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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight  GB News  July 31, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST

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>> i'll have a special digest on the woke bank scandal next. then later this hour, nigel joins me live to give an exclusive update on his crusade. also coming up tonight, rishi sunak wages war on eco extreme ism among warnings from labour that it could plunge us back into 1970s style blackouts . it's better for style blackouts. it's better for our energy security not reliant on foreign dictators , better for on foreign dictators, better for jobs, for example , 100,000 jobs, for example, 100,000 supported here in scotland, but also better for the climate. so are the tories right to slow the deranged march to net zero.7 my superstar panel are deeply divided on that. tonight i'm joined by carole malone, stanley johnson an and dame andrea jenkyns is elsewhere sorry david and victoria you've just been marshalled ripped reports claim the beckhams are the latest celeb couple to fall out with the sussexes. so what does that say about meghan's manner.7 well, my royal mail's my lady, colin campbell and dampier have campbell and phil dampier have fascinating exclusive details
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about royal fallout. plus, about the royal fallout. plus, paul burrell gives exclusive insight into prince harry's latest phone hacking claims being savaged by a judge and reports the duke's been sidelined by the woke tobins at his own eco tourism firm . his own eco tourism firm. princess diana's former butler unmissable later in the show . unmissable later in the show. coming up on the clash as carole vorderman continues her reinvention as an anti—tory attack dog . should the attack dog. should the x countdown star be banned from presenting at the bbc, edwina currie takes on narinder kaur and what promises to be a very fiery debate. as always, tomorrow's newspaper front page is hot off the press and fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie uncancelled the show to uncancelled later in the show to . this is wootton. tonight . this is dan wootton. tonight let's go . let's go. you're watching gb news britain's news channel. hope you had a fabulous weekend. thank you for being with us tonight. special digest on why i believe
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the farage de—banking scandal should actually unite the right and the left. that's straight after the news headlines with polly middlehurst . polly middlehurst. >> dan, thank you and good evening to you. the top story from the gb newsroom tonight. the home office has within the last couple of hours confirmed that asylum seekers will not begin being housed on the bibby stockholm accommodation barge tomorrow. as planned. it's currently moored off portland in dorset , but fire safety concerns dorset, but fire safety concerns appear to have prompted this late decision. a home office spokesperson said the vessel is now undergoing final preparations to make sure it complies with all appropriate regulations before the arrival of the first asylum seekers . as of the first asylum seekers. as we understand, boarding on the bibby stockholm may begin on wednesday. instead teachers in england are no longer on strike, as all four teaching unions have
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accepted a 6.5% pay rise. that means all industrial action has now been called off following walkouts in state schools since february in their dispute over pay, february in their dispute over pay, the education secretary gillian keegan, welcomes the decision, saying it brings an end to disruption in classrooms . now the prime minister says allowing 100 new north sea oil and gas licences is into clearly consistent with the uk's target to reach net zero emissions by 2050. rishi sunak explained that even by then the uk would still need oil and gas for 25% of its energy needs. the prime minister says therefore it's better to source fuel from britain rather than shipping it from around the world. the decision, though, has been criticised by environmental campaigners, saying it's dangerously inconsistent with the government's climate policy . a number of conservative mps are calling for the financial conduct authority to be investigated over the de—banking
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of nigel farage coote's account nigel farage says coutts has offered to reinstate his personal and business accounts, but he's determined to find out how many other people in coutts or natwest or any other bank for that matter have had their accounts closed because of their political opinions. a joint letter has been sent to the chancellor from some conservative mps, warning the fca may have inadvertent encouraged the culture within banking that led to the account closure . one of those who signed closure. one of those who signed the letter is iain duncan smith. we've discovered so many people have actually been caught up in this ridiculous nonsense and the fca has done absolutely nothing to stop it and recorrect it , to stop it and recorrect it, which they should have done also , by the way, they then criticise the chancellor in unofficial briefing , saying that unofficial briefing, saying that he essentially shouldn't have been interfering in the banking rules themselves . rules themselves. >> and of course they had to backtrack on that pretty quickly. but that's pretty appalling really. >> sir iain duncan smith there .
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>> sir iain duncan smith there. now in cricket england, have beaten australia by 49 runs in the fifth ashes test to secure a 2—2 series draw. stuart broad got the fairytale finish he wanted by taking the last two wickets as he headed into retirement with a 49 run win. and that meant that ben stokes's side levelled the series all out . for 334 for you with gb news across the uk on your tv, in your car, on your digital radio and now even on your smart speaker by saying play gb news you're with . gb news crusade you're with. gb news crusade against woke bank stealing the right of law abiding citizens businesses or organisations to operate in the modern world. >> he insisted this was not a partisan project. the removal of bafic partisan project. the removal of basic civil liberties for one's opinions, no matter how unpopular or unpalatable to the liberal elite, should equally
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terrify the right and left of british politics. and over the weekend, we got proof of that as both sides of the highly divisive brexit divide came together to reveal how far financial institutions had tried to destroy their campaigning . to destroy their campaigning. first, the bad boys of brexit, andy wigmore and arron banks, plus former brexit party chairman turned reform uk leader richard tice. all revealed their de—banking how had two bank accounts shut down our reform party account was shut down by metro two exactly two years ago. >> i gave a press conference on it and then another digital bank called tide bank. they shut an account of mine. last year. both of them claimed commercial reasons. howard davies and alison rose seemed to have presided over a regime of political ethnic cleansing . political ethnic cleansing. >> not had some very good >> had i not had some very good friends to me, my family friends to help me, my family would absolutely would have been absolutely screwed . screwed. >> but then more interestingly, so too did the arch ramona . gina so too did the arch ramona. gina miller. nigel long, longtime
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nemesis, complained the account for her own pro—eu political party. true and fair, had been closed by monzo and that she and her party had been rejected by nine other financial institute and so allowed us to open the account. >> in november 2021. but then on the 13th of july sent an email through their app saying or a message through their app saying, your account will be closed of september closed on the 13th of september without explanation given, without any explanation given, no no information. just no redress, no information. just it's to closed . it's going to be closed. >> what happened next proved clearly that this is not a partisan issue, but one that should unite the right and the left. when farage came out swinging to support his remainer political enemy that we want to live in a free, democratic society , or we head towards society, or we head towards a model of a chinese communist social credit system and would absolutely support gina miller's right to have a bank account, as i would jeremy corbyn or anybody
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on the extreme left. >> and i hope both of you would as well. this is about the very country that we are supposed to be, and i'm afraid the politicisation of both our pubuc politicisation of both our public and corporate sectors is taking us to a place where we cannot speak or act freely and without to 1000 people every day being banked woke banks who cancel customers for so—called liberal thought crimes must be held to account . held to account. >> but the de—banking scandal proves there is a much wider threat to british free speech and democracy that i've spoken about incessantly since the launch of gb news as it involves social media woke businesses, globalist institutions and the msm . as for nigel, though , major msm. as for nigel, though, major breaking news revealed on gb news tonight. the new coots chief executive has offered him the opportunity to keep both his personal and business accounts, but farage has hit back with his own legal claims for an apology and compensation . ian plus and compensation. ian plus importantly, demands for a face
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to face meeting to discuss the broader point of ordinary folk being cancelled for their political views with the bank. so as he puts it, the fight goes on and he'll reveal more about that fight live on show that fight live on the show later this hour. but i have to say, i'm one of the many thousands who has signed up to his new campaign website account, closed .org, trying to find out why hsbc shuttered my business account with no explanation in this is the most important fight against the establishment since brexit and i think people power is now demanding action. but what do my superstar panel think tonight? top daily express columnist carole malone , the former mep carole malone, the former mep and environmentalist stanley johnson , and former conservative johnson, and former conservative education minister dame andrea jenkyns. carole malone . this is jenkyns. carole malone. this is people power, right? and it's changing things. >> yeah, it is changing . the >> yeah, it is changing. the thing that worries me vaguely, priti patel at the weekend said there should be a royal commission into this and i think that's a really good idea
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because, you know, i'm worried about what's going to happen when farage stops talking about about what's going to happen wh maybe ge stops talking about about what's going to happen wh maybe the ;tops talking about about what's going to happen wh maybe the ;tops ta he1g about about what's going to happen wh maybe the ;tops ta he neverut it. maybe the banks, he never stops talking. well, no. what? he stop talking about he might stop talking about this, but, but i think this, but. but but, but i think what's incredible what's been incredible is that, you even his enemies you know, even his arch enemies have jumped board. there are have jumped on board. there are still left who will still some on the left who will try say that this is a try to say that this is a non—story, just because farage is at the heart of it. but the bottom line is everyone from every walk of life realises how big this is, how dangerous it is. you know, if someone takes your bank account away from it can literally wreck your life and lots of people have found that out as we've just seen on here. >> and also, if it starts with the bank account, where does it end? that's the where does it end? >> absolutely. and i think i mean, it's amazing that gina miller farage are on the miller and farage are on the same who ever would have thought that? thought that. >> but sadly, carol, there are a lot of people on the left who aren't, you know, from emily maitlis rachel reeves to maitlis to rachel reeves to yasmin alibhai—brown to that emily maitlis podcast. >> not believe it. you >> i could not believe it. you know, it just shows how out of touch some of the left are with,
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you the vast majority of you know, the vast majority of people you people in this country. you know, there are, as heard know, there are, as we heard today, is. from today, there is. i think from 2016, there was 50,000 bank accounts a year being closed. now, that's figure something accounts a year being closed. now350,000.gure something accounts a year being closed. now350,000. soe something accounts a year being closed. now350,000. so it'smething accounts a year being closed. now350,000. so it'smetrit's like 350,000. so it's just it's kind a very real kind of this is a very real problem. >> it's a huge, very real problem. stanley johnson, though, it's too though, do you think it's too far wigmore to say that far for andy wigmore to say that this to political ethnic this amounts to political ethnic cleansing ? this amounts to political ethnic cle.yeah, ? this amounts to political ethnic cle.yeah, ethink this is being >> yeah, i think this is being used actually . by people who used actually. by people who have perhaps a sort of fairly rightist agenda to push the banks away from doing things which on other counts , they which on other counts, they ought to be doing. let me give you an example. you years and years ago, i'm talking 40 years ago, i'm talking about 40 or ago when i started or 50 years ago when i started this environmental business, i funded via the european commission. i've got to say, a big study called banking on the biosphere. how could the banks help sustainability and all that sort of thing? worries me sort of thing? what worries me is people who don't like is that people who don't like the we're going, as it were, the way we're going, as it were, environmentally, economically the way we're going, as it were, environon ntally, economically the way we're going, as it were, environon and.y, economically the way we're going, as it were, environon and soeconomically the way we're going, as it were, environon and so forth,nically the way we're going, as it were, environon and so forth, willlly
