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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  April 11, 2024 3:00am-5:01am BST

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get ready more of this stuff. get ready britain, here we go. no more foreign legal nonsense. next . next. >> at a minute. after ten. this is the latest gb news and our top story. the european parliament has approved a major reform of the eu's migration and asylum rules . tightening reform of the eu's migration and asylum rules. tightening up controls. the president of the european parliament welcomed the adoption of a revamped migration system for europe, saying it would reduce irregular arrivals . would reduce irregular arrivals. facial imaging and fingerprints could be taken from people and they may be detained during screening. the eu parliament's president, roberta metsola, said this is a historic day for europe, adding that lawmakers
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would be able to say to voters that they had answered a long running plea for action on migration issues. running plea for action on migration issues . meanwhile, migration issues. meanwhile, five members of a bulgarian organised crime group have been convicted of falsely claiming over £50 million in universal credit in the uk's biggest ever case of benefit fraud. the gang worked for almost five years making thousands of false claims for universal credit, either using real or fake identities. the investigation identified three so—called benefit factories based in london, where repeated false claims were supported by forged documents, including fake tenancy agreements , counterfeit payslips agreements, counterfeit payslips and forged letters from landlords, employers and gps . landlords, employers and gps. the former chairman of the post office mediation scheme described today the wrongful prosecution of subpostmasters by the post office as the greatest scandal he's ever seen. sir anthony hooper told the horizon
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it inquiry today a new approach was needed to make sure multiple injustices, such as those never happened again. he added it didn't make sense that reputable subpostmasters appointed by the post office after an examination of their characters would be stealing the sums of money. it just didn't make sense, he said . just didn't make sense, he said. the metropolitan police has launched an investigation following several outbreaks of disorder during eid celebrations in west london. police came under attack from groups of youths in southall that's in the borough of ealing . they were borough of ealing. they were throwing bottles and missiles at officers, some were forced to put on riot gear to deal with the worst of the clashes. gb news obtained this video. if you're watching on tv of the disorder as it took place, it shows officers being pelted with sticks, bottles and other objects. many of those officers appeared to have been caught out by the sudden escalation of the disorder, and had no time to put on their protective equipment.
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meanwhile, pro—palestine protesters have sprayed red paint over the ministry of defence in london today . five defence in london today. five people were arrested for criminal damage and are in custody. the defence secretary, grant shapps, saying the armed forces can't and won't be intimidated, adding those inside the defence headquarters stand up to dictators and terrorists every day, going on to say those targeting us are the opposite cowardly criminals who i'm glad to see arrested . that's the to see arrested. 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 gb news. com slash alerts . alerts. >> it is time to remove the cancerous tumour that is the echr from british society. a proud sovereign nation such as great britain should never have to be bound by the rulings of an anonymous foreign judge who conducts secret proceedings in the dead of night. this has happened on rwanda flights . we happened on rwanda flights. we will never know who made the
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last minute decision to block the flights, but it is believed to be judge from either to be a judge from either russia, hungary or liechtenstein. but on another night, could be judge from night, it could be a judge from azerbaijan, san azerbaijan, north macedonia, san marino, or lithuania. marino, moldova or lithuania. one person from san marino , a one person from san marino, a country with a population of around 33,500 people, could make around 33,500 people, could make a decision that would impact the 67 million or so people living in the uk. they make decisions like not allowing us to deport a man called wahbi mohammed, who wanted to blow up london. he's a somalian and we couldn't get rid of him because he might face inhumane treatment in the country. he left so we could come and grace the streets of britain all the nigerian child rapist akin doyin akin shipped after he attacked a 13 year old girl. the echr said deporting him would breach his right to a private and family life . of private and family life. of course, this is only a massive problem because weak willed problem because our weak willed prime minister and other politicians want to ignore politicians don't want to ignore the echr, unlike france, who deported a terrorist to
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uzbekistan. they did it and lo and behold , the sky did not fall and behold, the sky did not fall in on france. their equivalent of the guardian newspaper did not implode, causing a nuclear chain reaction that reduced paris to smouldering rubble. everything was fine, but it's not all about the borders. elderly british veterans could die behind bars because the now disgraced and despised former leader of ireland, leo varadkar, is taking us to court to keep prosecuting veterans for things they may or may not have done dunng they may or may not have done during the troubles. meanwhile, members of the ira are allowed to walk free. how is that fair? what about the latest climate lunacy? the echr ruled that countries like switzerland, britain must do more to protect their citizens from the consequences of climate change. they sided with swedish school truant greta thunberg and 2000 geriatric swiss women. this means governments now have to adopt more ambitious climate policies, get stuffed. our politicians are too weak to do anything about this. they listen
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to idiots that tell us we'd be like russia and belarus if we just ignore the echr and not normal people who say that we'd also be like, oh, i don't know, japan or canada or australia. rishi sunak does not want his legacy to be the controversy of the echr, and this is why we need a referendum on it. it will be good politics for rishi to call a referendum on leaving the echr and to campaign for leave. here's what nigel farage has to say about it. >> echr. i tell you what, >> leave echr. i tell you what, wouldn't it be fun to have a referendum on echr membership ? referendum on echr membership? i'm quite looking forward to that. >> could he outflank nigel there? perhaps. here's the latest gb news people's polling . latest gb news people's polling. 36% of voters say that they agree with leaving the echr. if it stops rwanda flights, 31% don't want to, and a further 34% say they don't know 66% of tory voters want to leave. so the fact is really that most people have only just started paying attention to the echr . now there
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attention to the echr. now there is a case for sticking with it, but as far as i'm concerned, anything that gets in the way of border control, national security, counter—terrorism or sovereignty over climate policy can jog on. and i don't care what some anonymous froot loop from a pathetic minnow nation thinks about that. let's get the thoughts of my panel this evening. am joined by the evening. i am joined by the director the popular director of the popular conservatives, littlewood. director of the popular c have vatives, littlewood. director of the popular c have got res, littlewood. director of the popular c have got businessman ewood. director of the popular chave got businessman and)d. i have got businessman and activist brooks and author activist adam brooks and author as well rebecca reid . mark, i'll as well rebecca reid. mark, i'll start with you. referendum on the echr. >> yeah, i like the idea of it. i mean, usually you would hold a referendum if basically the parties are split and can't agree, we might actually get into a position in which the conservative party advocates withdrawal from echr and the labour staying labour party advocates staying in. the reason we had a brexit referendum was basically the tory party couldn't make its mind up, so it had to bat it to the people. so i'm not against it being in a general it being determined in a general election on a party election or on a party manifesto, but i will firmly manifesto, but i will be firmly supporting leaving this
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ludicrous i think ludicrous court. and i think this judgement on climate change is the most absurd overreach ever. is the most absurd overreach ever . look, there are some ever. look, there are some circumstances in which you need international arbitration. if you've signed a trade deal with another country , and there's another country, and there's some dispute about whether britain's abided by the terms of that trade treaty, you need some independent adjudication. but you need a european court, you don't need a european court, which making up climate which is making up climate change policy in switzerland, based on the right for a private and family life. whatever next? yeah, i mean, will it also start to decide that nhs waiting lists are too long, that houses in britain are too expensive , that britain are too expensive, that we're not spending enough on defence? are political defence? these are political matters , not judicial matters. matters, not judicial matters. >> of >> that's the direction of travel. and was why a lot travel. and that was why a lot of people voted to leave the european union. and i do think that people assumed if that a lot of people assumed if we going full we were going to take full control our laws, adam, control back of our laws, adam, that would probably out of that we would probably be out of the as well. the echr as well. >> the same. article eight >> look the same. article eight is used from, by a failed asylum seekers, in this country that we have the
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have to house them, so the echr is dictating lot. what goes on is dictating a lot. what goes on in this country, even the british judge in strasbourg has said this has gone beyond the remit of this court, and he's worried about it. you've named that? we can't get rid of terrorists. we can't get rid of dangerous foreign criminals unless we ignore them, which we're not prepared to do because of this court. now, you know, we need to leave. and a lot of the arguments i get on twitter are lefties that say, oh no, that'll leave us like a pariah state like russia. but do countries like russia. but do countries like australia , new zealand or like australia, new zealand or america? do they collapse because they're not in the echr? no they don't. this is a load of scaremongering. we could leave this and we could still have human rights in this country. >> but because they weren't in the echr, they they created their own system. what is worrying when you remove the worrying is when you remove the system, we could. what i'd system, we could. but what i'd be concerned about is be very concerned about is removing without removing it without a bullet—proof of bullet—proof understanding of what with. what we're replacing it with. which why the which is why i think the referendum is the best idea. >> i think probably just to
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clarify that you are pro clarify that then you are pro referendum. would would referendum. i would like i would like referendum, not like an advisory referendum, not a binding one. >> and i'd like a minimum turnout a minimum disparity. turnout and a minimum disparity. so if brexit would been so if brexit would have been a much if we much clearer case, if we had said we a 65% turnout and said we need a 65% turnout and it has to be 6040 above for us to do anything, or for the government to say this is advisory say this is advisory or just to say this is an referendum. we would an advisory referendum. we would like out you think, like to find out what you think, but doesn't mean we have to but that doesn't mean we have to do those things. do it. all of those things. because then because then people are having a and at the are having a say and at the moment the polling varies. but generally of generally speaking, a lot of people know it is or people don't know what it is or what does. a of people, what it does. a lot of people, but 53% of people still would say remain in the echr. >> i think one of the issues is that for a lot of people, they've just not really thought about it, and then see about it, and then they see things now like rwanda, deportation flights things deportation flights when things are of face, are held in front of their face, like the fruity like some of the fruity characters that can't deport, characters that we can't deport, and they realise of and they realise some of the nationalities the nationalities of some of the judges ruling judges that are ruling anonymously at times in the dead of night, last minute, to dictate and this dictate policy to us and this climate we've got.
