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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight Replay  GB News  July 19, 2023 3:00am-5:00am BST

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calvin robinson and buxton. calvin robinson and rebecca reid . also on the way as rebecca reid. also on the way as furious locals protest the arrival of the migrant barge. is it fair for small communities to be burdened with 500 asylum seekers when local services are so stretched .7 that's our big so stretched? that's our big debate at ten nigel farage will react to that story and the extraordinary decision by koos to shut his bank account because he, quote, didn't align with their values. nigel unmissable as ever. later this hour , also as ever. later this hour, also coming up, as the sussexes snub camilla by refusing to publicly wish her happy birthday. and thomas celebrates a sixth thomas markle celebrates a sixth birthday since he last spoke to his harry and his daughter, will harry and meghan eventually regret cutting off their families? lee cohen kyrees kennedy and amy ansell do battle in the clash, plus esteemed biographer tom bower live in the studio to offer his unmissable analysis on reports meghan is regretful over harry's hit job memoir. spare tomorrow's front page is on the way to zero and superstar us journalist meghan kelly joins me live stateside to give her take on
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the trump bombshell, too. the latest trump bombshell, too. this tonight. this is dan wootton tonight. let's go . let's go. this is news britain's news channel. i'm dan wootton . and as channel. i'm dan wootton. and as a journalist , i feel a journalist, i feel uncomfortable being the story. but i've always promised you that this show has no spin and no bias and no censorship. so i owe it to you to address this . owe it to you to address this. as you probably don't know . as you probably don't know. hopefully you don't know because you're not insane enough to pay attention to the sespe pit of social media these past few days, i have been the target of a smear campaign by nefarious players with an axe to grind, notably me by an ex—partner who i was. and this is something i've never spoken about and is very difficult to talk about publicly. but who i was previously abused by and who has been on a campaign to destroy my
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life in the past, he has written to me, confessing to being a, quote, psychopath . and i saw quote, psychopath. and i saw this first hand when he threatened in writing to, quote, slit my throat many years after we had broken up. i have been forced to report his behaviour and threats to police. they are now investigating . he has now investigating. he has created an untrue story about me and appears to have been working with an organisation who are intent on closing down this channel, whose report is include a convicted phone hacker. the guardian has also reported it tonight. what a surprise . other tonight. what a surprise. other unspeakable slurs have been made by a convicted extortionist. i have never even met who has a long history of blackmailing gay men and was sent to jail for a number of years by a judge who said his behaviour was, quote, compulsive and provided a high risk to the public. i, like all
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fallible human beings, have made errors of judgement in the past, but the criminal allegations being made against me are simply untrue . i would like nothing untrue. i would like nothing more than to address those spunous more than to address those spurious claims. i could actually spend the next two hours doing so. but on the advice of my lawyers, i cannot comment further. but i have been thinking much over the past few days about the current state of social media, where any allegation can be made in an attempt to get someone cancelled . but it is impossible to defend yourself against thousands of trolls that said, i am coming on air tonight with a lot of humility to do. i think being in the middle of this witch hunt has made me think a lot about the sort of journalist and broadcaster i aspire to be. one focussed on the mass of political threats facing this country, not on personal attacks . i mean, who doesn't have
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regrets ? but should i be regrets? but should i be cancelled for their many years later ? or do you accept that i later? or do you accept that i have learned and changed the last few years. i've grown professionally and personally , professionally and personally, and i've also found the meaning of true love after that truly toxic relationship with my ex that hurt me and damaged me. i've found happiness and my personal life with my wonderful boyfriend who is here tonight . boyfriend who is here tonight. my boyfriend who is here tonight. my friends and family are my world. the toll that this has taken on their mental health, well, i mean, that is literally killing me to watch. there is a reason why i have since day one on this show had a segment called uncancelled , because our called uncancelled, because our rush to judge before due process is thanks, in my to case, the mad ramblings of highly politicised twitter trolls and revolting blogs that askew basic
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journalistic standards . this is journalistic standards. this is destroying democracy . and that's destroying democracy. and that's why by the way, i didn't say a word about hugh elle edwards not not one word. no tweet was deleted by me . despite the deleted by me. despite the misinformation and lies perpetuated by carol vorderman , perpetuated by carol vorderman, i didn't know the facts and i wasn't going to weigh in until i did . i do also note that there did. i do also note that there are dark forces out to try and take this brilliant channel down, whether it's nigel's bank account, which we're going to hear about from him soon. patrick's twitter, jacob and lee's ability to speak out . lee's ability to speak out. calvin, who is also here tonight, his right to have religious views, or laurence speaking out against the entertainment established talent. we have all found ourselves under attack . and ourselves under attack. and that's because gb news is the biggest threat to the
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establishment in decades . and establishment in decades. and they will stop at nothing to destroy us. but we will keep fighting for you because we are a family here. you have been with me since day one on what has been a life changing experience for me, and we have each other's back. the way you have understood what's been happening these past few days and i've seen it, i've seen your messages. i've seen what you've had to say. and that has meant the to world me. i recognise i'm a figure and by a polarising figure and by speaking out in this way i am opening the gates of hell on my life. but social media has become a to race the bottom pile . aylon's another way to cancel a person . our country is better a person. our country is better than that. we must be. we must be. and that's why gb news exists. what we're trying to do here is something different . and here is something different. and to give a voice to the long forgotten people of the united
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kingdom . and a great man reminds kingdom. and a great man reminds me today that people don't follow you. because you're right . they follow you because you're real. so thank you for your support and the support of gb news. and now the actual news with polly middlehurst . dan with polly middlehurst. dan dan, thank you. >> good evening. the top story on gb news tonight, tata , the on gb news tonight, tata, the owner of jaguar land rover, is set to announce plans to build a new electric car battery plant in the uk. the so—called gigafactory in somerset could create up to 14,000 jobs, with reports indicate that the site will be near bridgwater . it's will be near bridgwater. it's not yet known how much in subsidies the government offered. tata to secure the new factory, but it's thought to run to hundreds of millions of pounds. darren jones , who chairs pounds. darren jones, who chairs the parliamentary business committee , says the government's committee, says the government's
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subsidy sum will need to be looked at. well also in the news today, the bbc's acting chairwoman has told a parliamentary committee today that there was huge pressure on the corporation to name huw edwards as the presenter caught up in recent controversy . the up in recent controversy. the house of lords committee also asked the bbc director—general tim davie why the organisation didn't take allegations against its most highly paid news presenter more seriously and much sooner. the bbc boss confirmed it was in touch with the mother who made the original serious allegations against huw edwards. allegations later robustly denied by her son. gb news understands 450 migrants have crossed the english channel in nine small boats today. have crossed the english channel in nine small boats today . the in nine small boats today. the news comes as the first group of asylum seekers will be moved next week to a barge current docked in portland in dorset . docked in portland in dorset. the bibby stockholm, as it's known , will be used to known, will be used to accommodate single male asylum
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seekers as part of the government's plans to reduce the cost of migrant hotels, which currently stands at over £6 million a day. currently stands at over £6 million a day . the home million a day. the home secretary says the risk of a terror attack in the uk is on the rise. speaker in westminster earlier on today , suella earlier on today, suella braverman identified islamist terrorism as the primary uk domestic threat and ms braverman also confirmed northern ireland related terrorism remained a significant threat , with some significant threat, with some dissident groups continue to plan attacks . the former plan attacks. the former manchester united footballer and wales manager ryan giggs says he's relieved at being cleared of domestic violence allegations after charges against him were dropped. the 49 year old was due to stand trial for a second time. accused of controlling or coercive behaviour towards his ex—girlfriend . but lawyers ex—girlfriend. but lawyers withdrew the prosecution. judge hilary manley directed that he
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was not guilty on all three counts. ryan giggs had denied the offences and his previous trial ended last august, with the jury failing to reach a verdict . and lastly , the first verdict. and lastly, the first british passports bearing the title of king charles. the third will start being issued this week. the post—brexit dark blue travel documents read his britannic majesty be on the inside page. the last time that appeared on a british passport was during the reign of king george the sixth. the late queen's father. you're up to date on tv online dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news britain's news . britain's news. channel >> so the conservative party is staring down the barrel of a triple by—election bloodbath and
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without bold initiatives, similar results at the polls next year seem sadly inevitable .sunak next year seem sadly inevitable . sunak looks defeated , fresh . sunak looks defeated, fresh out of ideas and consigned to manage decline of his party. but if they really don't have the fight to keep us all socialist coalition from hell, that's what i call it. out of number 10. and then there is one monumental thing that the pm and his party must tackle before it's too late . scrap the most despicable poll tax ever . the . scrap the most despicable poll tax ever. the bbc . scrap the most despicable poll tax ever . the bbc licence fee . tax ever. the bbc licence fee. the good news is ministers are expected to formally announce a review of its funding model in the autumn, which will consider alternatives , including a alternatives, including a subscription broadband levy, increased commercial activity and advertising . a government and advertising. a government source told the times the evidence that there is a growing unwillingness to pay is shown by figures each year. the licence fee model is becoming increasingly unsustainable . increasingly unsustainable. while the beeb's annual report published last week showed the number of brits choosing to pay for the licence fee plummeted by
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500,000 to 24.3 million. as the broadcaster later blamed an increasingly competitive media landscape that led to increased financial pressure . but who financial pressure. but who can blame folk for switching off? i don't want to pay a penny to help support a organisation that has become increasingly insular, institutionally biased over the past five years. they completely miss the majority support for brexit and then spent years doing all they could to undermine the result of the biggest democratic mandate in british history. then it happened all over again with the bofis happened all over again with the boris tories demolition of labour's red wall when they were unrealised hinckley are trying to say that boris wasn't to going be pm corbyn would be and over the pandemic, the beeb's fair coverage was nothing short of a disgrace . the corporation's of a disgrace. the corporation's credibility has been shot and we won't forget it. i've always said a subscription model would allow them to charge whatever they and test if there they want and test if there really for what they really is a demand for what they provide . would make the provide. it would also make the bbc accountable to the people rather than the quinoa. quaffing champagne , socialists and champagne, socialists and london's liberal media elite who
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currently make all the decisions . wants to salvage . so if sunak wants to salvage his currently troubled legacy, he must start by scrapping paying he must start by scrapping paying the british bashing corporations , undemocratic corporations, undemocratic licence fee and to respond now, tonight's superstar panel, top broadcaster tanya buxton , gb broadcaster tanya buxton, gb news presenter and commentator, the reverend calvin robinson, and the author and journalist rebecca reid. so calvin , look, rebecca reid. so calvin, look, you were a long time member of the organisation defund the bbc. at that point, you might have said calvin. it was a bit of an interest, but times have changed and surely this is the moment. this is the moment for the government do it. >> we saw momentum building for a time, for several a long time, for several reasons, but the first and most obvious the bias. people are obvious is the bias. people are sick and tired being lectured obvious is the bias. people are sicieven tired being lectured obvious is the bias. people are sicieven ifred being lectured obvious is the bias. people are sicieven if you're being lectured obvious is the bias. people are sicieven if you're watching:ured to. even if you're watching drama, doesn't drama, entertainment doesn't matter genre it matter what the genre is. it feels like the scriptwriters are putting lessons there for the putting lessons in there for the audience educate up to audience to educate them up to their and are their level. and people are sick and so their tuning out, and tired, so their tuning out, they're and they're they're turning over and they're putting on. but is putting gb news on. but this is the time for the government to
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act it's too late. if the act before it's too late. if the government the conservatives government of the conservatives don't it, don't do anything about it, nobody will. don't do anything about it, notbecause will. don't do anything about it, notbecause the .. don't do anything about it, notbecause the thing is, tanya, >> because the thing is, tanya, you've got sunak sitting there. he this by 2027, you've got sunak sitting there. he you this by 2027, you've got sunak sitting there. he you don'tthis by 2027, you've got sunak sitting there. he you don't have�*y 2027, you've got sunak sitting there. he you don't have the )27, you've got sunak sitting there. he you don't have the time. mate, you don't have the time. do it. show some urgency and actually you'll then get the pubuc actually you'll then get the public on your side. absolutely >> get it done. now. a subscription what's needed. >> get it done. now. a subscrijhave what's needed. >> get it done. now. a subscrijhave that1at's needed. >> get it done. now. a subscrijhave that choice.eded. >> get it done. now. a subscrijhave that choice. charge people have that choice. charge whatever you like. it'll be hilarious see because they hilarious to see because they will have haemorrhage will just have to haemorrhage the they've the people that they've got. they've all these people they've got all these people working don't need they've got all these people wc be ng don't need they've got all these people wc be working don't need they've got all these people wc be working there. don't need they've got all these people wc be working there. don'twhati to be working there. and what calvin said was absolutely true. i always who's going to be i always know who's going to be the badische you, it the badische i tell you, it normally yes. the white guy normally is. yes. the white guy in dramas in all of them, in the dramas in all of them, you know, you always know that it's going to some of it's going to be some kind of posh, white is posh, posh ish white guy. is going to be a baddie somewhere along line. that's how along the line. that's how they're things. they're they're spelling things. they're constantly pushing their sexual ideologies. there's constantly pushing what they want us to think, which by the way, it's totally fine if they're a private broadcaster. totally fine if they're a pri\that's)adcaster. totally fine if they're a pri\that's)adcas can't understand >> that's why i can't understand why channel 4 was so desperate not to be sold by the government. look, if you want to