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the way we're going, as it were, environon and so forth, will use and so on and so forth, will use this as an excuse to get the banks off them. >> why should they have anything to that? to do with that? >> because they'll say >> well, because they'll say it's of having it's all part of having a political view. they'll say banks. >> but hold on, you can't separate out and to manage ours. that's as it should go. that's as far as it should go. >> no, it's as far as it >> no, it's not as far as it should go, carol. that is as should go, carol. if that is as far as it shall go, then we are going to hell. >> let me put an example to you. there some great there are some great organisations that are currently i don't think you think organisations that are currently i are don't think you think organisations that are currently i are don't i hink you think organisations that are currently i are don'ti think'ou think organisations that are currently i are don't i think they'rek they are great. i think they're great that a currently questioning this deranged march to zero, you say? to net zero, would you say? i mean jenkins mean andrea jenkins actually leads them. would you say leads one of them. would you say that they should be de—banking ? that they should be de—banking? >> should i say that we need to be sure that we are being socially responsible and. yes. and that means they should. and that means the banks have to be socially responsible. >> so folks should lose their accounts if they don't support . accounts if they don't support. >> can i come to you for money instead, stanley? >> no, i think that the banks i'm talking about the bankers ought know what they're doing
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ought to know what they're doing because their finances. >> w- e show pl- >> you spoke on the show last week wonder if you've had week and i wonder if you've had any update on this. but but you are personally face facing being debunked being rejected. >> mean, i applied several >> i mean, i applied for several accounts, like mentioned to accounts, like i mentioned to you last week, dan, and it took like nearly 6 to 8 weeks to get a response just to open a bank account rejection. account and it was rejection. and funnily enough, what andy wigmore metro, wigmore just said about metro, i got form for it. well, i got an email today out of the blue saying, oh , we're sorry, we saying, oh, we're sorry, we haven't been in touch. if you want to reapply, please reapply . oh, so i wonder if actually this campaign that farage has started and more and more people coming on board, they're actually starting to take notice and think about it. and just think about it. >> you are a person. >> you know, you are a person. you know, you are a public figure. imagine all the thousands who no thousands of people who have no voice, never heard it . voice, who'd never heard of it. >> subject access. well, they probably request they probably request yeah, they probably request yeah, they probably the probably heard you talk on the show it last week and show about it last week and panicked. stanley will panicked. but. but stanley will actually let andrew respond. so andrea, you are question this march to net zero. you're part
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of a group within the conservative party who go very much against what stanley wants to this he's to do on this front. he's obviously part of the pro—environmental, part of things . things. >> w- p- w on. it's the law >> well, hold on. it's the law of the it is the law of of the land. it is the law of the land. we have a parliamentary act which says laws can questioned. laws can be questioned. >> yeah, have a parliamentary >> yeah, we have a parliamentary act do have target. >> and that target is the law. >> and that target is the law. >> stanley says maybe your organisation should be debunked because views. because of your views. >> that is clearly crazy. >> i mean that is clearly crazy. i mean i'm, i'm a democrat, it's crazy. i think it's crazy that somebody if you've got different political views to the establishment, so to speak, that you can be debunked. i mean, look , we saw even back down to look, we saw even back down to brexit how brexiteers like myself have been silenced and called every name under the sun. we're sick of being silenced. and i think that the community at large are as well. >> and i think what i find amazing about nigel's campaign is that it has gained ground not because it's nigel, but in spite of him, because there were completely people ready to hate him. absolutely. there and it's
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not like the mainstream or not like the mainstream media or the party want to celebrate. >> nigel. they know how much an important this is. but, >> nigel. they know how much an impcbut|t this is. but, >> nigel. they know how much an impcbut , this is. but, >> nigel. they know how much an impcbut , stanley, this is. but, >> nigel. they know how much an impcbut , stanley, youis is. but, >> nigel. they know how much an impc but , stanley, you wantbut, >> nigel. they know how much an impc but , stanley, you want tot, but, but, stanley, you want to respond to andrea there? >> well, i well , i respond to andrea there? >> well, i well, i do. i respond to andrea there? >> well, i well , i do. i spent >> well, i well, i do. i spent quite a long time doing this thing, and i was for a time the environmental adviser or one of the environmental advisors to something called jupiter ecology fund. something called jupiter ecology fund . and what we're trying to fund. and what we're trying to do, we were trying to make sure we funded good quote unquote, good things. now, maybe we've got a distinction got to make a distinction between people's personal accounts of thing accounts and the kind of thing banks finance . do you see what banks finance. do you see what i'm getting at here? >> i what i would be >> i mean, what i would be interested to know, dan, because inoficed interested to know, dan, because i noticed what andrew griffith said bank x not supporting said about bank x not supporting our defence industry. yes, our defence industry. yes, yes, yes. it'd be interesting to yes. and it'd be interesting to know whether they actually it's a threat to national security. yes and whether they actually give to money airbus, which is, you a big part eu funded. you know, a big part eu funded. i wonder if they give money to them. they said two thirds of banks are are defunding or banks now are are defunding or whatever name is.
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whatever the name is. >> defence . yeah. now which >> defence. yeah. now which seems lunacy at a time completely with war. >> exactly. so there's big issues with this. andrea jenkins stan lee johnson, carol wilson. do stand by my superstar panel with me all night. but still to come, matt, at the moment, nigel farage has some big updates on this crusade, including a sensational offer for us to accounts at coutts to be returned. he's going to reveal all soon. my next in the clash has anti—tory attack dog carol vorderman seriously breached bbc impartiality with her impartiality guidelines with her onune impartiality guidelines with her online against the online tirades against the government . and why no one government. and why is no one calling behaviour out calling her behaviour out nannder calling her behaviour out narinder edwina currie narinder kaur edwina currie riled and ready to debate live in the studio next. but what do you think, dan at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. back with the clash straight after this .
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nigel farage and lady colin campbell both on the way this houn campbell both on the way this hour. first, though, the clash and carol vorderman made her name on channel 4 quiz show countdown, recently countdown, but has recently turned radio with turned her hand to radio with a weekly slot on bbc radio wales. listen >> it's a chilling new drama, by the way. we're talking about villains on bbc1 from monday with an all star cast, including you are nathan the queen. >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> the drama. it's the one and
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only owen teale . hello, sir. only owen teale. hello, sir. hello. this horror thriller, this mean wolf. tell us what you're allowed to tell us. it starts on monday, obviously on bbc one. >> well, but how can that show be possible given the highly partisan vorderman who has been revealed for the world to see on social media with a one time maths tsar for david cameron, has pulled a political u—turn and become , as one mp, recently and become, as one mp, recently branded her a celebrity attack dog against the tories in recent weeks, the bbc star has branded the government a, quote, lying bunch of greedy , corrupt, bunch of greedy, corrupt, destructive, hateful , divisive, destructive, hateful, divisive, gaslighting crooks and faced accusations of being a snob after taking aim at conservative mp johnny mercer and his lack of a university degree , leading a university degree, leading mercer's parliamentary colleague craig mckinley, to call for a bbc investigation into her painfully partisan social media post. >> so where do you stand on this? as voters ploughs on with her reinvention as an anti—tory attack dog? should the hard left
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activist be banned from presenting by the bbc? diana gbnews.com vote in our poll at gbnews.com vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. but let's debate this now in the studio with the social commentator nannder with the social commentator narinder kaur kerr and the former conservative minister, edwina currie. now look edwina , edwina currie. now look edwina, i actually have no problem with carol vorderman. seems carol vorderman. she seems to have with me lately. have a problem with me lately. i've always got on really well with the woman. i used to work with the woman. i used to work with at really like her with her at itv. really like her as human being. if she wants as a human being. if she wants to this very partisan to go down this very partisan path and embrace a hard left ideology, good on her. but. and there's a big but. edwina she has to give up her show on bbc radio because it is not sustainable for her to do both. >> well, i think that's absolutely right. i mean, the i do have a problem with carol. >> one is that the way in which she puts her point of view is really quite vicious. yeah, yeah, yeah. we anybody that's beenin yeah, yeah. we anybody that's been in public life knows that. well, you can have an argument, debate about how do things debate about how to do things about policy , but you might
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about policy, but you might actually show some respect to the other person. their point of view may be as valid as yours and actually , in the long run, and actually, in the long run, they may turn out to be right. and you may well turn out to be wrong. you try and treat wrong. so you try and treat people respect. she's people with some respect. she's in gutter. you try and you in the gutter. you try and you try other people how to try and show other people how to behave. she's doing exactly behave. and she's doing exactly the of what she the opposite. much of what she is saying so, so unpleasant, is saying is so, so unpleasant, so nasty and so directed at the individual , so nasty and so directed at the individual, not at the policy that you think , oh, come on, that you think, oh, come on, you're going overboard . she used you're going overboard. she used to a tory. used to be a to be a tory. she used to be a great pal of david cameron. and i remember her being so i don't remember her being so very nasty then about the labour party in the opposition . but the party in the opposition. but the other thing is, as you say , she other thing is, as you say, she currently a live currently has a live presentation on our national taxpayer funded broadcaster. we don't have any choice if we're going to listen to the bbc at all. we don't have any choice about paying for the licence fee. in fact, we can be in deep,
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deep trouble if we don't pay for the licence fee until fairly recently. you could find yourself going jail. yourself going to jail. >> yeah. still can. >> still can. yeah. still can. >> still can. yeah. still can. >> and not right. >> and that's not right. >> and that's not right. >> oh, that's >> brenda. oh, surely that's a fair point. if borders wants to become a hard left campaigner, that's now wants to be that's what she now wants to be absolutely fine. give up your show bbc. just like i show on the bbc. just like i would that would never believe that i should have a show on the bbc. >> disagree with all of that. >> i disagree with all of that. i didn't actually know that she she'd been unpleasant about you. >> changed my >> so that's almost changed my opinion. think carol opinion. however, i think carol vorderman a fantastic job vorderman does a fantastic job in government. in calling out this government. i she's anti tory in calling out this government. i as she's anti tory in calling out this government. i as you e's anti tory in calling out this government. i as you just nti tory in calling out this government. i as you just saw'ory in calling out this government. i as you just saw before. because as you just saw before. well, no , she's anti she's anti. well, no, she's anti she's anti. she's anti. what this government is doing in terms of how vile they've been . she's calling they've been. she's calling people out with evidence once. so and the other thing is she's not actually an employee doesn't have it. >> it's what she says. >> it's what she says. >> but she is calling out this. she is calling out. so many bad things that this government is doing that i applaud her. we need people her. need more people like her. >> should she >> and actually, why should she keep show bbc,
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keep her show on the bbc, though? keep her show on the bbc, tho because show is nothing >> because the show is nothing to do with bbc news. and actually, she's she's she's a freelancer. as a freelancer actually, she's she's she's a f|she'scer. as a freelancer actually, she's she's she's a f|she's how as a freelancer actually, she's she's she's a f|she's how would a freelancer actually, she's she's she's a f|she's how would youeelancer actually, she's she's she's a f|she's how would you howcer actually, she's she's she's a f|she's how would you how would , she's how would you how would you she's farage got you feel if she's farage got a show on bbc radio wales. i also but her show was entertaining and so let me finish her show is entertainment's got nothing to do her tweets or what do with news her tweets or what she with the tory she puts out with the tory government. she's calling out the government tell you the tory government tell you something the tory government tell you sonlething the tory government tell you soni wasg the tory government tell you soni was a presenter on bbc >> i was a presenter on bbc radio five for five years. okay >> and it would have been a political show. >> and i was warned . i was >> and i was warned. i was warned, particularly at election times, to not be political . your times, to not be political. your job is. >> but she hasn't been political. we saw it. she wasn't political, called impartial, and she is impartial on her show. >> be impartial and she is impartial on her show. >> edwina it's an entered tainment show. and actually, i'll tell you what, lady edwina, she's actually just you're just upset. >> edwina do that. you cannot pretend to be impartial on that sofa and impartial on this sofa.