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climate issue that we've got. and i think people now and i think people are now waking it. waking up to it. >> yeah, i think that's right. and mean, to be honest with and i mean, to be honest with you, for viewers, patrick, who don't of the don't follow the nuances of the european constitution, they probably part probably thought this was part and eu, actually a and parcel of the eu, actually a good of people. it's not. good number of people. it's not. it's council of europe it's the council of europe predates the, the, the eu, many more in it. and look, more countries in it. and look, when was invented think when it was invented i think there winston churchill. there was by winston churchill. >> we should flag this >> we should we should flag this is often sort of is often it's often sort of created a sort of version is nothing churchill just created. >> see now we just had a holocaust in europe. there was a case for it. but circumstances have changed institutions have changed and institutions need with them. and need to change with them. and i think people want to take think if people did want to take back leaving this back control, then leaving this convention of that i >> -- >> and look, i think we're seeing exactly what happened with the start of the eu . you with the start of the eu. you know, it morphed into something it have been . it it shouldn't have been. it shouldn't grown into a shouldn't be. it's grown into a monster. is now monster. the echr is now something that dictates law rather than interprets law. >> it also protects human rights. a lot of what it does is incredibly valuable. we have maternity policies, we have fire
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doors, we have it overturned. the gay rights in in northern ireland. it's also written into the good friday agreement. this is an important and positive piece of legislation . it exists piece of legislation. it exists for a reason. and what i will not stand for is to see once again this become a left right. lefties love the echr righties hate it is. they're not so divisive to this country. >> i understand that it's divisive, unfortunately divisive, but unfortunately i think politically divided think we are politically divided on don't need to on it because we don't need to be labour. the chance for a referendum is now, isn't referendum on this is now, isn't it? because if we get a labour government, we're going it? because if we get a labour gov one. ent, we're going get one. >> think we have time to >> but i think we have time to have a referendum before the next election. the amount of time takes today, but the time it takes today, but the amount takes to gear amount of time it takes to gear up. just think the damage up. but i just think the damage that brexit not actual european union, around union, the politics around brexit horrible this brexit were horrible to this country and just don't want to country and i just don't want to see that again. yeah. country and i just don't want to seeyout again. yeah. country and i just don't want to seeyou think again. yeah. country and i just don't want to seeyou think he again. yeah. country and i just don't want to seeyou think he could. yeah. country and i just don't want to seeyou think he could. sonh. country and i just don't want to seeyou think he could. so you >> you think he could. so you think sunak could think that rishi sunak could conceivably referendum on conceivably call a referendum on the on the same day as the the echr on the same day as the general election? >> that would be quite a wizard wheeze. do you not think the problem, him. i problem, the problem of him. i mean, don't is
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mean, i don't think it is horrible to consult people. the problem consult people horrible to consult people. the pridoem consult people horrible to consult people. the pr> said, there's >> it is. as you said, there's not time. so if we could not enough time. so if we could do it on if we can call it do it on that, if we can call it now, hold it in november. >> that's all. >> that's all. >> they could have thought about it ago and been it six months ago and not been complete. idiot. >> can't hold it tomorrow, >> we can't hold it tomorrow, can we? we're probably going can we? so we're probably going to in to need a six month lead in to do and i was saying do it. and as i was saying earlier about the brexit referendum, that earlier about the brexit refere are m, that earlier about the brexit refere are some that earlier about the brexit refere are some conservativeiat there are some conservative cabinet ministers who would resign if we left so resign if we left echr. so i think sunak would it think sunak would find it difficult in the tory difficult to put it in the tory manifesto. so for the same manifesto. and so for the same reason that the conservatives needed brexit needed to back the brexit decision to the people, they may feel to. i'm feel that they want to. i'm sorry, that is that is sorry, but that is that is really gross politics. >> career politics. >> that is career politics. wanting election over wanting to win an election over wanting things right and properly. >> manifesto let the people decide have it. decide or let labour have it. >> have the >> let labour have the referendum. let whoever wins referendum. let let whoever wins the next election do it. >> most important >> what's the most important thing this, adam? is thing for you in this, adam? is it borders? is it, you it is it borders? is it, you know, counter—terrorism? is it climate? want to climate? what do you want to have? sovereignty over? have? total sovereignty over? >> have control over >> i want to have control over safety this country. got
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safety of this country. i've got kids. others here. kids. so have others here. i want grow up a safer want them to grow up in a safer world. now, if we can't deport foreign foreign foreign criminals, foreign terrorists want blow us up. >> but your chances of being involved in a terror attack are infinitesimal. chances are being impacted by human rights are much higher. i don't care if it's a one. this is legislation that keeps workplaces safe. that's do that's people. things people do every day. >> change, more >> more climate change, more climate means climate change policies means more money the taxpayer , more money from the taxpayer, from me. >> are you afraid of losing if we pull out of strasbourg? what what happens? >> variety. but >> there's a wide variety. but the they supported the the way that they supported the freedom press particularly important. >> excuse i'm allowed to sit >> excuse me. i'm allowed to sit on every on national television every single say this. we've single night and say this. we've got press. yes single night and say this. we've got and press. yes single night and say this. we've got and weiress. yes single night and say this. we've got and we are ;. yes single night and say this. we've gotand we are ayes single night and say this. we've gotand we are a member of the >> and we are a member of the echr. they have. they have the right to be forgotten, not the 20 allows me to do job. 20 that allows me to do my job. that it underpins it unquestionably. and it has been instrumental in cases predates the echr and it's been instrumental in cases long before the echr predates the internet. the press exists in a completely different way from before. >> we can regulate these things ourselves. >> we absolutely can't believe that would still able
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that we would still be able to do job of upholding human do a good job of upholding human rights. take rights. how long would it take to transmission from to rewrite a transmission from san telling, but san marino telling, okay, but who constitution? who rewrites the constitution? how does it take and who how long does it take and who gets it? gets oversight over it? >> first, understand are >> first, i understand there are practical. enough. all practical. yes. fair enough. all right. look, still to come, right. now look, still to come, a bulgarians a gang of bulgarians are convicted britain's largest a gang of bulgarians are conv benefit britain's largest a gang of bulgarians are conv benefit fraud,1's largest a gang of bulgarians are conv benefit fraud, costing st ever benefit fraud, costing taxpayers more than £50 million. but get worse than that. but it does get worse than that. aren't we being taken for mugs? no nonsense. lee anderson gets stuck into that, and a £55 million government crackdown on shoplifting shortly . he's also shoplifting shortly. he's also got an exclusive for us talking about a blackmailing near miss. so make sure you stay tuned for that. so make sure you stay tuned for that . but up so make sure you stay tuned for that. but up next, it's our head to head. as rishi sunak says the nhs waiting lists are his biggest failure during well , biggest failure during well, just the characteristically nonplussed radio interview . just the characteristically nonplussed radio interview. is he the worst prime minister we've ever had? tory mp sir philip davies and former labour minister bill rammell do battle on that. in just a text dated
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. reform uk mp lee anderson joins me live shortly. he's got an exclusive for us, and it involves a blackmailing plot. so you won't want to miss that. but now is rishi sunak the worst prime minister we've ever had?ifs worst prime minister we've ever had? it's time for the head to head. prime minister rishi sunak was fielding questions from the
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members of the public this morning during a cringeworthy lbc interview in which he made this soul searching admission . this soul searching admission. >> all the areas that i've set out, you know, when it comes to the nhs, that's the place where we've not made as much progress as i would have liked. >> you've made no progress. >> and you've made no progress. >> and you've made no progress. >> the list >> yeah, no, the waiting list today is higher it was when today is higher than it was when i office. i took office. >> we're on >> so while we're on the subject of prime minister's biggest of the prime minister's biggest failures, don't just failures, why don't i just rattle few more? okay, so rattle off a few more? okay, so there's been a record start to 2024 with over 5400 migrants arriving on small boats. so far this year. that's 43% up from the same time last year. the uk economy fell into a recession at the end of 2023, despite the much lauded national insurance tax cuts. stealth taxes mean brits have less and less in their pay packets in the round. meanwhile rishi sunak has been busy banning vapes and overhauling the education system by doing some really fruity stuff with a—levels . so with a stuff with a—levels. so with a crumbling nhs and ever worsening small boats crisis, and that's before we've got started on legal immigration, isn't it? a
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tanking economy is rishi sunak the prime minister we've the worst prime minister we've ever had? let me know your thoughts. gb views the gbnews.com gb news on twitter. go vote in our poll. the go and vote in our poll. the results shortly. doing results to follow shortly. doing battle are the tory battle on this now are the tory mp , soon to be sir philip davies mp, soon to be sir philip davies and former labour minister and the former labour minister bill rammell. bill is rishi sunak the worst prime minister we've ever had, even worse than tony blair. >> well, tony blair is one of the best prime ministers we've ever had, but, you know, i never thought i'd say this after the lies of boris johnson and liz truss's dogmatism wrecking the economy. but i actually think he is the worst prime minister we've ever had, you know, he crafted five pledges which he thought were easy to deliver. he's failing on four out of five of them. the national health service is an abject disgrace. 400,000 people on waiting lists, more than when he took office as prime minister. the average wait
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time is 18 months, compared to 18 weeks when labour left office. and it's always someone else's fault it strikes in the nhs. >> they have had an impact . to >> they have had an impact. to be fair, junior doctors are to blame for the high level of the current waiting list. in a large respect, if you look at the detailed reports, that's worth about 200,000 of the extra 400,000 that are on waiting lists since sunak took office. >> but his whole style, his whole modus operandi is it's someone else's fault. and whenever he's challenged, he is tetchy, petulant and entitled, which is what he is. >> okay, philip, i understand that you're quite exercised about this. i think one of the main issues that a lot of people have with rishi sunak is he just appears to be incredibly bad at politics. >> well, whether he is or isn't all the people to judge, but that doesn't make him a bad prime minister. and i don't actually believe either actually believe that either you or that tripe or bill believe all that tripe that out with, just that you came out with, just a few minutes ago, to be perfectly
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honest. rishi sunak honest. i mean, rishi sunak inherited probably had the inherited and probably had the worst of any new inherited and probably had the worst minister of any new inherited and probably had the worst minister since any new inherited and probably had the worst minister since winston prime minister since winston churchill. be perfectly churchill. to be perfectly honest, had a tarnished honest, we'd had a tarnished brand. we were 35 points down in the opinion polls. we had economic headwinds. we got the, all the immigration problems that had been left behind by his predecessor , liz, we'd got the predecessor, liz, we'd got the impact of the covid lockdowns. and of course, that's the reason why the waiting list is so high, which bill spectacularly fails to mention something the to mention something that the labour wanted to have labour party wanted to have longer deeper lockdowns for longer and deeper lockdowns for which would have had longer and longer waiting as consequence. >> what has he done about of >> what has he done about any of those philip, though, >> what has he done about any of those the philip, though, >> what has he done about any of those the thing. lip, though, that's the thing. >> us. so, for example, >> all of us. so, for example, let's let let's take them. let's take them by one. take them one by one. immigration, is immigration, which is the biggest biggest biggest which is the biggest issue. a bill which biggest which is the biggest isrgoing a bill which biggest which is the biggest isrgoing to a bill which biggest which is the biggest isrgoing to complete bill which biggest which is the biggest isrgoing to complete its which biggest which is the biggest isrgoing to complete its passage is going to complete its passage through the house of lords next week, which on the front of the bill makes clear it does not comply european comply with the european convention of human rights. i don't anyone have don't think anyone could have expected minister to do expected a prime minister to do anything than pass a anything tougher than pass a bill actually doesn't bill which actually doesn't comply european
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comply with the european convention rights, convention of human rights, but they anyway. he's they want to do it anyway. he's changed immigration they want to do it anyway. he's chalegal immigration they want to do it anyway. he's chalegal to immigration migration they want to do it anyway. he's chalegal to immigration stopation for legal to immigration stop dependents of students coming into country to increase the into the country to increase the amount that people have to earn. in fact, funnily enough, i got a letter from bradford university, my local university, last week, complaining that they in complaining that they were in financial difficulties because the immigration rules had been clamped on so stringently. clamped down on so stringently. that was the reason that they that gave . he's managed to, that they gave. he's managed to, start the, the cutting taxes. i mean, obviously we had to get inflation down. and when you get inflation down. and when you get inflation down. and when you get inflation down that has impact on economic growth. but he's got inflation down. taxes inflation down. he's got taxes down. put he has zero. down. he's put he has zero. >> he's come back to you philip i'll come back to you philip. bill bill bill philip phillips phillips strong case phillips made a strong case there that rishi sunak is not, in fact, the worst prime minister we've ever had. >> well, i think if you look at the evidence , he is got the evidence, he is we've got the evidence, he is we've got the highest tax. you know, the highest tax. but, you know, you about tax cuts, philip. you talk about tax cuts, philip. we've tax burden we've got the highest tax burden since the former labour minister bill. >> just bear that in mind. yeah
