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tv   Dan Wootton Tonight  GB News  September 26, 2023 9:00pm-11:01pm BST

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sounds tonight superwoman suella sounds the alarm stateside where she makes a superb speech about the global failure to tackle illegal immigration and the failure of multiculturalism . multiculturalism. >> while they pick and choose their preferred destination to claim asylum is absurd and unsustainable . all but as she unsustainable. all but as she boldly attacks the 1951 un refugee convention is the home secretary write that being gay isn't enough to claim asylum in the uk . the uk. >> i'll give my backing to her calls for legal reform in my digest , but calls for legal reform in my digest, but then my calls for legal reform in my digest , but then my superstar digest, but then my superstar panel weigh in. and tonight i'm joined by esther mcvey, calvin robinson and rebecca reid. meanwhile after veteran bbc broadcasterjohn meanwhile after veteran bbc broadcaster john simpson openly campaigns against donald trump, has he just exposed the beeb's biased news coverage? christopher biggins rebecca jane anne and martin bell debate that in the clash plus in his
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anticipated return to making videos on rumble , russell brand videos on rumble, russell brand railed against the state global media and authoritarian centralised power. but why is there growing anger that media select committee chair caroline dinnage tried to have the comedian cancer killed before being found guilty of any crimes. laurence fox investigates that in the fox report. and i'll get the views of us media superstar megyn kelly after a blm activist who organised that protest that saw edward colston statue toppled in bristol will admit a fraud after £30,000 of funds went missing . £30,000 of funds went missing. also breaking tonight, david walliams suing britain's got talent after he was axed as a judge over leaked audio recordings. so is he justified in this action? we'll debate that. developing story in the media buzz and netflix have released a brand new documentary about the still unsolved murder of tv star jill dando. about the still unsolved murder of tv starjill dando. 24 about the still unsolved murder of tv star jill dando. 24 years after it stunned the nation. the
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gold and girl of british television in murdered on her doorstep in broad daylight . doorstep in broad daylight. >> so . >> so. >> so. >> so. >> so who did kill jill dando, the man who helped expose jimmy savile, investigative journalist mark williams—thomas has pored over thousands of pieces of evidence, and he'll reveal his bombshell findings shortly . as bombshell findings shortly. as even bombshell findings shortly. as ever, first look at tomorrow's newspaper front pages . as soon newspaper front pages. as soon as they roll off the presses and tom bower will deliver more royal exclusives, too. this is dan wootton tonight. let's go . dan wootton tonight. let's go. you're watching tv news, britain's news channel. my goodness me. super suella has upset all the right people tonight , but upset all the right people tonight, but i'm going to bring you forensic analysis of her speech and what it means for multiculturalism in the uk straight after the news with polly middlehurst .
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polly middlehurst. >> dan, thank you. good evening. well, the top story tonight is that the home secretary says migrants arriving in small boats have put an unsustainable pressure on the uk's asylum system . and the british taxpayer system. and the british taxpayer delivering a speech in washington in the united states earlier on today. washington in the united states earlier on today . suella earlier on today. suella braverman also argued that being discriminated against for being gay or a woman was not enough to qualify for asylum where individuals are being persecuted. >> it is right that we offer sanctuary , but we will not be sanctuary, but we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if, in effect simply being gay or a woman or fearful of discrimination in your country of origin is sufficient to qualify for protection . qualify for protection. >> well, labour hit back straight away with the shadow home secretary yvette cooper, accusing the government of failing to set out any new plans to tackle the small boats crisis to tackle the small boats crisis to try and target lesbian and
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gay people from countries like uganda, where they face serious persecution, when they also only make up around 2% of asylum application in the uk is just trying to distract people from her own failure where she should instead be getting a grip rather than ramping up the rhetoric and focusing on her failure to tackle the criminal gangs or to sort out the chaos in the asylum system . well, also in the news system. well, also in the news today, sir ed davey said his party would make nhs and cancer treatments a top priority if his party got into power. the liberal democrat leader told his party's conference in bournemouth they'll rescue the nhs with more gp's, more carers and add greater investment in technology . he says he'll ensure technology. he says he'll ensure cancer patients will start treatment within two months of an urgent referral and that they'd been let down under the current government. the mayor of greater manchester said today he would take legal action against