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>> it's called free speech like that in real free speech. edwina it's called free speech. she's entitled to her opinion on her social media. >> but narinder kaurjust be honest, not just be totally honest, not just be totally honest with me. you would not feel the same if nigel farage or jacob rees—mogg got offered a tea time show on bbc radio two. you would not feel the same. none of your left wing mates would feel the same. >> no , that's not true. because >> no, that's not true. because actually if they had their own show and they were in portal and they're not impartial at gb news, we all know that. and i know bbc tax. i know because if nigel farage impartial. so if nigel farage impartial. so if nigel farage impartial. so if nigel farage had his own show on bbc and he wasn't impartial, of course i'd have a problem . but course i'd have a problem. but carol vorderman, it's not a political show. it's an entertainment show person. no, she's not. she is a free citizen . free speech. you can't you can't in one hand say free speech, free speech. and then when someone comes along and
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then argues and says, actually to be honest, calls people out, to be honest, calls people out, to honest, you can't say, to be honest, you can't say, i actually think you can, and i'll tell you why. actually think you can, and i'll tellso u why. actually think you can, and i'll tellso you1y. actually think you can, and i'll tellso you may notice that i was >> so you may notice that i was highly critical of emily maitlis when stay at the when she chose to stay at the bbc and express his left wing opinions night by night on newsnight . the moment that she newsnight. the moment that she left , i newsnight. the moment that she left, i said, you know newsnight. the moment that she left , i said, you know what? left, i said, you know what? good on her. she's made the right decision. she wants to be highly partisan. she can do it on her podcast. >> i've been talking politics on her bbc show. in fact, this is just bashing. it's final word. >> edwina, final word to edwina. >> edwina, final word to edwina. >> this is bbc bashing. >> this is bbc bashing. >> you have to let edwina have the final word. >> the bbc a public service >> the bbc is a public service broadcaster. >> the bbc is a public service broadcaster . there >> the bbc is a public service broadcaster. there are only 1 or 2 in this country. channel 4 is another one, and they have to be impartial and be impartial impartial and to be impartial and they are and and behave as if they are and behave as if they understand what impartiality narinder kaur nannder what impartiality narinder kaur narinder twitter is free. narinder kaur twitter is free. >> was the bbc direct general >> it was the bbc direct general tim davie himself who said all bbc presenters would be judged on what they posted on social
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media as well as what they said is not employed by the bbc. the definition of freelance and it's free speech. >> but look narinder kaur. >> but look narinder kaur. >> edwina kerr. edwina currie. great debate knew it would be bbc told us tonight they wouldn't comment individual wouldn't comment on individual tweets, there is tweets, but stress that there is an ongoing independent review into social media into its existing social media guidance, especially for freelance stuff other words, freelance stuff in other words, they have no answer to this. they the buck they are passing the buck for the but who do you agree the moment. but who do you agree with? should voters be banned from the beeb? from presenting on the beeb? yvonne the email she yvonne this is via the email she writes yes, she should up writes yes, she should give up her her comments are her radio show. her comments are disgusting. she's toxic. trevor writes via twitter i don't agree with or politics, but with her views or politics, but it's individuals judge it's up to individuals to judge for so with for themselves. so he's with nannder for themselves. so he's with narinder from narinder on this. and from graeme, i'd ordinarily say yes, but i cancelled my tv licence a couple of years ago, so technically speaking i'm not entitled to comment. and your verdict is now in. 45% of you agree that voters should be banned from presenting by the bbc. 55% of you going with the free speech champion narinder.
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it's a bit of an upset tonight, but it was a close one. now, princess diana's former confidant, paul burrell, joins me live from exclusive revelation about his legal battle prince harry. plus, battle with prince harry. plus, calvin on stand by, as calvin mckenzie on stand by, as well as nigel farage. first, though, the weather looks like things are heating up. >> bob boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news evening. of weather on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news should be a drier day tomorrow and many places will see some bright or even sunny spells. still quite breezy, however, and not particularly warm. and behind me there's another area of lurking for of low pressure lurking for wednesday . this brought the wednesday. this one brought the wet weather for much of the country today, still fairly soggy this evening. soggy out there this evening. some showers in places some heavy showers in places staying damp across staying pretty damp across eastern and southern scotland through but further through the night. but further south, will see some south, many places will see some lengthy, clear spells . and of lengthy, clear spells. and of course, northern scotland, where it's been dry for most of the
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day. course, the far north, day. of course, the far north, at least it'll stay dry overnight. temperatures dropping to 14 celsius on to to about 13 or 14 celsius on to tuesday . and as said, a drier tuesday. and as i said, a drier day. it doesn't mean completely dry. still a few showers, certainly across the certainly initially across the south—west and quite grey south—west and quite a grey morning england south—west and quite a grey morning outbreaks england south—west and quite a grey morning outbreaks of england south—west and quite a grey morning outbreaks of rainland south—west and quite a grey morning outbreaks of rain and with some outbreaks of rain and they'll only slowly ease off through the day. so it will be quite damp here. of quite damp here. parts of southern seeing some southern scotland seeing some showers northern showers north of northern ireland. said, for ireland. but as i said, for many, be a drier, brighter many, it'll be a drier, brighter day . still a lot of cloud, but a day. still a lot of cloud, but a bit blue sky. we'll see bit of blue sky. we'll see temperatures the temperatures getting into the low the south, low 20s across the south, high teens further north. but then that next low comes in during tuesday into tuesday evening into the southwest. look at this, southwest. and look at this, a spell of heavy coming spell of heavy rain coming in, blustery showers falling on behind unseasonably windy again along the south coast of england. so a wet spell coming in through the middle part of the week with, again, temperatures below average for the time of year. bye for now. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers , proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on gb news
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as . coming up. as. coming up. >> she's done it again . meghan >> she's done it again. meghan markle accused of dumping the beckhams in her latest case of ghosteen as she climbs the social ladder. my royal mail masterminds lady colin campbell and phil dampier with i've got exclusive information on this. you are going to be fascinated by it. first, though, he's the news crusader whose war against the woke banks is taking the nafion the woke banks is taking the nation by storm. nigel farage joins me live to reveal why an independent review into the whole affair will be nothing but a whitewash. oh, and he's been offered his cootes accounts back to nigel is going to reveal all straight after this .
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lady colin campbell and phil dampier on the beckhams. been ghosted by harry and meghan in just a moment. first, though, it is man of the moment. nigel farage and the victories just keep coming after seeing off two chief executives responsible for his discriminatory banking scandal and launching a huge campaign on behalf of tens of thousands of brits who have suffered the treatment, suffered the same treatment, it's tonight that it's been revealed tonight that cootes has sensationally offered nigel his bank accounts back . nigel his bank accounts back. meanwhile, the last fat cat standing amid the row natwest group chairman sir howard davies has stood firm and refused to resign , instead announcing an resign, instead announcing an independent review into nigel's treatment . however, the city
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treatment. however, the city firm he's appointed, travers smith , has led by a man who once smith, has led by a man who once described brexiteers as, quote, racist, xenophobic and nostalgic . the exact same language pretty much that cootes used in internal documents to describe farage himself . so, nigel, is it farage himself. so, nigel, is it fair to say that this probe will be the epitome of a woke wash ? be the epitome of a woke wash? >> yeah, completely and utterly . i mean, what an absolute joke . and how typical of sir howard davies mean. i mean, if ever there was a creature of the establishment , it's there was a creature of the establishment, it's him. with every job he fails , he gets a every job he fails, he gets a new even bigger , more highly new even bigger, more highly paid job. so, yeah, there is no prospect of a decent review. look, you know , thank you to mo look, you know, thank you to mo sayeed, who is the new ceo of coots for saying, you know, have the accounts back . and that's the accounts back. and that's good of him . and i could say, good of him. and i could say, well, that's it. that's absolutely fine. it's all been no problem at all. but actually it has been a problem because they've lied to me. they've traduced me. they have leaked against me. i mean , they have
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against me. i mean, they have treated me absolutely appallingly. and i had to pubush appallingly. and i had to publish defamatory material about myself , which has fed the about myself, which has fed the left wing trolls and others , left wing trolls and others, many accusations that have been buned many accusations that have been buried , frankly, for many years buried, frankly, for many years and years and years. i had to do all of this to prove my case. so ihave all of this to prove my case. so i have today sent a letter , i have today sent a letter, began litigation with coutts natwest to say, look, i want to have a meeting, i want to sit down face to face and find out how this happened , why this how this happened, why this happened. i want you to accept you've broken the law . i want you've broken the law. i want you've broken the law. i want you to accept that you have taken up an inordinate amount of my time. you've cost me a great deal of money in legal fees already , which i've used all the already, which i've used all the way through to make sure that i was dotting the i's way through to make sure that i was dotting the 1's and crossing the t's. but more important than all of that , i want to know how all of that, i want to know how many other people had accounts close at natwest and coutts
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because of their opinions and what can we do to make sure that nothing like this ever happens to anybody else in your banking group again ? what what are you group again? what what are you expecting to hear from them? >> nigel i mean, do you think they'll be open to that ? they'll be open to that? >> but you know, they are so in the wrong. they're so in the wrong. they've been so condemned and their reputation is so damaged and i think they will meet. i've be very, very surprised if they don't meet. and who knows , maybe mr sayeed and who knows, maybe mr sayeed is a, you know, a new broom within coutts let's hope that he is. although with howard davies still in position , you know, as still in position, you know, as chairperson of the overall group, i do have my doubts . chairperson of the overall group, i do have my doubts. but look, you know, i've said from the start i didn't need to go pubuc the start i didn't need to go public on any of this. it was always going to be potentially humiliating and difficult and so some of it has been done. but i felt somewhere in my water there
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was a bigger story here. and what we're learning is there is actually a national de—banking scandal that is going on. up to a thousand accounts are being closed every single day. and most of these people aren't in my position and they haven't got the platform they haven't got the platform they haven't got the opportunity to fight back. so if i can speak up for all of those people, if we can deal with this nonsense, if we can get ultimately to the position where having a bank account, it becomes a right in our country because you can't function otherwise in the 21st century without it. you know, that would be a real victory. and that's where i want to get to. let's get politics out of banking . get politics out of banking. let's get prejudice out of banking , and let's give all of banking, and let's give all of our citizens the opportunity themselves and with their small businesses to flourish . businesses to flourish. >> well, look, nigel, i hope change is coming. i mean, really interesting. dame andrea jenkyns, former conservative education minister, on our superstar panel tonight . last superstar panel tonight. last week revealed that she had
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week she revealed that she had been rejected by three banks in terms of opening up a new account over the weekend . and account over the weekend. and she says metro bank, which is obviously one of the banks that is believed to have shut down accounts for political purposes, including from the reform uk chairman richard tice, the party of which , of course, you're the of which, of course, you're the honorary chair here. she says they've approached her over the weekend and asked her to reapply for her account. so perhaps we are starting to see some of these banks change. >> well, i hope so. dan and it was interesting, you know, grant shapps yesterday saying that his kids had all been refused bank accounts. i mean, isn't it funny, though? all things funny, though? all these things bubble away . it's rather like bubble away. it's rather like the desire to leave the european union . yet the only person who union. yet the only person who ever says it is me, say it, ever says it is me, i say it, and suddenly everybody else says, oh, it's my turn. i'm going to come out to, you know , going to come out to, you know, i'm going to join the i'm going to join the cavalry. um but and yes , of course, i had tonight on
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yes, of course, i had tonight on the programme a local councillor in south west london and his little group of independents who formed a party got it registered with elle.com, done everything right. they can't get a bank account. so yes, the implications for public life and democracy of the pep rules, the politically exposed persons rules are serious, but it goes far wider. far broader than that. there are lots of people out there who have no voice , who out there who have no voice, who are living in fear, living in despair. my website inbox has never been busier and i include in that national referendums winning european elections. and i'm busier on this with more interestingly, cross party support than anything i've ever done before. >> well, i was going to ask you about that, because there are two different reactions from the left, nigel so firstly, you've got the emily maitlis of this world who seem to say, oh, you're just stoking populist division. what was your response
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to her? well, you know, i'm sorry, but i mean, it would be very hard to be anybody more detached from real life than emily maitlis. >> but the truth is, there are plenty of people i mean, the typical email i get today from real people is i often don't agree with you on policy issues, but this is a really important fundamental question of free speech, of democratic traditions . oh, and by the way, you know, my brother's business was shut last year. you know, this reaches out . so, yeah, of reaches out. so, yeah, of course, you going to have some in the media who want to prosecute their career by being against me and appealing to hatred and prejudice. let them do so. actually, many , many do so. actually, many, many people who would not be on my wavelength can see this really , wavelength can see this really, really matters. >> well, yes. >> well, yes. >> and that was where i was going to get to because i spoke about it in my digest today. i thought that there was quite a
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powerful moment when you came out publicly to speak up for gina miller, who, let's be honest , for many years was honest, for many years was really your arch nemesis . you really your arch nemesis. you know, the ultimate ramona. but it shocking that monzo and nine other banks don't want to give her true and fair party an account because, as she says, thatis account because, as she says, that is bad for democracy . that is bad for democracy. >> well, this is why i've launched , you know, this is why launched, you know, this is why i've launched, you know, account closed.org. it's non—political . closed.org. it's non—political. it's for people from across the spectrum who've been closed out. we need to find out the true extent of this. i mean, you know, the mail on sunday got an foi back suggesting that a thousand a day are thousand accounts a day are being down. can you think being closed down. can you think about that? a thousand accounts about that? a thousand accounts a day. um so i think there's a big national scandal here. i hope i've lifted the lid on it. ihope hope i've lifted the lid on it. i hope it leads to a bigger, broader public debate on a variety of levels and genuine reform, cultural reform from within the banks and other
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institutions who've been literally by very extreme organisations and legislative change coming from government that says, look, we all want to stop money laundering, but frankly, these rules are hurting men and women running small businesses . i'm actually quite businesses. i'm actually quite ambitious for this. i really am. >> well , look, i ambitious for this. i really am. >> well, look, i signed up over the weekend aid account closed.org. >> it's a really simple website, very effective and it gives you the information that you need in to order go and challenge the bank. if your account has been shut down. so congratulations , shut down. so congratulations, nigel. of course, both sides of the story as ever on gb news though. and sir howard davies, the natwest group chairman, has said in response to nigel my intention is to continue to lead the board. my understanding is that we do have the full support of our main shareholder the of our main shareholder and the regulators for us to continue to steer forward. steer this bank forward. now coming up in the media, buzz rishi sunak has a licence to drill as he announces approval
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for more than 100 new north nonh for more than 100 new north north sea oil and gas sites. so will the step away from eco insanity prove a ballot box win for the tories ? my superstar for the tories? my superstar panel fired up on that shortly. but next, are the beckhams the biggest victims yet of being marshalled? meghan cuts ties with the celeb power couple after she reportedly dumped their friendship ventures new. so is there an ability to keep relationships going if eventually going to be difficult for her? well, my royal masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier, they have exclusive information to reveal on straight after the .