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absolutely. >> and we've got the highest tax burden since the second world war under this tory government. they failed spectacularly on delivering growth. and i think he is the worst prime minister even he is the worst prime minister ever. but do you know what? i think he's a symptom rather than a cause. he presented himself as the unity candidate who would bnng the unity candidate who would bring stability and integrity the unity candidate who would bringto ability and integrity the unity candidate who would bringto government�*ntegrity the unity candidate who would bringto government .:egrity the unity candidate who would bringto government. butty the unity candidate who would bringto government . but the tory back to government. but the tory party is so riven by divisions and factions and sunak wallows around in the middle, and he's got no sense of leadership because underpinning it all, he gives me no sense that he's got a real set of beliefs and values that drives his conduct in government. >> all right. okay. look, philip, the opinion polls would suggest that he is one of the worst prime ministers we've ever had. >> no, i disagree if you look at the situation he inherited and where we are now, we're a lot better off in the opinion polls than were when we were when he when he took over. however, no, you you're not. you know, no you're not. >> when >> it's worse than when liz truss had your you had truss when you had your you had your and, and, and our brand
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your say and, and, and our brand was massively tarnished at the time. >> i mean, you can't just come in and have a new shop manager after gerald ratner makes a speech and all of a sudden that that that reputation changes, he inherited and that's what bill's treating this as he's just treating this as if he's just landed on earth in 2022. he's on about the tax burden, the tax burden is high bill to pay for the lockdown that you were all in favour of, to pay for people to sit at home and do nothing in favour of, to pay for people to rtwot home and do nothing in favour of, to pay for people to rtwot homeyoui do nothing in favour of, to pay for people to rtwot homeyou were iothing in favour of, to pay for people to rtwot homeyou were alling in favour of, to pay for people to rtwot homeyou were all in| for two years. you were all in favour that? wasn't, favour of that? i wasn't, i voted against that. how did you think that was going to paid think that was going to be paid for? to be paid for by for? it has to be paid for by higher taxes. you seem to want to lockdown how are to have the lockdown and how are you to have the lockdown and how are you pay to have the lockdown and how are you pay for you going to pay for it? >> and look. bill. bill, >> and look. hey bill. bill, you're that it's always you're saying that it's always everybody fault with everybody else's fault with rishi but you what? rishi sunak. but you know what? keir getting his keir starmer is getting his excuses in early ten years of renewal, say you need in renewal, you'll say you need in order you anything. order for you to do anything. i mean, that's somebody else's fault time, isn't it? there >> if he's going to take ten years to sort out the chaos we're inherit, because we're going to inherit, because i'll what drives i'll tell you what, what drives the highest tax since the
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the highest tax burden since the second war? the highest tax burden since the sec rishi, war? the highest tax burden since the secrishi, do war? the highest tax burden since the secrishi, do ita/ar? the highest tax burden since the secrishi, do it inr? the highest tax burden since the secrishi, do it in 18 months is >> rishi, do it in 18 months is the anaemic growth that we've had under this 14 years of this conservative government >> how much money was left after the last labour government bill, we the lowest debt to gdp we had the lowest debt to gdp ratio the g7 countries. ratio amongst the g7 countries. we had a world banking crisis that we had to grapple with. the tories had no different policies to deal with that than we did. but, you know, sunak you talk, philip , about sunak having philip, about sunak having inherited chaos from boris johnson and liz truss, and i agree with you. he had a chance to define himself against his two predecessors and he chose not to. he refused to even vote for the sanctions on boris in 18 months, and he's not repudiated liz truss . liz truss. >> the final word to you, on you. >> you're saying that rishi should have sorted out all these problems after lockdown and in 18 months, but labour is going to need ten years to do it. i mean, what a load of old tripe to perfectly honest. i mean, to be perfectly honest. i mean, you're making as you're you're making this up as you're going to be perfectly going along. to be perfectly honest, you absolutely
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honest, bill, you absolutely know no know that you've got no solutions to the problems that know that you've got no sollcountry the problems that know that you've got no sollcountry tifacing..ems that know that you've got no sollcountry tifacing..emsdon't the country is facing. you don't even tackle immigration. even want to tackle immigration. you're cave in to you're going to just cave in to the . that's you're going the unions. that's you're going to be a way dealing with to be a way of dealing with waiting. just to waiting. it's just cave in to 40% the rest 40% pay demands and all the rest of it's going to be absolute of it. it's going to be absolute chaos. and nobody likes keir starmer, even on the labour starmer, not even on the labour benches. do they? like keir starmer? and the voters certainly don't. so i'd be concentrating on getting your own with angela own house in order with angela rayner the rest of it. rayner and all the rest of it. get your own house in order before having at before you start having a go at what sunak's because what rishi sunak's done, because he's it. he's actually done it. >> nobody likes you, nobody likes and likes the labour party and that's 20% ahead that's why we're 20% ahead in the you know , rishi the polls, and you know, rishi sunak not the answer to this sunak is not the answer to this country's problems. >> yeah. but philip, i've got to pick you up on that. then you've just said it's not for keir starmer. i mean, it's because of rishi sunak isn't it. >> no it's not. you're treating it, patrick, as if rishi sunak inherited 20 lead in the inherited a 20 point lead in the polls he's burned through it polls and he's burned through it . he inherited 35 point . he inherited a 35 point deficit polls with a deficit in the polls with a tarnished brand and massive
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headwinds . tarnished brand and massive headwinds. he didn't arrive in that job because everything was going well . he arrived in the going well. he arrived in the job because everything was going badly. >> but, well, i get it. i look, i do, i appreciate it, where's where's the vision though, you know anyway. right. look both of you, you very much. thank you, thank you very much. thank you. that's what we're you. that's exactly what we're after. great stuff. right. after. so great stuff. right. who agree with? all who do you agree with? all right. as he claims that the nhs waiting biggest waiting lists are the biggest failure is rishi sunak. the worst minister worst prime minister we've ever had. sunak inherited had. becky says sunak inherited such bad situation after such a bad situation after truss. unfair judge him truss. it's unfair to judge him after a short period of time. fair mary he's fair enough. mary says he's certainly the most ineffective, but undoubtedly but the worst is undoubtedly blair. don't let billy say that can, says patrick. did you forget how bad liz truss was? short memories. no although. and hear me out on this. hear me out on this. there is the school of thought. i'm not saying this is my of thought. the school my school of thought. the school of liz of thought that says that liz truss proved right with truss will be proved right with the of least the fullness of time. at least there vision there, there was a vision there, although has, well although that vision has, well blown in my mortgage. but blown a hole in my mortgage. but anyway, 60% you that anyway, 60% of you agree that rishi sunak the worst prime rishi sunak is the worst prime minister 40% of you say he
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minister ever. 40% of you say he is not. not right. coming up, has prince harry's deportation from the us moved one step closer? you might have missed this because it happened just before we came on air, but i'll fill you in the runaway royals us application has been us visa application has been handed over now to a judge to decide whether or not it should be made public. we've got the editor at large at the mail on sunday, charlotte griffiths, giving us the latest. but giving us the very latest. but next, gang of bulgarians are next, a gang of bulgarians are convicted largest convicted of britain's largest ever benefit fraud, costing taxpayers more than £50 million. meanwhile, the government is launching a £55 million crackdown on spiralling shoplifting. going on reform uk's lee anderson is on that next. he's also got an exclusive for us about his own issues with blackmailing. i'm pretty
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still to come. a huge development in prince harry's battle against deportation. but first, it's time for reform uk's lee anderson. now a gang of bulgarian nationals has been convicted of britain's biggest ever benefit fraud, pocketing over £50 million from the taxpayer. the five fraudsters have now pled guilty. there's some of that cash if you're watching, is on the telly, it's all right for sa. they're just tossing it around the living room. they've now room. good stuff. they've now pled after making pled guilty after making thousands of false claims for universal five universal credit over a five year both real
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year period, using both real people and stolen identities to claim the cash. one of the suspects even managed to return to bulgaria after arrest to bulgaria after his arrest before being extradited back to britain. just these britain. but it's not just these criminal masterminds playing the benefit staggering benefit system with a staggering wait for this £11 billion of your money lost to universal credit fraud in the last two years alone, without a hint of irony, work and pensions secretary mel stride said i'm immensely proud of dwp investigators work in collaboration with the crown prosecution service to take down this organised crime group. today's convictions underline our commitment to protecting taxpayers money and it is only right and fair that we bring to justice those stealing from the pubuc justice those stealing from the public purse, right. well, look also speaks gb news. yesterday, rachel reeves said that labour have their own tough plans to tackle benefit fraud if and when they enter downing street . they enter downing street. >> did say they'd point universal credit where fraud and error cost taxpayers 5.5 billion a year. why are you not going
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after the benefit cheats instead? >> well, i think that it is important that we crack down on, fraud avoidance, evasion. but i think it's really important that we root out fraud wherever it exists , whether that is in the exists, whether that is in the benefit system, because i want to money go to people that really need it . really need it. >> the bulgarians here legally have pocketed 55 or so million pounds from the taxpayer as a as a total of £11 billion in universal credit fraud. what's going on? you know what, patrick? >> there'll be people watching this tonight absolutely furious. just about setting their alarm clocks for 5:00 in the morning to go and do a shift and pay their taxes and do the right thing by their family and this country. you get this riff country. then you get this riff raff, and it's these bulgarians and scammers out of 50 million. this is just the tip of the iceberg, by the way . we saw that iceberg, by the way. we saw that other figure, the 11 billion in the two there's lots the past two years. there's lots of out it. and you know of people out it. and you know what? these bulgarians, you know, government
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know, the bulgarian government should be accountable for this rubbish our country. >> i know, know, they're >> i know, i know, they're legally, but look what we're paying legally, but look what we're paying at the moment, paying out for at the moment, patrick. got illegal patrick. we've got illegal migration what, £10 migration costing us, what, £10 million you've these million a day? you've got these idiots committing idiots coming over committing all sex and all sorts of sex crimes and murders and horrible stuff that we can't deport the taxpayers footing the bill for that. and then we see this benefit fraud from these bulgarians costing, what, million? what, £50 million? >> the fact that they >> well, the fact that they could away it so could get away with it for so long, i think bigger picture long, i think the bigger picture is billion, as you is the £11 billion, as you alluded there two alluded to. there over two years. or years. i'm a taxpayer or a taxpayer . most people watching taxpayer. most people watching this undoubtedly be this undoubtedly will be taxpayers sorry but taxpayers as well. sorry but well we need a refund. >> well, i mean look i mean mel stride i've got i've got a lot of respect for mel. i like the bloke, but when he's saying he's proud dwp for getting to proud of the dwp for getting to the of this, it's the dwp the bottom of this, it's the dwp that's this happen in the that's let this happen in the first should hang first place. they should hang their shame. their heads in shame. >> billion of taxpayers >> £11 billion of taxpayers money last two i money in the last two years. i mean, is absolutely mean, it is absolutely astonishing. now astonishing. well, moving on now to else get to something else that'll get people going because it's shoplifting offences. they've recently record high more
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recently hit a record high more than a thousand shoplifting offences single day . but offences every single day. but despite this, the detection rate has dropped to record low in has dropped to a record low in response, government has response, the government has today a £55 million today announced a £55 million crackdown on the scourge of shoplifting plaguing shoplifting that is plaguing britain's high streets. >> announce of >> announce a strong set of measures to clamp down on retail crime. that's about a new offence , a brand new offence for offence, a brand new offence for assaulting shop workers using facial recognition technology to catch perpetrators with cctv , catch perpetrators with cctv, but also greater use of electronic tagging of prolific shoplifters . it's been warmly shoplifters. it's been warmly welcomed by retailers and police. i've spoken to today and, crucially, will demonstrate to our shop workers that we've got their back and also that we will do what it takes to keep our streets communities our streets and our communities safe. everybody safe. that's what everybody wants. deliver i >> -- >> lee, you said what a load of rubbish. then patrick, it's 2024 and we haven't come up with new schemes to catch shoplifters. >> these aren't the great train robbers. they're not the, you know, the criminal brains , know, the criminal brains, criminal masterminds. they're just lowlife thieves that are going to shops and clearing the
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shelves and walking out in broad daylight . it's so obvious who daylight. it's so obvious who these shoplifters are in communities mine or the communities like mine or the police have got to do turn up police have got to do is turn up when the shopkeepers report them and and arrest them. it's as and go and arrest them. it's as simple that. simple as that. >> what you reckon about >> and what do you reckon about this facial? i mean, he is doing something. he's saying there's new laws. if you assault a shopkeepen new laws. if you assault a shopkeeper. good, isn't new laws. if you assault a sthhat'ser. good, isn't new laws. if you assault a sthhat's good. good, isn't new laws. if you assault a sthhat's good. yeah.)od, isn't new laws. if you assault a sthhat's good. yeah. andisn't it? that's good. yeah. and facial i know, is a facial recognition i know, is a bit squiffy lot of people. bit squiffy for a lot of people. more tagging. i mean, more electronic tagging. i mean, is he actually doing the right thing is doing the right thing. >> he is doing the right thing. but patrick, it's but like i say, patrick, it's 2024 we're struggling with 2024 and we're struggling with shoplifters. i say, these 2024 and we're struggling with shopli criminal i say, these 2024 and we're struggling with shopli criminal masterminds. aren't criminal masterminds. these you know, these are low life, you know, rubbish. know, rubbish. that's you know, it's got walking our got walking up and down our streets looking the local streets looking for the local co—op it is up to co—op or whatever it is up to the co—op neck of the the co—op in my neck of the woods. go in, the woods. you just go in, take the stuff, terrorise the and stuff, terrorise the stuff and walk the and the walk out with the stuff. and the police later. police turn up two days later. >> there's obviously no real fear caught. no, not fear of getting caught. no, not at i mean, that's pretty at all. i mean, that's pretty clear, really, when see the clear, really, when you see the amount mean, you do amount of i mean, you don't do it, you and the only it, do you? if you and the only time shoplifting actually falls in area, patrick, when in my area, patrick, is when these are prison. these thieves are in prison. well, there you go. well, i suppose there you go.