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the government if the northern section of hs2 were to be scrapped . andy burnham said that scrapped. andy burnham said that labour would build hs2 if it won the election because a failure to do so would have massive implications for the north. the prime minister is reported to be alarmed by the runaway cost of the high speed rail link believed to exceed £100 billion worth of taxpayers . money former worth of taxpayers. money former cop26 president alok sharma has announced he will not stand as announced he will not stand as an mp at the next general election. his announcement comes a few days after he raised concerns about rishi sunak weakening net zero policies within the tory party. the former cabinet minister says he's not been an easy decision for him, but is still champion climate action for the remainder of his time in parliament. on tv online dab+ radio and the tunein app. this is gb news, britain's news . channel a total knockout a
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news. channel a total knockout a game changing speech that will be utterly despised by the usual cabal of globalist human rights lawyers and establishment media, but adored by ordinary brits, terrified of the invasion of the country via our unsecured southern border, costing lives and livelihoods brave , bold and and livelihoods brave, bold and unspeakable and polite society. >> just a few years ago, our home secretary, superwoman suella, took the fight against despicable human trafficking and the myths that surround such a sick trade to a global stage . sick trade to a global stage. and she made abundantly clear that serious change is now an urgent priority for the status quo, where people are able to travel through multiple safe countries and even reside in safe countries for years while they pick and choose their preferred destination to claim asylum is absurd and unsustainable . unsustainable. >> while nobody entering the uk by boat from france is fleeing
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imminent peril , none of them imminent peril, none of them have good cause for illegal entry . the vast majority have entry. the vast majority have passed through to multiple other safe countries and in some instances have resided in safe countries for several years. there is a strong argument that they should cease to be treated as refugees during their onward movement . there are also many movement. there are also many whose journeys originate from countries that the public would consider to be manifestly safe, like turkey or albania or india . for in these instances , most . for in these instances, most are simply economic migrants gaming the asylum system to their advantage . their advantage. >> so what does change look like? well, as well as pushing her long held desire to leave the echr, it also means tearing up the un's refugee convention, which has been left largely unchanged since its creation in 1951. to be frank and i'm with
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her on this being gay isn't enough to claim asylum in the uk i >> -- >> let me be clear. there are vast swathes of the world where it is extremely difficult to be gay or to be a woman , where gay or to be a woman, where individuals are being persecuted. it is right that we offer sanctuary , but we will not offer sanctuary, but we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if in effect simply being gay or a woman or fearful of discrimination in your country of origin is sufficient to qualify for protection predictably and pathetically, labour immediately cried homophobia , taking to twitter homophobia, taking to twitter the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper said , and suella yvette cooper said, and suella braverman has so lost grip of tory asylum chaos she is targeting and scapegoating lgbt people deeply divisive, damaging political game play and unworthy of her office. >> instead of blaming people, persecute in places like uganda
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for who they love, she should sort chaos at home. please. sort the chaos at home. please. there was nothing discriminatory about what suella said . in fact, about what suella said. in fact, she made the point that targeting illegal immigration immediately gets you branded odd as some sort of backward bigot who we allow to come into our country and become one of us is a fundamental issue without pubuc a fundamental issue without public consent, immigration is illegitimate and dismissing as idiots or bigots those members of the public who express legitimate concerns is not merely unfair. >> it is dangerous . the second >> it is dangerous. the second is much more cynical . all the is much more cynical. all the fear of being branded a racist or illiberal any attempt to reform the refugee convention will see you smeared as anti refugee. similar epithets are hurled at anyone who suggests reform of the echr or its court in strasbourg .