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break time now for my royal masterminds , lady colin campbell masterminds, lady colin campbell and phil dampier. and a mail on sunday exclusive has reports that global superstars david and victoria beckham are the latest people to be called term
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people to be called a term coined by critics of the duchess of suffolk , essex. for people of suffolk, essex. for people ditched by her with the beckhams said to be furious after they reportedly accused them of leaking stories to the press. now, despite posh and becks attending the couple's royal wedding back in 2018, there was no reciprocation at brooklyn beckham studded wedding or beckham star studded wedding or in miami recently as harry and meghan were notably absent from becks unveiling of new becks grand unveiling of new inter miami footballer lionel messi at an event that featured kim kardashian, serena williams and lebron james so late . see, and lebron james so late. see, you've got some exclusive information on about what went on between the beckhams and the sussexes . don't you . sussexes. don't you. >> well , i was sussexes. don't you. >> well, i was told that, in fact , that meghan didn't markle fact, that meghan didn't markle them they mark held her because is david beckham discnw covered that meghan had been spreading the word that he and his wife
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particularly actually his wife had had been leaking stories about her then and about her sorry . and he was so furious sorry. and he was so furious that he he is the one who has marshalled her. he evidently confirmed , noted harry, and confirmed, noted harry, and effectively told harry, you know, you and your wife can take a flying leap. my wife and i don't need to leak stories about you . and i mean, he evidently you. and i mean, he evidently didn't say. but the implication was, excuse me, we are at least as famous as you . why would we as famous as you. why would we condescend to leak stories about you and, worse, your non—entity of a wife and so this all took place. >> you believe in a conversation in between david and harry is that right? yes. >> that's what i was told. >> that's what i was told. >> wow . okay. phil >> that's what i was told. >> wow. okay. phil dampier , your >> wow. okay. phil dampier, your take on this ? take on this? >> well, i can well believe what lady c saying. >> dan, good evening. i mean,
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the other factor, of course, is that david beckham, i mean, he absolutely worshipped and adored the late queen. i mean, he was a massive of her. so i massive fan of her. so i wouldn't thought he was wouldn't have thought he was terribly about the way terribly happy about the way that harry and meghan treated her. c is her. but i think lady c is right. know, when we look at right. you know, when we look at the arrival of lionel messi at the arrival of lionel messi at the other night serena the other night and serena williams there and the williams was there and the kardashians whatever, you kardashians or whatever, you know, the other around kardashians or whatever, you knowisn't the other around kardashians or whatever, you knowisn't it? other around kardashians or whatever, you knowisn't it? (think around kardashians or whatever, you knowisn't it? (think harryound kardashians or whatever, you knowisn't it? (think harry and now, isn't it? i think harry and meghan the ones are meghan are the ones who are missing they're no missing out because they're no longer with becks, longer associated with becks, posh and becks, who are probably bigger than are now. bigger stars than they are now. so, they're ones so, you know, they're the ones who the connections. who are losing the connections. i you cast our mind i mean, if you cast our mind back five to the to the back five years to the to the wedding and i still can't believe five ago, but believe it's five years ago, but all these people turned up, didn't celebrity didn't they, these celebrity djs. thought, do they djs. and we thought, how do they know all these people? and of course, the is they course, the answer is they didn't. hardly didn't. so it's hardly surprising some of these surprising that some of these so—called friendships haven't lasted indeed. and shame >> no, indeed, indeed. and shame on to on you if you turn up to a wedding having either never met the person or literally having had conversation them once. >> $- $— once. >> look, king charles >> now, look, king charles is scottish taylor told scottish. taylor has told journalists he would be delighted craft kilt for
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delighted to craft a kilt for prince william to wear, despite will's reluctance to follow in the footsteps of his so the footsteps of his father. so king charles, you know, he's always been very fond of kilts. his eldest son, however, avoids , them, despite the , avoids them, despite the family's close links to the country. so lady c, does prince william have a duty now as heir to the throne as the prince of wales to wear a kilt for certain scottish engagements ? scottish engagements? >> well, i would have said yes. as you know, uh , my i mean, my as you know, uh, my i mean, my nephew by marriage is the chief of the clan. campbell which is the largest and biggest clan. there's a protocol in scotland. he highlanders wear kilts. lola anders, do not they wear truths 7 anders, do not they wear truths ? balmoral is in the highland. also the king is the king of scots and prince william will one day be the king of scotland. a part of how he arrived in
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england as king was via the stuart s this, you know . so why stuart s this, you know. so why is he ignoring the fact that he owes as a future king of scots and the he he owes i suppose you'd say respect , but to the you'd say respect, but to the scottish people to wear their national dress because they do. and i mean, i don't expect him to wear it all the time. and in fact the protocol is that you a lowland scot does not wear a kilt and that you really are not supposed to wear a kilts except in the highlands. >> but phil denver i guess. i guess the counterargument this could be part of william's modernisation mission. >> yeah he's been to the highland games in braemar once before wearing a suit. i don't think that went down very well. that was about 15, 20 years ago. yeah, we got the highland games the weekend in september.
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the first weekend in september. i would expect him if he does turn that. think he will have turn that. i think he will have to wear kilt. doesn't like to wear a kilt. he doesn't like wearing i mean, i've got wearing them. i mean, i've got so memories of so many fond memories of covering event and seeing covering that event and seeing the mum and the queen and the queen mum and prince. i'm watching people, the photographers, always photographers, of course, always trying up the kilts trying to get shots up the kilts to if they could get any to see if they could get any crown not that. crown jewels. not that. >> oh, god, you don't want that i >> -- >> okay, exam >> okay, but. but, ladies, seeing phil both agree . uh, seeing phil both agree. uh, william, i'm sorry. like it or not, you're going to be king. you're going to have to grow, grow to love the kilt, i guess. phil dampier, lady c, thank you both so much. we'll speak later in the week. but coming up, prince harry is up to his neck in legal wrangles. but could his potential libellous attack on princess diana's former butler and prove most and confidante prove his most challenging man bidding challenging yet? the man bidding to hold harry to account, paul burrell joins me live for an exclusive update next. in the media buzz, he's got a licence to drill , media buzz, he's got a licence to drill, which includes the industrial scale trolling of just stop oil so has rishi sunak
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scored a winner amongst the electorate after announcing more than 100 new north sea oil and gas licences? my superstar panel are fired up on that. let me tell you, stanley johnson, different end of the spectrum to carole malone and andrew jenkins. we'll have tomorrow's newspaper for you to newspaper front pages for you to hot off the press in mere minutes. don't go anywhere, calvin mackenzie up the next hour as well . hour as well. >> the temperature's rising . >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news evening. weather on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news should be a drier day tomorrow and many places will see some bright or even sunny spells. still quite breezy, however, and not particularly warm. and behind me there's another area of low pressure lurking for wednesday . this of low pressure lurking for wednesday. this one brought of low pressure lurking for wednesday . this one brought the wednesday. this one brought the wet weather for much of the country today, still fairly soggy this evening. soggy out there this evening. some showers in places some heavy showers in places staying damp across
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staying pretty damp across eastern and southern scotland through but further through the night. but further south, see some south, many places will see some lengthy, clear spells . and lengthy, clear spells. and across northern scotland, where it's been dry for most of the day, across the far north, at least it'll stay dry overnight. temperatures dropping to about 13 celsius on to tuesday. 13 or 14 celsius on to tuesday. and as i said, a drier day. it doesn't mean completely dry. still, a few showers, certainly initially the south—west still, a few showers, certainly initi quite the south—west still, a few showers, certainly initi quite grey|e south—west still, a few showers, certainly initi quite grey|e south—over and quite a grey morning over northwest england with some outbreaks they'll outbreaks of rain and they'll only slowly ease off through the day. so it will be quite damp here. southern scotland here. parts of southern scotland seeing north of seeing some showers north of northern but as i said, northern ireland, but as i said, for many, be a drier, for many, it will be a drier, brighter still of brighter day. still a lot of cloud, but bit of blue sky. cloud, but a bit of blue sky. we'll see temperatures getting into the low 20s across the south, teens further south, high teens further north. but that next comes in but then that next low comes in dunng but then that next low comes in during tuesday evening into the southwest. a southwest. and look at this, a spell of heavy rain coming in, blustery showers falling on behind unseasonably windy again along south coast of along the south coast of england. so a wet spell coming in through the middle part of the week with, again, temperatures below average for
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the time of year. bye for now . the time of year. bye for now. >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> 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 at sunak trolls just 0p >> tonight at sunak trolls just op oil on an industrial scale. after years of terrorising britain to demand no new oil and gas licences , the pm hits back gas licences, the pm hits back at the eco menaces with approval for at least 100 new fossil fuel projects in the north sea. better for our energy security not reliant on foreign dictators, better for jobs , for dictators, better for jobs, for example, 100,000 supported here in scotland , but also better for in scotland, but also better for the climate . rishi has also the climate. rishi has also promised to probe dystopian low
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traffic neighbourhoods , while traffic neighbourhoods, while grant shapps warned a labour government would lead to energy blackouts. so the tories right to move away from eco extremism. that's the big debate with my superstar panel . and tonight i'm superstar panel. and tonight i'm joined by carole malone, stanley johnson and dame andrea jenkyns . is also tonight, nigel farage scores another scalp in his de—banking scandal after coote's dramatic hinckley offers his account back . but former fleet account back. but former fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie reveals why the woke rot that inspired nigel's cancellation extends to 1400 other british corporations. he's uncancelled with that shock news later . with that shock news later. meanwhile, prince harry's up to his neck and courtroom wrangles. but could his potentially libellous comments about paul burrell prove the most damaging of all? >> your brother wanted a meeting , but you were firmly against it i >> -- >> the face to face may have come from a voicemail. that's how princess diana's butler and confidante joins me live to give an exclusive update on his legal
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fight with the duke. >> shortly. and are you surprised just 5.7% of crimes were solved last year with suella braverman takes aim at woke cops while the home office mulls using chinese style facial recognition to catch shoplifters . we're going to investigate whether that's a step too far when it comes to our civil liberties in the media. buzz engush liberties in the media. buzz english sporting heroes and a diva singer up for gongs and my greatest britain union jackass to and i'll have the first of tomorrow's newspaper pages tomorrow's newspaper front pages hot press in mere hot off the press in mere moments. though, news moments. first though, news headunes moments. first though, news headlines polly headlines time with polly middlehurst . at dad. middlehurst. at dad. >> thank you good evening. the top story tonight from the newsroom is that nigel farage says the exclusive bank coutts has offered to reinstate his personal and business accounts . personal and business accounts. speaking on the program here on gb news this evening, nigel farage said he's also seeking a full apology from the bank and compensation a number of
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conservative mps today sent a joint letter to the chancellor calling for the financial conduct authority to be investigated over claims it may have inadvertently encouraged culture within banking that led to his account closure . nigel to his account closure. nigel farage has today also sent a legal letter to coutts . legal letter to coutts. >> i want a face to face meeting with the bank's bosses. i want to find out how many other people in coutts or natwest have had accounts closed because of their political opinions and i want to make sure this never happens to anybody else ever again. so the fight goes on. >> nigel farage well the home office has this evening confirmed said that asylum seekers won't begin being housed on the bibby stockholm accommodation barge tomorrow as planned . fire safety concerns planned. fire safety concerns appear to have prompted the decision over the vessel, which is currently moored off portland in dorset, a home office spokesperson said this evening. the vessel is undergoing final