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that's solution for it, that's one solution for it, isn't have build isn't it? we'd have to build more prisons now, look, isn't it? we'd have to build morwilliams now, look, isn't it? we'd have to build morwilliam wragg now, look, isn't it? we'd have to build morwilliam wragg honeytrap, the william wragg honeytrap scandal westminster scandal has rocked westminster in days, and sunak in recent days, and rishi sunak has was has today said that wragg was right after right to apologise after the disgraced leaking disgraced mp admitting leaking his colleague's contact details to met on a gay to a stranger he met on a gay dating app called grindr. and now , lee, i understand that you, now, lee, i understand that you, have something to say. it's not. by have something to say. it's not. by the way, i believe , anything by the way, i believe, anything to do with grindr. but, you've had an interaction of your own with blackmail, have you? yeah, yeah, i've had a few actually, past, but one that springs to mind is i think it was early last january last year where i had random email from had this random email from a so—called lady saying that she'd got a videotape of me, and it was worth my while to go and meet her at this pub at a particular time. >> and to bring loads of cash or something like that in exchange for this video screen. >> i'll tell you what i'm going to do. i'm going to read this out case anyone's, listening out in case anyone's, listening on says. on radio or whatever it says. dear lee, i have video dear lee, i have a video recording that may be what's
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that an interest to you, there you so so there you go. and you go. so so there you go. and it tells you, gives you a certain date and a time to turn up, so there you go. kind regards. obviously, we've blurred all the relevant, blurred out all the relevant, names. probably fake names anyway. anyway, we've blurred them on the last. so that's. them out on the last. so that's. that to you. so what that was sent to you. so what happened, just at happened, well, i just looked at it. well, have it. i thought, well, i have somebody got somebody got a video don't know video of me. you don't know what's happening. you know, a long ago in your past, when long time ago in your past, when you've had a few too many, i don't know, but i've always said since there's since day one, because there's lots there in lots of traps out there in parliament i always parliament for mps. i always said never to said i would never succumb to blackmail, send it to blackmail, so i just send it to the police inspector. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on police inspector. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on to police inspector. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on to it..ice inspector. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on to it. they|spector. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on to it. they tried or. he blackmail, so i just send it to the on to it. they tried to he got on to it. they tried to trace ip address, but they trace the ip address, but they couldn't some particular couldn't for some particular reason. i never at reason. but i never turned up at the pub and i didn't up the pub and i didn't turn up with of cash. and i think with a wad of cash. and i think the moral of story is you the moral of the story is you cannot give in to blackmail. >> the other of the >> and the other moral of the story is this stuff clearly happens a lot. mean, happens quite a lot. i mean, we've journalists happens quite a lot. i mean, wemembers journalists happens quite a lot. i mean, we members of journalists happens quite a lot. i mean, we members of parliament,3lists happens quite a lot. i mean, wemembers of parliament, etc,; or members of parliament, etc, you know, say that they were approached. i would argue that's quite a crude way of approaching
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somebody . a vague thing about somebody. a vague thing about a video recording. yeah, turning up with a bag full of cash to this particular thing. i mean, you know, they would have had to have have up lot have had to have got up a lot earlier in morning to catch earlier in the morning to catch you on that one. but, you you out on that one. but, you know, just shows, i would know, it just shows, i would argue, daft william know, it just shows, i would argue, was daft william know, it just shows, i would argue, was with daft william know, it just shows, i would argue, was with alliaft william know, it just shows, i would argue, was with all oft william know, it just shows, i would argue, was with all of this. .iam wragg was with all of this. >> he been incredibly daft. >> he has been incredibly daft. i i've said repeatedly i mean, i've said repeatedly over past week or so that, over the past week or so that, you know, he to do in you know, what he wants to do in his life is none of my his private life is none of my concern. he get up to concern. he can get up to whatever he wants, but think whatever he wants, but i think the that disturbed me most the thing that disturbed me most was he gave phone was the fact that he gave phone numbers way colleagues and numbers way of colleagues and then to be then left them open to be blackmailed, and that sort of throwing under throwing your mates under a bus to save your skin. it's not to save your own skin. it's not it's not good. it's not a good look. >> what do you make of the handung >> what do you make of the handling of that? because, you know, has said he know, rishi sunak has said he was apologise. jeremy was right to apologise. jeremy hunt him hunt initially called him courageous. hunt initially called him cour�*thenrs. hunt initially called him cour�*then william wragg has now then william wragg has decided himself of the decided to remove himself of the weapon. everything you weapon. everything else, you know , what do you make of the know, what do you make of the actual handling of that? i mean, the narrative. you take the tories out of it, you know? what is the. do you make the
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is the. do you make of the narrative that somebody who has done that could be classed as courageous? >> it's funny, isn't it, patrick? because when i made some a month or so ago some comments, a month or so ago about mayor khan, i was called an islamophobe kicked out an islamophobe and kicked out the party. and i think william's done foolish and far done something foolish and far worse than what i did and has been called courageous. so you make your own mind up about the process just seem be very, process just seem to be very, very double standards there. >> some would wouldn't >> some would say, wouldn't they? thank you very, they? but lee, thank you very, very much your time as ever. very much for your time as ever. that anderson reform that is lee anderson of reform uk. look coming up at ten, uk. now look coming up at ten, this bombshell acas review finds evidence for allowing kids to change gender is built on shaky foundations, while healthcare professionals have been afraid to openly discuss their views . to openly discuss their views. so look, does the report now finally vindicate those people who were brave enough to speak out and get cancel for questioning the treatment of vulnerable children? i'm very pleased to say that i have graham linehan on now . this is graham linehan on now. this is the father ted creator. the it
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crowd creator. most people who watch gb news regularly or listen to us on radio will know who graham linehan is. this guy bravely comes forward tonight and explains everything that he lost during his fight for vulnerable children. why he wanted was for children not to be mutilated at the altar of trans ideology in britain, and it basically cost him everything. well, today he's been vindicated , so i'm looking been vindicated, so i'm looking forward to talking to him. but next, a judge as prince harry's us visa papers and his american future in his hands. yes, that's right. will the runaway royal be deported from the united states? there's been a big development to happen just before came on to happen just before we came on air. at large at the air. the editor at large at the mail
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next. prince harry's future in america potentially hangs in the balance. tonight, after his us visa application papers were
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dramatically handed over to a federal judge, the duke is embroiled in a bitter row over whether he lied about previous drug use when entering the united states in march 2020. in his tell all memoir, spare harry admitted using cocaine, cannabis and magic mushrooms , and magic mushrooms, acknowledging past drug use does not automatically result in a visa rejection. but the us based heritage foundation, spearheaded by margaret thatcher's former adviser neil gardner, says the us government either look the other way if it answered truthfully about drug use or looked the other way if he lied. the heritage foundation argues either action would be wrong. the department for homeland security has so far refused to make harry's visa application public, and a us judge ordered the biden administration to explain why. well, it's now reported tonight that judge carl nichols now has harry's visa application in full and is expected to decide whether it is made public in the near future.
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charlotte griffiths , the editor charlotte griffiths, the editor at large at the mail on sunday, joins us now . charlotte, thank joins us now. charlotte, thank you very, very much. a big development in prince harry's deportation battle, isn't it ? deportation battle, isn't it? >> it's a big development. and i'm actually amazed we got here because this feels like it's been rumbling on for months and months. and at first it felt like bit of a stunt from the like a bit of a stunt from the heritage foundation. know, heritage foundation. you know, they of they did the they kind of they did the freedom information request freedom of information request and lead and would this really lead to anything this is anything but this this moment is really because actually anything but this this moment is realto because actually anything but this this moment is realto somethinga actually anything but this this moment is realto somethinga thisjally led to something like this is actually happening led to something like this is actuthere's happening led to something like this is actu there's actuallyaning led to something like this is actu there's actually been a two and there's actually been a two week delay of this. so week delay to all of this. so it's a big moment that finally they've got these papers and conceivably what what could happen then. >> so harry presumably could be at some point put on a plane back to britain and forced to stay here. >> i think most likely thing >> i think the most likely thing that happen is a harry's that will happen is a harry's going to be feeling very anxious somewhere montecito somewhere in montecito right now, next few days. now, and for the next few days. and it's going be really and b, it's going to be really embarrassing because, they've embarrassing because, as they've already defence already hinted that his defence might lied about drug might be that he lied about drug use spare, because dhs
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use in spare, because the dhs has already said, look, just because he said he drugs because he said he took drugs and spare doesn't mean that he actually did. you know, we all know was trying to sell know that he was trying to sell copies of his book. so i imagine that deportation , there that before deportation, there might there might be might become there might be some sort embarrassing climb down. sort of embarrassing climb down. ihave sort of embarrassing climb down. i have say, i can't i have to say, i can't personally imagine a world in which harry is deported in a very public and embarrassing manner when moss manner. however, when kate moss and amy winehouse tried to get a visa for america, they were in fact rejected because of their known drug use. so we'll have to see what happens . see what happens. >> but that's a good point. and you know, harry, obviously likes to repent for his privilege. now, at every single opportunity . and maybe he used that . and maybe he has used that privilege or has been allowed to use that privilege anyway in to order go and reside in the united states. i mean, it was there in black and white. so essentially he either lied about the drug use in his book, 'spare' you know, the us government appears to have looked the other way, or he lied on visa application. on his visa application. >> and it's so ironic,
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>> yeah. and it's so ironic, isn't it, that in spare i mean, the whole of spare is about how hard by he is and how he's hard done by he is and how he's not actually that privileged because all the because his brother gets all the privilege and actually privilege. and yet it's actually this book, that's this book, 'spare' that's getting much trouble getting him in so much trouble because like perhaps he because it seems like perhaps he was his luck or he was chancing his luck or he thought he'd get away with it. but, you know, that's just not the case. he's a serious public figure, and admitted to figure, and he's admitted to drug in a book whilst living drug use in a book whilst living in america. >> what would you say to some people say, look, is people who say, look, this is just gratuitous hunt and just a gratuitous witch hunt and the of what the heritage the irony of what the heritage foundation they foundation is doing is that they actually don't really want him back uk anyway, to be back in the uk anyway, to be honest . honest. >> yeah, that's a good point, actually. a good actually. that is a very good point. but i it does feel a bit which anti but it's important which anti but it's an important symbolic you symbolic point here because you know kate moss over know if i was kate moss over here in the uk she can go to the us for ten years. and that's widely known. i'd be feeling pretty were she pretty peeved if i were her. she lost on a lot of work over lost out on a lot of work over in the states because she's obviously international obviously an international model. so you know, like so many of these it's often of these things, it's often about well. about the principle as well. and, know, there's
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and, you know, sure, there's a witch but was was it witch hunt, but was was it ianed?i witch hunt, but was was it invited? i think it probably was because you know, because harry's, you know, written about this in a book to sell books to make money, yeah. and all of this could change as well. and president trump, if that happens in november that ever happens in november time, i just wonder what the reaction will be like to harry. let's just say that the worst case for harry happens and you know, he is forced back to britain. i suppose he could go somewhere fair, he somewhere else. to be fair, he isn't. he's his only isn't. he's not. he's his only other he's not in other option. he's not here in britain. but what the britain. but what would the reaction be, you think to him reaction be, do you think to him here? would a here? who would it be? a potential opportunity for a bit of culpa and a return, you of a mea culpa and a return, you know, and a resurrection like a, like ashes? like a phoenix from the ashes? >> i don't know if >> yeah. well, i don't know if it's a coincidence, but tonight, stories started leaking stories have started leaking onune stories have started leaking online about how harry misses the uk and he's desperate to come over and these kind of stories are starting to leak out. first time in out. for the first time in a really in fact, really long time, or in fact, even really long time, or in fact, ever, the narrative has ever, because the narrative has always so pleased to ever, because the narrative has alv away so pleased to ever, because the narrative has alv away from so pleased to ever, because the narrative has alv away from this;o pleased to ever, because the narrative has alv away from this hellholed to be away from this hellhole england that he in. but, england that he grew up in. but, you these stories are you know, these stories are starting to get out. so do
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starting to get out. so i do think there be a world in think there could be a world in which harry might if which harry might return. but if i advising say mia i was advising him, i'd say mia culpa because culpa is what he needs, because this country loved this country actually loved harry back the day. you know, harry back in the day. you know, we and more we loved him. and the more mistakes he the more we mistakes he made, the more we tended love him. it's tended to love him. it's these hypocritical mistakes that that get so up. so get people so riled up. so i think if he did a full mia culpa and if he was here to look after his dad, that might help as well. >> that's fascinating though . >> that's fascinating though. it's really fascinating what you see, broke see, because this story broke not we on air, not long before we came on air, i haven't chance to see i haven't had a chance to see what online reaction has what the online reaction has been , already we're been yet, but already we're seeing the seeds. seeing them sowing the seeds. are oh, misses are we saying, oh, harry misses great uk. great britain, he misses the uk. it's really for him now it's home. really for him now thatis it's home. really for him now that is fascinating and potentially telling. potentially quite telling. charlotte >> yeah, i keep an eye out for stories in the especially stories in the next, especially coming from people magazine. any of that of those us publications that meghan's got a sort of friendship with? keep an eye on them i wouldn't them because i wouldn't be surprised this narrative surprised if this narrative grows and and is grows and grows and grows and is often around , know, looking grows and grows and grows and is often his und , know, looking grows and grows and grows and is often his dad , know, looking grows and grows and grows and is often his dad or know, looking grows and grows and grows and is often his dad or takingw, looking grows and grows and grows and is often his dad or taking up.ooking grows and grows and grows and is often his dad or taking up some; after his dad or taking up some royal duties again. one day i'd be, can i can see this
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be, i can i can see this happening. >> well, charlotte, thank you very, very much forjoining us very, very much for joining us tonight. really great to have you on. now, charlotte griffiths, editor griffiths, there, the editor at large on sunday large and the mail on sunday coming up , large and the mail on sunday coming up, damning data shows more migrant asylum more than half of migrant asylum appeals are successful in the uk , and two thirds of applicants who were refused asylum are just still roaming around britain. so we have successive governments failing our people, director of migration watch mike jones joins me live on that very, very shortly. but next and i am looking forward to this. the bombshell cast review finds evidence for allowing kids to change gender was built on shaky foundations. i am joined by the man very nearly lost it all. man who very nearly lost it all. it's graham linehan, the bloke who spoken out on this, coming out against the mutilation of children and is today been vindicated . vindicated. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of whether on gb news. >> hello there. good evening.