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in strasbourg. >> yes, we know that we've all been there, but perhaps the most significant moment was when the home secretary used the speech to declare multiple culturalism a failure for multiculturalism makes no demands of the incomer to integrate , but it has failed to integrate, but it has failed because it allowed people to come to our society and live parallel lives in it . parallel lives in it. >> they could be in the society dodi, but not of the society and in extreme cases they could pursue lives aimed at undermining the stability and threatening the security of our society . society. >> now over 481 million people still live in sub—saharan africa, 156,000,000in the middle east and north africa . and they east and north africa. and they say that they want to migrate to the uk. you get suella said . the uk. you get suella said. migration is already behind at least 45% of demand for new
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housing in england, with more than 1 in 5 births being to foreign born mothers. that's before you get to the increased criminality in relation to drug crime. exploit and prostitution , which comes from the illegals who are crossing the channel so i think there's some really key question here do we believe in our sovereignty? do we believe in our nation state? do we believe in protecting our borders? well, i would say yes. yes and yes. so while the msm will not acknowledge it, suella today opened one of the most important conversations the western world simply must tackle over the next decade. if we have any chance of protecting our way of life. but to respond now, my superstar panel, of life. but to respond now, my superstar panel , the former superstar panel, the former conservative cabinet minister esther mcvey, a gb news presenter, the conservative commentator calvin robinson , and commentator calvin robinson, and the author and broadcaster
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rebecca reid . i mean calvin rebecca reid. i mean calvin robinson look polite society is utterly horrified by this speech today. and i understand it's a speech. it's talk . it's not speech. it's talk. it's not action. yeah, you knew what i was going to say, but i do. but this was still bold and it was still brave. and i want to come to you first, calvin. and i think probably what is going to be the most divisive line suella saying clearly that saying quite clearly that multiculturalism in the uk is a failure. >> yes, it does not work. people have been saying this for decades. enoch powell got castigated as a racist for saying farage. he's saying it. nigel farage. he's trending on social media is tonight. >> enoch powell because multiculturalism doesn't work. >> we can say, look, we love britain, british culture britain, we love british culture and to welcome people in and we want to welcome people in from from from other cultures and from other nations. however, we still have predominant have to have a predominant culture to them into culture to welcome them into you. we protect that you. and unless we protect that culture promote culture and promote that culture, diluted culture, it gets diluted and becomes nothing. culture, it gets diluted and becbut�*s nothing. culture, it gets diluted and bec but enoching. culture, it gets diluted and bec but enoch powell was derided >> but enoch powell was derided as now what suella as a racist. now what suella braverman was very clear to say today is that just because i'm
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raising these issues doesn't make me racist, doesn't make me xenophobic , that doesn't make me anti—immigrant. >> that's the line they throw out there to shut you down so they don't have to have the conversation they want. the left wants borders and they'll wants open borders and they'll say, open say, if you address open borders, you're xenophobic, you're now you're racist. if you're now you're racist. if you're now you're it's you're homophobic as well. it's like can't the conversation. >> labour immediately homophobic. okay. so esther mcvey conservative mp , are mcvey as a conservative mp, are there any aspects of i mean , i there any aspects of i mean, i loved it. you can tell i loved it, but i want both sides. are there aspects of this speech there any aspects of this speech that have made at all that have made you feel at all nervous ? yes. no nervous? yes. no >> i think she put the brave into braverman and i think very true. it's true . i think she's true. it's true. i think she's very dan wootton. thank you very much . i thought it's much. i thought it's a conversation people have been wanting for a long, long time. so many people felt they couldn't for all of the reasons that they were tiptoeing around, walking on eggshells . they walking on eggshells. they couldn't talk about this. and i thought she said in a very calm couldn't talk about this. and i th0lmeasured|id in a very calm couldn't talk about this. and i th0lmeasured|id in we've' calm couldn't talk about this. and i th0lmeasured|id in we've' calto and measured way, we've got to