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do woke if you do all that woke stuff, if you want to be outwardly left wing, absolutely be absolutely fine. just don't be owned rebecca, i owned by the public. rebecca, i presume disagree. presume you disagree. yeah. >> deeply. so deeply. >> so deeply. so. so deeply. i love bbc in my soul. like, love the bbc in my soul. like, cut me obe bbc and the news thing. i always say the same thing, is that the reason thing, which is that the reason they on the they are harder on the government they are government is because they are the government. you can't take potshots opposition potshots at the opposition because they don't have any power. five years down power. if we are five years down the line and keir starmer is prime minister, you know, prime minister, which, you know, fingers but that was fingers crossed, but that was just me said no one ever. just makes me said no one ever. yeah know, hopefully fingers yeah you know, hopefully fingers crossed that's. crossed but yeah if that's. >> it's probably going >> no it's probably going to happen the case and happen if that's the case and the harping on the bbc are still harping on about the things that rishi about all the things that rishi sunak did wrong, then i will agree with in short agree with you in the short term. >> the bbc creates some of the best drama world. it best drama in the world. it punches above its weight extraordinarily as a country. one our skills. i one of our few real skills. i hear the time is that hear this all the time is that we better cultural things we create better cultural things than fleabag than most countries. fleabag couldn't out any couldn't have come out of any other fleabag other country. fleabag only exists the bbc and there exists because the bbc and there are was fine. >> that's fine. made the >> that's fine. we made the crown via netflix and that's crown via via netflix and that's totally way because
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totally fine by the way because it's employs british it's still employs british actors production actors and british production crews. to the crews. it doesn't need to be the bbc. in fact, bbc drama so bbc. in fact, bbc drama is so crap cheap woke these crap and cheap and woke these days. forget about the good bbc drama in recent years. >> star struck fleabag, all of them everything. >> star struck fleabag, all of the do everything. >> star struck fleabag, all of the do at everything. >> star struck fleabag, all of the do at least hing. >> star struck fleabag, all of the do at least recognise the >> do you at least recognise the social engineering on in social engineering going on in these dramas? >> think reflect the >> i think they reflect the values creative people values of the creative people in this and think the this country, and i think the majority reflect the majority of creators reflect the values north london quinoa. values of a north london quinoa. >> also, they with social >> also, they work with social mobility. back the mobility. let's go back to the news here. they also lie because i in those lockdown marches. i was in those lockdown marches. i was in those lockdown marches. i was in those lockdown marches. i was there. yeah. i was there. i was there. yeah. okay. and there was at okay. and they were there was at one hundreds of thousands one stage, hundreds of thousands of outside saying of people outside the bbc saying shame and they don't shame on you. and they don't think were of think there were hundreds of hundreds there were 100 thousands or hundreds of thousands or hundreds of thousands thousands, hundreds thousands or hundreds of th trump , i was there anti—lockdown marks. i was okay. >> trump, i was there . >> donald trump, i was there. .uk mark steyn campbell robertson, rebecca reid, thank you so much. now still to come, love donald trump by the way, so does nigel farage, who has tonight revealed bombshell revelations on his banking scandal , revelations on his banking scandal, including revelations on his banking scandal , including evidence that scandal, including evidence that coutts cancelled his accounts
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for engineering brexit, being friends with trump and questioning vaccines. his chilling dossier revealed shortly. but next in the clash, after fail to after harry and meghan fail to acknowledge the queen's birthday after harry and meghan fail to ackrremainedthe queen's birthday after harry and meghan fail to ackrremained silenteen's birthday after harry and meghan fail to ackrremained silent as1's birthday after harry and meghan fail to ackrremained silent as thomasiay and remained silent as thomas markle his sixth big markle celebrates his sixth big day since last speaking to his daughter, will the sussexes come to cutting their to regret cutting off their family's transatlantic expert, lee cohen, royal scoop jean lee cohen, royal scoop e jean carroll and social carroll kennedy and social commentator ready to commentator amy ansell ready to get in dan at gbnews.com. get stuck in dan at gbnews.com. our poll at on twitter. our poll at gb news on twitter. we're back after this .
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britain's news. channel sinister banking revelations from nigel farage that will send chills down your spine coming up. >> but time now for the clash . >> but time now for the clash. and queen camilla was treated to a 41 gun salute on her first birthday since the coronation yesterday. but not all her family were as keen to mark the big occasion, notably absent from acknowledging big from acknowledging her big day were runaway royals harry and meghan, failed to announce meghan, who failed to announce even birthday, even hencote birthday, which let's course, let's not forget, of course, that viciously called let's not forget, of course, that his iciously called let's not forget, of course, that his wicked called let's not forget, of course, that his wicked stepmother, camilla his wicked stepmother, in his disgraceful tell all memoir, spare the sussexes , memoir, spare the sussexes, meanwhile, also gave the silent treatment to meghan's dad, thomas, who celebrated sixth thomas, who celebrated a sixth birthday today since he last spoke to his estranged daughter . you think? will . so what do you think? will harry meghan regret cutting harry and meghan regret cutting off their down at gb off their families down at gb news com in poll news dot com vote? in our poll at on twitter. but to at gb news on twitter. but to duke it now, former duke it out now, former congressional staffer expert congressional staffer and expert in affairs lee in transatlantic affairs lee
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cohen on royal scoop guetta at the spectator. kyrees kennedy and the social commentator amy anne zell. so kyrees kennedy are this is a mistake, isn't it? at the very least, you should acknowledge your family birthdays . birthdays. >> yeah . dan, i do think it's >> yeah. dan, i do think it's rude and i do think that it is particularly rude because the royal family always go out of their way to celebrate not only meghan and harry's birthdays and different things like that, but also the kids. lilibet and archie and archie . but i'm also the kids. lilibet and archie and archie. but i'm i'm definitely not surprised about this. i mean, you just mentioned and when he called her the wicked stepmother. but not only that, throughout the entire book, she was i personally think that she was the person that came out the worst. he called her dangerous and said that she was willing trade information was willing to trade information about and even said that about him. and even said that she was willing to sacrifice him on her personal pr altar on the way for her to become queen. so,
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yeah, i'm definitely not surprised about this, but it doesn't look good. >> well, indeed, lee cohen is the american reaction actually now turning against harry and meghan, though? because the thing is, most yanks actually love the royal family and they think it's important to recognise the queen at moments like this . like this. >> well, i think it's been turning for some time. and i think de—man that they really had a triple whammy because clearly after spare, people on this side of the atlantic don't like dismissing your family and criticise losing your fam one's family any more than on your side of the atlantic. the british public are known for its deep rooted affinity for tradition and its beloved monarchy, and we americans find the sussexes appalling behaviour just as repellent as our british cousins . cousins. >> hmm. >> hmm. >> i anzel this was bad form,
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wasn't it? surely, even as a what do you call yourselves member of the sussex squad ? oh, member of the sussex squad? oh, i know a lot about them lately . i know a lot about them lately. surely, even as a member of the sussex squad. you think this is a bit crass ? a bit crass? >> well, dan, we don't know for sure if they didn't wish queen camilla a happy birthday. they removed themselves from social media over three years ago now. so even if they were to wish them wish her a happy birthday publicly , that would have been publicly, that would have been done on social media most likely. but as you know better than ever now , how vile social than ever now, how vile social media can be. unfortunately, and it's completely understandable that they took themselves off three years ago. so there might have been a phone call. there might have been an email. we just don't know. i don't know what went on behind closed doors. so kyra. >> kennedy, kyrees kennedy oh , >> kennedy, kyrees kennedy oh, yeah, you come and lee . yeah, you come and lee. >> i think that's rubbish because everything that that meghan markle and harry do is
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planned out and all messages and they do everything for a reason . so if, if they didn't wish camilla the queen a happy birthday, it was deliberate. it wasn't because it simply didn't come out on social media. >> but how would they have done it? and then therefore, how would we have known that they wished? >> well, they've got a website . >> well, they've got a website. you can release a statement, kyra kennedy can you can you just update us, though, on what the situation is in terms of the personal contact at the moment between the sussexes the between the sussexes and the royal from what royal family because from what i'm my sources, i'm hearing from my sources, there's virtually no contact. and certainly no contact between harry and camilla or meghan and camilla. yeah no, that's definitely what i've been heanng definitely what i've been hearing too, especially with harry and his friends, his kind of closest friends group that he obviously grew up with. >> and they were kind of a band of brothers. i know that there's certainly no contact with them
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at all now. and the royal family as well. but i don't know if you've heard the same, but i've heard reports of meghan and harry taking some time apart from each other . and harry taking some time apart from each other. and came from each other. and they came out today , i think, in the out today, i think, in the american media. so i think. now. >> do you think that's true? >> do you think that's true? >> official reports of kind of they didn't use the word separation but taking time apart from each other, we'll start to see how these failed relationships will really affect them because right now they need friends and they don't have any i >>i >> i mean, do you think that's true, amy? >> well, we do know for sure if they don't have any i mean, obviously, they have doria. they're in la in the us supporting them. and obviously we know how close they both are to her and we don't really know about their close circle of friends in the us . so they friends in the us. so they probably keep them quite close to them. we don't know much about them, but we know the expression blood is thicker than
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water. it's actually the blood of the covenant is thicker than water of the womb. so ultimately, if they have very strong friendships in la, obviously , okay, that is i think obviously, okay, that is i think okay, replacing fair enough. family bonds of the uk. fair enough. >> but you know what? you cannot replace family ever. amy enzo , replace family ever. amy enzo, gary kennedy, lee cohen, thank you all so much. but who do you agree with on this? well, harry and meghan eventually regret cutting off their families. lane writes, on writes, even if you don't get on with family, it's family. who knows when you need them in the future, be magnanimous from susan. probably regret susan. they'll probably regret it, although not out of a bad conscience, but out regret conscience, but out of regret for the consequence to them. and joe, via the email, for the consequence to them. and joe, via the email , they for the consequence to them. and joe, via the email, they might not realise it now, but everyone comes regret losing their comes to regret losing their family. life is short and your verdict is in. 72% of you verdict is now in. 72% of you agree that harry and meghan will eventually cutting off agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies cutting off agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies . cutting off agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies . 28%tting off agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies . 28% of|g off agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies . 28% of youf agree that harry and meghan will eventfamilies . 28% of you think their families. 28% of you think they won't. coming up, more royal truth actually from royal truth bombs actually from esteemed tom bower and esteemed author tom bower and uncancelled but it's
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uncancelled old. but now it's the weather , the temperatures rising. >> boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast. it's been a damp day once again across many central areas . the rain, many central areas. the rain, though, does ease overnight with clear spells emerging, but there will be further showers arriving on wednesday. we've had a feature move through during tuesday that's pulling away into the north sea at the moment and taking its rain with it, although it will take a while for eastern parts of the uk to be clear of rain and showers elsewhere. lots of cloud remaining , elsewhere. lots of cloud remaining, but the elsewhere. lots of cloud remaining , but the clearest remaining, but the clearest skies will be across scotland and northern ireland, albeit with a few showers into the north—west and temperatures where we get the clear skies dipping the double dipping into the low double figures to high single figures mid to high single figures. milder night to come, figures. a milder night to come, though, south, or 16 though, in the south, 15 or 16 celsius we wake up on celsius as we wake up on wednesday. and still a lot of cloud eastern and cloud around for eastern and central wales and
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central england, east wales and some showers. but more widely into the afternoon , we're going into the afternoon, we're going to see a mix of sunny spells and showers. the heaviest downpours will be across eastern england, central scots and central and eastern scots and the driest weather will be towards wales in the south—west, towards wales in the south—west, to 20 possibly 23 celsius in the south 1819 for scotland and northern ireland. fast forward to thursday and it's a bright start for many. a cool start to the day. but quite quickly we'll see the cloud build and we'll see the cloud build and we'll see showers developing once again. this time the heaviest downpours across central downpours will be across central areas. a chance of avoiding areas. a good chance of avoiding showers in some places and staying dry. fewer showers on friday before wetter weather arrives for the weekend . arrives for the weekend. >> the temperatures rising on boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> welcome back . this is dan >> welcome back. this is dan wootton tonight. coming up, the political assassination of donald trump continues as the former president says he's about
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to be arrested and indicted for the january 6th capitol riots. us superstar megyn kelly us media superstar megyn kelly weighs the weighs in from across the atlantic but first, atlantic shortly. but first, nigel farage has sensationally proven his former bank proven that his former bank coutts, cancelled accounts coutts, cancelled his accounts for and colluded for wrong thing and colluded with the bbc to lie about it. he's got an explosive dossier of evidence that should concern even his fiercest critics. even even his fiercest critics. really. so farage is going to reveal all .