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well after a rather overcast day, there's going to be more in the way of dry and bright weather on the way tomorrow. but for tonight there's still some further rain to come. that's as these weather fronts that have lingered across northwest lingered across the northwest continue push these continue to push into these northwestern areas . they'll also northwestern areas. they'll also sink further south bring more sink further south to bring more southern some outbreaks southern areas. some outbreaks of rain through the night, so it will stay fairly cloudy with drizzly rain continuing across northern but this northern scotland. but this main rain band actually sinks further south wales, the south into parts of wales, the midlands and then it sits across the coast. by tomorrow the south coast. by tomorrow morning. weaker morning. it's much weaker feature, will bring a lot feature, but it will bring a lot of these areas of cloud to these areas elsewhere , though, it should be elsewhere, though, it should be a drier clearer start to the a drier and clearer start to the day. it's going be very a drier and clearer start to the day. start:'s going be very a drier and clearer start to the day. start tomorrow. be very mild start tomorrow. temperatures dipping much temperatures not dipping much below for most below ten degrees for most areas. will be a areas. there will be quite a brisk southwesterly breeze overnight. winds should brisk southwesterly breeze overrthrough winds should brisk southwesterly breeze overrthrough the winds should brisk southwesterly breeze overrthrough the dayis should brisk southwesterly breeze overrthrough the day and ould ease through the day and actually across the east and the north it's going to be a dry and bright day, a much better day than today, and it's going to feel warm in that feel quite warm in that sunshine. a different sunshine. indeed. a different story , across the south sunshine. indeed. a different stonwest , across the south sunshine. indeed. a different stonwest in , across the south
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sunshine. indeed. a different stonwest in particular,�*|e south sunshine. indeed. a different stonwest in particular, whereth and west in particular, where the will for much the cloud will linger for much of the day, we could see some drizzly outbreaks of rain, particularly drizzly outbreaks of rain, part overrly drizzly outbreaks of rain, part over the high ground. now and over the high ground. now for rain returns for friday, the rain returns into northwest, so northern into the northwest, so northern ireland, western ireland, much of western scotland, another scotland, will see another fairly wet day, but the rain will more limited will be much more limited compared to today. so i think many eastern areas, even of scotland, away with scotland, should get away with a fairly across the fairly dry day. and across the south like it should be south it looks like it should be staying dry well. staying fairly dry as well. temperatures still milder temperatures still on the milder side things for the time of side of things for the time of year weekend. year into the weekend. it's a similar story as well. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . come on. christys tonight. come on. violence on the streets at eid celebrations and. stop mutilating kids. >> i got threats, i lost my family. >> the trans mafia tried to ruin graham linehan's life. but now he's vindicated. also, angela rayner got a visit from the tax inspectors, didn't she? i've got tomorrow's newspaper front pages with the director of popular conservatives, mark littlewood , conservatives, mark littlewood, businessman adam brooks and author rebecca reid. oh, yes.
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and guess who's behind this ? get and guess who's behind this? get ready, britain, here we go. people cheered as kids were mutilated. next . mutilated. next. >> it is now 10:01. and this is the latest news from the gb news room. the former chairman of the post office mediation scheme described today the wrongful prosecution of subpostmasters by the post office as the greatest scandal he'd ever seen , and he's scandal he'd ever seen, and he's called for a re—evaluation of the justice system . sir anthony the justice system. sir anthony hooper told the horizon it inquiry we've had many miscarriages of justice, but nowhere as many as these . sir nowhere as many as these. sir anthony says a new approach is
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needed to ensure there's no repeat of the greatest scandal that i have ever seen in the criminal justice process. >> we've had many miscarriages of justice, but nowhere near as many of these . we need to many of these. we need to re—evaluate how we approach criminal cases of this kind . criminal cases of this kind. something went very, very wrong . something went very, very wrong. >> children's gender services in the nhs has been based on weak evidence and has been branded scandalous by the shadow health secretary today, after the publication of a new study, labour's wes streeting said children had been let down by a lack of research and evidence, saying the report was an important piece of work which raised serious concerns. the study said as well, the toxicity of debate around gender issues has meant professionals have often been too afraid to openly discuss their medical concerns. parliamentary under—secretary for justice laura ferris said forjustice laura ferris said it's a problem countries across
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the world have been grappling with. >> there has been a 20 fold, something like a 15 or 20 fold increase in the number of children being referred to this service in the last 10 or 15 years, and that's happened in many countries, many other countries. it's a problem. everybody's been grappling with. we're the government that asked hillary cass to conduct that review. this is a detailed , review. this is a detailed, empirical scientific review that should inform the way that policy is developed, and it shouldn't be a matter of trends or feelings or social cachet on how this very sensitive issue is developed. >> and lastly, a dog who's fathered more than 300 puppies as part of a guide dogs breeding breeding program has retired. nine year old golden retriever trigger has fathered 39 litters, including one that had 16 puppies in it. that's a record breaking number for the charity. the head of breeding operations at guide dogs in banbury says triggers wonderful, gentle nature and excellent health. and
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of course, genes have made him the perfect asset to our breeding program. they hope in the years to come that his son, billy, can take his place. he's the boy. billy, can take his place. he's the boy . for the latest the goodest boy. for the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts. scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts. >> today is a victory and total vindication for anyone who stood up against the disgusting, unwarped mutilation of children by a load of ideological trans activists and wild west doctors . activists and wild west doctors. the cas report is damning and reveals what i regard to be industrial scale child abuse that has taken place in britain, cheered on from the sidelines by a load of virtue signalling. luvvies. a summary of the report shows the medical evidence and research for the use of puberty blockers and hormones was weak and poor. international standards were not followed when dishing out life changing medication to children . many
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medication to children. many children who experienced gender dysphoria could actually have other mental health problems that need to be addressed , and that need to be addressed, and there was a rush to medicate children without therapy. it covers a lot more than this, but here's my conclusion medical experiments have been carried out on children and the trans mafia who have infected everything from our education system to our civil service helped to put the fear of god into anyone who questioned this , into anyone who questioned this, including parents. now, if you look at how stonewall and mermaids have responded to this report, they've performed what appears to be a huge reverse ferret. stonewall welcomed its findings. a mermaid spokesperson said this trans youth tell us they want services which are accepting and respectful, which offer supportive spaces to explore their gender and provide access to medical transition if and when they need it. we are pleased the voices and experiences of trans young people appear have been heard people appear to have been heard and welcome doctor and respected. we welcome doctor cass's calls for trans children and young people and their
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families to be treated with compassion and respect, not a huge amount on the actual detail there though, is there? then you have like james o'brien have people like james o'brien coming out with tripe like this. >> when reports like this are published, everyone claims vindication . literally everybody vindication. literally everybody will claim vindication. the more vindication. literally everybody will yaaim vindication. the more vindication. literally everybody will 4a debateiication. the more vindication. literally everybody will 4a debate is, ition. the more vindication. literally everybody will 4a debate is, the. the more vindication. literally everybody will 4a debate is, the more more vindication. literally everybody will 4a debate is, the more any; toxic a debate is, the more any intervention sees everybody claim vindication. the only people vindicated and i would say this, wouldn't i, here today, are the ones that have focused more on the toxicity perhaps, than on anything else, because until you get rid of the toxicity, you're not going to help anyone . help anyone. >> how dare he? okay, i'm going to hand this over to jk rowling, who sums this all up perfectly . who sums this all up perfectly. the consequences of this scandal will play out for decades. you did all you could to impede and misrepresent research . you're misrepresent research. you're trying to bully people out of their jobs for opposing you. young people have been experimented on, left infertile and in pain. she is talking generally, though not exclusively , about james exclusively, about james o'brien. by the way, if i sound
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angry, it's because i am bloody angry. kids have been irreversibly harmed and thousands are complicit. not just medics, but the celebrity mouthpieces, unquestioning media and cynical corporations. here, here. well, it's time now for me to hand you over to graham linehan, a man who bravely stood up against this madness, who defended children , who is now defended children, who is now unequivocally on the right side of history. this is what happened to him as a result of his brave battle. listen closely to this man, please . to this man, please. >> well, it would be easier to say what didn't happen from the moment i started talking about this issue , i had, friends, and this issue, i had, friends, and even family members distanced themselves from me , i got themselves from me, i got threats, i got nasty emails, nasty direct messages , some of nasty direct messages, some of them from people i'd worked for with years, everyone telling me to stop talking, everyone
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telling me to shut up . then telling me to shut up. then i had the police at my door twice . had the police at my door twice. they they visited on behalf of trans rights activists , i lost trans rights activists, i lost my family , my marriage. at least my family, my marriage. at least i'm still close to my children . i'm still close to my children. but i lost my marriage because , but i lost my marriage because, i kept losing, jobs and opportunities , and it was just opportunities, and it was just kind of unrelenting pressure, the thing i thought would save me, the thing i thought was a kind of safety net was the father ted musical, because i genuinely thought my colleagues on the show would stand up for me, would see what was happening to children and would realise that i was right to be, to be, taking the stand that i was taking the stand that i was taking . but, instead they told taking. but, instead they told me to remove my name from the musical and said they wouldn't make it unless i, unless i did,
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they offered me £200,000. i refused because i thought the issue was too important , refused because i thought the issue was too important, i thought i didn't want father ted to be built on, you know, the ruined bodies of children , and ruined bodies of children, and so, yeah, i just it was just, it's just been a nightmare for the last six years. i haven't written any comedy in six years. instead, i've had to write journalism because journalists refuse to do their jobs on this issue.i refuse to do their jobs on this issue. i have to say gb news is the one. one, exception to that. it's just been a very long fight. i'm extremely tired from it, i nearly didn't get into australia because, australia, the australian authorities think i'm some sort of, bigot. >> and here's what he thinks should happen to those
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responsible . responsible. >> well, i think we have to be a little bit careful here. a little bit careful here. a little bit careful here. a little bit judicious in in how we, find the guilty and what we do about them. there are some people who are more guilty than others. mermaids i think, should be held accountable very much so. i think they should be, investigated . i think there investigated. i think there should be a criminal investigation into mermaids. i think there should be a criminal investigation into stonewall , investigation into stonewall, and i think there should be an inquiry into the bbc, the bbc shows like i am leo, shows like that which push this ideology on an audience of children. i think they need to be held accountable, so it's not just doctors who need to be investigated. it is the whole apparatus that, created this myth of the trans child, which we now know thanks to cass. although many of us knew it already, we didn't need cass to
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know. this is an absolute, lie, that was designed to confuse, manipulate people and shame them into thinking that they were attacking a vulnerable, section of society when in fact, they were trying to help a vulnerable section of society . section of society. >> well, shame on those working in the nhs who experimented on kids. shame on them for still trying to cover up the true extent of this scandal by refusing to reveal what's happened to around 9000 young adults, referred from the tavistock clinic to adult centres . what are they hiding? centres. what are they hiding? but this wasn't just a medical scandal , but but this wasn't just a medical scandal, but a social scandal as well. and to those people in the education system who think it's okay to tell children that they've been born into the wrong bodies and set them on this path, get out of our kids lives , path, get out of our kids lives, you creepy weirdos. mermaids refused to respond to graham linehan's calls for a criminal investigation into them . while
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investigation into them. while stonewall is yet to respond to our request for a comment in relation to graham's calls for an inquiry into the bbc and its child about trans child programs about trans issues, said proud issues, they said bbc is proud to reflect all areas of children's lives, including age appropriate representation of the different issues they may face whilst helping them develop empathy and kindness towards each other as they grow up. but let's go to the thoughts of my panel let's go to the thoughts of my panel. this evening. i am joined by the director of popular conservatives. it's mark littlewood. i've also got businessman and activist adam brooks and author and journalist rebecca reid. mark, i'll start with you. is this a hammer blow to the nhs? yes it is. >> well, this particular part of it, i mean, this focuses on one part of the national health service. i mean, the national health service seems have health service seems to have trouble everywhere, but this is perhaps part. perhaps its most troubled part. thank this report. thank god for this report. i mean, let's hope we can draw mean, let's hope we can now draw a line. well, i was going to say draw line this nonsense. draw a line under this nonsense. patrick this isn't a farce. patrick but this isn't a farce. this a horror show. what's this is a horror show. what's occurred echo what jk occurred? and i'd echo what jk rowling this is going to occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorforlg this is going to
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occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorfor on this is going to occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorfor on years1is is going to occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorfor on years and going to occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorfor on years and decadesy occurred? and i'd echo what jk rorfor on years and decades of go for on years and decades of legal action. now this is going go for on years and decades of legbe action. now this is going go for on years and decades of legbe like)n. now this is going go for on years and decades of legbe like thelow this is going go for on years and decades of legbe like the thalidomideoing to be like the thalidomide scandal or the blood scandal with haemophiliacs . it's with haemophiliacs. it's absolutely ghastly what's happened. be grateful happened. but let's be grateful for small mercies. this could be the end of it. so they're going to review all trans treatment. and it's been paused , i think, and it's been paused, i think, with immediate effect for anybody aged 17 younger. and anybody aged 17 or younger. and there to have to a there is going to have to be a full inquiry here. and the guilty are going to have to be found. >> adam, can't believe how >> adam, i can't believe how many went along with this. >> unbelievable. let's just >> unbelievable. and let's just remind well, was nhs remind as well, there was nhs trust not cooperate trust that did not cooperate with with this report. they need to and they need to be outed and they need to answer they didn't answer why they didn't cooperate. again, this one of cooperate. again, this is one of the biggest of our the biggest scandals of our lifetime i've head above lifetime, i've put my head above the numerous times about the parapet numerous times about mutilating kids. this gender ideology, and i've been called a transphobe, a bigot . i've had transphobe, a bigot. i've had threats myself. i've had my business targeted because i speak out about this. you know, we have got a serious problem now where the normalisation of cutting body parts off or
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changing gender, that is not normal. and this is not me, attacking trans people. it's about kids. >> it's not right. >> it's not right. >> this is not normal. >> it's not right. >> this is not normal . this is >> this is not normal. this is an extreme. >> no, it's not normal action. >> no, it's not normal action. >> it's not normal. but it's a very unusual. and we keep using the mutilating here. i just the word mutilating here. i just want are want to clarify when people are saying are saying mutilating, are you referring or to. referring to surgery or to. >> i'm referring i'm referring to so surgery which this i to both. so surgery which this i appreciate not necessarily appreciate does not necessarily coven appreciate does not necessarily cover, in this country cover, not in this country surgery. >> so surgery is not so. so putting someone on puberty blockers and hormone treatments etc. i think does lead four times the last 15 minutes. we times in the last 15 minutes. we have to mutilating have referred to mutilating children. yes. and then we've just clarified just now that we were not mutilating children. whether you're old whether or not you're old enough, it depends whether or not of it is you're not a child at 17 or 18. >> i think putting kids on puberty blockers and putting them hormones, which. puberty blockers and putting the so hormones, which. puberty blockers and putting the so you )rmones, which. puberty blockers and putting the so you think es, which. puberty blockers and putting the so you think es, a which. >> so you think it's a mutilation? yes, i do, i agree. so we're talking about my so when we're talking about my you we're talking about mutilating. we are mutilating. but that's my we are not about surgery. not talking about surgery.