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preparations , actions to ensure preparations, actions to ensure it complies with all appropriate regulations before the arrival of the first asylum seekers in the coming weeks to teachers in england are no longer on strike as all four teaching unions accept . a 6.5% pay rise. that accept. a 6.5% pay rise. that means all industrial action has been called off following walkouts in state schools since february in a dispute over pay the education secretary gillian keegan welcomes the decision, saying it brings an end to disruption in the classroom . the disruption in the classroom. the prime minister's been saying today that allowing 100 new nonh today that allowing 100 new north sea oil and gas licences is entirely consistent with the uk's target to reach net zero emissions by 2050. rishi sunak says that even by then the uk would still need oil and gas for 25% of its energy needs . the 25% of its energy needs. the prime minister says it's better , therefore to source fuel from britain rather than shipping it in from around the world. the
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decision is being criticised by environmental groups, saying it's dangerously inconsistent with the government's climate policy . and lastly in cricket policy. and lastly in cricket england have beaten australia by 49 runs in the fifth ashes test to secure a22 series draw . to secure a22 series draw. stuart broad got the fairy tale finish he wanted by taking the last two wickets as he headed into retirement with a 49 run win and that meant ben stokes's side levelled the series all out . for 334 with gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on the uk on tv in your car, on your digital radio and now on your digital radio and now on your smart speaker. by saying play gb news. back now to dan . play gb news. back now to dan. tomorrow's news tonight. >> now in our mediabuzz first
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front pages are in oil be back the metro leads with sunak announced payment over the environment which we're coming to very shortly. i like this one ihave to very shortly. i like this one i have to say i'm keeping hold of my chopper . that i have to say i'm keeping hold of my chopper. that is i have to say i'm keeping hold of my chopper . that is the i have to say i'm keeping hold of my chopper. that is the daily star's headline as it quips the pm is too special to get the train like the rest of us again in. i'm going to be talking in just a moment about how sunak fought back. i think in a really brilliant way , actually today brilliant way, actually today against the bbc, which of course wants him to spend nine hours on a train in my superstar panel. back with me now, top daily express columnist carole malone, the environmentalist. i'm sure he's on a lot of trains. stan lee johnson and the former conservative education minister, dame andrea jenkyns. now rishi sunak , as you just saw, waged sunak, as you just saw, waged war on not0 obsess sieves and anti motoring maniacs today by announcing 100 new north sea oil and gas licences, as well as a
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review of dystopian low traffic neighbourhoods. while energy secretary grant shapps is warning that labour's tyrannical ban on oil and gas drilling would plunge the country into darkness, the pm describes what a common sense climate plan might look like. it's really important for everyone to recognise that even in 2050, when we are at net zero, it is forecast that around a quarter of our energy needs will still come from oil and gas. that's why technologies like carbon capture and storage are important . capture and storage are important. but what is important then is that we get that oil and gas in the best possible way, and that means getting it from here at home. better for our energy security, not reliant on foreign dictators, for foreign dictators, better for jobs, example, 100,000 jobs, for example, 100,000 support here in support started here in scotland, but also better for the climate . sunak sunak's. also the climate. sunak sunak's. also sending a clear message to eco terrorists group just stop oil. you can't criminalise an industry that provides jobs and heats homes. so carole malone i think this is the right decision politically for rishi sunak to
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move away from what i describe as eco extremism . as eco extremism. >> i think it really is, you know , the north sea oil is no know, the north sea oil is no longer the resource that once was, but if managed carefully , was, but if managed carefully, it could last the uk for the next 30 years. what i what i think is incredible is that for me the definition we're very lucky to have natural resources of our own anyway . but for me of our own anyway. but for me the very definition of stupidity is to ban new oil and gas fields while remaining dependent on foreign imports . it's crazy, you foreign imports. it's crazy, you know, when we've got we've got those resources here. >> it depends on the cost, depends on the cost. >> what i heard today , which >> what i heard today, which kind of made me think of it, i heard an expert talking about how we produce this. you know, we get this oil from from you get north sea oil. but he's saying it's not going to benefit us. this guy said, because we sell most of it to foreign countries, which would be catastrophic, i would think, in the granting those licences catastrophic, i would think, in the gran licencesiose licences catastrophic, i would think, in the gran licences that licences catastrophic, i would think, in the gran licences that were :es the 100 licences that were granted , there should a granted today, there should be a
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proviso that they have to proviso in it that they have to sell at least 60. keep 60% of it here, and sell the rest here, and then sell the rest abroad. that would make more sense me because it is sense to me because it is private companies that are going to they want to be doing this and they want to be doing this and they want to a profit. but me, it to make a profit. but to me, it just seems mad to be, you know, we've got to be independent. and at stanley, you're at some point, stanley, you're you're with just stop oil on this, aren't you? >> well, i have proudly worn in the and my past and the the past and my past and the extinction rebellion about to be accused by my own son of being a uncooperative, crusty , as uncooperative, crusty, as i remember now. i think the intriguing point is the big political point at the moment, that here you have the two main political parties and forgive me if i call them the two main i mean the labour party, the conservative party, big wing, apparently engaged in a kind of dutch or dutch auction who can be who can prove that they're nastier to the environmentalists . you use the word eco terrorists . i got to tell you terrorists. i got to tell you something, dan, in 1969, i was the first conservative research
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department officer in charge of the environment. and i wrote a tory manifesto on the environment which helped get mr heath into the 1970 election. now where are we now ? at now where are we now? at a dangerous moment because both parties seem to be saying we're going to burn them down, bid them down. >> starmer only said he was going to bin them when he lost uxbndge going to bin them when he lost uxbridge a couple weeks ago. uxbridge a couple of weeks ago. up uxbridge a couple of weeks ago. up then, he would say up until then, he would say forget wanted spend £28 forget he wanted to spend £28 billion. is not a bad policy. >> uxbridge as it were, >> uxbridge was, as it were, accidentally. stanley not accidentally. stanley do you not accept the public don't want this. >> we have done more than any other western democracy. go and turn your attention, stanley, to china and india. stop making us poon >> hold on. hold on. dan? >> hold on. hold on. dan? >> dan, i can tell you something stat here. >> china has produced more carbon emissions in the last eight years. listen than we have in the 220 years since records began. >> yes, we are still the eighth largest producer of carbon dioxide. >> 1. >> 1.
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>> i'm sorry. historically, we are we are the eighth largest producer. >> but now, now. okay, now let's just look for a moment. >> i have just spent eight weeks in china. that's a decent length of time to get a feel for it. and i can tell you that is a country which is absolutely taking renewables seriously. >> . come on. you've >> every every. come on. you've said that no one of the statistics back that up. i'm sorry. none of the statistics i have the statistics of my own eyes surrounding coal powered power stations every week. >> they have managed over a penod >> they have managed over a period of time to bring 400 million people up to a level of andrew doyle economic development. >> but what's fascinating about what's fascinating about this, both in the conservative party, andrea, as you know, served under boris johnson as a minister, big, big fan of your son, but you couldn't disagree more strongly with stanley on this completely. >> i mean, as you said, carol and , actually, it's got and stanley, actually, it's got cross—party consent this, but no one's ever challenged a
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narrative. and i think it's crazy. and, you know, the public haven't been brought along with this . and when i look in my this. and when i look in my constituency, i speak to my constituents. some of them are struggling . do they pay the gas struggling. do they pay the gas bill or do they put food on the table and they don't believe in this net zero. the majority of the people i speak to and but no, but, but but to me , it's no, but, but but to me, it's a regressive form of taxation we have. >> it's very unfair to ordinary people to absolutely taxes and extra costs . extra costs. >> fine. but that's something that that is a different argument. it's not a different i'm sorry. it's we're talking about we're talking about ends and hoped until i came here, >> i hoped until i came here, but this is a regressive. >> we agreed on the end on i hope we on the poorest actually, ihope hope we on the poorest actually, i hope we agreed on the answer. >> had the g7, which not >> you had the g7, which not only britain, but seven other countries makes g8 . we countries. that makes g8. we have signed up in every possible form to net zero by the year 2050. and actually we've signed up to some objectives on 2030. what is it? what we're arguing
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now is the means by which we get there to accept that until china and america lower their emissions hugely, nothing we do will. >> we have done our part and the problem is, stanley, your party will not be re—elected if you're going to the 1,000,000 billion, we are going to make you poorer. we are going to take away your gas boilers. we're going to take away your petrol and diesel cars. no, no, no. >> it's about freedom. >> it's about freedom. >> is freedom to choose . >> is freedom to choose. >> is freedom to choose. >> you with ulez up or >> charge you with ulez up or down you will down the country? no, you will not win this. >> not win. all right. >> you will not win. all right. >> you will not win. all right. >> this is what i say. and maybe i say it here first. my concern is the political party. my is not the political party. my concern is the things i've been working or 50 years, working for like 40 or 50 years, which is the environment and biodiversity and climate change. okay, doing it . okay, well, we're doing it. >> it. but i want to >> we're doing it. but i want to move rishi sunak on a move on because rishi sunak on a related the related note, took to the airwaves this morning to promote the north announcement. the north sea oil announcement. >> martin >> but when the bbc's martin geissler asked pm how he was geissler asked the pm how he was travelling to aberdeen, i think guys a bit of a bit off, a bit more than could because more than he could chew because
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rather robot rather than revert to robot rishi, the pm and i loved this came out all guns blazing . came out all guns blazing. >> listen you just ask you finally before you go, how are you getting up here to make this green announcement today? private minister private jet every prime minister before also used before me has also used planes to travel the united to travel around the united kingdom an kingdom because it's an efficient use time for the efficient use of time for the person the country. efficient use of time for the per so the country. efficient use of time for the per so i the country. efficient use of time for the perso i can the country. efficient use of time for the perso i can keepe country. efficient use of time for the perso i can keep focusing'. efficient use of time for the perso i can keep focusing on >> so i can keep focusing on delivering for people. but if your to climate change your approach to climate change is should go on is saying no one should go on holiday, no should on holiday, no one should take on a i you i think you are i think you i think you are completely and utterly wrong. >> am i right? that is absolutely not the approach to tackling climate. >> there's difference. >> there's a difference. >> there's a difference. >> much for having >> thanks very much for having me. >> have me. >> we have to let you go. will you to coming back on and you commit to coming back on and speaking if only we saw more of that more that fight from sunak more often. >> i actually think the polls would looking a far more healthy. >> a facile argument isn't it? he's for god's he's a prime minister, for god's sake, on the train. he's sake, get on the train. he's only got many hours in a day. only got so many hours in a day. he can't depend on a train. getting him to wait to on getting him to wait to be on time line. >> they don't want us flying. that's what is about. that's what this is about. carole stanley johnson. carole malone, stanley johnson.