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on gb news, the people's.
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channel >> megan kelly is on the way. but time now for what the farage and two weeks after his british bank account was shut down, nigel has tonight made a public bombshell dossier. he's calling the coots files public. the 40 page memo mentions brexit 86 times russia 144 times. and nigel status as a politically exposed person on ten occasions while listing his support for donald trump as well as his views on immigration . net zero views on immigration. net zero and the vaccine as the reasons his account with coots was closed . the bank also seems to closed. the bank also seems to have colluded with the bbc to falsely suggest the account wasn't commercially viable. so nice deal. wow. surely proof of a politically motivated witch hunt against you . hunt against you. >> yes, they will argue it's not political. they'll argue it's about values . yes. but you see
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about values. yes. but you see the bank is a commercial organisation . theirjob is to organisation. theirjob is to service their shareholders, who, by the way , include you, me and by the way, include you, me and everyone watching and listening. because as the group which coots is a part, is 38.6% owned by us, the taxpayer, we bailed them out after their greed and stupidity back in 2008. they now treat us with total contempt and i have to say, dan, i've been through a bit over the years. i mean , i bit over the years. i mean, i have been, you know, abused , have been, you know, abused, used and screamed at and one of the most vilified figures in not just british, but european political life over the last 20 years. and even i was absolutely gobsmacked to read this dossier , to see the bile, the poison and the prejudice. and it's a prejudice that can only come from upper middle class white people living in smart postcodes
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in london with a metropolitan mindset . i in london with a metropolitan mindset. i mean, they in london with a metropolitan mindset . i mean, they literally mindset. i mean, they literally they literally hate, loathe and despise spies. anybody with a different worldview. and this document is dripping with that how. >> now. >> nigel so this is what coots says they say our ability to respond is restricted by our obugafions respond is restricted by our obligations of client confidentiality decisions to close accounts are not taken lightly and take into account a number of factors, including commercial viability, reputational considerations and legal and regulatory requirements. but that's so ironic, isn't it, nigel? because they than happy to they were more than happy to sound off with the bbc. we oh yes. >> and they thought it was correct that they thought it was ethical and legal to discuss the financial state of my account with the british broadcasting corporation. >> i mean , totally >> i mean, totally extraordinary. i mean, if ever i saw a breach of gdpr and a breach of client confidentiality, it was that. but you know, this document
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comprehend proves that . on the comprehend proves that. on the 17th of november 2022, when this decision was made, that i would be exited, you know , declared be exited, you know, declared a non—person , and that financially non—person, and that financially i was a viable account. non—person, and that financially i was a viable account . and, you i was a viable account. and, you know, it's there in the report. you know, the client's economic situation an is now sufficient to retain on a commercial basis it's all there . the thing is you it's all there. the thing is you see these banks have been closing thousands of accounts over the last few years. nobody's ever fought back for two reasons. one, most people don't have the platform. you know, or the ability or the cloud to fight back. and two, whenever it's happened to public figures, they've thought it too embarrassing to reveal to the world what has happened to them. and of course, by my doing this, i damage hedge my financial credibility for all time because
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you have to fill in the form. have you ever been refused a bank account so this will damage me. but you know, had it just been me , i might have slunk off been me, i might have slunk off quietly . but as i've seen in quietly. but as i've seen in messages, letters, emails from thousands of businesses that are being closed down because they operate in the cash economy , i operate in the cash economy, i just thought, no, someone somewhere has got to make a stand. and i'm doing that. and you know, think it's why the gb news don't kill campaign is so important. if we don't arrest this, we'll finish up with a china style social credit system where only those with acceptable views will be able to participate fully in society. and i'm going to fight them. >> but nigel, this is happening all over the place, isn't it? because you mentioned the don't cancel cash campaign, a brilliant campaign by gb news, one of the most successful campaigns in media in recent campaigns in the media in recent years . and ofcom, our so called years. and ofcom, our so called regulators , are now
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regulators, are now investigating that campaign. now, nigel, i put it to you that if ofcom is investigating our don't kill cash campaign, why on earth do they not investigate sky news for all of their climate hysteria campaigns , for climate hysteria campaigns, for example? yeah i mean, look, you know, if ofcom want to fight over the don't kill cash campaign , then will somebody campaign, then will somebody please hold my jacket? >> because this is an entirely legitimate campaign. channel 4 news is campaigned for years on the fact that arron banks and myself were funded by the russians. and this document is full of it. full of it . one of full of it. full of it. one of the main reasons for cancelling my account with coutts is allegations that i've been financially linked to russia. it is all utterly and entirely untrue. it is wrong. so why can other media organisations campaign? and this is not gb
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news? no. if they want to fight on this, i tell you what, we'll jolly well give them one. >> yeah, no indeed . >> yeah, no indeed. >> yeah, no indeed. >> very, very good point. and actually, nigel, you right actually, nigel, you are right to other public to point out that other public figures forward. know figures came forward. i know speaking wasn't speaking personally, it wasn't until story that i was until your story that i was prepared or felt sort of comfortable to reveal that the same thing happened to me with hsbc . because you're right, it hsbc. because you're right, it does feel embarrassing. and you worry that if you reveal this, that you're going to find it more difficult in the future with other financial organisations. but i think we have to call this out now. >> no, absolutely. and i would say the coots and i would say to ofcom anybody else, please ofcom and anybody else, please don't pick a fight with the hardest pub because hardest bloke in the pub because he's to back away we he's not going to back away we 90, he's not going to back away we go, nigel, go , nigel. go, nigel, go, nigel. >> farage back for that >> nigel farage back for that fight at 7 pm. tomorrow night. thank you so much, nigel. great to talk. but coming up, plucky brits. speaking of a fight, refuse to take the migrant crisis. lying down as angry dorset locals protest the arrival of a 300 foot barge that
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will accommodate 500 asylum seekers. so is it fair? small communities are lumbered with migrants when local services are so stretched. my superstar panel returned to weigh in shortly. but next is the most persecuted president in american history. and the witch hunt hasn't finished yet. us media superstar megyn kelly joins me live for her forensic analysis on donald trump's announcement today that he expects to be arrested and indicted over the january 6th riots. megyn kelly live with that and so much more stateside straight after this .
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kelly j. keane and tom bower on the way. but time now for us media megastar megyn kelly and the washington witch hunt against the 45th president of the united states has notched up another gear as donald trump announced today that he has been given very short to given a very short four days to report to a grand jury, which he
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says almost always means an arrest and indict moment. the us department of justice is targeting trump over his alleged involvement in the january 6th attack on capitol, adding involvement in the january 6th atta separate capitol, adding involvement in the january 6th atta separate legal:ol, adding two separate legal investigations already launched against the donald in both new york and georgia . so, megan, york and georgia. so, megan, will the washington witch hunt against donald trump only end when he's been successfully dnven when he's been successfully driven of politics? yes. yes driven out of politics? yes. yes >> i think that's a fair statement. or when he's been dnven statement. or when he's been driven right into a jail cell. i mean, one of the things that's extraordinary about this potential dc washington , dc potential dc washington, dc indictment is that the defendants that they've been going after so far in connection with january 6th, they almost never get bail. as soon as they get arrested and indicted, they are locked up and they remain locked up. now i can't imagine that jack smith would try that with a former president of the united states. but those who have been watching these cases closely say they don't bet that he will not if they treat him anywhere near the way they've treated others who have been treated the others who have been indicted around 6th.
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indicted around january 6th. that's happen that's exactly what will happen to this is to him. i mean, this is indictment number three for those playing home, those of you playing at home, three potentially and three of potentially four. and there's that fani there's no indication that fani willis down atlanta, willis willis down in atlanta, georgia , is taking her foot off georgia, is taking her foot off the gasoline at all. so we really genuinely could end up with four indictments against joe chief political joe biden's chief political rival the of the summer . rival by the end of the summer. now, politically, this helps donald trump, or at least it has so far. he was 15 points away from ron desantis right before the first indictment came down in now he's 30 points in march. now he's 30 points ahead desantis , according ahead of ron desantis, according to polls. so it's only to most polls. so it's only helped him in his surge to become the gop nominee . however, become the gop nominee. however, legally , he he's in a lot of legally, he he's in a lot of trouble. dan legally, he's in some jeopardy here. and he actually could be convicted. i'll just give you my quick rundown of the three cases that, you know, have been brought or are just about to be to according trump's post today in new york. it's a very weak case, but it's going to be tried in front of a jury that likely hates him in florida. for the
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documents case, it's a very strong case. legally it's unfair politically, but it's a very strong case legally. but it's likely to be charged in front of a jury that actually likes donald trump. so you take your pick. which one would you prefer? i think i'd you know, i guess i'd rather have a jury that likes me. but that case in florida could put him in jail for the rest of his life . so for the rest of his life. so it's no matter what. and it's scary no matter what. and now case on january now you got this case on january sixth, which we haven't yet seen . to opine on the . so i hesitate to opine on the strength legally if they're going to go after him for what he said. the day of january 6th, that's going to fall apart because he has a first amendment right to say what he said, that day. and it was not legal incitement as that term is used. our first amendment is too broad to criminalise what he said. but there's sorts of other there's all sorts of other things look to be things that they look to be criminalising in connection with things that they look to be crir behaviour, n connection with things that they look to be crir behaviour, suggestingn with his behaviour, suggesting that he really tried to interfere with a congressional proceeding and could get and otherwise where it could get hairy. that if that's the hairy. and if that if that's the case, dan, that case gets tried in worst possible jury
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in the worst possible jury fiction for donald trump. there is no and that is washington dc , where it is going to be near impossible to find a jury that will treat him fairly. other defendants in connection defendants tried in connection with jan six in washington have tried to move their trials. they have lost every single time they've all been convicted and so this one is genuinely scary for him. from a legal perspective . perspective. >> now, the man intending to run against the republicans and potentially donald trump in next year's presidential election , year's presidential election, perhaps best known for his comedy, tumbles and apparently inability remember quite inability to remember quite where he is, what he's meant to be despite being the be doing, despite being the supposed leader of the free world. megan, fan of world. megan, you're no fan of sleepy biden , but what are you sleepy biden, but what are you heanng? sleepy biden, but what are you hearing? because can he really run again or is there a plan in place, you know, is governed gb newsroom going to be swept in at the last minute ? the last minute? >> well, there was a report this week from cnn that inside democrats will tell you it's not going to be joe biden. don't get
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too attached, and that only a few people who have been hired to work on his re—election campaign will dispute that, but that democrats are saying to that the democrats are saying to their candidates like gavin their top candidates like gavin newsom, ready because they newsom, be ready because they don't believe that joe biden will actually see this through and run as the nominee. and actually run as the nominee. so i don't know whether that's true. look him, you don't true. you look at him, you don't think can possibly it. think he can possibly do it. you really don't. he's really don't. i mean, he's losing his mental faculties , his losing his mental faculties, his physical he's physical capabilities, and he's not liked by his own party, not even liked by his own party, most of whom would pray. and every night on their knees for an alternate nomination, an alternate nominee, if they thought could get him, thought they could get him, you know, past democratic know, get past the democratic national so i don't know. national party. so i don't know. i wouldn't put strong money on it necessarily being joe biden, just given that his party doesn't want him, though, right now, there's though, there's stalking horses. there's no one else meaningfully challenging him. interesting to him. what's more interesting to me is as we get to know him a little bit better and as he now has run in the public eye and has to run in the public eye and not from a basement during covid, the stories starting covid, the stories are starting to out, dan, about what an
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to come out, dan, about what an absolute jerk guy is and absolute jerk this guy is and has they've been a has been. they've been out for a long time, even the long time, but even the mainstream starting to mainstream press is starting to run them now how he run them now about how he bullies his staff. he screams at them. drops the bomb in in, them. he drops the f bomb in in, you know, toward them, at them when yelling at them for being so he tries to make so incompetent. he tries to make them like chumps all around them feel like chumps all around them. won't acknowledge them. he won't acknowledge his seventh granddaughter, the daughter his hunter. he daughter of his son, hunter. he touts the fact that he has six grandchildren, six, six, six. he goes extra measures to say it goes to extra measures to say it publicly, knowing that it's going to inflict pain, pain on the his seventh the family that has his seventh granddaughter that her granddaughter who knows that her grandfather the president of grandfather is the president of the that he the united states and that he won't acknowledge her, never mind own father , hunter mind her own father, hunter biden. start to get biden. the story start to get recirculated about how he's been abusive voters his entire abusive to voters his entire life who dare raise things with him , like the that he him, like the fact that he plagiarised somebody else's papen plagiarised somebody else's paper. attacked the man as a paper. he attacked the man as a dumb and not as equal to him in iq, and then proceeded to list a bunch of other lies about how he graduated the top his graduated in the top of his class. and had a scholarship class. and he had a scholarship and he went to school all and i