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look at this issue now, what might have been the right words back in 1951 when you gave protection for 2 million people are not going to be the same rules. when we're looking at 780 million look million people. let's look what's ground. what's happened on the ground. let's and look what's let's happen. and look what's happening right around the world. are we going do world. how are we going to do this in a measured and controlled way, giving sanctuary where you need it ? but you're where you need it? but you're quite right, not just where there's discrimination you there's discrimination and you know, you might say, well, how do we know if you're gay or not? if you're just using the terminology people terminology because people know how play the system and what how to play the system and what you've say. we've to you've got to say. we've got to get we have a get back to how do we have a balanced way do and that balanced way to do it? and that people feel welcome into this country by the people who live here who are coming here and those who are coming in. think brave and in. so i think very brave and bold speech and about time. in. so i think very brave and bolwell,3ch and about time. in. so i think very brave and bolwell, look,|d about time. in. so i think very brave and bolwell, look, we bout time. in. so i think very brave and bolwell, look, we bou�*going to >> well, look, we are going to get sides the story now, get both sides of the story now, though, rebecca though, because rebecca read, i'm that speech i'm told that post this speech today, you think that suella braverman anne is a psychopath. >> what do you mean by that? >> what do you mean by that? >> there were ways that she phrased are phrased things which are deliberately to as
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deliberately designed to be as inflammatory and as nasty as possible while making it difficult to actually critique . difficult to actually critique. so when she says 1 in 5 children is born a foreign born is born to a foreign born mother, doesn't make a mother, that she doesn't make a value judgement in it, she doesn't and a bad doesn't say. and that's a bad thing, you can tell thing, right? but you can tell from the context of the speech and from that she and from the way that she delivers it, thinks that's bad. isn't she allowed give facts? >> what didn't she allowed >> but what didn't she allowed to way that she delivered to the way that she delivered inflammatory very inflammatory felt very inflammatory. it felt inflammatory. it felt inflammatory. felt inflammatory. it also felt odd that she would not be that given that she would not be in position is in had in the position she is in had she been in uk she not been born in the uk where she your mother. that where she was your mother. that is a strange thing not to understand empathetically is a strange thing not to underpeoplempathetically is a strange thing not to underpeople because cally is a strange thing not to underpeople because slyy is a strange thing not to underpeople because sly news. is a strange thing not to unchuaople because sly news. is a strange thing not to unchu won't because sly news. is a strange thing not to unchu won't be ause sly news. is a strange thing not to unchu won't be surprised.ews. is a strange thing not to unchu won't be surprised. there >> you won't be surprised. there was and a after the speech was a q and a after the speech i watched the whole thing. reporter from sky news immediately made point to immediately made that point to her. was furious, rebecca her. she was furious, rebecca because she said just because of my background as an immigrant it is so doesn't mean i should have to be understanding of other immigrant that you want me to think particular way. and think in a particular way. and i don't think immigration my understanding is that her parents immigrants parents were immigrants and that she immigrant, but she is not an immigrant, but i don't really understand you don't really understand how you can cognitive
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dissonance. >> and to be able to stand there when minister when the prime minister is somebody and say somebody who is a hindu and say multiculturalism failure somebody who is a hindu and say mreally.turalism failure somebody who is a hindu and say mreally oddlism failure somebody who is a hindu and say mreally odd disconnect. lure a really odd disconnect. >> understand she means >> to understand what she means by multicultural. >> to understand what she means by multicu really because i live >> i don't really because i live in a part of south west london, which predominantly which is very predominantly south asian, predominantly indian. all the schools indian. and so all the schools are very, very mixed in terms of ethnicity. there a lot of different languages. think different languages. and i think it's wonderful, it's a beautiful, wonderful, enriching . and i it's a beautiful, wonderful, enriching .and i have enriching thing. and i have people my child, people who look after my child, who where who teach in london, where i lived years, it's lived for many years, and it's a ghetto and that's a crime . ghetto and that's a crime. >> the names of the train station are no longer in england, but but that is the issue with people coming from albania and starting grooming gangs and murdering and gangs and murdering people and drug running. >> that is obviously nobody likes no wants likes that. no one wants that. but an issue with crime. but that is an issue with crime. and me, i suppose and to me, i suppose the question is hate the idea question is i, i hate the idea enough of anybody being put to death or put in prison for not wearing a hejab or for being gay enough that i'm willing to be more minded about who else more open minded about who else ends maybe shouldn't ends up here who maybe shouldn't be. and course you're not. be. and of course you're not. but should be because you but you should be because you