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andrew jenks. i hope you took hope. the boat to hope. you took the boat to china. hope you took long china. i hope you took the long boat. so yeah. >> how did you get there? >> how did you get there? >> to tell you the first time >> i to tell you the first time was in 1990 61 on a beer seat, 500 cc twin cylinder, china twin cylinder motorcycle. >> just finishing off now. >> we're just finishing off now. >> we're just finishing off now. >> up, just 5.7% of >> coming up, just 5.7% of crimes were solved in england and wales last year. >> can you believe that? so is the solution. china seas style facial recognition cameras to catch criminals in the act. my superstar panel will debate that shortly. but first, prince harry's drowning in legal battles, could his battles, but could his potentially libellous comments about butler about his mum's former butler and confidante prove his most challenging ? princess diana's challenging? princess diana's best friend, paul burrell, joins me live from exclusive interview and update on his own legal row with the duke. straight after this .
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kelvin mackenzie is uncancelled on farage de—banking crusade soon. but first, princess diana's rock and former butler paul burrell and prince harry seemingly has more court cases on the go than friends right now. despite his phone hacking claim against the publisher of the being branded, quote , the sun being branded, quote, implausible by a judge last week. he'll still meet them in a high court trial next year. among a flurry of other cases against british tabloids, albeit for lesser accusations that they used investigators to used private investigators to obtain news stories . but
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used private investigators to obtain news stories. but harry's not been so eager to respond to his mother's former confidant, burrell, who is pursuing legal action against the duke for potentially libelling him in his previous high court wrangle against publisher of the against the publisher of the mirror for your complaint is about an alleged disagreement with your brother about meeting paul burrell. >> and you refer to this as a private disagreement. >> yes , your brother wanted a >> yes, your brother wanted a meeting, but you were firmly against it . the phrase to face against it. the phrase to face may have come from a voicemail. that's how tonight we can reveal paula's actively communicating with prince harry's lawyers about unfounded claims that he sold diana's possessions. >> and here to give an >> and he's here now to give an update case. so paul, update on his case. so paul, what's the latest . what's the latest. >> well, dan, i have written to clinton's prince harry's solicitors for times now, four times and received no response whatsoever for and i'm beginning to think that i'm not going to
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hear from his solicitors until all this litigation is concluded because if prince harry has to admit that he's told an untruth about me, who else has he told an untruth about ? now, you know, an untruth about? now, you know, dan, in my view , has a very dan, in my view, has a very personal view about this because not only has the judge justice fancourt, said that harry's case is implausible. fancourt, said that harry's case is implausible . i know that is implausible. i know that harry knows more than he's letting on because you see, i think he's overegged the pudding to some degree. harry knows full well that back in the day, and i witnessed this, that the princess, his mother would invite editors and journalists to lunch and private meetings at kensington palace, which he attended with his brother, william . so harry always knew william. so harry always knew there wasn't a secret agreement with the media at all. what it was was a working a working relationship with the media. and diana understood that. and i
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thought that harry did until this point . but now harry's even this point. but now harry's even thrown his late grandmother under the bus again in and said that she had an agreement with the media in fleet street. i never saw that either. he's he's also accused his brother and his father, again , of making father, again, of making relationships with people in fleet street and taking taking money as a sort of settlements from fleet street, really . he's from fleet street, really. he's he's really going for this. and he's really going for this. and he has to substantiate all of this. he can't just say these things. he has to bring the evidence forward . and until now, evidence forward. and until now, he hasn't . because, you know, he hasn't. because, you know, dan , he can't. dan, he can't. >> no. very good point. very good point. and as you say, justice fancourt was really good point. and as you say, there's simply no proof, there's no proof of this secret deal. but look, other other news
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breaking today about prince harry paul. some suggest he may have been dropped in some way by this eco tourism group, travalyst . as a pr guru travalyst. as a pr guru described him as a lightning rod for bad news. so. so what do you what do you make of this, paul? because isn't harry actually behind travalyst? but now it feels like the company doesn't actually want to use him to push their cause . their cause. >> he was the face of this company for three years. dan this initiative was being pulled out by him and now he's been left out of all the latest talks and the new board. but are you surprised , eased, because really surprised, eased, because really there's so much negative pubuchy there's so much negative publicity around harry at the moment that he he is no longer a positive force for good that can actually push forward an initiative like this . it's initiative like this. it's becoming more and more difficult for him to promote any business
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relationships . and i think that, relationships. and i think that, you know , his usp in america, you know, his usp in america, especially with brand sussex, he's taking a huge bashing because of the negativity surrounding sue ing the british media and where will we go from here? i've no idea. but it's causing ripples with celebrities in america as well. it's causing people to stand away from them because they're it's a damage limitation exercise that's being put forward now in america . put forward now in america. >> indeed. just because we give both sides of the story always here on gb news, when we contacted travellers, their chief executive, sally davies, said. prince harry is the founder of travalyst, remains an invaluable part the invaluable part of the organisation. his role has not changed any way and is changed in any way and he is regularly involved in strategic discussions and decisions alongside our partners and board, , very odd if board, but very, very odd if that's the case, that he would not be used publicly. and look , not be used publicly. and look, they are using this term now,
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paul they are using this term now, paul, when you've been. markle right. when you lose contact with harry and meghan and it appears to have been harried, i've been harried , you've been i've been harried, you've been well and truly harried , but it well and truly harried, but it appears there's a big row between the beckhams and the markles. but some disagreement henn markles. but some disagreement henri paul about actually who cut off communication with who because it sounds like the beckhams are absolutely furious that they were accused of leaking stories about harry. >> yeah , well, clearly, people >> yeah, well, clearly, people are beginning to feel that they're being used by meghan. >> i mean, meghan is a predator and she will use people and drop them when she's finished with them. she sucked them dry, them. when she sucked them dry, they'll be gone. beckhams them. when she sucked them dry, they'lneedjone. beckhams them. when she sucked them dry, they'lneedjone. and3eckhams them. when she sucked them dry, they'lneedjone. and meghans them. when she sucked them dry, they'lneedjone. and meghan . don't need harry and meghan. they're a—list celebrities in their own field. they don't need their own field. they don't need the support of harry and meghan, but isn't it sad that harry and the beckhams were there at the wedding, as were the obamas , as wedding, as were the obamas, as were the clooneys ? where are were the clooneys? where are they all now? they're beginning to see who harry and meghan are,
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and they do not want to be in the same sphere as them . the same sphere as them. >> paul burrell always brings want to talk princess diana's rock and former butler. thank you so much, paul. keep us posted. now, kelvin mackenzie's on standby to get stuck into nigel farage's crusade against the woke banks shortly with shocking new information. first, though, the weather that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb proud sponsors of weather on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news should be a drier day tomorrow and many places will see some bright or even sunny spells. still breezy however, and still quite breezy however, and not particularly warm. and behind there's another area behind me there's another area of low pressure for of low pressure lurking for wednesday. this one brought the wet weather for much of the country today, fairly country today, still fairly soggy out there evening. soggy out there this evening. some showers in places some heavy showers in places staying pretty damp across eastern southern scotland
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eastern and southern scotland through further through the night. but further south, places will some south, many places will see some lengthy, clear spells. and across northern scotland , where across northern scotland, where it's been dry for most of the day, of course, the far north, at least it'll stay dry overnight. temperatures dropping at least it'll stay dry ov aboutt. temperatures dropping at least it'll stay dry ov about 13 temperatures dropping at least it'll stay dry ov about 13 ten143ratures dropping at least it'll stay dry ov about 13 ten14 celsius.dropping at least it'll stay dry ov about 13 ten14 celsius. on)ping at least it'll stay dry ov about 13 ten14 celsius. on to 1g to about 13 or 14 celsius. on to tuesday. and as i said, a drier day . doesn't completely day. it doesn't mean completely dry. few showers, dry. still a few showers, certainly initially across the south—west quite a grey south—west and quite a grey morning over northwest england with rain and with some outbreaks of rain and they'll only slowly ease off through the day. so it will be quite here. parts of quite damp here. parts of southern seeing some southern scotland seeing some showers northern showers north of northern ireland. said, for ireland. but as i said, for many, it'll be a drier, brighter day. lot of cloud, but day. still a lot of cloud, but a bit of blue sky. we'll see temperatures getting into the low 20s across south. high low 20s across the south. high teens but then low 20s across the south. high teen next but then low 20s across the south. high teen next low but then low 20s across the south. high teen next low comes3ut then low 20s across the south. high teen next low comes int then low 20s across the south. high teen next low comes in during that next low comes in during tuesday evening into the southwest. at this, southwest. and look at this, a spell of heavy rain coming in, blustery showers falling on behind, on seasonably windy again along the south coast of england. so a wet spell coming in through the middle part of the week with, again, temperatures below average for the time of year. bye for now.
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>> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news news now coming up in uncanceled the diversity scheme that inspired cuts to cancel nigel farage for holding the wrong views has more than 1400 other british corporations signed up to its woke agenda. >> so how do we stop this dystopian rot? former fleet street icon kelvin mackenzie investigates in uncanceled soon. but next in the media buzz, a poultry 5.7% of crimes were solved in england and wales last yeah solved in england and wales last year. so our woke cops to blame. and do we now really need chinese style facial recognition cameras like the home office wants? or is that really a huge challenge to our civil liberties? my superstar panel get stuck in in just a few minutes .