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could go down list but lie, could go down the list but lie, lie, lie after lie, which is what get this role. what he did to get this role. i mean, listen, i know a lot of politicians do it, but his politicians do it, but in his case, they it doesn't match the ivanka killer image that the press has tried to spin. and as we get to know him better, thanks these congressional thanks to these congressional house particular, house republicans in particular, the really coming off the mask is really coming off now . how. >> now. >> the us soccer star and woke warrior megan rapinoe. we know her, don't we, megan? she made headunes her, don't we, megan? she made headlines recently when she announced she would become she would welcome transgender athletes sport, athletes into women's sport, despite inherent despite their inherent biological over biological advantage over genuinely female rivals. now, megan, do you think rapinoe is virtue signalling stance risks ruining sport for women ? ruining sport for women? >> yeah, it does . and she's >> yeah, it does. and she's against at least the public here on this. the overwhelming majority of americans. i mean, the latest poll show i saw put it at 92% recently had been in the high 60s. so i'm would like to see another poll mirroring the numbers showed that it was
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up to 92% of americans who are against biological boys competing against girls or men competing against girls or men competing against girls or men competing against women in women's sports, period . so she women's sports, period. so she is way outside the mainstream on this and she is absolutely despicable to take this position after she has left out the team. she no longer has to do it. she doesn't have a daughter, but i do.she doesn't have a daughter, but i do. she wants my daughter to compete against male athletes. and you know what? it's not safe. and i won't let miss blue purple hair, whatever she is of the day, dictate my own daughter's safety, wellness or fairness on the sporting field in particular, after megan rapinoe has made her millions, she can sit back and cash her checks till the cows come home. she's not going to have to take the physical risks. my kid is your kid is. and so i have a strong objection to her weighing in on this at all. and if she's going weigh in against the going to weigh in against the side of girl safety, she can take a seat. yeah >> all well and good, isn't it, to say it at the top and i think
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it's particularly selfish when it's particularly selfish when it comes to team sports. megan as because there's an idea as well because there's an idea that, it's okay, there's that, oh, it's okay, there's a few of us. it doesn't make a difference. actually, that's difference. and actually, that's completely because do completely not true because do you when her own you remember when her own football , the women's team, football team, the women's team, played a team of under 15 boys and in dallas , i think it was and in dallas, i think it was dallas fc and yet they were totally crushed, totally crushed. they got crushed and if she's so in favour of women playing against why didn't she's so in favour of women playeverigainst why didn't she's so in favour of women playever try nst why didn't she's so in favour of women playever try out why didn't she's so in favour of women playever try out for why didn't she's so in favour of women playever try out for the hy didn't she's so in favour of women playever try out for the men's|'t team? >> huh? if it's all the same, you know, the athletic abilities are the same and safety is are the same and the safety is the it's actually why. the same. it's actually why. >> why even have gendered sports? well, why have sports? well, exactly. why have gendered sports, right? >> saying, >> if what she's saying, why not? why aren't seeing a not? what why aren't we seeing a bunch the nba or the bunch of women in the nba or the nfl? what is it, megan? could there be inherent fairness there be an inherent in fairness that to acknowledge that you refuse to acknowledge now you have made now that, again, you have made all the millions you are out, you safe. it's more you are safe. it's more important to you to virtue signal by far signal and be loved by your far left to left constituents than to get real about what's and fair real about what's safe and fair for girls . for today's girls. >> yeah, indeed. indeed >> yeah, no, indeed. indeed >> yeah, no, indeed. indeed
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>> this is a big battle, >> but this is a big battle, isn't it, megan? because you've got woke folk in sport who got the woke folk in sport who do not give a that is the problem. and at the moment they are winning a lot of hearts and minds. so i think actually sport all around the world, all of these organisations around the world, they have to come together and fight this. but you are i want them are a very sports i want them out of locker rooms. out of our locker rooms. >> them out of our >> i want them out of our bathrooms. i support transgender >> i want them out of our bathrooins. i support transgender >> i want them out of our bathrooin terms)port transgender >> i want them out of our bathrooin terms of�*rt transgender >> i want them out of our bathrooin terms of theirnsgender >> i want them out of our bathrooin terms of their mental r people in terms of their mental health issues and the pain that they must be going through, penod they must be going through, period it. don't have period. that's it. i don't have to them feel better in my spaces. >> okay. megan kelly, host of the she's the the megan kelly show. she's the meghan that we love in america. you've her on you you've got to find her on you tube coming up, it's been tube now. coming up, it's been five years since women's rights advocate kelly j. keane first bared her icon , adult human bared her icon, adult human female t shirt. but half a decade on, how does the leading campaigner against creeping trans ideology see the next five years going she's live and unfiltered shortly the next plucky brits in dorset are voicing their fury at the arrival of a 300 foot barge that
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will accommodate 500 small boat arrivals. so is it fair communities like theirs are lumbered with the consequences of the migrant crisis? my superstar panel do battle on that next. plus, we're going to have a first look at tomorrow's newspaper. front pages hot off the press at and a brand new greatest britain and union jackass will be revealed . huge jackass will be revealed. huge hour ahead. tom bower's live as well. don't go anywhere . well. don't go anywhere. >> the temperature's rising . >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast. it's been a damp day once again across many central areas . the rain, many central areas. the rain, though, does ease overnight with clear spells emerging, but there will be further arriving will be further showers arriving on wednesday. we've had a feature move through during tuesday that's pulling away into the north sea at the moment and taking its rain with it, although it will take a while
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for eastern parts of the uk to be clear of rain and showers elsewhere. lots of cloud remaining, but the clearest skies will be across scotland and northern ireland, albeit with a few showers into the northwest and temperatures where we get the clear skies dipping into the low double figures mid to high single a milder to high single figures. a milder night come though, in the night to come though, in the south, or celsius. as we south, 15 or 16 celsius. as we wake up on wednesday. and still a cloud around for a lot of cloud around for eastern and central england, east but east wales and some showers. but more into the afternoon , more widely into the afternoon, we're going to see a mix of sunny spells and showers. the heaviest downpours be heaviest downpours will be across central across eastern england, central and eastern scotland. driest and eastern scotland. the driest weather towards wales in weather will be towards wales in the 20 to possibly the south—west, 20 to possibly 23 celsius in the south 1819 for scotland and northern ireland. and fast forward to thursday and it's a bright start for many, a cool start to the day. but quite quickly we'll see the cloud build and we'll see showers developing once again. this time the heaviest downpours will be across areas. a good across central areas. a good chance of avoiding showers in some places and staying dry.
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fewer showers on friday before wetter weather arrives for the weekend . the temperatures rising. >> boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm dan wootton. tonight, our borders are bursting at the seams, but plucky brits give the latest indication they're not going to take the migrant crisis lying down as angry locals in dorset protest the arrival of a 300 foot barge that will accommodate 500 asylum seekers . is it fair? 500 asylum seekers. is it fair? small communities are lumbered with migrants when local services are so stretched. that's the big debate with my superstar panel next. and
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tonight, i'm joined by tanya buxton. calvin robinson and rebecca reid. also tonight, after backtracking on her bogus royal race, claims meghan markle is now reportedly regretful over harry's hit job memoir, spare and the professional whiners label it earned the pair. well, esteemed robert author tom bower is going to give his take on the duchess's motives later in uncanceled. plus it's been five years since women's rights activist kelly j. keane first bared her iconic adult human female t shirt that sparked the fight back against creeping trans ideology. so is it common sense finally prevailing? and where does the debate take us in the next five years? meanwhile while . while. that was the moment a star of the bbc's rupaul's drag race took an angle grinder to their crotch in front of kids at a theme park, did the venue double
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down or apologise? i'll reveal all media buzz. and can all in the media buzz. and can you who's up for a gong in you guess who's up for a gong in tonight's britain and tonight's greatest britain and union jackass for saying britain should be totally islamic? tomorrow's front tomorrow's newspaper front page is press imminently is hot off the press imminently too, first, the news too, but first, the news with polly middlehurst . polly middlehurst. >> dan, thank you. the top story tonight, tata, the owner of jaguar land rover , is set to jaguar land rover, is set to announce plans to build a new electric car battery plant. the so—called giga factory in somerset could create up to 14,000 jobs, with reports indicating the site will be near bridgwater . indicating the site will be near bridgwater. but it's indicating the site will be near bridgwater . but it's not yet bridgwater. but it's not yet known how much in subsidies the government offered tata to secure the new factory in the uk. but it is thought to run to hundreds of millions of pounds. darren jones , who chairs the darren jones, who chairs the parliamentary business committee , says the government subsidy some will need to be looked at. well, today the bbc's acting
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chairwoman has told a parliamentary committee that there was huge pressure on the bbc to name huw edwards as the presenter caught up in recent controversy. the house of lords committee also asked the bbc director general tim davie why the organisation hadn't taken allegations against its most highly paid news presenter. more seriously and much sooner. the bbc boss confirmed that it had beenin bbc boss confirmed that it had been in touch with the mother who made the original serious allegations against huw edwards allegations against huw edwards allegations later, robustly denied by her son. now gb news understands 450 migrants crossed the english channel in nine small boats today . the news small boats today. the news comes as the first group of asylum seekers will be moved next week to a barge currently docked in portland in dorset . docked in portland in dorset. it's called the bibby stockholm. it's called the bibby stockholm. it's going to be used to accommodate single male asylum seekers and is all part of the government's plan to reduce the cost of migrant hotels, which
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currently stands at over £6 million each day . the home million each day. the home secretary says the risk of a terror attack in the uk is on the rise. speaking in westminster, suella braverman has identified islamist terrorism as the primary uk domestic threat. ms braverman also confirmed northern ireland related terrorism remains a significant threat, with some dissident groups continuing to plan attacks . the former plan attacks. the former manchester united footballer and wales manager ryan giggs says he's relieved at being cleared of domestic violence allegations after charges against him were dropped. the 49 year old was due to stand trial for a second time, accused of controlling or coercive behaviour towards his girlfriend. but lawyers withdrew the prosecution . the judge in the prosecution. the judge in the prosecution. the judge in the case, hilary manley , the case, hilary manley, directed that he was not guilty on all three counts. ryan giggs had denied the offences and at
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his previous trial, which ended last august, the jury failed to reach a verdict . lastly, the reach a verdict. lastly, the first british passports bearing the title of king charles iii, will start being issued this week. the post—brexit dark blue travel document will read his britannic majesty on the inside page. britannic majesty on the inside page . the last time that page. the last time that appeared on a british passport was during the reign of king george the sixth. the late queen's father . sure, you're up queen's father. sure, you're up to date on tv online dab+ radio and the tune—in app. this is gb news, britain's news channel . will dumas as you sign in our mediabuzz first front pages are in and the metro is leading with news that the mum of three who aborted her unborn child at 34 weeks almost full term, won an appeal today to reduce her
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prison sentence. >> that means she'll be released imminently early. it's a story that's divided the nation. and we're debating it we're going to be debating it later . the independent later this hour. the independent sparks another race row as the n word is twice found in government papers prepared by british immigration officers . as british immigration officers. as my superstar panel . back with me my superstar panel. back with me now, the broadcaster, tanya buxton, the reverend calvin robinson and the us selling author rebecca reid , now the author rebecca reid, now the bibby stockholm migrant barge completed its controversial journey into portland port in dorset this morning, only to be met by protests from furious locals with the barge capable of housing over 500 young male migrants who will be granted the freedom to come and go whenever they please. distress residents of the sleepy seaside town say their local services, such as gps , are already at breaking gps, are already at breaking point and simply won't be able to cope with the influx of new arrivals . so, calvin, is it fair arrivals. so, calvin, is it fair for these communities to be
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totally burdened or do we have totally burdened or do we have to accept that ? unfortunately, to accept that? unfortunately, at the moment we can't keep paying at the moment we can't keep paying £7 million a day or more to put these people in hotels . to put these people in hotels. >> it's not fair at all. and these people are going to be painted as nimbys because they don't want it in their own backyard. but none of us want it in our backyards. what should happen these fighting age men happen is these fighting age men should we should should be sent back. we should prioritise women children if prioritise women and children if we're have a refugee we're going to have a refugee scheme and then if we're scheme at all. and then if we're building of we building on top of that, we should implement rwanda should implement the rwanda scheme don't have to have scheme so we don't have to have people up residence in people taking up residence in small villages where people taking up residence in smeresources villages where people taking up residence in smeresources are villages where people taking up residence in smeresources are already where people taking up residence in smeresources are already at1ere the resources are already at breaking well, i don't >> tanya well, i don't understand why they i thought the whole point of having this barge they're the barge is that they're off the land. don't why they land. i don't see why they should allowed to come and should be allowed to come and go. be part of go. that should be part of penalty. know, you come penalty. you know, you come over on illegal means illegal on illegal means in illegal ways, then you get put on this barge till they find out barge till you they find out whether you're registered. we don't know these people are. don't know who these people are. we and all these we don't know. and all these men that coming some of
