery by by number 10, when we had the, the third reading bill. reading of the rwanda bill. look, if was going look, you know, if he was going to out , if braverman was to pull out, if braverman was going to pull the echr, they going to pull out the echr, they would done it now, would have done it by now, but they because tell they won't, because i'll tell you patrick, my honest you why. patrick, my honest opinion is it's far many opinion is it's far too many people, in in people, not just in in parliament, but within the conservative benches. that would not support this move at all. i'm talking about the one nation. so the parliament as a whole is out of touch with the british public as it was during the brexit debate . probably
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the brexit debate. probably three quarters of parliament would agree to leaving the would not agree to leaving the echr. look, there's a simple solution to this, patrick. just ignore it. >> well, i'll tell you what. i'm just getting this in my ear now. apparently this is just london. the now reportedly that the sun are now reportedly that rwanda saying they rwanda are saying that they won't deal . now, won't pull out of the deal. now, if we leave the echr. well hang on a minute. this is ridiculous. they were saying this when you were having your votes. they were having your votes. they were saying it when suella braverman charge. they braverman was in charge. they were when robert braverman was in charge. they were was when robert braverman was in charge. they were was there.en robert braverman was in charge. they were was there. rishi)ert braverman was in charge. they were was there. rishi sunak jenrick was there. rishi sunak was holding over. like was holding it over. people like yourselves heads. at that particular time, i. particular moment in time, i. this is it. what's going on? it's a circus, lee. >> well, it's ridiculous. at the time of the vote, patrick, you knew because you covered that vote, that night, we were vote, on that night, we were told the same thing that rwanda would out. we were. would pull out. we were. so there was section us within there was a section of us within there was a section of us within the conservative party at that time, , who thought time, backbenchers, who thought it nonsense. and we've been it was nonsense. and we've been proved it was proved right. i think it was a little bit of, like emotional political blackmail , if you like political blackmail, if you like to, to get the bill over the line. but not for one minute.
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did we think that rwanda would pull out of the deal. absolute nonsense. >> yeah. and the actual practicality of pulling out of the echr. d0 practicality of pulling out of the echr. do you think rishi sunak has the minerals to do that? >> $- @ think it's >> i don't think it's personally. it may have patrick, but i don't think he's got the minerals to deal with the one nafion minerals to deal with the one nation lot. they outnumber the sensible people within, within the conservative party. look, i've said it before. i've said it again. you know, if it was serious about getting, you know, coming out the echr, it would coming out of the echr, it would have suella braverman have kept suella braverman in position. she was position. she was a she was a strong advocate of this, but i don't think don't think he don't think i don't think he will and like i said will do it, and like i said before, patrick, we could ignore the wanted to. we've the echr if we wanted to. we've doneit the echr if we wanted to. we've done it before on the votes for prisoners. and always used to prisoners. and i always used to raise i in the raise this when i was in the conservative party with government, if government, you know, if we ignore the echr. you know, ignore the echr. well, you know, what would be the consequences of that? was told of that? and i was told repeatedly that it would it would affect our standing the would affect our standing on the international stage . it would international stage. it would affect our reputation. but i tell what, reputation is tell you what, our reputation is already tarnished on the not
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just the international stage, but the national stage. i'm sick to death us importing the to death of us importing the third world culture over the channel. of these people on channel. some of these people on these boats coming over. patrick, as you've reported on your , go commit your show, go on to commit horrific crimes. that's my concern. that's the concern concern. and that's the concern of the british public, i mean, it also just smacks of him not being particularly good at politics, which is what quite a few are saying. he had a few people are saying. he had a home secretary in suella braverman who would have been perfectly us to pull perfectly fine for us to pull out echr, and immigration out the echr, and an immigration minister. this minister. i've reported on this show former immigration show via the former immigration minister's own mouth, that the prime minister want to prime minister did not want to talk about immigration. talk to him about immigration. both of those people have gone. he's got secretary he's now got a home secretary who to leave the who doesn't want to leave the echr, of sudden he's echr, and all of a sudden he's coming and saying that he coming out and saying that he would happily leave it. that is a just smack, a big shift. and it just smack, i potentially of i think, potentially of desperation. lee, desperation. but lee, astonishing new research has found are having to found that gps are having to teach parents how to cook simple meals like potatoes and beans. now, the news has sparked outrage, with campaigners
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warning that some parents inability to cook healthy meals is fuelling the uk's childhood obesity crisis. and you're the perfect man to talk to about this because you were, in my view, genuinely, wrongly ridiculed , branded £0.30 lee. ridiculed, branded £0.30 lee. people laughed at you. okay for raising the alarm about this issue previously. well, you've been vindicated now, haven't you? >> well, i'll tell you what, patrick. there's no wonder you can't get an appointment at the gp's surgery these days. you're too busy, you know, doing cooking lessons with irresponsible parents. yes, yes, i was right. and, you know, i work with the food bank for a considerable amount of time. we was cooking . we cooked 150 was batch cooking. we cooked 150 meals, from £50 worked out at £0.30 when i, when i actually said this in parliament, i was ridiculed. i was laughed at. i asked every single labour mp to come and join me in the food bank project . have a this bank project. have a go. this was designed help people and was designed to help people and it's patrick there are it's true. patrick there are tens of thousands, if not hundreds thousands people hundreds of thousands of people up and down this country that cannot cook a basic meal from
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scratch, from, you know, from from ingredients. they just from the ingredients. they just cannot this cannot do it. and this is a generational thing. this has come is probably third or come this is probably third or fourth now people fourth generation now of people that cope. obviously that cannot cope. and obviously then cope, they then if they can't cope, they can't those skills onto the can't pass those skills onto the kids a result that, eating kids as a result of that, eating junk rubbish and ready meals. >> and they're teaching them, apparently they're teaching them how to do things like cook beans, which with respect, cooking is open a tin and cooking beans is open a tin and either shove in the microwave either shove it in the microwave or on the hob about 2 or 3 or on the hob for about 2 or 3 minutes. isn't it really? let's be honest. and what i found fascinating when said fascinating was when you said that people on that stuff. a lot of people on the left ridiculed you, didn't they? they they they they? then they they they they really knife you. really stuck the knife into you. but were really all but if they were really all about people, they they about helping people, they they probably on board probably would have got on board because are the kind because these are the kind we can mock people we can mock these people if we want, certainly don't want, which i certainly don't want, which i certainly don't want to do. or you could try and actually help them, which i think really think is what you were really trying try yeah, try trying to do, try and yeah, try and something positive, patrick. >> mean, they weren't >> i mean, they weren't ridiculing celebrity ridiculing these celebrity chefs, know, these jack chefs, you know, these jack monroes, these jamie monroes, these these jamie oliver's and they, they were
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cooking for £0.20. cooking meals for £0.20. considerably cheaper than what we prepare them for. and we could prepare them for. and we could prepare them for. and we was actually doing this in the food bank. i was volunteering at. we was encouraging people when they came parcel to sign came for the food parcel to sign up a cooking course and a up for a cooking course and a budgeting to try and help budgeting course to try and help people their budget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis�* their budget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis is their budget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis is what their budget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis is what we eir budget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis is what we shouldget. this budgeting course to try and help pethis is what we should be. this is this is what we should be doing. responsible, patrick. >> okay, now, look, lee, i've got ask you about this. i'm got to ask you about this. i'm going to covering this in going to be covering this in a bit more detail quite a lot bit more detail or quite a lot more detail next, because next i am take viewers am going to take our viewers and our listeners live to the falkland but falkland islands. but argentina's javier argentina's president, javier milei set out milei has promised to set out a diplomatic for the uk to diplomatic roadmap for the uk to hand the falkland islands back to the south american country . to the south american country. lee, would you fight him on the beaches of the falkland islands, well, i'm not sure about that, patrick. i'm a bit long in the tooth for that. but listen, this is. i think he must be in trouble. this is a man, by the way. i was looking at him earlier on. who visits a psychic to get, you know, to come up with of his harebrained with some of his harebrained schemes. i think he's been talking to late dead dog as