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okay. more on tomorrow's news tonight in our media buzz. more front pages in the daily express leads with banks being told to stop ripping off savers. the paper reports that city watchdogs will tell the banks to pass interest rate rises on just first stop, sunak . that's what first stop, sunak. that's what the daily mirror's gone with tonight. the paper says the pm has given in to greedy energy giants with his announcement of 100 new oil and gas licences in the north sea and the guardian also leads with sunaks plans to grant 100 new licences . grant 100 new licences. interesting though too, they do have on the front page there . have on the front page there. farage cuts off offering to reopen my account. so nigel making the front page even of the guardian . my superstar panel the guardian. my superstar panel return now top daily express columnist carole malone , the columnist carole malone, the former mep and tory environmentalist stanley johnson and the former conservative education minister, dame andrea jenkyns. education minister, dame andrea jenkyns . now shocking home
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jenkyns. now shocking home office figures have revealed that just 5.7% of crimes were solved in england and wales last yeah solved in england and wales last year. that comes just weeks after the home secretary suella braverman warned british police they must ditch their focus on wokery and constant hate on common sense policing . in the common sense policing. in the latest example of lawless britain, though, a supermarket owner in hampshire has claimed that police now refuse to investigate shoplifting complaints unless the value of goodsis complaints unless the value of goods is over. £200, there is clear cctv of the suspect's face and their name can be provided . and their name can be provided. in a controversial move, the home office has secretly backed facial recognition technology in attempt to tackle the scourge of shoplifting. despite public concerns over privacy and racial profiling. so carole malone, look, firstly , i think it's look, firstly, i think it's totally despicable , the fact totally despicable, the fact that shoplifting has almost been decriminalised. and let's just be honest about it. we're scared of talking about it, right? because what it means is that more little scrotes go more and more little scrotes go and shoplift. that's the reality. but but carole, i worry
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. i worry about the civil liberty concern sequences for facial recognition . facial recognition. >> me too. i mean, chinese style. >> but i don't think they should worry too much because i don't think it's going to happen. you know, the thing is, even if they had facial recognition and they recognised shoplifter or the recognised the shoplifter or the burglar, police won't burglar, either the police won't prosecute will prosecute them or the cps will say not evidence. say there's not enough evidence. you heard a story, you know, i heard a story, i heard a guy on the radio today saying that he saw two burglars trying his home. he trying to get into his home. he saw them tackle them. they ran away. them dropped their away. one of them dropped their phone. his name obviously on phone. his name was obviously on the able to get the phone. cops were able to get to identify him. he was one of two brothers. and police two brothers. and the police went and arrested them, gave the names everything went and arrested them, gave the nam
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a government minister this morning on the radio saying we have a stellar record for tackling crime. and i was thinking, are you are you he what he meant was recorded crimes. now the reason not many crimes. now the reason not many crimes are recorded is because cops aren't caught deeming them as crimes. so you could get burgled and they're not deeming that as crime. but i do think that as a crime. but i do think that as a crime. but i do think that this guy, richard ingles, is been told that is saying he's been told that hampshire this hampshire police have this list, this criteria before , before this criteria before, before they prosecute. they've got they will prosecute. they've got to steal at least 200 quid's worth of stuff. if they only worth of stuff. so if they only steal 150, you're not going to get have to have get prosecuted. you have to have the name, name of the the full name, name of the burglar. now, why would the shopkeeper full name of shopkeeper have the full name of the burglar? not his the burglar? and it's not his job get the full name, the job to get the full name, the cops name to get the job, to get the full name. but it is just astonishing how this attitude to crimes, know, burglar can crimes, you know, burglar can wreck life. of course , forever. >> i mean, it's also the white van man as well. in my area, it's not just the shops as well who are really suffering. it's the white van man. the police are anything on that. are not doing anything on that. but i give example then,
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but can i give an example then, of the bad how bad the of how the bad how bad the police was in my area with myself, i've had seven death threats the years and had threats over the years and i had a constituent . no, thank god. a constituent. no, thank god. yeah, i'm still here. 70 emails from a constituent who was telling me to buy a stab vest. oh it was pure evil, this guy. and and the police wouldn't do anything about it because they said they can't do it until they've done something. yeah. and so i had to get the speaker involved. and priti patel , when involved. and priti patel, when she secretary even she was home secretary to even get them to act on this, we need a you a zero tolerance policing. you know, like rudy did in new york. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> you said you tackled this. >> you said you tackled this. >> so tackle the small things that's why and i'm very that's why you and i'm very concerned about, as know, concerned about, as you know, from of from civil liberties point of view. but you've just returned from china, as you mentioned, and like idea and you actually like the idea of facial recognition technology. they suddenly it. >> they suddenly went into it. i mean, i'm fairly easy to mean, i guess i'm fairly easy to recognise as compared with the generality of people , people in generality of people, people in china. no, no, no, we're not in china. no, no, no, we're not in china. actually, i go through the receipts and say how are
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you, boris? so there are some there are some downsides about having characteristics having a facial characteristics or upsides. actually, depending on the view. i think the interesting thing is have we lost sight of the good old days? now i'm not saying you should be sent off to australia or even new zealand. do we have a transport in new zealand ? i transport in new zealand? i don't think we did. i'm not saying saying you should saying i'm not saying you should do that. yeah, i'm not saying you to that. but i do recall you to do that. but i do recall recently being in machu picchu actually . how did i get there? i actually. how did i get there? i went the. she was went to the. okay. she was showing me around said, showing me around and i said, funny , there's no prison here. funny, there's no prison here. and of course there's no prison . any crime was a capital offence , as you see now, we offence, as you see now, we don't want there being serious. being serious. you do wonder whether this is not a good point. i'm going to be agreeing with both of you. we shouldn't be tolerating . oh, no. be tolerating. oh, no. >> absolutely. >> oh, absolutely. >> oh, absolutely. >> but okay with the >> but you're okay with the facial recognition technology? what civil liberties? what about the civil liberties? >> okay, this is my thought about recognition. it about facial recognition. if it actually picture and actually changes the picture and makes possible for police to
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makes it possible for police to get on top of these crimes, then maybe it's worth considering. >> johnny. >> johnny. >> most catching a burglar is not that hard. there are cctv everywhere . most homes have a everywhere. most homes have a camera, doorbell. okay. you know, most of them. they'll leave fingerprints . most of the leave fingerprints. most of the criminals are known to the local cops. so it's not that big. are you sure? >> it's not that. >> it's not that. >> but the issue is, though, all the i mean, if we look at in west yorkshire, we've got a west yorkshire labour mayor and all the focus in is on hate crimes of course, everything on social media and the focus is never on violent crimes. >> it's a massive issue. it's about whatever the woke trend of the now. stanley johnson the day is. now. stanley johnson have of a woman called have you heard of a woman called cardi b? >> well, i think i have. she was the lady who was making a song, giving a song. what do they do? >> singing. singing song. singing a song. >> singing, singing a song. singing a song. and i think she encouraged someone to throw some water from behind or some water at her from behind or some complicated thing like that. but in when that happened,
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in fact, when that happened, she then, irritation , threw her then, in irritation, threw her microphone into the crowd. >> am i right? i am so impressed. >> so this took place in las vegas. have a look and we'll respond off the back lockdown . down >> whoa. you feel good? but that's up . yeah that's up. yeah >> sexy ladies, let me hear you say mummy . say mummy. >> say no. got it ? make money. >> say no. got it? make money. >> say no. got it? make money. >> oh, i see you now . >> oh, i see you now. >> got me down for good . i'm a >> got me down for good. i'm a boss to a work a. i'm stanley. >> you got that completely right. firstly so how do how on earth do you know about cardi b? >> i know a lot about about these sorts of things, but some of these things are going to crop up and catch your eye. >> and it was really the thought. >> did you see it? it was really. did she catch your eye? it was suddenly it was really it was really the thought that actually you can do damage. actually you can do some damage. you damage. but the
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you can do some damage. but the thing is. >> i know, i know. initially she was encouraging people throw was encouraging people to throw waters, slightly waters, which may be slightly changes complexion of this. changes the complexion of this. but look this, but my first look at this, carol, i thought sorry. it carol, i thought i'm sorry. it is that members of carol, i thought i'm sorry. it is public that members of carol, i thought i'm sorry. it is public keepat members of carol, i thought i'm sorry. it is public keep on nembers of carol, i thought i'm sorry. it is public keep on throwingof the public keep on throwing objects. >> w e or water w— e or water at people >> yeah, that or water at people on and actually , i didn't on stage and actually, i didn't really blame her for throwing the mic. >> we see it with politicians when lobbed at when they get eggs lobbed at them. don't they. >> yeah. and they're not supposed react. she did. supposed to react. but she did. >> her or her. her >> it was her, her or her. her john prescott moment. >> yes. why did you remember that we've a few. that we've all had a few. >> that was that was that was a that was a straight left. actually okay. so we're supporting b, cardi b has supporting cardi b, cardi b has stanley johnson support . stanley johnson support. >> there you go. things you never thought you'd see on tv news. stanley de—man , drew news. stanley de—man, drew jenkins, carole malone, do stand by coming up, a flurry by because coming up, a flurry of sports stars of english sports stars and a tory gongs in tory grandee up for gongs in tonight's greatest britain union. find out who's going union. jack find out who's going to winner shortly. my to be crowned winner shortly. my next the same woke next in uncanceled the same woke diversity scheme that first inspired farage's bank to inspired nigel farage's bank to cancel him for wrong thing has more than other british
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more than 1400 other british corporations signed up to its dystopia. really dystopian rules. plus, carol vorderman reinvented as an anti—tory attack dog. but her twitter tirades breaching strict bbc impartiality rules. and should she get the boot. kelvin mackenzie riled and ready on all of that. we're back in just two minutes time.