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that are coming over, some of them be the most wonderful them might be the most wonderful people world. i don't people in the world. i don't know. some might be know. but some of them might be really people. we don't know really bad people. we don't know who they are. they should be kept there. >> well, course have >> well, of course we have evidence. about it evidence. we can't talk about it because ongoing case. because it's an ongoing case. but we have evidence of one of those recent illegal arrivals within are within weeks in the country are alleged raping a woman. rebecca reid yeah, i mean, think my reid yeah, i mean, i think my opinions have slightly opinions on this have slightly changed talked it changed as we've talked about it more more about it. >> and while my instinct is always if somebody is a always that if somebody is a genuine seeker, i would genuine asylum seeker, i would always want to a place for always want to find a place for them. a middle them. there's a middle ground between weird scattergun between this weird scattergun thing doing thing the government are doing where it's like, well, send them to rwanda. we'll a boat. to rwanda. we'll buy a boat. like feels like just a weird like it feels like just a weird meeting. came with meeting. everyone came up with ideas just went, yep, ideas and they just went, yep, cool, we'll do of cool, fine. we'll do all of them. i think realistically, amanda a couple of weeks amanda said a couple of weeks ago, reason ago, there's no reason you couldn't ethical couldn't have, like, ethical well processing which well run processing centre which is presumably is safe where presumably you'd put place put infrastructure in place which its own which would have its own doctors. people doctors. and i think people should really well. should be treated really well. i don't like the idea that it would be nasty and some of the behaviour like painting over
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murals. it doesn't seem murals. so that it doesn't seem welcoming that welcoming for children that stuff abhorrent, but stuff i think is abhorrent, but i increasingly think in i do increasingly think that in order have a robust asylum order to have a robust asylum system, probably need to system, you probably need to have clean, have a good, kind, clean, welcoming centre. welcoming processing centre. >> that's why this would be absolutely long absolutely fantastic as long as they stay it. you take they can stay on it. you take they can stay on it. you take the doctors, anyone unwell, stay on there everything has to on it. there everything has to be in a contained be dealt with in a contained manner those need manner and then those that need to be back to their to be flown back to their country be flown it's country can be flown back. it's the being given mobile the kind of being given mobile free phones and have free mobile phones and have access to all all the health care don't any care that's i don't have any issue with that at all. >> think why should they >> i just think why should they get mobile so that they get mobile phones so that they can to mean, i was can talk to i mean, if i was fleeing a war torn country and i went somewhere and i wanted to feel safe, but they were living in camps and bella—rae birch a fairly garford beck single fairly garford beck every single person that comes into this country stay in france. country could stay in france. >> reason that we're coming >> the reason that we're coming here is so easy to here is because it is so easy to work in the black market. no, no, so work in no, no. it's so easy to work in the black market in this country to be shielded by albanian gangs. are fleeing gangs. and they are not fleeing anything thing than anything thing other than france. anything thing other than fra|i:e. anything thing other than fra|i think some people are and
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>> i think some people are and some people aren't. and i think that carly is a fairly unpleasant based and unpleasant place to be based and realistically, say lot. realistically, i say this a lot. if fleeing from here, if i were fleeing from here, i would probably want to go to somewhere that i had family, which australia or new which would be australia or new york. so i wouldn't york. so therefore i wouldn't just soon as i got to just stop as soon as i got to germany, where i don't the germany, where i don't speak the language, know anyone. language, i don't know anyone. i'd want to get someone where i could rebuild life. could rebuild my life. >> list. you >> it's not a shopping list. you don't get. oh, where would i prefer to be? which has the best system? >> and if and if you humans are genuinely fleeing torn genuinely fleeing a war torn country set up in the first country you set up in the first safe place. >> that's not what you build your life. >> the second world war. that's not do to not what people we do have to remember.have to remember. we >> we do have to remember. we have to remember. rebecca believes borders. believes in open borders. now, look, this look, in a statement this afternoon, the home office said the providing the government is providing substantial funding to local services, including the police and support minimise and nhs, to support and minimise the community. the impact on the community. and there will be 24 over seven security site. the site security on the site. the site is be is designed to be self—sufficient order to self—sufficient in order to minimise the local minimise the impact on the local community catering, community with catering, recreational basic recreational areas and basic health provision board. recreational areas and basic heaeven provision board. recreational areas and basic heaeven pr(serc0| board. recreational areas and basic heaeven pr(serco is board. recreational areas and basic heaeven pr(serco is going d. >> even that, serco is going to be a killing from this.
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be making a killing from this. >> indeed, now look horrified parents have condemned a pride themed performance at a popular family saw family theme park that saw a drag performer on stage drag performer gyrate on stage and an angle grinder his and take an angle grinder to his crotch of kids. watch crotch in front of kids. watch this . this. go . so that's the drag race star crystal shell from rupaul's drag race . one mum whose child saw race. one mum whose child saw the act said, this is a line you don't cross that tells me everything you need to know about how they value children in the owner of adventure island theme essex has since theme park in essex has since apologised customers for apologised to its customers for the insisting the venue the gaffe, insisting the venue wouldn't take part future
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wouldn't take part in any future celebrations because, quote, being inclusive has backfired on us, quite honestly. i mean, look , this is a weird one because i think it's so obvious that i don't understand why people understand it right? drag is bnng understand it right? drag is bring isn't for adults . okay? bring isn't for adults. okay? it's like burlesque , right? it's it's like burlesque, right? it's like burlesque. who is going to take a six year old to a dita von teese performance? so this is nothing about i love lgbt. t no, it's not. this is just about aduu no, it's not. this is just about adult entertainment appropriate for children. i would choose not to go to a drag act. >> i think that guy there is a. i not choose to go and i would not choose to go and watch him. however, adults watch him. however, if adults want but for want to, that's on them. but for him do it in front of him to do it in front of children is disgusting. and for the mothers be encouraging it the mothers to be encouraging it and fathers to sit by, and for the fathers to sit by, stand let happen, stand by and let that happen, they their children stand by and let that happen, they it's their children stand by and let that happen, they it's a their children stand by and let that happen, they it's a disgrace. children down. it's a disgrace. >> they're doing is >> and what they're doing is they're messing with their heads. know, when children heads. you know, when children are put something are young and you put something overtly of them, are young and you put something ovcauses of them, are young and you put something ovcauses psychological»f them, are young and you put something ovcauses psychological problems i >>i -- >> i don't emma >> i don't think they see it as sexual. it's something >> i don't think they see it as sexual. up it's something >> i don't think they see it as sexual. up in it's something >> i don't think they see it as sexual. up in at's something >> i don't think they see it as sexual. up in a funnynething dressed up in a funny elle edwards trying to come on a bit. i wouldn't walk naked in
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i wouldn't walk around naked in front the time. front of my child all the time. i she's seeing that i don't think she's seeing that as quite possibly. >> sometimes a little dance >> sometimes i do a little dance when i'm getting ready to go out for you compare as >> can you compare you as a mother naked in front of mother walking naked in front of your drag? your child to a drag? >> but also so, rebecca can. >> but also so, rebecca can. >> i wouldn't take my. rebecca can i just clarify, just can i just clarify, can i just clarify, rebecca are you saying because the lgbt clarify, rebecca are you saying becauout the lgbt clarify, rebecca are you saying becauout it, the lgbt clarify, rebecca are you saying becauout it, are the lgbt clarify, rebecca are you saying becauout it, are you he lgbt clarify, rebecca are you saying becauout it, are you sayingt angle out of it, are you saying you would take a six year old child to go and watch von child to go and watch dita von teese was during the day child to go and watch dita von teeswe was during the day child to go and watch dita von teeswe wereis during the day child to go and watch dita von teeswe were somewhere; day child to go and watch dita von teeswe were somewhere that it and we were somewhere that it was happening during the day, then, yes, would. was happening during the day, the perversion>uld. was happening during the day, the perversion is d. was happening during the day, the perversion is fine as long as >> perversion is fine as long as it's during day because it's it's during the day because it's nap and there's and nap time and there's bedtime and this is just terrible. >> no. have seen her act? >> no. have you seen her act? >> no. have you seen her act? >> yeah, i have. i think >> yeah, i have. and i think she's amazing. i don't see any reason take my reason why i would not take my six sons to see them. six year old sons to see them. in reality, child is so in reality, my child is so young, she wouldn't know what's going just glittery going on. it's just glittery lights. year old would lights. and a six year old would be it. that's my major be bored by it. that's my major issue. wouldn't it issue. they wouldn't find it interesting. completely interesting. you are completely wrong to wrong if you speak to psychologist and psychiatrists, they traumatised it they would be traumatised by it will martini will sit nice lady in a martini glass around with a big glass bashing around with a big glittery olive. that's fantastic
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performance. >> it's sexual thing . she's >> it's a sexual thing. she's flipping clothes. she's. flipping off her clothes. she's. she's doing. flipping off her clothes. she's. she'sdon'tg. flipping off her clothes. she's. she'sdon't think i genuinely >> i don't think i genuinely don't see any problem with it. i'd but. i'd be very happy but. >> but but why then do we >> okay but but why then do we have if we follow your lead, why then do we have any censorship for children , children be able for children, children be able to watch , for example? to watch, for example? >> i'd be much more concerned about anything with shooting or violence in 100. i'd be much violence in it. 100. i'd be much more concerned , i suppose, more concerned, i suppose, because, loud noises feel because, like loud noises feel impactful. they're able impactful. and if they're able to follow the narrative of somebody being dead, that feels upsetting. somebody being dead, that feels upsettnaked is a nice thing. being naked is a nice thing. and i follow of fairly i follow the kind of fairly scandi european policy that i think are not think naked bodies are not shameful inherently bad. shameful or inherently bad. i think good to celebrate. think it's good to celebrate. >> talking about >> we're not talking about bodies, nudity, sexualization. >> we're not talking about bocit's nudity, sexualization. >> we're not talking about bocit's sexualised1ualization. >> we're not talking about bocit's sexualised children. 1. absolutely. i just inherently have seen >> i just inherently have seen a lot of burlesque that never feels it feels kitschy and fun and playful and silly, not and playful and silly, but not inherently don't think inherently sexual. i don't think anybody is aroused. >> to lots of drag shows? >> i like drag. >> i don't like drag. >> i don't like drag. >> okay. have you been? >> okay. but have you been? >> okay. but have you been? >> i've been a couple, find. >> do you concede that really at
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the centre of drag is sexual innuendo ? innuendo? >>i innuendo? >> i don't know if it's that i find the pastiche of womanhood a little bit troubling because i feel like it's almost mocking what is to be feminine what it is to be hyper feminine . so like because . so i like burlesque because i felt belongs to women, . so i like burlesque because i felt ielongs to women, . so i like burlesque because i felt i feelgs to women, . so i like burlesque because i felt i feel like» women, . so i like burlesque because i felt i feel like drag1en, . so i like burlesque because i felt i feel like drag is1, . so i like burlesque because i felt i feel like drag is an whereas i feel like drag is an appropriate of sorts and it's consistent of consistent with other kinds of appropriation, find appropriation, which i also find uncomfy able. but i don't think the always inherently the drag is always inherently sexual. a pantomime dame is not inherently mrs. inherently sexual, mrs. doubtfire do people inherently sexual, mrs. doubtficonflate do people inherently sexual, mrs. doubtficonflate pantomime? ple always conflate pantomime? depends with. always conflate pantomime? defdrag. with. always conflate pantomime? defdrag. drag with. always conflate pantomime? defdrag. drag is with. always conflate pantomime? defdrag. drag is adult/ith. >> drag. drag is adult entertainment sexualised entertainment is sexualised content. are content. pantomime dames are a joke, still a man joke, but it's still a man dressed woman with fake dressed up as a woman with fake boobs the problem is boobs dancing. the problem is that a man dressing up as a woman. the is the woman. the problem is the sexualization, gyrating, the thrusting. >> but very often in a pantomime, the pantomime dame >> but very often in a pantdo ime, the pantomime dame >> but very often in a pantdo are, the pantomime dame >> but very often in a pantdo a big he pantomime dame >> but very often in a pantdo a big dance.tomime dame will do a big dance. >> i've never seen gyrating >> i've never seen one gyrating or or i've never seen or thrusting or i've never seen you, absolutely there's you, but absolutely there's a certain gyrating dancing. >> does dancing. >> mrs. doubtfire does a lot of gyrating dancing in mrs. doubtfire. >> dancing? >> dancing? >> i see. i don't think any i don't is talking don't think anyone is talking about cross—dressing . don't about cross—dressing. i don't think is talking think anyone is talking about pantomime it's pantomime dames. i think it's about level of sexual about the level of sexual content in each parent gets to make a decision about what they
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think is appropriate for that child. >> that's an inappropriate. >> that's an inappropriate. >> do think this is where >> but i do think this is where the left can be very odd the liberal left can be very odd because a strip because is certainly a strip show or butlers in the buff or something like that. it just wouldn't be allowed in front of kids. >> i think that they are sacrificed their children's mental well—being in order to show some kind of political ideology and that really offends it's genuinely not that. >> it's that i don't see how it could possibly be harmful. i just fundamentally don't think that. >> okay. >> okay. >> rebecca reed , calvin >> rebecca reed, calvin robinson, tanya buxton, great debate . stand by, because coming debate. stand by, because coming up , it was the story that up, it was the story that divided a nation. the woman who aborted her baby at 34 weeks, almost full term , will soon be almost full term, will soon be released from prison after winning an appeal to have her sentence reduced . so was it the sentence reduced. so was it the right decision? we'll debate that shortly. but next, after backtracking over bogus royal family race claims and the infamous oprah interview, meghan markle has now reportedly tried to distance herself from prince harry's wrecking ball memoir
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spare that threw his and her family under the bus a steam . family under the bus a steam. and royal biographer tom bower live on all that .