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talking to his late dead dog as well. stage. well. at some stage. >> he's cloned dog. >> i think he's cloned his dog. actually he's got actually lee, i think he's got a clone. yeah, take clone. yeah, but i take your point. carry it's it's point. carry on. it's not. it's irrelevant. really? >> yeah, probably >> yeah, but, yeah, it probably needs. yeah, probably needs to get you know? you know, needs. yeah, probably needs to get falklandsj know? you know, needs. yeah, probably needs to get falklands that iw? you know, needs. yeah, probably needs to get falklands that have)u know, needs. yeah, probably needs to get falklands that have been)w, the falklands that have been ours for what, hundreds of years. mean, does ours for what, hundreds of ye> to war again over >> would we go to war again over them, though? we do keep them, though? i mean, we do keep heanng them, though? i mean, we do keep hearing defence hearing a lot about defence cuts, spending. cuts, defence spending. we've spread . i mean, do spread pretty thin. i mean, do you think that that would go you think that that we would go to defend the falkland to war to defend the falkland islands would hope it >> well, i would hope it wouldn't come to that. patrick i hate to see our young men and women going to foreign lands women going off to foreign lands to, know, risk their to, you know, to risk their lives. it is a lives. but, you know, it is a british they're british british colony. they're british people that island, they people on that island, and they deserve and if push
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deserve our support. and if push comes we should them. >> all right. one final one to you, lee, there's been this story about the old sex based honey trap, and william wragg has stuck his head above the parapet today , i take it you're parapet today, i take it you're not worried about being caught in any of this, are you ? in any of this, are you? >> well, i did, i did, i heard it on gb earlier on the radio in the car about some people who've been sending emails or text messages to, to mps. and then you know, saying, i met you last week at this do. and, i really like you. and then they missed sending nude photos. well, i'm telling what anybody telling you what now, if anybody falls for sort of nonsense, falls for that sort of nonsense, then enough to the local then he got enough to the local funny farm. >> we're not going to be >> so we're not going to be seeing any naked pictures of lee anderson time soon. that anderson any time soon. that i would hope not. >> it'd quite distressing, patrick. >> all right , lee, patrick. >> all right, lee, thank you very much. >> always good sport. take care. >> all right. that is, reform uk mp lee anderson . mp lee anderson. >> now, as you just heard. yes. is this man about to go to war with britain for the falkland
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islands? well, i'm very pleased to say i'm going to be joined by roger spink. now, roger is a politician on the falkland islands , where she will join us islands, where she will join us from live to explain why the argentinian president is desperate to wrestle back the territory brits fought and territory that brits fought and died for. and don't miss a major gb news exclusive that's coming at 10:00. it's this unholy alliance that has been formed between a new environmental group and the pro—palestine mob. we've done the police's for job them here and we'll be
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. now coming up, i expose the new radical hard left alliance that could be about to unleash a campaign of political violence. we expose it. will the police do anything about it? but first, the eccentric argentinian
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president javier milei has promised to set out a so—called diplomatic roadmap for the uk to hand back the falkland islands to the south american nation. well, the uk occupied the islands in 1833 and defeated the argentine army in a war over the territory in 1982. but under pressure from hardliners in his country, melaye said in a speech to mark malvinas day, as they call it, i want to reiterate our unwavering claim for the islands and i commit that during our government we will have a clear roadmap so that the malvinas return to argentine hands. now, this should actually genuinely be quite concerning because yes, he may just be saying it's a pander to his base, but he is a man has done everything. he man who has done everything. he said going to do so far. said he was going to do so far. so this, i think, is so this, i think, yes, is concerning. i'm joined now by roger a member the roger spink, a member of the legislative assembly of the falkland islands. roger, thank you you are you very, very much. and you are you very, very much. and you are you are on the falkland islands now, believe, is great. now, i believe, which is great. it's closest to it i've ever it's the closest to it i've ever been. and look, what do you make of this? >> evening. patrick. yes?
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>> good evening. patrick. yes? i'm , we're i'm in stanley, yeah, we're we're fairly relaxed. the previous government was obviously very anti the falklands, the, the new president, is looking for a different way forwards, i don't think that means that argentina is dropping its, its claim , but is dropping its, its claim, but i think, certainly, we will see and we, we await with interest how this changes argentina's stance as regards the falkland islands slightly concerned at all. >> i mean , this guy is a bit of >> i mean, this guy is a bit of a cult hero to many people, a bit mad possibly, which i happen to quite like, apart from when he might be laying claim to a bit of british sovereign territory, which now he is doing i >> -- >> yeah, well, argentina, has have real economic difficulties. they have inflation around 200, rampant poverty amongst their people. so a lot of the time argentine , politicians use the argentine, politicians use the
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falklands to divert attention from the ills of their own economy and their own mismanagement of their own economy . so, we're very, very economy. so, we're very, very confident in the protection that we have, from the british forces at mount pleasant . we're also at mount pleasant. we're also very confident in the support we have from the british government. we recently had a visit by lord cameron to the falklands, where he reiterated the support for the people of the support for the people of the falklands and our wishes to remain british, which we, expressed in a referendum just over ten years ago, so we're very confident and we also have support cross—party support in the houses of parliament. so we're very relaxed about the attitude of the argentine . it's attitude of the argentine. it's nothing new from our point of view, and i think, we will wait and see what actions this new president actually, does in the, in the future. i think probably his statements were for domestic consumption. >> are you almost laughing a bit
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at the argentinian president here, do you think you do seem, i mean, remarkably relaxed about the whole thing ? the whole thing? >> well, we've seen it, you know, for the last 42 years we've seen the temperature go up and down as regards our relationship with argentina. we're a very peaceful nation. we like to get on with our neighbours. we have good relationships with chile, uruguay, brazil, paraguay, etc. argentina just continues to make their unfounded claims on the falklands. and while you look across the world, people are fighting for for, self—determination in ukraine, etc. you know, argentina is just like russia. they, they, they try to brainwash their people that there is this spurious claim for the falklands. >> and as far as you're concerned , there is absolutely concerned, there is absolutely no, no claim for it. i mean, would you would you fight them on the beaches, as it were . on the beaches, as it were. >> well i yeah, i think , i think
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>> well i yeah, i think, i think people here, almost are very, very united, you know, i mean our, our referendum, almost 99% wish to remain british. and i think there's no reason, although that was ten years ago. i think there's no reason to doubt that if we had a referendum today, the result would be very similar. so i don't think people in the falklands have any doubt about our wish to remain being british. so. >> and no. and it's true. it's worth noting as well, isn't it? it's worth noting as well that there is actually, i believe, a permanent british military presence and not an insignificant one on the falkland islands. i mean, it wouldn't be that easy for them to take, would it ? to take, would it? >> no, no. and we are reassured we are. we get regular briefings from the military and we're very reassured by the british president presence at mount pleasant. and we think that it's at a level that is more than capable of dealing with any of the existing threats from
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argentina. >> could i ask, look, why ? why? >> could i ask, look, why? why? i mean, i obviously do care about the falkland islands and just so just this is a hypothetical question, but, you know, why should i care? why should, loads of should, you know, loads of people there , here on, on people out there, here on, on the mainland, were in the mainland, as it were in britain, care about the falkland islands. you know, got islands. you know, we've got a load our own stuff going on load of our own stuff going on here, money being here, taxpayers money being splashed the splashed around all over the gaff . why should we care about gaff. why should we care about whether or not, you know, argentina as your back argentina has as your back garden mate ? garden mate? >> i think we are part of the british. we're very proud to be part of the british family, and we see ourselves as britain's gateway to antarctica, so we're more than just the falkland islands. there's south georgia down here, the british antarctic territories, etc, and we see ourselves as being strategically important for britain. and we don't rely on britain for any aid to run our own economy, so other than defence, we are