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it's time now for uncanceled . it's 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. and nigel farage has seen off, too, woke banking chief executives launched a campaign to fight for thousands of other brits and now tonight being offered his coote's account back . this is what he had to say to me earlier in the show i have
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today sent a letter , began today sent a letter, began litigation with coutts natwest to say, look, i want to have a meeting. >> i want to sit down face to face and find out how this happened , why this happened. happened, why this happened. i want you to accept you've broken the law. i want you to accept that you have taken up an inordinate amount of my time. you've cost me a great deal of money. >> but while nigel fights for banking reform, it's been disturbingly revealed that 1400 other british firms across a range of industries have also signed up to the same corporate diversity scheme that first inspired his de—banking be core urges its member companies to stand up against all forms of oppression and dismantle racist systems, policies, practises and ideologies. giving a credit station to banks like natwest and coutts much like the lgbt charity star stonewall. so kelvin, it feels like corporations , right? have to say corporations, right? have to say , hey, rack off to this vocal
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minority, these extreme team schemes which push a particular ideology which actually very hard left very , very, very woke, hard left very, very, very woke, very out of touch with most brits just don't bother with these schemes. >> well what it is, it's a bit like the rosettes which are handed out on rather poor hotels to make them look better than they are . and that's what these they are. and that's what these companies are, these companies like coutts do they they they don't want a problem so they say we stick this two star rosette on the front of our bank and with a bit of luck we'll get away with it. but now what nigel farage has done is beyond incredible go nigel go . it's incredible go nigel go. it's incredible. he's humbling . banks incredible. he's humbling. banks worth i think natwest is worth 18 billion, as he himself says. he's not worth £0.18, but he took them on. he had right on his side. and now the chief executive is far from saying get out. he's saying, hey , please out. he's saying, hey, please come back. and nigel was saying,
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where's the money? because he a lot of money went on legal fees. he's got his own reputation . was he's got his own reputation. was it damaged by it? yes, it was. were any of those 40 pages true? no. they weren't. he is going to end up here with his account back and with i'm with coutts writing a check. i suspect probably for the thick end of three quarters of £1 million. how incredible. anybody who's ever dealt with a bank in a kind of collision way has always ended up flat on the floor. they have departments which are designed to say do your worst right and good old nigel. what an incredible bloke this is. nobody nobody has ever done what nigel has done. >> a complete capitulation, a complete by coots . complete by coots. >> and i think what we're already seeing , calvin, is this already seeing, calvin, is this is not about nigel you know the consequence of this are rippling through to banking who all of a sudden these banks. >> okay i am just about thanks to nigel. i'm just about to take on the charlatans at at at a
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major insurance company on exactly the same basis . right. exactly the same basis. right. a week ago . i'd never have one. week ago. i'd never have one. today they're done for axa. here i come . i come. >> what have they done? >> what have they done? >> they failed to be insured. >> they failed to be insured. >> you know , i got an insurance >> you know, i got an insurance through them . through them. >> a tree from a neighbour fell on a on a house i own. right and they said you're not covered. who could who knew that ? nobody. who could who knew that? nobody. you this, you read this you read this, you read this insurance document. i've read it very closely. see there, nobody would ever know you weren't covered. i am coming after axa. so if you're watching chief executive, i am to going do a nigel. i may not be a successful , i'll cause you a lot of , but i'll cause you a lot of pain and you will definitely try. >> no, i note the change happening already in banks. >> have you. >> now, calvin, have you. have you this reinvention of you noticed this reinvention of carol vorderman, who has gone from a pro tory maths tsar cosying up to david cameron to hard left commentator spewing nasty racial dialogue and it's
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all it's all happened since she's moved back to wales right. >> she was perfectly all right when she lived in a £4 million flat, by the way, overlooking lambeth bridge . right. lambeth bridge. right. fantastic. it's all going great. >> socialists. yeah, right . >> socialists. yeah, right. >> socialists. yeah, right. >> this is fantastic. there wasn't word of any of this, wasn't a word of any of this, tosh, but since she's done two things, a move wales. always tosh, but since she's done two tishockinglove wales. always tosh, but since she's done two tishocking mistake.'ales. always tosh, but since she's done two tishocking mistake. by s. always tosh, but since she's done two tishocking mistake. by the lways tosh, but since she's done two tishocking mistake. by the way; tosh, but since she's done two tishocking mistake. by the way . a shocking mistake. by the way. and the second thing. and the second thing, which i love. >> oh, do you? i do. okay >> oh, do you? i do. okay >> right. well, i do notice that when you go on holiday, you go 6000 miles away to new zealand. i don't see you in cardiff. right >> no, love cardiff. >> no, i love cardiff. >> no, i love cardiff. >> i genuinely. >> i genuinely. >> okay. >> oh, right. okay. >> oh, right. okay. >> right. well, you could >> all right. well, you could cosy with vorderman. cosy up with vorderman. >> night out in cardiff. >> wild night out in cardiff. >> wild night out in cardiff. >> well, anyway, she's >> okay, well, anyway, so she's in wales . she goes to >> okay, well, anyway, so she's in wales. she goes to bbc in bbc wales. she goes to bbc wales. suddenly imagine that a combination wales and the combination of wales and the bbc. and she does a show for them and suddenly she's become some loony leftie . some loony leftie. >> yeah, indeed. >> yeah, indeed. >> and my point is , look, go >> and my point is, look, go down the maitlis route, if that's what you want. go on and
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become hyperpartisan borders and retweet all of these crazy conspiracy theories . do that if conspiracy theories. do that if you want, but give up your show on the bbc because you are undermining. >> you are public her. >> you are public her. >> her issue is she's being funded by all of us. and we'll say that it doesn't look like it in the polls right now, but say it's like 5050 labour and tory. why are why are conservative voters funding her pay at bbc wales so that they have a whole load of bile poured on them? it is a ridiculous thing. anyway the old the old welsh windbag i'm afraid, is clearly gone potty since he's gone. there i wonder whether the whole of wales is like that. >> but the thing is, it's tim davies own words and this is what makes me so angry about the way that tim davie totally gave to in lineker. to in gary lineker. >> he's made a mockery of himself director general himself as the director general of the bbc. his own words to presenters what you tweet presenters were what you tweet is a reflection on the bbc. but after remember the strike by all of the bbc sports presenters tim davie has now been coward. he is
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cowering in a corner and i'm sorry tim davie doesn't need to cower in a corner over vorderman. you know, you to stand up vorderman. >> yes, i agree . i agree with >> yes, i agree. i agree with you. but the trouble is that once they become director general, suddenly they've got no backbone anymore . yeah. and the backbone anymore. yeah. and the big names that they've got because their audience is so small now, these big names have more power than the executives . more power than the executives. no, she's not. she's not a big name. there are there are aspects of her. there are rather large. >> i don't know what you're talking about. >> but kelvin, the point is, this was his opening mission at the bbc. i am going to clear everything up and impartiality and i'm to going crack down on social media. and in fact, he has proved an embarrassment. >> well, yes, from the left , you >> well, yes, from the left, you can say whatever you like from the right. can you imagine if nigel farage had a show on five live or something and this had happened? he'd be booted off air at miles an front page at 100 miles an hour, front page of every newspaper. >> i mean, that's the thing.
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there's just hypocrisy there's just it's the hypocrisy here. mackenzie here. but kelvin mackenzie uncancelled, later uncancelled, we will speak later in week. thank so much. in the week. thank you so much. on the told us it on vorderman. the bbc told us it won't comment on individual tweets but there is an tweets but stressed there is an ongoing into ongoing independent review into its existing social media guidance, especially for guidance, especially only for freelance . time now to freelance staff. time now to reveal tonight's union jack and greatest britain . carol maloney, greatest britain. carol maloney, who's your nominee for gb? >> i think after that it should be kelvin. he was on fire there. that's just because he's eating all my biscuits in the green room. anyway, i won't want my greatest brit is priti patel this week for urging sunak to pause the race to net zero because she's saying that the targets that have been set are unattainable and unaffordable and on ordinary and that unfair on ordinary working people. and i think she's right . she's absolutely right. >> let's have a look at this . >> let's have a look at this. all right . all right. >> we need to pause . pause. all >> we need to pause. pause. all this activity, 20, 30 is not that far away. the public are not ready for this. and importantly, we cannot just have this state, the government, central government, just sort of
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saying across again, institutions, local councils , institutions, local councils, county councils, this these are the targets that you have to meet . meet. >> oh, my goodness. >> oh, my goodness. >> she is so right. sorry, stanley. no, it's not what you want to hear. she is totally right. stanley, who is your nominee, had to be had to be stuart broad. >> if you watch this, watch the game this evening, as i did until i had to come here just fantastic. and he got to wickets, which brought him, i think to 604. incredible >> oh yeah. what a great career. andrea jenkins, your nominee, the lioness is. >> we need to get fully behind them as they take on china tomorrow. >> good nominees. i'm good. all good. actually, they could all win, but i've got to go with priti patel because i think it was a bold statement. a great nominee from carol there. carol, who are you going to go with? >> jackass? >> mine, jackass? >> mine, jackass? >> mine, jackass? >> mine the. >> mine is the. >> mine is the. >> shadow. the increasingly >> the shadow. the increasingly ludicrous shadow chancellor, rachel reeves for saying that the sacking of council ceo dame alison rose was misogyny. this
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was not this is tosh. this was not mr urgency. this was a woman who broke client confidentiality . one of the stellar rules of banking . she she sold false banking. she she sold false information, gave false information, gave false information to the bbc, and then lied about having done that. she and if it was misogyny, how come peter flavel, who was also one of the bosses, of course, he's been fired as well. he's a bloke, not misogyny. they were sacked for incompetence and bad judgement. >> they'll always go for identity politics. stanley johnson your union jack as well. >> it has to be. it has to be. >> cardi b you made couldn't it just couldn't be anybody else. but >> but why? i thought we all agreed that it was okay that she threw the microphone on stan lee. why will you change your mind? >> you looked at her minutes ago. i changed my mind. >> she blown you out, stanley? >> she blown you out, stanley? >> oh, no. she. she she. >> she's. i think she's been dumb for potential batters , so. dumb for potential batters, so. de—man jenkins, your nominee, it
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has to be the woman who's even top trumping gary lineker at the moment. >> the one and only bbc wales presenter carol vorderman. >> yeah . do you know what? >> yeah. do you know what? >> yeah. do you know what? >> she's been a bit of a subject of the show tonight . and i have of the show tonight. and i have to say, carol vorderman is tonight's union jack. i mean, i think we've all got on i know you, carole malone got on very well with with this woman on she's had a dish yeah i really did. >> yeah . and i haven't seen her >> yeah. and i haven't seen her for a long time, but yeah, me too. >> she's obviously changed. she's had a reinvention, a look. that's absolutely fine. you have your reinvention. you go down the left political path the hard left political path just it on the bbc. just don't do it on the bbc. just don't do it. it's just don't do it. and it's wrong. and the bbc need to take action. malone, stand action. carole malone, stand johnson dame andrea jenkins, thank you so much. i'm back again tomorrow from 9 pm. with laurence fox. megan kelly and tom bower. next up though, it's headliners. good night. tom bower. next up though, it's headliners. good night . the headliners. good night. the temperature's rising, but next,
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solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news evening. on. gb news evening. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news should be a drier day tomorrow and many places will see some bright or even sunny spells. still quite breezy, however, and not particularly warm. and behind me there's another area of low pressure lurking for wednesday . this of low pressure lurking for wednesday. this one brought of low pressure lurking for wednesday . this one brought the wednesday. this one brought the wet weather for much the wet weather for much of the country today. still fairly soggy out there this evening. some showers in places some heavy showers in places staying across staying pretty damp across eastern southern scotland eastern and southern scotland through the night. further through the night. but further south, will see some south, many places will see some lengthy , clear spells. of lengthy, clear spells. and of course , northern scotland, where course, northern scotland, where it's been dry for most of the day. of course, the far north, at least it'll stay dry overnight. temperatures dropping to 14 celsius on to to about 13 or 14 celsius on to tuesday . and as said, a drier tuesday. and as i said, a drier day. it doesn't mean completely dry. few showers, dry. still a few showers, certainly the certainly initially across the south—west a grey south—west and quite a grey morning northwest england morning over northwest england with outbreaks rain and with some outbreaks of rain and they'll only ease off they'll only slowly ease off through day . so it will be
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through the day. so it will be quite damp parts of quite damp here. parts of southern scotland seeing some showers of northern showers north of northern ireland. said, for ireland. but as i said, for many, it'll be a drier, brighter day still lot of cloud, but day still a lot of cloud, but a bit blue we'll see bit of blue sky. we'll see temperatures getting into the low 20s across the south, high teens further north. but then that next low comes in during tuesday into the tuesday evening into the southwest. at a southwest. and look at this, a spell of heavy rain coming in, blustery showers falling on behind unseasonably windy again along the south coast of england. so a wet spell coming in through the middle part of the week with, again, temperatures below average for the time of year. bye for now. >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> you're with gb news. the top story tonight, nigel farage says the exclusive bank coutts has now offered reinstate his now offered to reinstate his personal and business accounts . personal and business accounts. speaking on his programme here on gb news earlier this evening, nigel farage said he's also seeking a full apology and compensation from the bank. meanwhile a number of conservative mps have sent a joint letter to the chancellor calling for the financial conduct authority itself to be investigated over claims it may have inadvertent gently encouraged the culture within
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banking that led to the account closure. nigel farage has today sent a legal letter to coutts. >> i want a face to face meeting with the bank's bosses. i want to find out how many other people in coutts or natwest have had accounts closed because of their political opinions and i want to make sure this never happens to anybody else ever again. so the fight goes on. the home office has confirmed that asylum seekers will not begin being housed on the bibby stockholm accommodation barge tomorrow . tomorrow. >> fire safety concerns appear to have prompted the decision, which is currently moored off portland in dorset. a home office spokesperson said the vessels undergoing final preparations to ensure it complies with all appropriate regulations before the arrival of the first asylum seekers in the coming weeks. the prime minister says allowing 100 new nonh minister says allowing 100 new north sea oil and gas licences
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is entirely consistent

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