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7:00 this evening. gb news the people's . channel kelly keen on people's. channel kelly keen on the way, but it's tom bower time how. >> now. >> and it appears mr and mrs. backtrack are at it again , this backtrack are at it again, this time with meghan markle reportedly feeling regretful
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over harry's hit job memoir spare that threw the royal family under a bus. having already tried distancing themselves from their bogus racism claims in the oprah interview, a royal source now reckons the duchess of sussex has buyer's remorse over harry's book after they were dubbed professional whiners. so tom harwood this does feel a little bit like meghan is trying to distance herself from spare because it was so awful and the americans really turned on her as a result. but what are you heanng? >> well, i'm hearing is that they're facing yet another crisis and the crisis now is really quite profound. they have a crisis of identity, a crisis of purpose and a creeping crisis of purpose and a creeping crisis of fear that they won't have enough cash . i think the real enough cash. i think the real problem for the sussexes is that they really have no idea what they're going to do next. and so what they're really facing is a terrible problem of what work should they do ? what mission should they do? what mission have they got in life, which they always had ? and of course, they always had? and of course, they've had the terrible disappointment about netflix. i
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mean, because what was really interesting last week was while you away that the times you were away that the times reported that they were to reported that they were going to get nomination , an emmy get a nomination, an emmy nomination for their series. but of didn't. as of course, they didn't. as i predicted wouldn't predicted they wouldn't last week. problem is week. and the whole problem is for the problem for them. well, the problem is that people have turned against the sussexes and that was a huge blow them that this rather blow to them that this rather successful in terms of audience and publicity , the netflix and publicity, the netflix series on their lives and their crisis has not been nominated and she hasn't yet been named as he had hoped as a judge in the emmy awards. so creeping all the time is his belief. i think that the sussexes are finding life very difficult. and what's really remarkable is that one never sees a happy family couple with two children in california in montecito or by the beach. they seem to have withdrawn dramatically, and that is , i dramatically, and that is, i think, a symptom of their depression, of their fear that they really don't know what more to do to really establish themselves. and to survive.
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>> so the emmy thing is fascinating, isn't it? >> because remember, that's netflix. so that's right. at the heart of the liberal elite in hollywood . it absolutely would hollywood. it absolutely would have been expected to get onto that shortlist because remember, netflix does a lot of campaign earning for shows like that. so i think maybe, tom, this is the i think maybe, tom, this is the i mean i know we've had spotify and the executives speaking out but this actual evidence now, but this is actual evidence now, isn't just how out of isn't it, of just how out of favour they are in tinseltown? >> and what's interesting is that, course they're that, of course they're publicists were clearly leaking that get an that they were going to get an award. the times award. that's why the times wrongly reported that they had got the award. but what's interesting is that they interesting as well is that they keep suggesting that they've interesting as well is that they kee new suggesting that they've interesting as well is that they kee new netflixting that they've interesting as well is that they kee new netflix projects they've interesting as well is that they kee new netflix projects , hey've interesting as well is that they kee new netflix projects , either got new netflix projects, either harry going to africa to save africa, africa and the and the animals there or meghan going to south africa and examining poverty there. but of course, these aren't proper netflix subjects . they're not going to subjects. they're not going to get a big audience and in the end, it always comes down to the problem they have of their profile or of their who, what do
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they represent, their purpose , they represent, their purpose, their identity. and that i think to their misfortune is that they're now finding it very difficult to assert themselves and maintain themselves as a—list celebrities. of course , a—list celebrities. of course, they never were, but that was their ambition then, and they're just slipping down the pecking order fast . order fast. >> really interesting, isn't it 7 >> really interesting, isn't it ? now, look, tom, dan andrews, he's this bloke who's a bit of a left wing authority in the premier of the australian state of victoria. he's actually pulled out of the 2026 commonwealth games that city was meant to be hosting . it was all meant to be hosting. it was all agreed they'd paid the money and unfortunately tom, this does feel a little bit like a ripoff mexican wave sweeping across australia. not necessarily the people of australia. i don't think they necessarily want it, but the people in power, this hard left government in australia should should king
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charles be worried about this ? charles be worried about this? >> absolutely. this wouldn't have happened in the queen's lifetime and didn't. when they had similar crisis, they had the similar crisis, they quickly found an alternative venue for the games. and this is one the great problems of one of the great problems of charles. he's never really made himself popular in the commonwealth. he hasn't really wanted to travel enough across the commonwealth. but of course the commonwealth. but of course the whole problem does also start with meghan and her accusation that the royal family was racist, which of course struck deep, deep core in the black african countries and in the caribbean , but also gave the caribbean, but also gave grist to the republicans in australia that somehow now the royal family was not as liberal and as accommodating thing as everyone believed . but in the everyone believed. but in the end, i do think this comes down to king charles's leadership, that he has not been able to assert himself as a great commonwealth leader and the great misfortune is that the leadership of the commonwealth under patricia scotland is deeply contaminated. the secretariat is always very
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controversial and somehow under the queen, who is passionate about the commonwealth, the late queen, the late queen, there was always, always a great loyalty and that has disappeared. well i've been thinking about this, tom, this week. >> it really feels like there has a shift, because has been a shift, because the remarkable queen remarkable thing about the queen and include the late and i also include the late queen sorry, and i also include prince philip part of it, is prince philip as part of it, is that matter their age, no that no matter their age, no matter their health, they remained the undisputed stars of the royal family. i guess maybe the royal family. i guess maybe the only era where you could say that changed was in the 1990s with princess diana through the rest of the late queen's reign . rest of the late queen's reign. she was front and centre. there's been a real change over the last couple of months. we saw it at wimbledon over the weekend. we're actually see william and kate and their young family and now the out and out international stars of the royal family. and it does pose a bit of a problem for charles and camilla doesn't it? >> well, i do think it's a
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problem for them, because i don't think they want to be front of stage. i think they've had enough. i think as i've explained several times in our program, that camilla really is too tired she doesn't want too tired and she doesn't want too tired and she doesn't want to be an active health is health. >> and she really is struggling, isn't it? >> and i think king charles also , likes the title, , he is not he likes the title, but he doesn't want to do the hard . but he doesn't want to do the harand . which the queen >> and his which the queen always the late queen always did, the late queen always did, the late queen always did. always did, the late queen alwandiid. always did, the late queen alwand the queen always did. and >> and the queen always did. and he been very self he has always been very self indulgent. for his indulgent. he works hard for his causes, every cause, causes, but not for every cause, and when duty demands it. and not when duty demands it. and i think that's why they pushed william to the pushed william and kate to the front. they are a huge, attractive couple. i mean, when i saw kate wimbledon , i saw i saw kate at wimbledon, i saw meghan your heart she meghan eat your heart out. she was just fantastic. and her children were terrific, too. but of course, it does create a problem for the commonwealth games. it creates a problem for britain's identity that somehow you have the prince of wales. who's to some extent acting as king and i think we saw that at the coronation if you remember how we revealed that when the
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newly crowned queen left the abbey, people did not, in the most important part, nave bow and curtsy to her. she is challenged . and i think the king challenged. and i think the king is as well. and he needs to worry a bit about that, about his own status and loyalty to the crown. >> yeah . yeah. it's fascinating, >> yeah. yeah. it's fascinating, isn't ? but i certainly think isn't it? but i certainly think australia is a big worry at the moment. >> well, it is. i mean australia of course, has always had this huge by the way thing. >> shame on shame on dan andrews. i mean, he's a really terrible bloke, by the way. he's a terrible bloke. he did terrible over the covid terrible things over the covid pandemic, on for pandemic, but shame on him for signing up his state. you know, the state was all signed up because the commonwealth games is a really important thing. i'm a big believer it, very a big believer in it, very important commonwealth important for commonwealth relations, important for commonwealth relationcountries, very african countries, very important for of sports important for lots of sports that don't get it into the olympic games to and pull out and just cannot be bothered. and just say cannot be bothered. i think it's disgraceful . i just think it's disgraceful. >> well, not only pulled out without . yeah. and what without notice. yeah. and what he really doing to thousands he really is doing to thousands of athletes threats now or
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of athletes the threats now or thousands who are thousands of athletes who are training for that event. it really is a shocking thing. >> you know what? couldn't >> do you know what? couldn't the king step in? i mean, isn't this an opportunity for the king to actually put his money where his mouth is with william using the duchy funds and actually say, we'll stage it in the. >> well, i think i think it's also for the government. i mean, the british government the commonwealth is hugely important. the queen, late important. the queen, the late queen had a word with queen would have had a word with the let's see if the prime minister. let's see if king the same, save king charles does the same, save the commonwealth games. >> king charles it. come on, >> king charles do it. come on, you can afford it. tom bower, our king of the royals. thank you so much. we're going to have more tomorrow's newspaper more of tomorrow's newspaper front few front pages coming up in a few moments. plus, women's rights activist kelly she's activist kelly keene. she's uncanceled. first, though, the weather warm feeling weather, that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast that it's been a damp day once again
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across many central areas , the across many central areas, the rain, though, does ease overnight clear spells overnight with clear spells emerging, but there will be further showers arriving on wednesday. we've had a feature move through during tuesday that's pulling away into the nonh that's pulling away into the north sea at the moment and taking its rain with it, although it will take a while for eastern parts of the uk to be clear rain and showers be clear of rain and showers elsewhere . lots of cloud elsewhere. lots of cloud remaining, but the clearest skies will be across scotland and northern ireland, albeit with a few showers into the north—west and temperatures where clear skies where we get the clear skies dipping low double dipping into the low double figures high single figures. mid to high single figures. mid to high single figures . a milder night to come, figures. a milder night to come, though, the south, 15 16 though, in the south, 15 or 16 celsius up on celsius as we wake up on wednesday. still a lot of wednesday. and still a lot of cloud around for eastern and central east wales central england, east wales and some showers . but more widely some showers. but more widely into the afternoon, we're going to see a mix of sunny spells and showers. the heaviest downpours will england will be across eastern england central scotland, central and eastern scotland, the driest weather will be towards wales the south—west, towards wales in the south—west, 20 possibly 23 celsius in the 20 to possibly 23 celsius in the south 1819 for scotland and
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northern ireland. fast forward to thursday and it's a bright start for many, a cool start to the day . but quite quickly we'll the day. but quite quickly we'll see the cloud build and we'll see the cloud build and we'll see showers developing once again. this time, the heaviest downpours will be across central areas . a good of avoiding areas. a good chance of avoiding showers in some places and staying dry. fewer showers on friday before wetter weather arrives for the weekend . arrives for the weekend. >> that warm feeling inside aside from boxt boilers is proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> now coming up at uncancelled it's been five years since women's rights activist kelly j. keane first raised eyebrows with her adult human female t shirt. so after half a decade of campaigning against creeping trans , including a trans ideology, including a brutal of abuse against brutal campaign of abuse against her, where does the debate go next? she's live shortly. but first, in the media buzz, the story that's divided a nation . story that's divided a nation. the woman who aborted her baby at 34 weeks, almost full term , at 34 weeks, almost full term, will soon be released from
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prison after getting her sentence reduced at the court of appeal. so was the right call . appeal. so was the right call. my appeal. so was the right call. my panel are very my superstar panel are very divided on this live straight after the .