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>> puberty >> we're talking at puberty blockers. are two blockers. and those are two different i different things. now i personally believe in personally don't believe in either of things for under either of those things for under 18 personally believe 18 seconds. i personally believe that transition that social transition is fine and transition be and medical transition should be for however i think for adults. however i think that really exemplifies how this debate so ghastly that debate has got so ghastly that we are using words like mutilating to try and make mutilating kids to try and make this as dramatic and painful as possible. when it's already dramatic and painful. your child needing additional medical needing any additional medical care is already a parent's worst nightmare. we don't need ham nightmare. we don't need to ham this make it worse. this up and make it worse. >> adam. was traumatic and >> adam. it was traumatic and painful graham linehan, >> adam. it was traumatic and painfulit? graham linehan, wasn't it? >> it's awful happened >> it's awful what's happened to this man. he has been attacked. he's his livelihood . he's he's lost his livelihood. he's lost friends. he's lost family for as it is. and for telling it as it is. and he's been vindicated again. he's now been vindicated again. myself on a lot smaller scale than graham. i've been attacked and i've been threatened because of carry on talking of it. but i carry on talking about it because i believe kids, kids cannot be trans . we've got kids cannot be trans. we've got a serious mental health issue. >> can kids be gay? >> can kids be gay? >> oh, of course they can be gay. so you know, no, but they cannot change their gender. >> and at the end, the children
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can't . can't. >> please let me speak. let me, let me speak. we even the report says about the mental health issue. got large amount issue. we've got a large amount of referrals being of referrals that are being diagnosed there diagnosed as autistic. there needs to be further investigation. and i think declaring someone as trans can be the easy way out . be the easy way out. >> it was. it was a bit like the wild west. from what this report says. >> well, i mean, what i find so disturbing about this and where i disagree with rebecca, i think you pretty direct you do need to use pretty direct language here, because what's happened total tragedy . i happened is a total tragedy. i mean, i don't think we should pretend that this is a minor incident. this is horrific. >> i'm not. i'm asking for accuracy. i'm not report. >> well, i think children are being and what the being mutilated. and what the cats mutilation definitively is, is, . well, i cats mutilation definitively is, is, .well, i mean, cats mutilation definitively is, is, . well, i mean, cutting is, is. well, i mean, cutting horrific child abuse, let's call it. okay, fine. let's call it that. that's opinion rific child abuse. i'm not going to recoil. irreversibly damaging kids though. that's what this though. again, that's what this report shows is that we have been infiltrated by ideologues that the medical scientific
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bafis that the medical scientific basis for this was flimsy. now it's always a tragedy if we operate on the wrong medical premise , and then we discover premise, and then we discover latterly that we've given the wrong drug or the wrong drugs caused deformity, that's always a tragedy. but here, shaky foundations from the outset, this was ideological, not medical scientific . medical or scientific. >> it has the same problem that pregnancy and medication does. it's not ethical to do studies on children is not with on children as it is not with with pregnant people. therefore you do a study about you cannot do a study about what's and not. what's appropriate and what not. every parent in this situation was from they was acting from what they thought the best. now i'm thought was the best. now i'm perfectly willing to accept that they wrong, but they may have been wrong, but nobody maliciously. nobody did this maliciously. this trying to get this is parents trying to get it right their kids. this is parents trying to get it rigii their kids. this is parents trying to get it rigii th lot kids. this is parents trying to get it rigii th lot of s. this is parents trying to get it rigii th lot of trust in >> i put a lot of trust in parents all parents parents because all parents love their just quickly their children. and just quickly , couldn't speak , these doctors couldn't speak out because trans out because these trans activists violent, they activists were violent, they were threatening they didn't activists were violent, they were to 'eatening they didn't activists were violent, they were to lose1ing they didn't activists were violent, they were to lose their they didn't activists were violent, they were to lose their job. hey didn't want to lose their job. >> they didn't want to be labelled as trans folk who was violent, who was. please. trans activists most activists are some of the most violent people there . violent people out there. >> what act violence? >> what act of violence? >> what act of violence? >> not seen the most violence?
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>> have you not seen the masked trans activists women's trans activists or the women's rights absolutely rights events? absolutely >> i go to women's rights events. >> it is toxic and that is the toxic they're talking about toxic that they're talking about in the report. >> asking that we use >> all i'm asking is that we use words mean what we actually words that mean what we actually want not what we want them to mean, not what we just suits us. just feel. suits us. >> child abuse. >> horrific child abuse. >> agreed. >> agreed. >> feel better? let's use that. okay. right look, thank you very much. said much. now, an nhs spokesman said nhs grateful to nhs england is very grateful to doctor her team for nhs england is very grateful to doctccomprehensive team for nhs england is very grateful to doctccomprehensive work for nhs england is very grateful to doctc comprehensive work on nhs england is very grateful to doctccomprehensive work on this their comprehensive work on this important review. past important review. over the past four nhs has made four years, the nhs has made significant progress towards establishing significant progress towards establish gender service for different gender service for children and young people by stopping use of stopping the routine use of puberty , suppressing hormones puberty, suppressing hormones and opening the first of up to eight new regional centres, delivering a different model of care. robbie dos santos, care. and robbie dos santos, director of campaigns and human rights at lgbt+ rights organisation stonewall, has said what is important above all is that trans and gender diverse children get the quality healthcare that they need and deserve, right? look, coming up , deserve, right? look, coming up, do these pictures look like the scenes from a civilised nation?
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yes, i'll be showing you those shortly. there we are. i mean, look at this. okay, so find out exactly happened when riot exactly what happened when riot police were called when islamic eid celebrations in london turned dangerous last night. but next damning data shows more than half of migrant asylum appeals are successful in the uk. but i think this is worse. two thirds are refused, applicants are still here, so have successive governments just failed? the british people director of migration watch, doctor mike jones joins me live and that's in just a tick. stay tuned
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it's patrick christys tonight on gb news. all of tomorrow's newspaper front pages are coming your way very shortly. but first, shocking new analysis has revealed that judges have overturned home office decisions and allowed asylum seekers to stay in the uk in 51% of cases. since 2021. in one case, an immigration judge ruled that a convicted sex offender could remain in the uk because he'd be at risk of mob violence in his home country of afghanistan . a home country of afghanistan. a bangladeshi man who was locked up for 12 years for murdering his wife successfully appealed the home office's decision to remove him by arguing that his conversion to christianity would put him at risk bangladesh .
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put him at risk in bangladesh. sound familiar anyone? the home office data also shows that from 2011, more than 50,000 people who were refused asylum have remained in the uk illegally . remained in the uk illegally. okay, 50,000 people who we have refused asylum have just remained in the uk illegally. welcome to the show now and director of migrationwatch uk it's mike jones. mike, great to see you . look. what do you make see you. look. what do you make of this. these numbers are stark. we're not deporting anyone really, are we. >> because it's shocking. i mean the most fundamental question in asylum policy or illegal migration policy is if somebody enters your country illegally or if they apply for asylum on, they're refused , can you deport they're refused, can you deport them? that's the most fundamental question . now, in fundamental question. now, in the vast majority of cases, the answer to that question is no, we can't deport them. there are some exceptions. the reason why
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the number of albanians is crossing the english channel illegally has declined is because we have a returns policy with that country , but in most with that country, but in most cases, countries are deemed unsafe. we can't deport them to their country of origin, and i think many people will want to know, how on earth have we managed to have 50,000 people who we have refused asylum to just wandering the streets of britain, living here? will they still be claiming benefits if they're not claiming benefits ? they're not claiming benefits? presumably they're living a life of crime and wandering around the streets . it's the streets. it's just incredibly disturbing, mike, isn't ? isn't it? >> yeah. i mean, ultimately it goes back to the legal system that we have, there's the legal aspect and there's the operational aspect, aspect and there's the operational aspect , essentially operational aspect, essentially for the asylum system to function properly, you need a legal system that allows you to deport people to the country of origin. so we have the human
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rights act that enshrines the european convention of human rights into british law. we have what's called the principle of non—refoulement, so if somebody is here from an unsafe country, you can't actually deport them to their country of origin. it's very difficult to do this, my personal view is i think this legislation is out of date. it's not fit for purpose, i believe it's democratised. the asylum system , i don't believe the system, i don't believe the state can, perform its proper dufiesin state can, perform its proper duties in terms of, enforcing border controls. and, yeah, it needs to be changed. but politicians, unfortunately, won't address this. >> yeah, indeed. i mean, someone who's, you know, would be at risk of mob violence in his home country of afghanistan, a convicted sex offender. i mean, what i want to know is, where are all the afghan women who we should be letting in? where are all the afghan children who are fleeing these people? why it
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fleeing these people? why is it that we are getting afghan sex offenders then offenders instead, and then having keep it doesn't having to keep them? it doesn't really . really seem fair. >> yeah. i mean, i, i received a phone call recently from a member of the public and, they referred to a story in the daily telegraph and, for, afghan, illegal immigrants were being tried for sex offences and, you know , his argument was, well, know, his argument was, well, you know, the lawyers focus on their human rights, but what about the human rights of the victims? and, you know, there's a huge trade off here. i think , a huge trade off here. i think, the legal system as currently constituted is incompatible with national security , and the national security, and the democratic will of the british people . people. >> yeah. i mean, there appears to be very little point in even trying to get rid of anybody at the minute. so let's assume or we'd have to assume we know that quite a lot of people are just granted asylum first time around
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anyway, them out anyway, so let's take them out of of the people of it then. of the people who are half those are are rejected, half of those are then granted asylum at the second attempt. if you're in the case abdul ezedi , for case of abdul ezedi, for example, you may be granted it at the third attempt. and then of those people who we have decided to categorically refuse asylum to , which will be a asylum to, which will be a fraction really, of all of those people who initially came over here, 50,000 of them are still wandering around on the streets living in britain. it is an absolute joke. doctor mike, thank you very, very much. it's always great to have you on the show. doctor mike jones of migrationwatch uk, now a home office said this office spokesperson, said this we on our long we stand firm on our long standing policy that those without stay in the without a right to stay in the uk will be removed. our illegal migration act makes this possible as people who enter the uk illegally will have their asylum claims and human rights claims declared inadmissible. each application is each asylum application is individually assessed, including decisions removal of decisions on removal of individuals where people have previously been refused asylum
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in the uk, a fresh asylum claim can be made through legal representation. look how on earth can we get rid of half of these people if we remain part of the echr? it's been a massive topic this. but seriously, how can we do it? we can turn them down all we want, but if it's going to end up in a court in strasbourg with some completely anonymous a minnow anonymous judge from a minnow nafion anonymous judge from a minnow nation deciding in the dead of night that we cannot deport these people, realistically these people, then realistically , point of any , what is the point of any border whatsoever ? border control whatsoever? you're coming up. don't miss the footage deputy labour leader footage of deputy labour leader angela rayner being greeted by tax inspectors . yes, that's tax inspectors. yes, that's right, not real ones, i may add. while out campaigning in teesside, she stands firm over a capital gains and electoral roll scandal. plus violence marred eid celebrations in the . eid celebrations in the. caphal eid celebrations in the. capital. but next i will deliver to you the very first of tomorrow's newspaper front
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pages. they're hot off the presses . patrick christys. presses. patrick christys.