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totally self—sustaining and we're very proud to be self—sustaining, not in any way fearful of a labour government. i'll take it . i'll take it. >> not at all. no, we know most of the labour, frontbench, members and they are very, very supportive of the falkland islands. >> could i just ask you, you know, imagine i am javier milei now. all right, which might be easier for some people to imagine than others. you know, what's your to what's what's your message to the argentina ? an madcap the argentina? an madcap president right now ? president right now? >> well, i would say that , you >> well, i would say that, you know, we are peaceful. there are a number of areas such as exchange of fisheries information, flights , etc, where information, flights, etc, where we can cooperate together peacefully to the benefit of argentina and the falklands and the people of the falklands. and i think , in this day and age, we i think, in this day and age, we need to have a grown up relationship that actually, is ,
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relationship that actually, is, is recognising there is a difference over a sovereignty . difference over a sovereignty. but we live, we are neighbours and there are things that would be beneficial to both sides. >> why would anyone want to invade you? you seem like an absolutely lovely chap. thank you very, very much, roger, and ihope you very, very much, roger, and i hope to talk to you again very soon. and it is nice to know that gb news has at least one viewer falkland islands. viewer on the falkland islands. rogen viewer on the falkland islands. roger, there, politician roger, speak there, politician on falkland now, on the falkland islands. now, coming you gb coming up, i'll bring you a gb news exclusive reveals the news exclusive that reveals the true that the civil true depths that the civil service has sunk to. it's remarkable staff are remarkable this staff are wrapped in cotton wool like wrapped up in cotton wool like never and then got never before. and i've then got another gb news exclusive as well for you, because it's a sinister new alliance between a hard left extremist group and a pro—palestine mob , and it is pro—palestine mob, and it is looming large over britain . looming large over britain. >> there comes a time when we have to put our bodies on the streets and on the roofs . streets and on the roofs. >> gb news reporter charlie peters joins me to reveal all. the question is, now we've done that job for them. will the
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police bother to intervene? i'm not sure. are you ? not sure. are you? >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello again. it's a wet night for many of us, with spells of rain crossing the country, staying cold in the north and as those spells of rain move north, well, we'll see some snow well, we'll see some hill snow across but across parts of scotland, but low pressure well and truly in charge at the moment. one low departing into the north sea, the low along for the next low coming along for tonight . another on way tonight. another low on the way for that's been for the weekend that's been named storm kathleen by met eireann strongest named storm kathleen by met eireanwill strongest named storm kathleen by met eirean will be strongest named storm kathleen by met eirean will be across strongest named storm kathleen by met eireanwill be across ireland st named storm kathleen by met eireanwill be across ireland .: winds will be across ireland. but it will be a windy night tonight with of heavy tonight with outbreaks of heavy and rain, and persistent rain, particularly for western hills of at first and then of britain at first and then into scotland by dawn. that rain through the central belt could cause issues, and above 200 cause some issues, and above 200 250m we're going see some 250m we're going to see some snow building up north of the central belts, and so that could
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affect some higher routes of central scotland during the morning, centimetres morning, up to ten centimetres in but does peter in places. but that does peter out through the morning. and by the afternoon brighter the afternoon some brighter spells , especially across spells emerge, especially across parts england wales, spells emerge, especially across parts there'llnd wales, spells emerge, especially across parts there'll also wales, spells emerge, especially across parts there'll also be alales, spells emerge, especially across parts there'll also be some where there'll also be some heavy showers and it will stay blustery, although the wind coming from the south will lead to temperatures of 18 celsius or so across parts of the south—east in scotland it stays cold and it's another wet start for scotland on saturday morning. spells of rain moving north again followed by north once again followed by showers. it's a windy showers. and it's a windy day. those winds peaking in western parts of the uk at 50 to 70 miles an hour, leading to big waves leading to disruption in places. but it's also going to be relatively warm with some brightness by the afternoon. and in the east of england, highs of 20 to celsius looks like 20 to 22 celsius looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . i reveal the christys tonight. i reveal the far left radicals planning havoc in the coming days. why don't the police just act now? also . the police just act now? also. the home office is giving staff trigger warnings . but you will trigger warnings. but you will not believe. what for? and revealed . on. smile tory mp revealed. on. smile tory mp william wragg outs himself as being part of a sex fuelled honeytrap scandal . and. honeytrap scandal. and. criminals may be like the so—called female mizzi let off
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if they've had a tough life. i've got all of the front pages with star telegraph columnist allison pearson, founder of global britain. amanpour and ex—labour party adviser matthew laza. oh, and this is a bit too close for comfort . i must keep . close for comfort. i must keep. >> feeling . >> feeling. >> feeling. >> get ready, britain. here we go. we do the police's job for them by exposing the hard left radicals. next . radicals. next. >> it's just after 10:00. radicals. next. >> it'sjust after 10:00. good >> it's just after 10:00. good evening. the latest news tonight . the man who headed up an armed robbery in yorkshire. almost 20 years ago, during which a police officer was shot dead, has been found guilty of her murder. if
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you're watching on television, footage has been released showing two police officers responding to an call responding to an emergency call and arriving at the scene. back in 2005, 38 year old policewoman sharon beshenivsky died after she interrupted that armed raid at a travel agents in bradford. she'd only been a police officer for nine months. peer and dita khan flew to pakistan two months after the murder and was arrested in 2020 and found guilty of that murder. today, senior investigating officer, detective superintendent of west yorkshire police mark bowes said he hopes today's verdict will give sharon's family some peace. >> darren and theresa went to work on that day back in november 2005, fully expected to come home to their families and friends. >> but due to the horrific actions of those individuals that have now been convicted for those offences , that wasn't the those offences, that wasn't the case.i those offences, that wasn't the case. i would like to acknowledge the respect and dignity that sharon's family
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have shown over the past 18 years, and i do hope that today's conviction goes some way in enabling them to move on with their lives . their lives. >> in other news tonight, civil servants at the department of business and trade dealing with arms exports have threatened to go on strike after raising concerns over their degree of legal liability if israel is found to be violating international humanitarian law . international humanitarian law. it comes after three former supreme court judges called on the government to stop allowing the government to stop allowing the sales of arms to israel . the sales of arms to israel. three british aid workers, john chapman, james henderson and james kirby, were killed in an israeli air strike on monday. they were working for the charity world food kitchen , charity world food kitchen, which has demanded an independent investigation into their deaths. meanwhile, israel says it will adjust its tactics in the gaza war after killing a total of seven aid workers in those airstrikes, which its military admitted was a major mistake. us president joe biden
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has told israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu during a phone call tonight that us support for israel will depend on the steps being taken to address civilian harm and humanitarian suffering in gaza . humanitarian suffering in gaza. now, on a much lighter note , if now, on a much lighter note, if you thought adjusting to daylight saving time was hard, how about adjusting to lunar time ? the moon is to get its own time? the moon is to get its own time? the moon is to get its own time zone in an effort to provide a coordinated benchmark for spacecraft and satellites, but it isn't quite as simple as just readjusting your watch or your clocks around the house with moons, differing gravitational forces affecting how time unfolds relative to how we perceive it here on earth. so for those planning a trip to space, nasa hopes to develop its new lunar time by the end of 2026. that's the news for the latest stories. do sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen right now, or go to
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gb news .com/ alerts . gb news .com/ alerts. >> good evening. it's time now for a gb news exclusive . i can for a gb news exclusive. i can reveal that radical hard left groups are merging and mobilising, and they're planning to wreak havoc in the coming days. climate fanatics and the pro—palestine mob could be the two most hated groups in britain . and from this weekend, a new environmental group has formed an unholy alliance with palestine action . say hello to palestine action. say hello to youth demand. the group started as just stop oil students and it's asking volunteers if they are willing to be arrested, potentially ruining young people's futures by shamelessly encouraging them to get a criminal record. now they want the government to do two things to end oil licensing and production, and cease trading weapons with israel. and they're willing to go to extreme lengths to it happen . here is gb