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radio. >> let's return to tomorrow's newsnight now and our mediabuzz more front pages have been delivered. lots with nigel farage on actually tonight. but first, the daily express , which first, the daily express, which leads with rishi sunak's warning that illegal migrants to britain face the toughest ever laws after he won his battle to squeeze the small boats bill through parliament. the daily mirror. oh goodness me. goodness gracious me. this is what i like to call fear , right? but burning to call fear, right? but burning up, they say with a yellow headline. here's farage, though . this is the front page we want to see the daily telegraph splashing on the shocking admission that the gb news
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presenter's bank account was shut down coutts, he shut down by coutts, as he doesn't align the bank's doesn't align with the bank's value . that was after nigel blew value. that was after nigel blew their previous lies out of the water by exposing coutts water by exposing the coutts files news earlier files on gb news earlier tonight. of course he was tonight. and of course he was with us earlier in the show too. daily also leading on that daily mail also leading on that shocking revelation . oh, my shocking revelation. oh, my superstar back with me superstar panel. back with me now, top broadcaster tanya buxton, the gb news presenter , buxton, the gb news presenter, the reverend calvin robinson, and the broadcaster rebecca reid . now, it was a story that divided the nation, but the woman who was previously jailed for aborting her unborn child at 34 weeks, almost full term , will 34 weeks, almost full term, will be released from prison after having her sentence reduced . so having her sentence reduced. so arlene foster she went down for 28 months for illegally taking abortion tablets to end her pregnancy . during lockdown. she pregnancy. during lockdown. she obtained the pills by telling the british pregnancy advisory service that she was only seven weeks gone and still within the 24 week legal limit , she was not 24 week legal limit, she was not deemed to be suffering any mental health problems at the time . the mother of three won
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time. the mother of three won her case at the court of appeal. today and will soon be released after having her sentence reduced to 14 months. so this is a very divisive subject . but a very divisive subject. but reverend , you have strong views reverend, you have strong views on abortion. don't you? but i mean, should this woman have stayed locked up when she's got a family? >> i think most criminals should stay locked up for full stay locked up for their full sentence i we're letting sentence. i think we're letting them and it's them out far too early. and it's not a deterrent to not really a deterrent to getting locked up anymore. but, you know, from show, you know, from my show, i get a lot people writing to talk lot of people writing in to talk about of having had lot of people writing in to talk ab
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place. and actually, quite often the or whether to have place. and actually, quite often the or not. whether to have place. and actually, quite often the or not. in whether to have place. and actually, quite often the or not. in the her to have place. and actually, quite often the or not. in the first 0 have place. and actually, quite often the or not. in the first place, sex or not. in the first place, because people who are pro abortion will say it's because of because of rape. of incest, it's because of rape. these situations, we these extreme situations, we do need addressed. need to be addressed. absolutely. do. absolutely. of course they do. but have over 200,000 but we have over 200,000 abortions in this country every single used as single year. it's being used as a it's not being a contraceptive. it's not being used these extreme used in these extreme circumstances. used in these extreme circu say ances. used in these extreme circu say we es. used in these extreme circu say we have to have used in these extreme circusay we have to have legal that say we have to have legal abortion for these circumstances, , okay, circumstances, i'd say, okay, would allow abortion for would you allow abortion for only these situations? would you remove for the people that remove it for the people that think it is choice because think it is a choice because they to the pleasure they want to seek the pleasure of not have the of life and not have the consequences of life and not have the con rebecca, s of life and not have the con rebecca, you say she should >> rebecca, you say she should be released. she should be. >> we're >> i mean, i think that we're talking things talking about two things here. abortion broad spectrum abortion is a broad spectrum concept in concept and abortion in this specific scenario. in terms of what calvin about abortion, what calvin said about abortion, i've had an abortion, so i understand actually happens understand what actually happens for me, was the right for me, it was the right decision. and statistically , the decision. and statistically, the research shows around 90% research shows that around 90% of regret their of women don't regret their abortion. right abortion. it was the right choice at right choice for them at the right time guarantee that time. i would guarantee that anybody had one would anybody who's had one would not use contraception. it's use it as contraception. it's not a nice day out. you can't guarantee because many guarantee certainty because many people do. you can't guarantee if abortion. if you have had an abortion. i
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can it is honestly not can tell you it is honestly not what compared what you would choose compared to other other people celebrate it. the that it. i celebrate the fact that women right to make the women have the right to make the choice. nobody celebrating women have the right to make the cho visceral. �*dy celebrating the visceral. >> that your >> there are people that do your body only speak for body and you can only speak for yourself. body and you can only speak for youthere people that >> there are people that actively many actively celebrate how many abortions they've had and see it as thing. as a good thing. >> so if you're talking about the shout about abortion the shout about your abortion campaign is about the idea campaign that is about the idea of trying to destigmatize the having of trying to destigmatize the havi'm talking the people of trying to destigmatize the havi printlking the people of trying to destigmatize the havi print t.ing the people of trying to destigmatize the havi print t shirts the people of trying to destigmatize the havi print t shirts andthe people of trying to destigmatize the havi print t shirts and walk aople of trying to destigmatize the havi print t shirts and walk down who print t shirts and walk down to green saying, i've had 34 >> green saying, i've had 34 abortions, have people that abortions, have more people that celebrate, actively celebrate. >> tiny , tiny, tiny. >> that is a tiny, tiny, tiny. >> that is a tiny, tiny, tiny. >> you said nobody. i'm saying that's >> you said nobody. i'm saying tha okay? nobody was an >> okay? nobody was an overstatement. vast, overstatement. the vast, vast, vast people do not vast majority of people do not have abortion because it is have an abortion because it is easy it is fun, but easy or because it is fun, but because is the necessary because it is the necessary thing at the moment in this specific case woman, specific case of a woman, 34 weeks vanishingly weeks that is vanishingly infinitesimally rare. the vast , infinitesimally rare. the vast, vast, vast, vast, vast majority happen before 24 weeks because apart from anything even apart from anything else, even if a selfish if you were just a selfish person, a much less person, it's a much less harrowing are harrowing process. if you are five weeks and you're five weeks pregnant and you're talking about a zygote than if you are 34 weeks pregnant, and that full size, full term
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baby. >> where do you stand on this one? >> soi one? >> so i think standing right >> so i think i'm standing right in middle of them because in the middle of them because i whereas a woman whereas you think that a woman should to have should be allowed to have an abortion term, you don't abortion full term, you don't believe abortions. believe believe in abortions. i believe that. course, woman should that. of course, a woman should have choice to have have a choice to have an abortion, a set abortion, but it should be a set period. absolutely should period. it absolutely should be a so cut down. period. it absolutely should be a but» cut down. period. it absolutely should be a but ith down. period. it absolutely should be a but in this»wn. period. it absolutely should be a but in this case, with this >> but in this case, with this woman during lockdown and nobody's about that. and %“ % the things >> and that's one of the things to during when to me is during lockdown, when she's when they started sending out willy nilly, out abortion pills willy nilly, well, out well, they're sending out abortion willy nilly. not well, they're sending out aborthat, willy nilly. not well, they're sending out aborthat, shey nilly. not well, they're sending out aborthat, shey nilly. a ot just that, but she was in a situation i think, wasn't she, with that was not the with a partner that was not the father has father of her children. she has an autistic so there was an autistic child. so there was so we can't take the so you know, we can't take the lockdown element out of this. and i don't i'm glad and therefore, i don't i'm glad she's out of prison. glad she's out of prison. i'm glad she's out of prison. i'm glad she's her children. she's out of prison. i'm glad sheand her children. she's out of prison. i'm glad sheand her the dren. she's out of prison. i'm glad sheand herthe main thing, >> and that's the main thing, isn't children, her isn't it? her children, her her alive need mother alive children need their mother at really, at home. the only people really, really punished, really really being punished, really were need their mother. >> but the argument doesn't stand up because could break stand up because she could break any and have to jail. any law and have to go to jail. you could say, well, her children need her. >> laws. >> i wouldn't break laws. i probably wouldn't send the vast majority. >> i've said the majority
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>> i've said the vast majority a lot. majority of women >> i've said the vast majority a lot. have majority of women >> i've said the vast majority a lot. have children ty of women >> i've said the vast majority a lot. have children i! of women >> i've said the vast majority a lot. have children i wouldn'ten who have children i wouldn't send would we send to prison or i would we don't a punitive system. if don't have a punitive system. if you are not if i would say if your crime is not to do with the abuse endangerment abuse or endangerment of children, should abuse or endangerment of chi able , should abuse or endangerment of chi able to should abuse or endangerment of chi able to wait should abuse or endangerment of chi able to wait your should be able to wait until your children are adult and then serve your sentence later, literally, mother literally, because the mother commit literally, because the mother con but don't, though >> but but they don't, though they probably what they probably they what percentage of what percentage of prisoners country are percentage of what percentage of prisoneito country are percentage of what percentage of prisoneito start country are percentage of what percentage of prisoneito start with?try are women to start with? >> like infinitesimally >> it's like infinitesimally tiny. the majority of women don't ones don't do crime. and the ones who do, often of being do, it's often because of being in relationship to somebody in a relationship to somebody who makes them do drug related crimes. system crimes. the crime system in this country about country is not really about women, it's particularly not women, and it's particularly not about women with children. and children mum be children need their mum to be around i would say the mothers >> okay. i would say the mothers need to not commit crimes. >> good debate. good debate. important one. now he's the wokeist who's wokeist man in football who's currently one of the biggest donors oil but donors to just stop oil but aren't content with bankrolling eco terrorists. dale vince is virtue new virtue signalling plunged to new depths. a woman as first depths. we need a woman as first team his league two team manager at his league two club green rovers. the club forest green rovers. the only he went on to only problem is he went on to replace her with a man just 14 days later. so this is the moment former aston villa and
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england ace gabby agbonlahor slammed vince as an attention seeking . seeking. >> if i'm being brutally honest, i feel that the chairman of forest green is an attention seeking >> wow. i feel that he loves the limelight. >> it was obviously a pr stunt. >> it was obviously a pr stunt. >> he had no , um. >> he had no, um. >> he had no, um. >> he had no, um. >> he was never going to give her the job. >> when the season started, it was just a pr stunt. give her a couple of weeks, sort of an overnight job, and then bring in someone that he was probably looking for from the start . looking for from the start. >> vince paraded hannah dingle around the media and lapped up the plaudits for sparking a landmark occasion in men's football. just like the echo losers he backs turns out he's just another champagne quaffing hypocrite rebekah reed calvin robinson, tanya buxton do stand by because coming up, can you guess which controversial social media star has been nominated for a greatest britain union jack award for saying britain should become fully islamic? i'll reveal all shortly, but in
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uncanceled, it's been five years since women's rights activist kelly j. keane first made waves with her iconic adult human female t shirt and the trans debate has raged wildly during that time. so what's store that time. so what's in store for the next half decade? kelly j. keane you don't see her anywhere do you? she's anywhere else, do you? she's live in just two minutes time .