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didn't have the debate. didn't like to have the debate. >> i am open minded >> i'd say i am open minded because i to the because i like to have the debate. every week to debate. i have every week to have debates. have the debates. >> all i do know. >> all i do know. >> felt ill when you >> but you felt ill when you heard facts or you heard some of the facts or you thought it was in an thought it was done in such an awful way. was about value, awful way. it was about value, judgement i felt for judgement there. i felt that for a time people a long period of time people have to hold this have wanted to hold this conversation sometimes there have wanted to hold this cothe �*sation sometimes there have wanted to hold this cothe�*sati0|messengertimes there have wanted to hold this cothe �*sati0|messengertin do there is the right messenger to do it as well. somebody been on as well. somebody who's been on the can say this the journey who can say this was right, was you do right, this was wrong, you do this, do that, and i felt i this, i do that, and i felt i felt it was of the right. i felt it was of the right time to have this conversation. i can see that there is a right to that there is a right time to have conversation because have the conversation because i think issue with people. >> for instance, hearing that you just up and say, you can just turn up and say, i'm then they'll let you i'm gay and then they'll let you live here. and isn't live here. and that isn't exactly happens, it's exactly what happens, but it's more problem than is more of a problem than it is exactly. also should be exactly. but also that should be very track because very easy to track because realistically, if you've been living where you living in a country where you can't and get here can't have sex and you get here and you're gay, you are going to get grindr the first get on grindr within the first six be easy to six weeks, it should be easy to tell somebody then tell if somebody is then committing to a lifestyle that is them or not. like is inherent to them or not. like we be able to work
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we should be able to work through this. and i agree. we should have should be able to have the conversation saying, is it about persecution conversation saying, is it about per if cution conversation saying, is it about per if cutio live conversation saying, is it about perif cutiolive in conversation saying, is it about perifcutiolive in a country conversation saying, is it about perif cutiolive in a country with >> if you live in a country with the death penalty, then it is. but discrimination, but if it's a discrimination, no, a country a no, you live in a country with a death penalty. no, you live in a country with a death inenalty. no, you live in a country with a death in place for your home >> is in place for your home country. if where live, country. but if where you live, the in place the death penalty is in place for persecution. for being gay persecution. >> with you. >> i've just agreed with you. >> i've just agreed with you. >> there lot >> yes, but there are a lot of countries where is countries where that is the case. >> $- g the point is, the >> yeah, but the point is, the point sorry. it's point is. i'm sorry. it's not a high enough cannot we high enough bar. we cannot we cannot just leave people in countries where they get murdered for being engaged to anyone where the country has rules. anyone where the country has rul> so you think somebody should just be left to live in a country where they could put country where they could be put to not said to death. but we've not said that you're actually going. >> out >> we separated out one persecution of persecution and one a form of discrimination . discrimination. >> if you're a >> so if you're if you're a genuinely person living in a genuinely gay person living in a country they the country where they have the sexuality you it , you sexuality and you need it, you would genuinely, genuinely would get i genuinely, genuinely want to hear your answer. >> get a bit real >> i've got to get a bit real here by the way, it's me here by the way, it's not me saying that rights and all saying that gay rights and all of countries are right, of these countries are right, but most of but actually in most of them people being to. people are not being put to. >> that if >> but are we agreeing that if the penalty is in place the death penalty is in place in a country are genuinely a country and you are genuinely gay, able to gay, man, you should be able to go agree to that? go and not agree to that?