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to make it happen. here is gb news reporter charlie peters, speaking to an organiser of youth demand. >> if you look closely , it is >> if you look closely, it is the same broken political system thatis the same broken political system that is driving genocide on both fronts. the tories and labour are are driving these policies that are going to kill millions of people . they basically place of people. they basically place no value whatsoever on human life. and we can clearly see this gaza . this in gaza. >> what it's all about to kick off this weekend in what can only be described as a kids camp from hell, the group set out their plan sunday, the 7th of april, gathering the evening, april, gathering in the evening, monday, and action monday, march and action tuesday, day an tuesday, a rest day with an event evening and higher event in the evening and higher spice action wednesday march and action collaboration with palestine action finishing up on thursday. it's a youth assembly and a party, but let's take a look. okay, at this schedule for wednesday in more detail. collaboration with palestine action. now they're the group who have been smashing up
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british factories associated with elbit and israel based military technology company now , military technology company now, in just the last 48 hours, 13 of their members have been arrested. they also posted this from the underground cell that they call links lair, which targeted an engineer at elbit. the social media post slammed him as a war criminal and published his home address and contact details. the engineer separately had his car vandalised. michael gove is reportedly planned on labelling palestine action an extremist group, but so far no action has been taken. now i asked this okay, should the police not take pre—emptive action now we are publicly revealing what they're going to do, what their aims are when it's happening. do our police force not have a duty to step in now and stop it? so look, here's a little bit more of what we know okay? so
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graduates from just stop oil have seen the hate marches and thought i fancy a piece of that action. they've expanded their course the war in course to include the war in gaza then teamed with gaza and then teamed up with palestine action . here is the palestine action. here is the kind of person that we're talking about . talking about. >> there comes a time where we have put our bodies on the have to put our bodies on the streets and on the roofs to put our bodies in a place which will slow the trade of bombs being dropped on civilians. we will stand up and be counted. the existence of anyone who must live their life as an unequal is a torture for all of us to bear. >> well, i'm joined now by gb news reporter charlie peters, who unearthed this shocking story. thank you very, story. charlie, thank you very, very much. this all sounds rather sinister and probably should stopped . should be stopped. >> youth demand group >> well, the youth demand group is they want to is saying that they want to oppose genocide from the rosebank fields to the west rosebank oil fields to the west bankin rosebank oil fields to the west bank in palestine, and that's why they've linked up with this
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group. palestine action , as you group. palestine action, as you say, currently reportedly being assessed as a potential extremist group and when i raised this new link that we've uncovered between this just stop oil youth movement and palestine action, i got this reaction from the policing minister, chris philp, who told me that criminality has no place on our streets and that includes so—called protesters causing criminal damage and serious disruption to threatened and intimidate the law abiding majority . he went on to say that majority. he went on to say that we will not stand for just stop oil, palestine action or any other group considering combining forces and crossing the line. we have given police powers to tackle criminal actors, whatever their guise , actors, whatever their guise, and will go further to ensure officers have the tools they need to prevent serious disruption disorder. the disruption and disorder. the police continue to closely monitor and prepare for any protests that could see criminality, and we are confident officers will do all they can to stop any groups
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breaking the law. what i also got further reaction while uncovering this new link. lord walney , the government's walney, the government's independent adviser on political violence and disruption, telling me that this new link is an unholy alliance and said that it reflects a wider trend of militant gaza protesters linking up with environmentalists. and thatis up with environmentalists. and that is a new alliance that i will be revealing tomorrow in a new gb news investigates documentary available on our membership platform on our website . it has attracted website. it has attracted significant reaction because chris philp, last week the policing minister, did say that palestine action was inciting criminal action with a manual that it had released and so this new link between what is commonly known as a non—violent group in the form of just stop oil and youth demand, linking up with a more direct act and disruptive organisation, could
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represent a new stage of radicalisation for environmental groups who could potentially engage with more violent action. they say they're non—violent, but when i spoke to them yesterday, they also praised all of palestine actions violence such as dismantling factories and vandalising cars. >> look, charlie, thank you very , very much for that. it's fantastic work that you're doing there as charlie. charlie peters gb news investigates documentary. it's exclusively available for gb news members and you can see it at gbnews.com forward slash membership. i'm going to go now and get the thoughts of my panel. i'm joined this evening by daily telegraph columnist allison pearson. we've got chairman of got the founding chairman of global britain uk, amber gill, and former labour party adviser matthew laza allison. i mean, charlie has essentially done the police's job here. it police's for job them here. it looks though this lot are looks as though this lot are saying going saying that they're going to take over this weekend take action over this weekend and next week. some of the people involved people that they're involved with have taken violence. what appears know , direct appears to be, you know, direct action, as it were. should the police just pre—emptively stop
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this ? this? >> well, we saw chris philp, the police didn't police minister, didn't we, saying charlie, oh, the saying to charlie, oh, the police have the tools, police have got all the tools, blah blah . well they've had blah de blah. well they've had all the tools since october the 7th and they've done basically nothing. as suella braverman nothing. and as suella braverman warned she as home warned before, she quit as home secretary fired as home secretary or was fired as home secretary or was fired as home secretary at the end of last yean secretary at the end of last year, if they didn't get those, islamist marches under control, they were be all sorts they were going to be all sorts of unforeseen consequences, including terrible unrest. and these on one of their these guys on one of their manifestos are actually directing how to, you know, they call it resistance for what they mean is blocking sewage pipes, you know, painting buildings. we've seen them occupying the british museum. we've seen them doing sorts . and i just doing all sorts. and i just think it's out of control, patrick. and i think i think that what it is, is it's marxism on the streets. these two organisations, pro—palestine pro the environment they've got, they've yoked together just to make trouble, that's what. >> but there is the real possibility. i mean, if they're going after things like, you know, or
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know, arms factories or whatever, there is a rizla paper now between this kind of action and an actual the step further, if they if they believe that there is something existential going on, both in terms of gaza and terms of the environment, and in terms of the environment, it's beyond the realms of it's not beyond the realms of possibility. i believe that they might things are might do things that are incredibly and the incredibly drastic. and the police this information police have this information now. them. now. charlie spoke to them. well, this way. well, look, it this way. >> these people, i think >> i mean, these people, i think it's fair say , whilst, you it's fair to say, whilst, you know, philps comments know, chris philps comments are welcome , that, you know, the welcome, that, you know, the police have the to do all police have the tools to do all that, we'll see it when it that, but we'll see it when it happens. would say, happens. but what i would say, these not these people are not pro anything . they're actually anything. they're actually anti—national fringe elements. anything. they're actually anti—nation the nge elements. anything. they're actually anti—nation the very elements. anything. they're actually anti—nation the very fringests. anything. they're actually anti—nation the very fringes of they are on the very fringes of society, of british society. yes. as you said, i think it's every likelihood they've been targeting what the local tesco branch, you know, the local, these factories which are supplying arms and ammunitions to israel to defeat islamist terrorism, but the police has to take a zero tolerance, no nonsense approach . these people nonsense approach. these people cannot be allowed to court chaos
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, misery and calamity for normal, ordinary people . normal, ordinary people. >> does this stuff pose a greater risk than far right terrorism? matthew, do you think? >> well, i think they both pose a significant risk and therefore they both be in the they need to both be in the sights of the authorities. and i think, historically we think, you know, historically we saw sort of far left activism in the a case here, the 70s wasn't just a case here, but red brigade in germany, but the red brigade in germany, etc. you know, etc. was a major, you know, a major for the security major focus for the security services. i think that rather slacked off. over the years, probably with good reason. but i think we need to have , the think we need to have, the security services laser like on both far right and far left, terrorism, because they're both probe, for extremism, because they both pose a threat to our democracy. >> people in authority, the government, particularly . but government, particularly. but all politicians, they always want it quickly , hurriedly want it quickly, hurriedly change the subject to this threat from the far right, which i would is not equivalent i would argue is not equivalent to threat from these to the threat from these pro—palestinian elements. but they're of causing they're terrified of causing offence. so they'll always say, what's the far right, patrick?