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time now for uncanceled . and time now for uncanceled. and this is where britain's top commentators speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture sweeping the rest of the media. now, remember this trans activist on people to activist who called on people to punch a terf ? i was going to punch a terf? i was going to come here and be really fluffy and be really nice and say, yeah, be really lovely and queer and gay. >> no . if you see a terf punch >> no. if you see a terf punch him enough .
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him enough. >> well, sarah jane barker, who we've just seen there, has now been recalled to prison for breaching licence conditions and charged with a public order offence for that stunt at a trans pride event in london. it comes as controversial. us transformer thomas was transformer lia thomas was pictured with a provocative antifa shirt reading antifa super soldier in a social media post. well, coincidentally, someone else who raised eyebrows with a humblet someone else who raised eyebrows with a humble t shirt five years ago was women's rights activist kelly j. keane, whose adult human female garb there. she's got it on sparked a half decade battle to protect females from creeping trans ideology , i'm creeping trans ideology, i'm delighted to say. she joins me now. and kelly, let's be honest about it . now. and kelly, let's be honest about it. this segment is called uncancelled . and in the past uncancelled. and in the past five years, you have been cancelled from the vast bulk of the mainstream media. i would argue, though, more people than ever now back your campaign . ever now back your campaign. yeah, well ,
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ever now back your campaign. yeah, well, it's amazing if you keep telling the truth and you repeat it without fear that eventually people catch on and feel that they can also speak the truth . the truth. >> and i think that's something that i really have strived to do right from the off. i don't use preferred pronouns or lie about people's sex. i don't pretend that an act of kindness is to pretend that i see something in front of me that i don't see. and we create space for women to feel that they can also. well, anybody really . but majority of anybody really. but majority of everything that i do is women centred so that women feel that they can actually speak the truth without fear in the public square. and if they don't feel that they can utter the words as we ask them to be the billboard because was obviously banned . as because was obviously banned. as soon as i put my first billboard up, would allow me to put up, nobody would allow me to put a billboard such a billboard up with such a hateful, terrible message as this t shirt. >> meanwhile, kelly j. i'd say the other side and we saw it with sarah jane barker. there are almost get a pass almost seem to get a free pass. i mean
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you were violently attacked in new zealand. i don't believe that there was any action taken against that individual . against that individual. initially, the police weren't going to do anything to sarah jane barker until it became political will and the home secretary weighed in. yeah well, when it comes to the man that poured tomato soup on my head , poured tomato soup on my head, he is. >> initially they were going to totally dismiss it . and he's totally dismiss it. and he's still trying for a dismissal, but that is to going a first heanng but that is to going a first hearing on the 20th of september. so as long as chris hipkins government let me in, i'll be going back to new zealand because i feel that would be so much fun. oh really ? >> 7- >> so, so, 7_ >> so, so, so, ?_ >> so, so, so, so ? >> so, so, so, so tell me 7 >> so, so, so, so tell me about that. so. so you're going to go back. you're to going do it again. >> i yeah. i think , look, >> i am, yeah. i think, look, there's a lot of maori women that i met and i apologise if i haven't pronounced that properly, but there's of properly, but there's a lot of women in. thanks so much .
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women in. um, thanks so much. um, there's a lot of women in new zealand who have been so badly let down the fact that that could have happened the way it did on that day, that the police were sort of on the outskirts of the park. and then it reported in new zealand it was reported in new zealand media, have to say, and media, which i have to say, and we give them good run for we give them a good run for their money, but i think they are amongst the worst in the western world. um, well, you see how they just. yeah you see how shocked chris hipkins was when a journalist actually asked him. >> that's the prime minister, by the way, who replaced jacinda ardern, asked ardern, and a journalist asked him, what's woman? and you'd him, what's a woman? and you'd think he'd just been to think he'd just been asked to recite the quantum physics textbook. know, he literally textbook. you know, he literally armed and armoured had no armed and armoured and had no answer said, you're going answer and said, you're going to have back me. it's have to come back to me. it's astonishing. is. it is astonishing. it is. it is astonishing. it is. it is astonishing. you know why? astonishing. but you know why? you why woke folk? you know why these woke folk? kelly know that they will kelly they know that they will be cancelled own tribe be cancelled by their own tribe if stay biological if they stay biological realities. that's where we're at. >> well, yeah, but i just feel this stuff is contagious. so the more we lie and the more we
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pretend that we move over for people's feelings over facts. um the more everybody has to do it. which is why standing for women and party of women and we're just waiting for our application to be accepted. but the political party of party of women is just starting with this lie about biological sex. but really, it is the it's the most fundamental truth which has been lied about, which is that a woman can have a penis and a man can be a woman. and anyone can just say that they are exactly what they want. and the next minute we all have to go along with the lie. and so i'm so excited where we're going. i had noidea excited where we're going. i had no idea that when i sold that first t shirt and some stickers five years ago, i, i'd naively thought, dan, that we would put this billboard up and everyone would go, oh my goodness, of course, of course. it's an adult human . what a silly human female. what a silly thing. terrible. we've all thing. how terrible. we've all been over, right , well done. been all over, right, well done. let's move along with the truth
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. it didn't . um, and clearly, it didn't quite work like that . quite work like that. >> no, indeed. kelly keane, thank you so much . great to have thank you so much. great to have you uncancelled tonight . right. you uncancelled tonight. right. but it's time now to reveal tonight's greatest britain union acas . the superstar panel acas. the superstar panel returned. tanya buxton, your nominee for greatest britain. yes greatest britain first, please. >> so my greatest britain there it is. guy that attacked the just stop oil guys got them out of the way and tried to drive through and he successfully drove through. i think had to drove through. i think he had to get his car 3 or 4 times, get out of his car 3 or 4 times, but he did it again again. but he did it again and again. and what should and that's what everyone should be doing. sorry, i'm not advocating is not the advocating that this is not the channel it, but channel advocating it, but if there's stop person there's a just stop oil person stopping getting somewhere stopping me getting somewhere i need doing exactly. >> look out, out. calvin >> look out, look out. calvin robinson, your greatest britain nominee. >> badenoch pushing >> kemi badenoch mp for pushing back the trans guidance back against the trans guidance in schools and actually taking on the education secretary. someone thank you, someone needed to so thank you, kimmy. and rebecca reid. kimmy. an and rebecca reid. >> who are you going with is your greatest britain the court
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of reduced the of appeal judges who reduced the sentence so that the woman carla foster who terminated at 34 weeks is able to be at home with her children while i would i would like to see a world where that never happens again. >> the important thing is that those children that have their mum what they mum back, which is what they need, not the need, is taylor swift not in the news something. news this week or something. taylor swift always in the news. calvin i try vary things. >> p- w— >> uh, look, i've got to go with tanya. i've got go with tanya. i've got to go with tanya. i've got to go with tanya. i've got to go with tanya. i love the fight back against the just stop mob. against the just stop oil mob. i love buxton , your love it. tanya buxton, your union nominee, please . union jackass nominee, please. >> has to be the bbc. >> it just has to be the bbc. i mean, when are they going to get it? nobody wants to pay for them any don't they any more. why don't they just trot quietly and put trot off quietly and put themselves up for subscription? they'll people do they'll see how many people do not want to watch and not want to watch them and that'll end of that. that'll be the end of that. >> scrap poll tax. exactly >> scrap the poll tax. exactly scrap the poll tax. calvin robinson, your nominee, andrew tate, just for his barbaric tate, not just for his barbaric attitude but attitude towards women, but because he tweeted that britain he wait for britain to he can't wait for britain to become a fully islamic country. >> that's a disgusting >> i think that's a disgusting attitude have.
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attitude to have. >> calvin it's an interesting one lot of folk would one because a lot of folk would have thought you and andrew have thought that you and andrew tate aligned on. not at tate were aligned on. not at all. >> no, because calvin is not an evil person. thank you . evil person. oh, thank you. >> calvin. >> but you're not calvin. >> but you're not calvin. >> he defines toxic masculinity on some issues. he takes masculinity and makes it toxic. his attitude towards women is disgusting. he's not a gentleman, and he needs to find christ. tanya, do you agree? >> i do, actually. i do. i mean, i think it's such a shame that we can't find any decent young role models our men role models for our young men because woke and because they're all woke and ridiculous. the ridiculous. but he is not the suv- ridiculous. but he is not the guy. he's not the guy. >> men are reaching out >> young men are reaching out for they for masculinity wherever they can finding can find it, and they're finding it it's a great it in him. and it's a great shame he's leading shame because he's leading people true because there are >> it's true because there are great things about being masculine. are great masculine. there are great things and things about being a man, and he corrupts that. yeah. >> and rebecca who's >> and rebecca reid, who's your union? jack esther dale. >> trying to take all >> vince for trying to take all the glory for hiring female the glory for hiring a female manager rid of manager and then getting rid of her i don't her after two weeks. i don't know football, know much about football, but i'm you turn a team i'm not sure you can turn a team around two weeks. around in two weeks. >> yeah, so his stunt backfire badly on him. >> and very common >> yeah. and it's a very common thing women. it happens
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thing to do to women. it happens a lot in corporate jobs. you put a lot in corporate jobs. you put a woman the and when a woman at the top and then when she doesn't fix it, immediately gone. >> okay. i have to say, don't put in the first place. >> is that what you're saying? >> is that what you're saying? >> that what you're saying? no >> i'll say, though, is getting the because as i the double win because as i spoke in my digest at the spoke about in my digest at the top of the show, rishi sunak has a chance save government top of the show, rishi sunak has a heince save government top of the show, rishi sunak has a he actuallyave government top of the show, rishi sunak has a he actuallyave preparediment if he actually was prepared to stop boats, if he was stop the boats, if he was prepared to cut taxes and if he was prepared, imagine that. imagine he was going to the imagine if he was going to the election saying, i will election and saying, i will scrap the tax. will not scrap the poll tax. you will not have pay the licence fee. have to pay the bbc licence fee. look, i don't think it would turn it around as one policy, but i think it would be the start a fight back. start of a fight back. tanya buxton, robinson. rebecca buxton, calvin robinson. rebecca reed, you thank reed, thank you so much. thank you to you for your company tonight. next up, it's headliners with their irreverent take on tomorrow's newspaper front pages . good night. front pages. good night. >> sorry, the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast. it's been a damp day once again across many central areas. the rain, though, does ease overnight with clear spells emerging , though, does ease overnight with clear spells emerging, but though, does ease overnight with clear spells emerging , but there clear spells emerging, but there will be further showers arriving on wednesday. we've had a feature move through during tuesday that's pulling away into the north sea at the moment and taking its rain with it, although it will take a while for eastern parts of the uk to be clear of rain and showers elsewhere , lots of cloud elsewhere, lots of cloud remaining, but the clearest skies will be across scotland and northern ireland, albeit with a few showers into the north—west and temperatures where clear skies where we get the clear skies dipping low double dipping into the low double figures mid to high single figures mid to high single figures . a milder night to come, figures. a milder night to come, though, the south, 16 though, in the south, 15 or 16 celsius as wake up on celsius as we wake up on wednesday. and still a lot of cloud around for eastern and central east wales and central england, east wales and some , more widely some showers, but more widely into the afternoon, we're going to see a mix of sunny spells and showers. the heaviest downpours will eastern
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will be across eastern england central scotland, central and eastern scotland, the weather will be the driest weather will be towards wales in the south—west, 20 possibly 23 celsius in the 20 to possibly 23 celsius in the south 1819 for scotland and northern ireland. fast forward to thursday and it's a bright start for many, a cool start to the day . but quite quickly we'll the day. but quite quickly we'll see the cloud build and we'll see the cloud build and we'll see showers developing once again. time, the heaviest again. this time, the heaviest downpours will be across central areas . a good chance of avoiding areas. a good chance of avoiding showers in some places and staying dry. fewer showers on friday before wetter weather arrives for the weekend . arrives for the weekend. >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. you're with gb news. the top story tonight. tata the owner of jaguar land rover , is set to announce plans rover, is set to announce plans for a new electric car battery car battery plant in the uk. the so—called for a new electric car battery plant in the uk. the so—called gigafactory, which is to be gigafactory, which is to be built in somerset, could create built in somerset, could create up to 14,000 jobs with up to 14,000 jobs with indication that the site will be indication that the site will be near bridgwater . it's not yet near bridgwater . it's not yet near bridgwater. it's not yet known how much in subsidies the near bridgwater. it's not yet known how much in subsidies the government offered tata to government offered tata to secure the new factory for the uk, but it's thought to run into
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