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>> we're not agreeing. go and not agree to that? >> so 're not agreeing. go and not agree to that? >> so thatot agreeing. go and not agree to that? >> so that seemsaing. go and not agree to that? >> so that seemsairbakery. >> so that seems a bakery. >> so that seems a bakery. >> robinson estimate >> calvin robinson estimate my superstar panel. don't worry are here the here all night but also on the way brand rails way as russell brand rails against state global media against the state global media and authoritarian centralised power return to power in an explosive return to rumble have caroline dinenage and meddling mps only added to the conspiracy that the establishment is trying to cancel him before he's been found of a thing. found guilty of a thing. laurence fox investigates this shortly, but up next in the clash, as bbc legend john simpson posts a tweet openly campaign against donald trump. does this prove the beeb is biased? christopher biggins rebecca jane and jenny barnett do battle on the clash do battle on that in the clash next. you think though, next. what do you think though, dan vote in our dan at gbnews.com vote in our poll at news. back after this
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>> patrick christys weekdays from three on gb news choose . from three on gb news choose. >> time now for the clash and the bbc has been thrown into a major new impartiality row after one of its most famous and supposedly impartial journalists went to war against donald trump .john went to war against donald trump . john simpson has spent all his life working at the beeb, serving as world affairs editor since 1988. but in a sense , since 1988. but in a sense, deleted tweet posted yesterday. he wrote the poll, which shows trump ten points ahead of biden in the us may well be inaccurate. that doesn't mean we inaccurate. that doesn't mean we in the west shouldn't be working really hard to strengthen ourselves get the possibility ourselves to get the possibility that win. i don't that trump might win. i don't see sign of this at present. see any sign of this at present. this led boris johnson's former chief adviser, dominic cummings,
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to respond. good to see senior bbc hacks openly stating they are not impartial hacks , but are not impartial hacks, but campaigners . it's healthier. campaigners. it's healthier. this is out in the open rather than pretending like he did on brexit. now, simpson has since posted what the bbc press office tonight called a clarification explaining he deleted the original tweet because it was badly expressed before doubling down on his pretty partisan point that the world is not prepared for the consequences of a second trump presidency . so a second trump presidency. so what do you think? does this anti—trump tweet from john simpson prove that the bbc is biased? dan gbnews.com vote in our poll at gb news on twitter. but to debate this now, i'm joined by the legendary actor christopher biggins, deputy ukip leader rebecca jane and the broadcaster jenny barnett . so broadcaster jenny barnett. so rebecca jane , i mean, this was rebecca jane, i mean, this was completely outrageous. we now have someone who has been told for decades to believe is completely impartial while
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actively wanting the world to campaign against donald trump. how on earth can we consider the bbc impartial anymore ? bbc impartial anymore? >> well, we can't. and, you know, we might have been told for decades that they're impartial but they actually impartial, but are they actually impartial? , we go impartial? you know, we can go back to 1984 when mps sued the bbc and won for being not so impartial. they are governed by ofcom. they have a charter that set out that states that they should be impartial, but we know for a fact they're not. you know, when we look at the know, even when we look at the brexit campaign, there then brexit campaign, there was then a report that said that a produced report that said that essentially there were five of five speakers for every one speaker speaking out about the remain. so it's been a problem for many, many years and absolutely , we need to not be absolutely, we need to not be disillusioned with the fact that the bbc have been impartial since the 80s . since the 80s. >> but because it's got worse , >> but because it's got worse, hasn't it? hasn't it? it's got worse because this is john simpson, a bloke that we should trust now, feeling like he can openly campaign against a
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political figure . political figure. >> yeah, i couldn't agree more. but of course, john simpson then made the mistake from his side of obliterating his tweet by taking it off. >> i saying this doesn't exist anymore . so you know, he knows anymore. so you know, he knows he's wrong . he's wrong. >> that's true. actually that's true. jenny barnett , >> that's true. actually that's true. jenny barnett, he's admitted tobias hasn't he? >> well , i admitted tobias hasn't he? >> well, i think we're in unprecedented times. i think someone like john simpson, who talks about donald trump, it's not talking about, you know, mr bloggs at the end of the road, we're talking about a geezer who's being impeached . we're who's being impeached. we're talking about a guy who's ten points ahead in. no, no, no, no, no, no. >> he's been impeached yet. he actually biden who actually it's biden who should be the moment. and actually it's biden who should be bbc the moment. and actually it's biden who should be bbc aren't the moment. and actually it's biden who should be bbc aren't campaigning1t. and the bbc aren't campaigning against him. do think? biden against him. do you think? biden they're against against him. do you think? biden tibloke, against against him. do you think? biden tibloke, who against against him. do you think? biden tibloke, who is against against him. do you think? biden tibloke, who is clearlynst a bloke, jenny, who is clearly seen ireland as currently in charge of the free world. you don't hear a peep about that from the bbc. you don't hear a