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you know , five guys call colin you know, five guys call colin in minicab. mean, where is in a minicab. i mean, where is this far right threat? >> well, they have done i mean, we seen, you know, the guy we have seen, you know, the guy who for the threats who was jailed for the threats against rosie cooper, the former mp, etc. it's actually i, but i agree they're both important. >> but no. no. well yes they are. you said, you know are. but as you said, you know and need to be and they both need to be stopped. you know, stopped. the guy you know, it's the odd occurrence and the odd occurrence here and there every saturday we there where every saturday we see left marxists on our see far left marxists on our streets chanting genocidal chants against jews. the comparison . comparison. >> and we need to have a police force that doesn't say that swastikas need to be taken in context. >> well, yes, exactly. >> well, yes, exactly. >> well, yes, exactly. >> well, look what has happened there is, we can agree, is there is, we can all agree, is fantastic work from from charlie peters go and watch peters there and do go and watch that, well on our website. that, as well on our website. but you know are the police going to react to this pre—emptively or are they going to wait for destruction , damage, to wait for destruction, damage, etc, youth demands told us etc, etc. youth demands told us in a statement. chris philp is right that criminality has no place in our streets, but it also should have no place in the
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corridors of power. sadly that is case at moment. is not the case at the moment. people political people of all political persuasions are seeing that politics failing that politics is failing us and that our leaders interested our leaders are more interested in enriching rather in enriching themselves rather than people. than protecting ordinary people. young people are not content to have criminals running the country . palestine action are country. palestine action are yet to get back to us, although they might be on the roof, i don't know, we'll have to don't know, but we'll have to wait see. coming should wait and see. coming up, should criminals softer criminals be given softer sentences come sentences if they come from disadvantaged ? disadvantaged backgrounds? tonight's got stuck into tonight's panel got stuck into that. of tomorrow's that. plus, all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages very soon. but we bring you another gb but next we bring you another gb news exclusive that exposes how unbeuev news exclusive that exposes how unbeliev painfully woke the civil service has now become. it's so bad that you might need a trigger warning before hearing about it. gb news us correspondent stephen edgington. he reveals all
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next. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. a very first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages is coming your way. but right now, it's time for another gb news exclusive . an investigation news exclusive. an investigation has revealed that home has revealed that the home office been offering staff office has been offering staff trigger support if they read about slavery , as it could about slavery, as it could remind them of past traumas and give them flashbacks. yes, staff are being offered mandatory training on inclusion and belonging , stating civil belonging, stating civil servants may be triggered by references to topics such as racism and slavery, abuse and
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violence. well, i'm very pleased to be joined now by the man behind this exclusive expose. for us. it is gb news new us correspondent, although this is, of course, a domestic story, it's stephen edwards. stephen, thank you very, very much. please can you just tell us all about this? because i thought april was earlier in april fool's day was earlier in the week? >> what is, is the >> well, what this is, is the home are offering home office are offering staff basically line and basically a support line and help if they get triggered by references, whether that's video, audio or written text in terms of slavery and racism and abuse. and what they say is that this could trigger , past traumas this could trigger, past traumas and flashbacks and that could make them very upset and therefore , we've offered them therefore, we've offered them therefore, we've offered them the support lines, these kind of employee helplines, which are available 24 over seven, 365 days a year. now, i don't know about you, patrick, but maybe i also have some past traumas, some flashbacks to the barbary
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pirates as a white man in england who obviously enslaved many british people, i'm just joking, but i think this is completely ridiculous. obviously, it's another example of where the home office are taking this very woke odd line of it's basically this hr culture where they're trying to kind of mollycoddle their staff, and instead of viewing their role as protecting british citizens or controlling our borders the most important priority for the home office is protecting the feelings of their staff. and i can just say very quickly , this full story is quickly, this full story is available for gb news members exclusively, and you can go to our website gb news. com slash membership to read the full story. and there's just so much in there that's going on. and this is all to do with mandatory training, diversity training yet again for home office. >> is behind all of this >> who is behind all of this stuff? stephen, because you've done numerous different exposes and able to and perhaps you might be able to give the examples as give us some of the examples as well some other previous
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well of some other previous ridiculous you've ridiculous incidents that you've managed within the managed to expose within the home office and potentially other sectors of government. and home office and potentially otherremind; of government. and home office and potentially otherremind ourselves1ment. and home office and potentially otherremind ourselves ,nent. and home office and potentially otherremind ourselves , it nt. and home office and potentially otherremind ourselves , it comesi let's remind ourselves, it comes on day as well, that some on the day as well, that some civil servants threatening civil servants are threatening to over arms to to go on strike over arms to israel. i mean, we have an activist core in our civil service. do we not at best. i mean, also just an incredibly woke one. the very least, i think i think that this stuff is actually endorsed by ministers. >> i wouldn't blame civil servants entirely. the conservative party have, of course , been in charge for the course, been in charge for the last 14 years. so they've had every opportunity to shut down these stories that i keep reporting on. to give you a few other examples of stuff that i found out specifically in the home office before, force home office before, border force officers are allowed to wear lgbt pride epaulettes on their uniforms. staff in home office hq in marsham street are given some staff, what they call non—binary staff are given both male and female security passes so that they can change their gender every single day or daily
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if they want to. and even a part of this story , another part of of this story, another part of this story that we reported today for gb news is some of the events that the home office are advertising for their staff internally. let me read some advertising for their staff intthese y. let me read some advertising for their staff intthese events, et me read some advertising for their staff intthese events, because ad some advertising for their staff intthese events, because it'some of these events, because it's quite an interesting list. queer chat and craft. where are all the lesbians? lesbian do for lesbian? and that's a social event for lesbian and bisexual women, queer book club, lesbian speed dating, gay girls, social sunday meetup and lgbt learning disability group. so those are all external events. but listen to this patrick. there are also internal events for staff which were all held during work office hours in the last two months, and these are the civil service lgbt plus network, manchester history walk, coming out at work , mental health impact lgbt liverpool coffee morning and the end of history month. quiz for lgbt staff in the civil service. so yet again, i think it's coming back to that issue of civil servants are pushing this
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stuff. of course, ministers could end this stuff immediately tomorrow if they wanted to. and again, these civil servants are in charge of our borders. they're in charge of illegal migration, legal migration and keeping us safe . keeping us safe. >> so yeah, it's remarkable, isn't it? these are the people in charge of enforcing our borders. it's mad. okay. it is mad. and we paying for all this stuff, stephen. absolutely >> we're paying for it. and i think if any gb news viewer is watching at home and wondering why the home office is so dysfunctional , the answer is the dysfunctional, the answer is the civil servants themselves are frankly obsessed with, again, navel gazing. their own internal welfare, their mental health, and so on. and launching all of these different events and also as i say, keep saying ministers are responsible for this stuff . are responsible for this stuff. they have the power to make sure that civil servants focus on their day roles, deliver for the public, but they're not doing that. and unfortunately, i mean, to give you a great example of a civil servant who works at the
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home office, he's the most senior servant in the home senior civil servant in the home office, matthew he office, sir matthew rycroft, he is the civil service, race, faith and belief champion . he faith and belief champion. he spends his time in the last few months in meetings talking about transgender issues with civil servants. now, i don't know whether the man responsible for britain's borders should be doing that. why is he wasting a moment of his time talking about completely irrelevant topics? he's put his deputy in the department in charge of immigration. he's basically abdicating responsibility for the most important issue facing the most important issue facing the country. so it's no wonder that i think that department is completely dysfunctional and people will remember a friend of the show, matthew rycroft, because he was the one who couldn't answer very basic questions about deportation and borders. >> look, stephen, thank you very, very much. you're doing absolutely stellar stuff for us. i know that you're going to keep uncovering and uncovering this stuff, and you're bring back some you're going to bring back some massive scoops from washington for you for us as well, in case you missed exclusive the
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missed that exclusive at the start, that apparently start, that is that apparently home office are being home office staff are being offered over seven, 365 offered a 24 over seven, 365 days a year helpline if they are triggered by things like references to slavery in case that unearths some historic trauma within themselves . i have trauma within themselves. i have a statement from the home office now. it says we keep our diversity and inclusion policies and programs under constant review ensure they meet the review to ensure they meet the needs and priorities of the department people . we department and our people. we make no apology for ensuring staff with challenging staff who deal with challenging topics are fully supported. now. stephen edmondson's news stephen edmondson's gb news investigation is exclusively available for gb news members. you see it gbnews.com you can see it gbnews.com forward slash membership coming up . sure, criminals have their up. sure, criminals have their sentences reduced if they come from a deprived background. or does britain's justice system need to toughen up? tonight's panel of pundits thrashed that one out after bringing you the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. they are landing thick fast we landing thick and fast as we speak. patrick christys
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gb news. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. and it is time now for me to bring you all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. and some them. let me pages. and some of them. let me tell our spicy . pages. and some of them. let me tell our spicy. right. so tell you, our spicy. right. so we're going with the metro . dead we're going with the metro. dead soldier rope riddle reveal tied up and trapped in river. a soldier found dead in river after vanishing on a night out had been bound by ropes, an inquest has heard . we move on to inquest has heard. we move on to the independent. stop selling arms to israel now, biden warns israel to address civilian harm, calls on immediate ceasefire . we calls on immediate ceasefire. we go to the i sunak urged to pubush go to the i sunak urged to publish legal advice on arms sales to israel. now the prime minister is preparing to suspend arms sales to israel if new legal advice suggests that the state has broken international law. civil servants overseeing the export of arms to israel are threatening legal action themselves, as well . the themselves, as well. the guardian beau biden demands gaza
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ceasefire in strongest rebuke to israel yet , let's go now to the israel yet, let's go now to the daily mail. now top tory, i gave mps numbers to sex sting plotter. he admits, swapping intimate photos as police launch probe. i'm just going to go into a bit more detail on this story now because i will be joined, of course, by my wonderful panel as is daily telegraph columnist allison pearson, founding chairman britain chairman of global britain amanda gal and former labour party adviser matthew larter . so party adviser matthew larter. so senior tory mp william wragg has tonight admitted being coerced into leaking the contact details of multiple parliamentary colleagues after he was caught up in a cyber sex sting after sending explicit pictures to a random profile on gay dating app gnndn random profile on gay dating app grindr. wragg says that he was manipulated into sharing the contact details of prominent political figures. well, these figures were then allegedly