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gb news. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. only on gb news and it isfime tonight. only on gb news and it is time now to bring you tomorrow's news tonight with the very front pages . right. very first front pages. right. let's have a look at the metro student died hooked on big nitrous oxide canisters. that's three bottles of laughing gas a day. a student who died from abusing laughing gas was inhaung abusing laughing gas was inhaling 2 or 3 big bottles a day. apparently, she was only 24 last year. a truly beautiful and gentle soul, she's been described as emergency staff treated her, but she died 24 hours later, apparently due to blood clots in her lungs. gosh, the independent. the hounding of angela rayner is an outrageous declaration of class warfare, says john rentoul . there we go. says john rentoul. there we go. well, we can all take that to the bank then, can't we? don't
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appease putin. cameron snubs trump. ukraine peace plan. foreign secretary urges the us to stand up to bullies and commit billions more to zelenskyy. let's go to the i. labour plans to fix uk buses with public ownership of failing services. now this is interesting. the party vows to resolve bus crisis by effectively nationalising services , as in the first terms services, as in the first terms of office, shadow transport secretary louise haigh says the plan will create or save 1300 bus routes. let's go to the daily express radical nhs plan to fast track care and free up beds. patients are benefiting from quicker treatment with which, crucially , is freeing up which, crucially, is freeing up hospital beds in a radical shake up of health care. so this is them doing a bit of pr for rishi sunak there, as of course, is their right. the times sickness claims rise hits tory heartlands incapacity benefit up by a third incapacity benefit up by a third in affluent areas. every
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constituency in britain had a rise in sickness benefit claims last year , with some of the last year, with some of the biggest being recorded in conservative areas . in affluent conservative areas. in affluent southern areas, the number of people claiming the main incapacity benefit jumped by a third or more than a year. so, there we go. there's also that, of course, the gender clinics in ministers sites after refusing to share data, we touched on that or we more than touched on it, we got stuck right into it. actually, at the top of the 10:00 there. and look, 10:00 hour, there. and look, i'm going a bit here going to focus a little bit here on, think, the front of the on, i think, the front of the eye, which labour plans to eye, which is labour plans to fix buses with public fix uk buses with public ownership, mark, i'll come to you on this, this is what nationalisation, isn't it? is this we expect more of this under a labour government, do you think? >> can. e can. i mean, you think? >> can. i mean, some e can. i mean, some of >> yeah. we can. i mean, some of the privatisations under the tories have been botched. i think particularly the rail privatisation. have privatisation. they should have sold and the and sold off the track and the and the routes together. but the idea that you politicians idea that if you put politicians and the state in charge of things, they're going to function better. absolutely
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crazy idea. i mean, our buses, if by the minister for buses if run by the minister for buses , going improve at , are not going to improve at all, will see labour all, but we will see labour leaning in this direction is the problem though. got no problem though. they've got no money things with. >> well, i'll tell you. >> well, i'll tell you. >> talking of, talking of money. all play you all right. i can play you a little shortly because, little clip shortly because, look, can run from scrutiny little clip shortly because, loo she can run from scrutiny little clip shortly because, loo she can but from scrutiny little clip shortly because, loo she can but taxn scrutiny all she likes. but tax protesters teesside today protesters in teesside today proved angela rayner can't proved that angela rayner can't hide here go . yes. hide forever. here we go. yes. okay, so let's just play that again there and keep it. keep it on. there we go. there we go. angela rayner, it says tax dodger on it. and there were people with, bright yellow vests with tax inspectors written across the back of them following her around. so rayner and shadow chancellor rachel reeves were forced to flee out the back door pub. we've the back door of a pub. we've all there. to be fair, this all been there. to be fair, this afternoon, a campaign afternoon, after a campaign event it comes the event was hijacked, it comes the same labour's deputy same day that labour's deputy leader a hypocrite leader was branded a hypocrite after emerged she after it emerged that she demanded mp jill mortimer,
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demanded tory mp jill mortimer, publisher, tax returns which she continues to publish continues to refuse to publish her own, adam, i mean, you know , her own, adam, i mean, you know, you've got people openly taking the mickey now she's getting followed around by people with tax inspector their back and tax inspector on their back and banners she goes. banners everywhere. she goes. >> look, i don't this >> yeah, look, i don't like this sort of intimidation of mps. i don't agree with angela rayner on basically anything. to be fair , i've met her. she was fair, i've met her. she was a nice person. she was kind to me. but i can't advocate that. and i think it all stems from labour a few years ago saying about hounding tory mps, you had john mcdonnell , you hounding tory mps, you had john mcdonnell, you had comments from david lammy, now it's coming back to bite them. these tactics are coming back on them and i think it's wrong. >> yeah, well what do you make of this? i mean, she could end this all, couldn't she, by publishing the advice that she's this all, couldn't she, by puborhing the advice that she's this all, couldn't she, by pubor coming advice that she's this all, couldn't she, by pubor coming cleane that she's this all, couldn't she, by pubor coming cleane tha ashe's this all, couldn't she, by pubor coming cleane tha a few; things? >> i think it's very tied up with her experience with her personal experience with her personal experience with her, with her husband and her children. i think her having children. i think it's personal. it's very private and personal. so and having recently done quite i can see quite a similar thing, i can see why you wouldn't want to go
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further into it, actually further into it, but i actually what disagree with adam, what what i disagree with adam, what i nice we're both i think is nice is we're both consistent. adam like you consistent. adam feels like you shouldn't to mps, shouldn't do that to mps, whichever the thing whichever side of the thing they're you they're on. i feel like you should do that to should be able to do that to mps, whichever side on. mps, whichever side they're on. but important, i think, but what's important, i think, is we stay is that we should stay consistent. expect consistent. whatever we expect should right for both sides, should be right for both sides, left right. left and right. >> what's on the >> well, what's your view on the angela rayner tax. and also the other this though is other thing is this though is the electoral roll stuff. people other thing is this though is the elto:oral roll stuff. people other thing is this though is the elto be l roll stuff. people other thing is this though is the elto be ignoringff. people other thing is this though is the elto be ignoring thateople other thing is this though is the elto be ignoring that .ple seem to be ignoring that. >> it's quite a complex thing over rayner tax dodge over the rayner tax dodge allegation i should say, on the protest. i mean, i've only seen that very small clip, but it seems me wholly peaceful. seems to me wholly peaceful. they sort of i think it they weren't sort of i think it would feel think i think it would feel i think i think it would feel i think i think it would a bit worrying . would feel a bit worrying. >> i imagine it would. >> i mean, i think it's okay for people hold banners against people to hold banners against politicians if they're not following politicians if they're not follo'think if you advocate that, >> i think if you advocate that, then it spoils. >> labour party took money >> the labour party took money from just and just from from just stop oil and just stop are and the tories took stop oil are and the tories took it from that guy who was racist, diane abbott. >> we don't we can't about >> we don't we can't talk about donors because donors donors because everyone's donors are what i've are horrible from what i've seen, that seems to me within
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the freedom of speech the right of freedom of speech and expression without being too aggressive or violent. >> rayner's own taxes, >> on rayner's own taxes, though, got a problem >> on rayner's own taxes, thougand got a problem >> on rayner's own taxes, thougand i got a problem >> on rayner's own taxes, thougand i agree a problem >> on rayner's own taxes, thougand i agree withoblem >> on rayner's own taxes, thougand i agree with rebecca here, and i agree with rebecca that these are private matters, but she has made a large chunk of her career demanding, incredible, money incredible, transparent money from her political opponents and is now reluctant to provide it herself. it was not enough when nadhim zahawi said, oh, i've had some expert advice. i'm no, that wasn't enough. jill mortimer, all she had to release all of her tax returns. yeah. so when it comes to angela rayner herself, apparently different it comes to angela rayner herse apply. arently different it comes to angela rayner herse apply. she :ly different it comes to angela rayner herse apply. she doesn't ent it comes to angela rayner herse apply. she doesn't need to rules apply. she doesn't need to release the expert advice, release that. the expert advice, in view , but she needs to do in my view, but she needs to do a 30 minute interview explaining why was on the right. why she was on the right. >> but it's the same thing. it's consistency. all we want self consistency. all we want is self consistent . consistent. >> w- >> i think the story is snookered from what i snookered herself. from what i gather, allegations is that gather, the allegations is that if says thing, she could if she says one thing, she could be the if be in trouble for the other if she the thing, she she says the other thing, she could trouble there. could be in trouble there. >> course she could have her >> of course she could have her story not have done story or she might not have done any of them, and it might not have anything. have done anything. >> kwasi.
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>> she might kwasi. >> she might kwasi. >> but are with patrick >> but you are down with patrick to hour interview, and to a half hour interview, and he'll of it. absolutely. >> offer actually been >> the offer has actually been repeatedly made. so, not repeatedly made. so, yes, not far off getting a two word response though think far off getting a two word resjfaire though think far off getting a two word resjfair to though think far off getting a two word resjfair to i'llthough think far off getting a two word resjfair to i'll do ugh think far off getting a two word resjfair to i'll do it h think far off getting a two word resjfair to i'll do it if think it's fair to say i'll do it if you like. >> what interview rayner. >> what interview angela rayner. yeah, well, the big table yeah, well, borrow the big table over yeah, well, borrow the big table ove right. metropolitan >> right. the metropolitan police, story now police, i'm serious. story now ish. metropolitan has ish. the metropolitan police has launched several outbreaks following several outbreaks of disorder during eid celebrations in west london. officers suddenly came under attack last night from groups of youths in southall who threw bottles and other missiles at them. this footage is pretty astonishing.
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115 year old suspect has since been arrested for a public order offence, with the met saying this behaviour is completely unacceptable and we will be reviewing what happened. to establish what action can be taken. now. the police, of course, had earlier wished everyone a happy eid. coming up, queen letizia of spain, is that right? yeah, that's the right pronunciation . i'm fluent. makes pronunciation. i'm fluent. makes history as she breaks tradition to appoint the first woman as the head of the queen's secretariat. progress or virtue signalling? there are more. when i crown tonight's greatest britain in union jack shortly. but next i bring you more of tomorrow's newspaper front pages. plus, yes, yobs vandalising the ministry of defence building in london's whitehall . but you will not whitehall. but you will not believe. or maybe you will actually what is in the twitter bio of one of the people behind it. stay tuned
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welcome back. it's time to give you more of tomorrow's front pages. let's do it . all right. pages. let's do it. all right. we've got the sun for you. ring of steed. huge crackdown at the grand national. cops undercover in race crowd. so the police are mounting one of the biggest ever grand national crackdowns to stop idiot protesters repeating last year's chaos. they say a ring of steel will greet would be invaders and undercover officers will infiltrate crowds. when aintree in liverpool host 150,000 people over the three days. well, there you go, let's go to the daily telegraph now, shall we, yeah. big story. this nhs ordered to reveal the fates of 9000 trans children. so this is the follow up of that cass report that we heard about, so nhs trusts have so far. anyway, some of them refused to reveal the state of play really when it comes to now young adults, around 9000 of them who were
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moved on from the tavistock clinic to a variety of other providers. what state are they in? how are they doing? that's the next level to this, and they've also got the international story, which they're leading with. so international of course, is a us president about, two president talking about, two middle biden middle eastern nations. biden warns attack israel . warns iran not to attack israel. they go for they've also got china accused of counterfeit stamp scam. so there we go. the telegraph going global. go telegraph going global. let's go to the daily mail. on telegraph going global. let's go to the daily mail. oh yes, china is flooding britain fake is flooding britain with fake stamps delicious food. stamps and delicious food. a rogue firms and rogue firms are landing thousands of innocent british victims with £5 penalties. so thousands of fake stamps are apparently entering britain from china and we all have to pay £5 penalties to collect them . i mean, i'm not collect them. i mean, i'm not sure maybe there's more to this story than meets the eye, but is thatis story than meets the eye, but is that is that an act of war? maybe it's an act of war. let's go to the guardian. biden declares ironclad support for israel amid fears of iran attack . they also go on the transgender clinics transgender
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clinics for adults face inquiry into patient care. i've still got my panel with me. we've got director of popular conservatives mark littlewood, businessman and activist adam brooks, and author and journalist well, journalist rebecca reid. well, look, another day, another pro—palestine stunt with youth demand and palestine action. can i just remind everybody? yeah, we did do an expose on them last week. we told the police they told the police through the medium of gb news exactly what they were going to do. here we are though no pre—emptive arrests. anyway, once again they teamed up to give the ministry of defence the special radical left treatment after labour hq was on monday . left treatment after labour hq was on monday. i'm was targeted on monday. i'm sorry, but we will win . sorry, but we will win. >> i believe that we will win. i believe that we will win . believe that we will win. >> yeah. good stuff. well, luckily the alarm was raised by a self—titled old man who goes by the name revolting hippie on axe, and can i just say keep it
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up there? so this is his twitter bio, right ? up there? so this is his twitter bio, right? old man, up there? so this is his twitter bio, right ? old man, 1960s bio, right? old man, 1960s hippie. i know a little bit about tibet. yeah. you do? yeah you do. rangzen anyway, police were able to rush the scene and arrest five activists. of course, the police could have saved themselves all of the bother if they had just heeded the warning that we made on this very week. mark, our very show last week. mark, our office doing to probe , office is doing enough to probe, actively stop kind of thing now. >> well, it's difficult, isn't it, because, yeah, you do want to stop it. but to proactively stop it. but i don't a crime been don't think a crime been committed actually committed until it's actually been committed. right. somebody says we're going to have a demo, we're going to throw some rac to come in. yeah, yeah, maybe, maybe they could have intervened there. hope, think there. i mean, my hope, i think that behaviour, that this sort of behaviour, i mean, disobedience, mean, it's civil disobedience, right ? you're entitled it, right? you're entitled to do it, but should face the but you should face the consequences your actions. consequences of your actions. and i've only seen and my i mean, i've only seen that clip, would say this that clip, but i would say this is a few grand's worth is probably a few grand's worth of damage. it deliberate of damage. it is deliberate criminal damage and trespass. so probably, i know, a few probably, i don't know, a few weeks prison , a few grand in weeks in prison, a few grand in a fine, that's what was meted