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approached on whatsapp by accounts claiming to have met them previously , who often them previously, who often demonstrated detailed knowledge of the victim's personal and professional lives. these conversations quickly turned sexual, with the mystery accounts sending explicit photos to the victims. now, at least two of the victims are known now to have sent intimate pictures in return. so i've got to ask allison, what the heck do you make of this, then? >> well, this, i'll have to choose my language with care, patrick, won't i? this guy , patrick, won't i? this guy, william wragg. how stupid, narcissistic and reckless would you have to be? he is a conservative mp he is vice chair of the 1922 committee. he goes on to a dating website. fair enough. and he shares some compromising pictures of himself. you just don't do that. i mean, it is just defies belief that you would do that because it is a security risk. he then becomes a blackmail risk. and indeed, who was the you know, who was the guy he was talking
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to? spy. russian spy. to? chinese spy. russian spy. we don't know. but we do know that he then handed over his some of his colleagues phone numbers. weak, despicable . he should go weak, despicable. he should go now, as far as i'm concerned. but these people , patrick. too but these people, patrick. too many people in politics, they are narcissists . they are are narcissists. they are reckless. they have no common sense at all. i mean, ijust think it's absolute lunacy. what these people, don't you? >> well, i think i echo absolutely . what? all of what absolutely. what? all of what you say, allison, but i would add , look, these type of sort add, look, these type of sort of, you know, spear fishing , of, you know, spear fishing, tactics are a known thing. you will have hostile actors, you will have hostile actors, you will have hostile states, targeting people in public life in the uk, politicians and others . but the bigger question others. but the bigger question here is candidate selection. how on earth are these people getting selected and then getting selected and then getting elected to be in places of authority and power? this guy, is the chairman of the parliament's committee for constitutional affairs . it's
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constitutional affairs. it's bonkers. there needs to be a bigger , far longer, far wider bigger, far longer, far wider ranging inquiry into how on earth are these people getting selected in the first place? >> yeah, i mean, matthew, this is a massive cock up, no pun intended. >> you're trying challenge >> you're trying to challenge me. there, patrick. me. challenge me there, patrick. i'm to get me into i'm trying to get me into trouble, look, i clearly trouble, look, i think clearly what he did was very stupid in the first place. anybody who either is an mp or wants to be an mp should be careful what they say. and i mean, it's the grammar this too. people grammar on this app too. people ask for nudes as they're ask you for nudes as they're called pretty quickly, but if you're politics, say you're in politics, you say no pretty obviously pretty quickly. and he obviously didn't a didn't do that, which is a foolish , foolish thing to do. foolish, foolish thing to do. >> his under the bus >> his mate's under the bus there well. there as well. >> that is that >> but that is, that is that that's is really that's what is really deplorable, he's literally deplorable, is he's literally given some random person given out to some random person contact colleagues contact details, of colleagues who he are then going to who he knows are then going to be so i think that's be targeted. so i think that's what's going to get him. the foolishness is one thing. the callousness in handing foolishness is one thing. the callthese ss in handing foolishness is one thing. the callthese details in handing foolishness is one thing. the callthese details is] handing foolishness is one thing. the callthese details is another.) out these details is another. he's down next he's standing down at the next election anyway. would election anyway. he would be gone well, yeah, gone if he wasn't. well, yeah, maybe be gone anyway.
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maybe he should be gone anyway. >> is it. and also, >> well, this is it. and also, look, and know, look, alison, and you know, william will no doubt make william wragg will no doubt make further fullness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time fullness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time and fullness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time and we'll fullness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time and we'll have fullness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time and we'll have t01llness william wragg will no doubt make fu|time and we'll have to assess of time and we'll have to assess what he has to say then. but this is , i mean, it's not this is, i mean, it's not treason. i'm not going to accuse this guy of treason. right. but you're giving personal details to colleagues who are in a government to somebody who clearly , it appears, is clearly, it appears, is extorting him. i mean, that is all awful. >> it really is awful. and the question is, why did he not go immediately to the police? i mean, i don't i don't understand why he didn't do that. but it as matthew said, you're not many steps away from defence secrets, are you? this is it. >> this is what i'm getting at. >> this is what i'm getting at. >> yes, yes. >>- >> yes, yes. >> profumo esque profumo esque. >> profumo esque profumo esque. >> that's the thing we >> well, that's the thing we well, this is the tip well, this is this is the tip of the i think, know, the iceberg. i think, you know, this know about what this is what we know about what are all the all the questionable, things that have happened that don't know happened that we don't know about. all about. and again, look, all roads lead to the candy's department, that is simply the bottom of this tip. how are these people getting selected
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and elected? >> i mean, hitherto, he's been. i mean, he was quite anti—boris. people didn't like him for that. but, you know, he is the chair of select committee. been of a select committee. he's been a respected figure. a reasonably respected figure. it's i think, you it's just it's just i think, you know, he was foolish to send the pictures soon pictures out, but as soon as somebody tried to extort, blackmail, want blackmail, whatever you want to call should gone call him, he should have gone straight to the chief whip. and the gone the chief whip would have gone with services. with him to security services. >> this is very concerning on numerous fronts, numerous different fronts, really, got the really, because you've got the idea might, you really, because you've got the idea go might, you really, because you've got the idea go on might, you really, because you've got the idea go on a might, you really, because you've got the idea go on a datingnight, you really, because you've got the idea go on a dating app:, you really, because you've got the idea go on a dating app andu really, because you've got the idea go on a dating app and be know, go on a dating app and be that easily compromised. what led being not led up to someone being not easily randy, led up to someone being not easi there randy, led up to someone being not easi there few randy, led up to someone being not easi there few sherbets randy, was there a few sherbets involved? don't know. and involved? we don't know. and then on top of that, the readiness to then go and sell out. >> and it seems that he may have given the names of people he thought were particularly likely given the names of people he th and also journalists appa mean, look, multiple >> i mean, look, i get multiple think every single day think i'm safe every single day on twitter. >> that's no, it was women >> that's no, no, it was women as well. no, we say as well. no, no, we should say this. wasn't it wasn't just
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this. it wasn't it wasn't just it it wasn't grindr anytime it was it wasn't grindr anytime soon. somebody, somebody all say there somebody posing there was also somebody posing as as well yeah, as a woman as well as a yeah, there's charlie and abby. it's not just charlie. >> i'm sure there's a lucy >> oh, i'm sure there's a lucy and a few others. but look , you and a few others. but look, you know, all of us in public life, we get multiple attempts every single day. >> but, you know, it's very simple as a question of judgement to say, no, look or report to the police. yeah. >> it's concerning it is seriously concerning. right. okay, look, let's move this one on because yeah, salacious story and let's be honest, it's going to run. so if you to run and run. so if you thought that we're guilty of dishing soft justice in this dishing out soft justice in this country, then prepare for things to get a heck of a lot worse. now it's been revealed that judges been to judges have been told to consider softer sentences for offenders or offenders from deprived or difficult backgrounds. the mitigating factors included in the new sentencing guidelines could include poverty, experience of discrimination and low educational attainment and negative influence from peers. i mean, what the heck is that last
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one there? negative influence from peers anyway, justice secretary alex chalk and common sense esther mcvey have sense minister esther mcvey have both branded the as both branded the guidance as patronising and argued that it risks making excuses for crooks to commit crime . alison, is this to commit crime. alison, is this just an excuse to send just an excuse to not send people to overcrowded jails? >> yeah, i hadn't thought of that, could be. that, but it could well be. i mean, i think there are two elements first, those of elements here. first, those of us come non—middle us who come from non—middle class backgrounds, know, my class backgrounds, you know, my mum difference mum taught me the difference between it's between right and wrong. it's immensely rude between right and wrong. it's imsuggest rude between right and wrong. it's imsuggest people rude between right and wrong. it's imsuggest people , rude between right and wrong. it's imsuggest people , because de to suggest that people, because they're poorer or less advantaged, you know, aren't taught how to behave or conduct themselves. and that's that's a slight on millions of people in this country who'd never who would never commit crimes , you would never commit crimes, you know, then and then know, and then and then the other that the, the other thing is that the, the majority of people who are the victims of crimes are themselves in poorer, disadvantaged circumstances . so you're circumstances. so you're essentially saying we'll release these people early or not give them long enough jail sentences, and then they'll be back in the poorer communities, you know, causing mayhem made
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causing the mayhem that's made your life so unpleasant, or the antisocial behaviour that lots of these judges who are living in holland park or leafy sussex and kent, they're not the ones going to be bearing the brunt of these guys coming out quickly, are they? >> and know , there is >> and you know, there is a sense of right and wrong, isn't there? i mean, there's literally is it comes is a crime. is when it comes is a crime. >> this look, this is >> this is look, this is peddung >> this is look, this is peddling yet more wokery peddling of yet more wokery backwards, backwards meaning it's nonsense it's the hindi word for nonsense . is. it's . that's what it is. it's divisive . it's peddling divisive. it's peddling division. it's trying to divide people, not just along racial lines now, but also along socioeconomic background lines. i mean, look, for example, cornwall is one of the, heaviest areas of deprivation in the country. yet you don't see feral machete gangs on the cornish coast, but you do see them here in london. and so how, how how do the pedlars of the division square that circle ? yeah, it's square that circle? yeah, it's patronising. it is again setting people against us and them building that narrative that just because maybe you're from a
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particular background, you should be looked at it in a particularly different way. justice should be equal and fair play justice should be equal and fair play for all. >> to kind to someone who might have at some point in their lives experienced what i mean. some the less on their bit of poverty. >> well, yeah. i mean, i think when you use common sense. so i mean, if you to police mean, if you talk to police officers who to shoplifting officers who go to shoplifting incidents, somebody is incidents, if somebody has is clearly need clearly in desperate need and has a couple of bread has stolen a couple of bread rolls, they you know, rolls, they treat, you know, they case differently they handle the case differently to gone in to somebody who's gone in and taken bottles vodka off taken 20 bottles of vodka off the common sense. >> apologise for that, >> i apologise for that, matthew. all agree to >> i apologise for that, matth on. all agree to >> i apologise for that, matthon. all all agree to >> i apologise for that, matthon. all right?l agree to >> i apologise for that, matthon. all right? no, ree to >> i apologise for that, matthon. all right? no, lee to >> i apologise for that, matthon. all right? no, i said move on. all right? no, i said sorry at time. i was in a sorry at the time. i was in a bad way and that was in wilmslow i >> -- >> yeah. all right, fair enough, fair enough. >> right now . nike ministry of >> right now. nike ministry of justice spokesperson said sentencing made by sentencing decisions are made by independent judges already independent judges who already take the take into account the circumstances of each case, in line with guidelines set out by the sentencing council. now, do any of you remember this thug getting to random house? >> is the school rebecca sills .
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>> is the school rebecca sills. james come to the front door right now for me? >> james james. >> james james. >> yes. so it appears that the mrs. influence has spread to inspire a young woman to morph into the female version of the tiktok troublemaker. what's this ? oh no , no, he said, stop talking. >> oh oh oh oh oh. >>— >> oh oh oh oh oh. >> well, if you if you miss that, that is a young woman there. if you want to call her that, i suppose, who carried out assaults right across london and yeah. shock, yet to be yeah. shock, horror yet to be caught. but these chaos for clout as they're called social media trends are very, very worrying. and i suspect that they're only going to get worse coming up today marks four years since keir starmer became labour leader. so as he looks to
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transform the country, has he succeeded in transforming his party? find out when crown party? find out when i crown tonight's greatest britain in union jack. but first, another big story for you tonight . civil big story for you tonight. civil servants threatening to servants are threatening to strike uk continues strike if the uk continues arming israel. is this left wing luvvies running whitehall and i believe it's an absolute scandal. but what about my panel? we will tackle that when we get tomorrow's we get more of tomorrow's newspaper
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welcome back to patrick christys. tonight i've got more from pages for you. now let's do it . the times senior tory. i it. the times senior tory. i gave mps numbers to honeytrap. we've spoken about that, william wragg. there's also a giant picture story there of a house on the brink of a cliff in trumpington . good luck selling trumpington. good luck selling that. apparently, it's actually called cliff farm. there you go. well, cliff used to be farm. anyway, daily express make no mistake, migrant flights to take off every loophole is
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off soon. every loophole is being closed to foil any attempt at blocking migrant flights to rwanda , a home office source has rwanda, a home office source has revealed. let's go to revealed. all right, let's go to the sun. it's a good day for charles king raring to go on tour of oz as cancer treatment goes well. good news this king charles has told aides to ramp up plans for a two week state visit to australia after a positive start to the cancer treatment . well, that is treatment. well, that is fantastic. heck of a long flight as well. so he must be feeling in fine fettle if he's embarking on daily on that soon. the daily telegraph biden tells israel to stop civilians . they've stop killing civilians. they've also got here primary pupils allowed to pick their gender, tory mp and gay honey trap. they've cut straight to the point. there are lessons. to be fair, on the front of the daily telegraph. and there's yes, quite a lot of other good stories on the front of the telegraph, as there always is now. okay. i'm as ever, now. okay. i'm joined, as ever, by pack, daily by my press pack, daily telegraph allison telegraph columnist allison pearson, founding chairman of global gill global britain uk am amber gill and adviser global britain uk am amber gill and laza, adviser global britain uk am amber gill and laza, now adviser global britain uk am amber gill and laza, now civil adviser global britain uk am amber gill and laza, now civil servants matthew laza, now civil servants in the department for business
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and this broke a and trade. so this broke just a couple of hours before we came on now requested on air. have now requested to cease over cease work immediately over fears could be fears that they could be complicit in war crimes in gaza. officials overseeing arms exports to israel have raised concerns with senior civil servants that they may be liable if it is deemed israel has broken international law. it comes after three former supreme court judges called on the government to stop allowing the sales of arms to israel. three british aid workers, john chapman, henderson and chapman, james henderson and james sadly killed james kirby, were sadly killed in an israeli airstrike on monday . look, alison, you don't monday. look, alison, you don't get a lot of these people saying the same thing about foreign aid. not all of it, but some of it does definitely go to some very dodgy very dubious dodgy people. >> excuse. they >> there's just no excuse. they won't not do any work. won't make to not do any work. is there the idea they're going to international to be complicit in international war crimes is absolutely ridiculous. look, patrick, i think it's the end of an era. the government's coming to an end, and end, isn't it? and the and they're emboldened. civil they're emboldened. these civil servants, political servants, their political activists, many of them, they're clearly anti—israel and anti—jewish, and they're allowed to express these views, which
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are not the policy of the british government. and they should not be allowed to do that. it's against what their job is supposed to be. well, they should be disciplined. but no one we know, no one's going to discipline them. >> mean, is >> i mean, this this is literally i mean, they're refusing to their job. and, refusing to do their job. and, you the sentiment refusing to do their job. and, yoover the sentiment refusing to do their job. and, yoover this the sentiment refusing to do their job. and, yoover this particular1e sentiment refusing to do their job. and, yoover this particular issue itiment is over this particular issue right could be over right now, this could be over anything. i mean, the precedent that this sets. well, that's the thing, tweeted earlier thing, look, i tweeted earlier today, i think any civil today, i say i think any civil servant who refuses to do their job should be sacked. full stop. no ifs, no buts. look, i've served in the diplomatic service. i've seen a lot of these people firsthand. and a lot of them have political axes. they grind and day out, they grind day in and day out, no matter which administration is and shouldn't is in power. and that shouldn't be that servants, be the way that civil servants, civil professionalism civil service professionalism should be. now, the problem we face is today they're talking about israel , but maybe tomorrow about israel, but maybe tomorrow the uk is engaged in a war on terror. for example, will they be doing the same then? that would be working against
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britain's national interests . britain's national interests. they're not fit for purpose. they're not fit for purpose. they need to be. >> oh, that's the concern. and thatis >> oh, that's the concern. and that is the concern. the dial has so drastically that has shifted so drastically that the civil service now is actually running the show and could go against is going against the wishes or the wills of a democratically elected government. whatever people's view of that government may be. matthew. view of that government may be. ma'ihew. view of that government may be. ma'i mean, i think if we'd had >> i mean, i think if we'd had the advice, which is the legal advice, which is currently being discussed, david cameron currently being discussed, david camerto get updated legal going to get updated legal advice the next days. if advice in the next few days. if the advice had been the legal advice had been published and had said that it was we thought was committing or we thought it was committing or we thought it was war crime was contributing to a war crime for to continue with for britain to continue with exports, they have exports, then they might have a point. to wait point. but they need to wait for the advice the government's legal advice rather quick. i rather than getting in quick. i have say i'm not have to say as well, i'm not sure that they're going to be, you that a war crimes you know, that a war crimes tribunal is going sort of tribunal is going to be sort of desperately trying to find people home the people working at home from the department you department of business, you know, to drag them to the know, to drag them off to the hague not very realistic. hague is not very realistic. >> i mean, we've seen >> yeah. i mean, we've seen we've threatened strikes we've we saw threatened strikes over which if over rwanda flights, which if you daily express is you believe the daily express is front or tomorrow front page today or tomorrow morning, are morning, you know, they are definitely so
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definitely going to take off. so we're see over we're going to see strikes over that, aren't we? i mean, we're going see strikes over going to see strikes over presumably anything. going to see strikes over pre wellbly anything. going to see strikes over pre wellbly arthisng. going to see strikes over pre wellbly arthis is. going to see strikes over pre wellbly arthis is the great >> well look, this is the great blob. you know, two words, blob. but you know, two words, sue right. let's do it sue gray, right. let's do it back gray, was back to sue gray, she was heading what? the cabinet heading up. what? the cabinet office to, the office goes on to, lead the leader of the opposition's office, and she's doing a great job. well, you would say that, but problem is, these but the problem here is, these are who we entrust to be are people who we entrust to be apolitical, doing the work for the elected government. >> you're not in the civil service, matthew. >> i i'm not clever enough to be a civil servant. that's why i was merely a political adviser. and, look, i mean, i think sue was to defend sue. i don't think anybody called into account her integrity the years integrity over the many years that she served. and now she's left. the civil left. she's left the civil service. she's clearly not going left. she's left the civil se go :e. she's clearly not going left. she's left the civil se go back e's clearly not going left. she's left the civil se go back to clearly not going left. she's left the civil se go back to it.early not going left. she's left the civil se go back to it. she's|ot going left. she's left the civil se go back to it. she's clearlyg to go back to it. she's clearly now war. i think now in a political war. i think the who are serving in the people who are serving in the people who are serving in the service doing the civil service being doing politics, the issue if politics, which is the issue if you've we saw recently, you've got, as we saw recently, the a world the home office having a world huab the home office having a world hijab day, spending british taxpayers that, what taxpayers money on that, what is you say, know, if you know, you say, you know, if we, know , we could be we, you know, we could be at a war with iran, god forbid.