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a fine, if that's what was meted out. i think this sort of lunacy would stop. >> think any of them are >> do we think any of them are working course they're working class? of course they're not. posh or middle class. >> that is complete speculation. we have no idea. >> i'm a betting man. >> i'm a betting man. >> no data. i bet there is no working class doing that. >> okay, well, they're all busy in their jobs trying to earn money for their families. >> and you've got these students, you've got these entitled idiots doing this. >> think, rebecca, >> do you think, rebecca, though, there question though, that there is a question to be had about whether some of these people are being these young people are being either brainwashed or easily led into getting potentially and i will just again, just be at pains to say that , you know, we pains to say that, you know, we don't know how they're pleading in some of these things. so i just to clear that up. but just want to clear that up. but yeah, potentially up with yeah, potentially end up with criminal could criminal records that could really seriously them for criminal records that could realrestzriously them for criminal records that could realrestzriotheir them for criminal records that could realrestzriotheir lives. them for criminal records that could realrestzriotheir lives. are |em for the rest of their lives. are people advantage of them? people taking advantage of them? >> think this has the >> i think this has been the case for generations. at case for generations. people at greenham told the greenham common were told the same and, you know, same thing. and, you know, i think understand they're think i understand why they're angry. reasonably angry. like if we are reasonably saying people were killed saying that people were killed
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by that were sold to israel by arms that were sold to israel by arms that were sold to israel by the uk. but you can understand, especially when you're 17 and you feel everything that deeply, why you would feel the need to do something like that. i think you have to be empathetic for them. i don't see why they pick i just don't see why they pick and choose in that regard, though. >> i mean, we did a piece here on this show at exactly on this very show at exactly this last night about the this time last night about the fact is fact that azerbaijan is committing genocide committing ethnic genocide against christians. we don't seem one seem to see, i think this one feels and reported, feels accessible and reported, and they're and therefore it's what they're connected and therefore it's what they're conand ad and therefore it's what they're conand we have causes >> and we all have our causes that to more deeply that we connect to more deeply than every one than others. every single one of us does. >> and do you think there's any justification painting justification for spray painting the ministry defence? the ministry of defence? >> don't, but >> no. well, i don't, but i mean, i'm liberal sort mean, i'm a liberal minded sort of disobedience of guy. so civil disobedience and the is, is and breaking the law is, is allowed, have to face allowed, but you have to face the consequences for that action. even if you action. right. so even if you are protester who are a peaceful protester who breaks this is you breaks the law and this is you say it be a criminal say it might be a criminal offence, patrick, that is a criminal . that is criminal offence. that is criminal offence. that is criminal damage. i mean, i'm happy call unfairness . happy to call that unfairness. >> it is definitely people washing it up are on minimum wage they wash it . wage and they should wash it. >> no, should be made to
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>> no, they should be made to wash that's good wash it. that's just good parenting. should have to parenting. they should have to go it down. go and wash it down. >> on other >> throwing paint on other people's >> throwing paint on other peo do. s >> throwing paint on other peodo. what >> throwing paint on other peo do. what would do if one >> do. what would you do if one of something like of your kids did something like that? let them out of >> i wouldn't let them out of the ever again. no, the house ever again. no, no. >> but of their lives, >> but the rest of their lives, my kids would face serious consequences. >> they wouldn't no money >> they wouldn't get no money off me. they wouldn't off of me. they wouldn't be allowed house. allowed out of their house. >> they, they could >> they, you know, they could make inheritance tax. make them pay inheritance tax. >> they'd lose. they'd lose their would not suffer their phones. i would not suffer that. take that. and i would probably take them myself and get them down there myself and get them down there myself and get them it. yeah, would too. >> that's. but that is, that's good parenting. >> so, know, seriously, you >> so, you know, seriously, you know, do you ever the know, where do you ever see the parents these kind of people parents of these kind of people coming issuing own coming out and issuing their own statements, am statements, going, i am i am sorry, is making a public sorry, nobody is making a public statement decry their child. statement to decry their child. if i was, i think i would be inclined to make a public statement someone or statement if some someone or something i raised had something that i had raised had dyed hair blue. dyed their hair blue. >> one does screaming about >> no one does screaming about something, on gb something, i would come on gb news and say, my kid has been indoctrinated, they've been indoctrinated. >> say , come on, you >> can you say, come on, you know, wash dirty know, you don't wash your dirty laundry like that. laundry in public like that. >> your children >> you raise your children privately at home.
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>> don't wash anything. >> again, that's criminal damage. hope they face the >> again, that's criminal damcourt. hope they face the full court. >> give them a scrubbing brush and tell them to rid of it. and tell them to get rid of it. >> all right. right, right, right. look, it's time to right. no. look, it's time to reveal today's greatest bristling jackass mark, bristling union jackass mark, here's britain. here's your greatest britain. please >> for doctor hilary >> i've gone for doctor hilary cass. god this is cass. thank god this report is out. it has taken four years, but explained very but she explained it was very difficult . i've not read difficult to do. i've not read all pages, this could all 388 pages, but this could draw a line under such an horrific, terrible episode in our medical history. >> yes. good start. >> yes. good start. >> mine is an honorary nomination. it's elon musk, for supporting free speech in brazil and fighting back against a very, very, extreme brazilian judiciary that was trying to censor twitter and social media. so elon musk has really fought back on this , and, he's created action. >> good start. all right. going back up, minus queen letizia of spain, who has made history. >> she appointed the first female head of the queen's secretariat, which is a break in tradition for the household. >> what can i just ask? sorry.
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you know, uneducated 101 over here. what is that? >> god, it's sort of like your biggest private secretary is sort of the lead person , the sort of the lead person, the head honcho of the royal household. >> so she's shattered, shattered gender boundaries there, right. today's greatest is today's greatest briton is doctor hilary cass. yes. of course. look, i mean , it kind course. look, i mean, it kind of. it kind of haunts me today, i think really, didn't it. so hopefully that report does actually lead to some serious change. union jack time now. change. union jack has time now. mark i've gone for mark home office. i've gone for over costs they have mark home office. i've gone for over to costs they have mark home office. i've gone for over to £88. costs they have mark home office. i've gone for over to £88. 52nd they have mark home office. i've gone for over to £88. 52nd rise|ey have mark home office. i've gone for over to £88. 52nd rise in have risen to £88. 52nd rise in little over a year. unbelievable all our passports. i'm glad they're now blue again. but a flimsy little paper. documents for £88. 50. you can get a leather bound version illustrated of lord of the nngs illustrated of lord of the rings. these things cost about, but that won't get you through an airport. mark mckenna. it should be a tenner. the cost. yeah, it's a rip off. it should be a tenner. i know, sorry, i for a second there, i thought that you could get passport that you could get your passport embossed with lord of the rings. >> i was like, what? >> i was like, what? >> i was comparing it to another piece printing .
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piece of printing. >> it doesn't you into >> it doesn't get you into middle or anything like that. >> well, if i can go and see the hobbit. >> but what off. >> but what a rip off. i >> but what a rip off. i >> my nomination the echr , >> my nomination is the echr, andifs >> my nomination is the echr, and it's for forcing more climate change nonsense on us. it's going to cost us money. and you know, they are dictating our lives. yeah. >> again, another big contender that i isn't we did that i think, isn't it? we did a lot on that at the top of the 9:00 hour. if you're watching us onune 9:00 hour. if you're watching us online or you rewind on your online or you got rewind on your telly whatever you're doing telly or whatever you're doing it, the top of it, do go back, watch the top of the 9 pm. i was asking if it's right should right that we should have a referendum on. referendum on the echr. go on. rebecca, who's union? jackass? >> minus samantha markle. she has suit against, has a defamation suit against, meghan she's trying has a defamation suit against, megetln she's trying has a defamation suit against, meget kate she's trying has a defamation suit against, meget kate middleton,1e's trying has a defamation suit against, meget kate middleton, who trying has a defamation suit against, meget kate middleton, who ising to get kate middleton, who is currently for currently being treated for cancen currently being treated for cancer, witness cancer, to give a witness statement like, read the room, samantha. >> gosh, i'll be honest, i wasn't this. so wasn't aware of this. right. so i'm going to read the i'm just going to read the headlines. plans headlines. samantha markle plans to middleton to ask kate middleton for a witness she witness statement as she officially an appeal officially files an appeal against judge's dismissal of a defamation case against half sister. meghan says her recovery is a priority. right. well, i mean, there's a lot of different
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aspects to that that sound incredibly litigious, so i'm going to swerve there. any comments on that now, i'm going to give my union jack today to give my union jack ass today to give my union jack ass today to the echr. yes. they have massively it massively overreached when it comes to climate action. and i actually potentially actually think potentially hammered into their own hammered a nail into their own coffin. thank very coffin. look, thank you very much. have really, really much. now i have really, really enjoyed tonight. i'm not supposed favourites, but supposed to have favourites, but it my favourite of it has been my favourite show of the so thank you, the week so far. so thank you, thank thank you and thank thank you, thank you and thank you who's been you to everybody who's been watching listening home. watching and listening at home. just well, please do just to say, as well, please do go press your record go back, press your record function, as you can get function, rewind as you can get it all there. do cover what's at the top of the 10:00 as well. we had linehan on that had graham linehan on that guy's been put through the absolute wringer of the trans wringer as a result of the trans ideology think has ideology that i think has frankly a lot of frankly been warping a lot of the and our the discourse and our institutions. spoke institutions. he spoke out today. sure you go today. so make sure you go and watch that back. we have got headliners for you. they're headliners next for you. they're going taking through going to be taking you through this front in this lot. the front pages, in even detail, in their own even more detail, in their own inimitable that inimitable style and that happens. next. >> a brighter outlook with boxt
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solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello there. good evening. well, after a rather overcast day, there's going to be more in the way of dry and bright weather on tomorrow . but weather on the way tomorrow. but for there's still some for tonight there's still some further that's as further rain to come. that's as these weather fronts that have lingered northwest lingered across the northwest continue to push into these northwestern areas. they'll also sink south to bring more sink further south to bring more southern areas. some outbreaks of through the night, so it of rain through the night, so it will cloudy, with will stay fairly cloudy, with drizzly continuing across drizzly rain continuing across northern scotland. but this main rain actually further rain band actually sinks further south into of wales, the south into parts of wales, the midlands, then sits midlands, and then it sits across the south coast by tomorrow morning. it's a much weaker it will weaker feature, but it will bnng weaker feature, but it will bring lot of cloud to these bring a lot of cloud to these areas. elsewhere, it areas. elsewhere, though, it should drier and clearer should be a drier and clearer start day, but it's going start to the day, but it's going to very mild to be a very mild start tomorrow, temperatures not dipping ten degrees dipping much below ten degrees for areas. there for most areas. there will be quite brisk southwesterly quite a brisk southwesterly breeze overnight. those winds should ease the day and should ease through the day and actually across the east and the
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north it's going to be a dry and bright day, a much better day than today, and it's going to feel warm that feel quite warm in that sunshine. indeed. different sunshine. indeed. a different story south story though. across the south and west in particular, where the will linger for much the cloud will linger for much of see some of the day, we could see some drizzly of rain, drizzly outbreaks of rain, particularly coast particularly across the coast and high ground. now and over the high ground. now for friday, the rain returns into northwest, northern into the northwest, so northern ireland, much of western scotland, another scotland, will see another fairly day, but the rain fairly wet day, but the rain will be much limited will be much more limited compared today. so i think compared to today. so i think many eastern areas, even of scotland, should away with scotland, should get away with a fairly and across the fairly dry day. and across the south looks it should be south it looks like it should be staying dry as well. staying fairly dry as well. temperatures on milder temperatures still on the milder side for time of side of things for the time of year into weekend. it's a year into the weekend. it's a similar story as well. year into the weekend. it's a similar swarm s well. year into the weekend. it's a similar swarm feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> you with gb news. the top stories. this hour. the post office inquiry is heard today that the chairman of the mediation scheme for people who believe they'd been wrongly prosecuted by the post office,
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repeatedly told the former boss, paula vennells, that cases against subpostmasters didn't make sense. sir anthony hooper told the horizon it inquiry that he made the point several times that it didn't add up that reputable subpostmasters would be stealing sums of money. he strongly criticised the wrongful prosecutions, adding we need to re—evaluate how we approach criminal cases of this kind . in criminal cases of this kind. in other news today, the european parliament has approved a major reform of the eu's migration and asylum rules, tightening up controls. the president of the european parliament has welcomed the adoption , rather of a the adoption, rather of a revamped migration system for the bloc today , which would the bloc today, which would reduce irregular arrivals. the eu asylum and migration pact will come into force in two years time. facial imaging and fingerprint thing could be implemented and migrants may be detained during screening. the eu parliament's president, roberta metsola, said. this is a
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historic day for europe

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