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>> that could happen . >> but but that could happen. are they to object? you are they going to object? you know, they. absolutely. know, are they. absolutely. are they to be muslims the they going to be muslims in the home object to being home office who object to being at know, at war with iran? you know, they're to they're british. they have to take diktat the british government. >> it's a concerning precedent. and shocking and now look to more shocking earthquake footage from taiwan. now, dashcam footage shows now, this dashcam footage shows the moment that the 7.7 magnitude quake struck and it triggered a rock slide which crushed cars in its path . i've crushed cars in its path. i've got a feeling . got a feeling. >> everything about me seems to have changed step by step. i got a brand walk. i even sound sweeter when i talk. i said, oh well, just like to point out the music there was from the dash cam footage. >> we didn't think it was a good idea to add that to that devastating clip, but there we go. scenes. it's time
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go. shocking scenes. it's time now reveal those greatest now to reveal those greatest britain jack ass. right, britain union jack ass. right, alison, who's your greatest britain, please. >> it is mrjohn tinniswood, a british great grandfather who fought in world war ii. >> john has become the world's oldest man , aged 111, and john oldest man, aged 111, and john attributes his long life to a fish supper every friday. man after my own heart. fish and chips, john. every friday. well done john. you're looking absolutely brilliant for 100. well, you look brilliant for 80. >> wow, 111. >> wow, 111. >> good luck. that's going to take some beating. go on a man. >> oh, it's got to be nigel nigel farage belated happy birthday to and as donald birthday to him. and as donald trump you know this the trump said you know this the best is yet to come. the most influential politician since margaret thatcher. you know here's to more. >> well, indeed this is not nigel turns. >> are you gonna be joining reform ? >> reform? >> nigel turns 60 yesterday at a big bash, and donald trump even popped big bash, and donald trump even poppedin big bash, and donald trump even popped in to say hello at one point. so there we go. >> there are quite a few hangovers, i believe, throughout
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westminster today, after last night's, mine. i don't night's, party, so mine. i don't think win, but mine think i'm going to win, but mine is starmer years is sir keir starmer four years ago was elected labour ago today he was elected labour leader, etched on my memory because since then we've seen the labour party transformed. and ready to serve the and he's now ready to serve the country transform to and he's now ready to serve the cou country. transform to and he's now ready to serve the cou country. we1sform to and he's now ready to serve the cou country. we need| to and he's now ready to serve the cou country. we need it to to and he's now ready to serve the cou country. we need it to be.to the country. we need it to be. i smashed the gangs and smashed the and do other the gangs and do many other things. and cut the gangs and do many other thinwaiting and cut the gangs and do many other thinwaiting lists. and cut the waiting lists. >> mentioned it yet, >> we haven't mentioned it yet, so there we go. right? today's greatest britain is john tinniswood. he's hundred and 11, a fine winner , a fine winner, a fine winner, a fine winner, 111 years old. well done john. now union jackass, it's alan duncan. >> mine is former foreign office minister who says israel is no longer a british ally. and he adds that israel is basically starving to death. 2 million people. totally untrue . and sir people. totally untrue. and sir alan is, is quite close, to patrick other countries in the middle east who have slightly worse human rights records than israel. >> okay, i'll go on. imam. >> okay, i'll go on. imam. >> it's got to be the man in front of the daily mail, william wragg, for being an absolute dunderhead lack of
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judgement. >> oh, brilliant. right. okay there we go. >> go on. and mine's the nation's for not nation's airports for not getting together getting their act together before start before the summer holidays start to scanners , which to have the new scanners, which means you have to fiddle means you don't have to fiddle around liquids. around with your liquids. >> oh, yeah. >> oh, yeah. >> well, today's >> okay, good. well, today's union jackass is william wragg, mp for being an absolute. what? dunderhead a dunderhead, right? okay. >> i'm much better choice of word than patrick, sir. well choice earlier. we'll leave that right. >> can i just say thank you? i've had a fantastic evening this evening. i hope everybody watching and listening has as well and rewind, well go back and rewind, especially the top of 10th especially the top of the 10th for gb news exclusive. but for a big gb news exclusive. but up it's headliners it up next it's headliners take it easy winners. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello again. it's a wet night for many of us, with spells of rain crossing the country, staying cold in the north and as those spells of rain move north, well, we'll see some hill snow
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across parts of scotland, but low pressure well and truly in charge at the moment. one low departing into the north sea, the next low coming along for tonight. another low on way the next low coming along for tonthe . another low on way the next low coming along for tonthe weekend low on way the next low coming along for tonthe weekend that'sn way the next low coming along for tonthe weekend that's been way for the weekend that's been named storm kathleen by met eireann because strongest eireann because the strongest winds ireland . winds will be across ireland. but it will be a windy night tonight outbreaks heavy tonight with outbreaks of heavy and persistent rain, particularly hills and persistent rain, pa britainly hills and persistent rain, pa britain at hills and persistent rain, pa britain at first hills and persistent rain, pa britain at first and hills and persistent rain, pa britain at first and then.s of britain at first and then into scotland by dawn. that rain through the central belt could cause issues, and above 200 cause some issues, and above 200 250m we're going to see some snow building up north of the central belts, and so that could affect some higher routes of central scotland during the morning, up to centimetres morning, up to ten centimetres in places. does peter in places. but that does peter out the morning . and by out through the morning. and by the afternoon some brighter spells especially across spells emerge, especially across parts of england and wales, where also be some where there'll also be some heavy showers will stay heavy showers and it will stay blustery, the wind blustery, although the wind coming from the south will lead to temperatures 18 celsius or to temperatures of 18 celsius or so across parts of the south—east. in scotland stays south—east. in scotland it stays cold and it's another wet start for scotland on saturday morning. spells of rain moving north once again, followed by
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showers and it's a windy day, those winds peaking in western parts the uk at 50 to 70 parts of the uk at 50 to 70 miles an hour, leading to big waves leading to disruption in places. but it's also going to be relatively warm with some brightness by the afternoon. and in england , highs of in the east of england, highs of 20 to 22 celsius. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 11:00. you're with gp >> it's11:00. you're with gp news and our top story tonight. leicester police have launched an investigation after receiving reports that explicit images and flirtatious messages have been sent to mps as part of an alleged sixteen scam. earlier this week, it was reported that a number of mps had been sent emails or contacted by an unknown caller on their phones under the pretence that they had already met, and william wragg, chairman of commons select chairman of a commons select committee, admitted to the times that did hand over the that he did hand over the personal phone numbers of colleagues person he met colleagues to a person he met onune colleagues to a person he met online varne. but he says he did it because he was scared that the individual or organisation behind the already had behind the scam already had compromising information about him. mp sixteen scam him. the current mp sixteen scam is known in tech circles as spear phishing, a type of cyber attack that targets specific
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groups, civil servants

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