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peep about that from the bbc. >> do. we know is >> yeah, we do. we know is behind the polls, i think behind in the polls, but i think in situation this where in a situation like this where the young people and several people need to look to see the direction of what's happening under western democracy, somebody like john simpson speaking out helps everybody. and if you can remember, pastor martin niemoller , who said when martin niemoller, who said when they came for the communists, when they came for the trade unions, when they came from the jews, nobody spoke out when they came for him , there was nobody came for him, there was nobody there out . there to speak out. >> rebecca jane, chain >> rebecca jane, rebecca chain thatis >> rebecca jane, rebecca chain that is the of the bbc. that is not the job of the bbc. ihave that is not the job of the bbc. i have listened . i have listened. >> i, i think that john simpson is very brave for what he's. >> well, rebecca, if he's brave enough, why doesn't he take a hike? >> jenny, let me let me bring rebecca. rebecca, jane in. rebecca, if he's truly brave, why doesn't he take a hike? stop. take our money, and he can go and do the job and campaign
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in as much against trump as he want. he just shouldn't do it within on the bbc. absolutely >> you know, where on earth do we go with this? it's absolutely it's nonsensical for me. you know, we have to be completely impartial there, just not. and actually, are we trying to say that they are sorry, i forget the lady's name . jenny. the lady's name. jenny. >> jenny. jenny. >> jenny. jenny. >> sorry. jenny barnes . >> sorry. jenny barnes. >> sorry. jenny barnes. >> what am i saying? that i'm saying that the when the news is read, it's read flatly there are no inflexion ins in a situation like this where an old you say hack says something like this. it's because the situation is more serious than normal and it is unprecedented. begins begins. >> let me just bring biggins back in, because the problem i've got begins is that actually there's no one at the bbc who seems to support brexit or support trump. >> they all think in one particular way. and we've seen the folk who do leave the bbc
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like emily maitlis and jon sopel and lewis goodall , prove that and lewis goodall, prove that they are actually not just on they are actually not just on the left. biggins they are on the left. biggins they are on the hard left , absolutely. the hard left, absolutely. >> and this isn't what the bbc is about at all. we are paying the bbc to be impartial and there they are left wing as any left wing can be. but then but the but the left wing would accuse the bbc of being right. >> oh, please, jenny, you didn't answer my question, though. >> jenny. >> jenny. >> jenny, jenny, please. >> jenny, jenny, please. >> please . >> please. >> please. >> can you answer my question? do you believe that the bbc are impartial? >> yeah, because i have been told off several times at the for bbc not being impartial. right. okay >> so let me just give you some facts then , if you don't mind. facts then, if you don't mind. so obviously in the 1980s there, falkland war coverage was brought into question. as i said, 1984. they were sued and won by mps for not being impartial . won by mps for not being impartial. like i said about the
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brexit thing, 5 to 1 in favour of remain 2019. they were accused of labour bias and in 2020 mp5 accused of labour bias and in 2020 mps boycott their radio four programme. rebecca >> rebecca, how is that not are you going how is that impartial going with this? sorry, i am saying, i am saying that however you look at the bbc, we are faced with the greatest nation on earth and a fascist who has been impeached standing for president. >> so you don't like him, jenny? >> so you don't like him, jenny? >> you don't like him . and so >> you don't like him. and so the bbc should campaign against him. that's what you think. jenny barnett. rebecca jane begins. love having you three always will speak very soon, but who do you agree with on this? doesjohn who do you agree with on this? does john simpson anti trump tweet bbc news is tweet prove that bbc news is biased from dell? i think the bbc should just they don't bbc should just admit they don't have standards when it comes to bias. shares bias. another star shares political yet action is political views yet no action is ever taken from to the bbc is incredibly biased from gary lineker to nish kumar, their roster is filled with left wing anti conservative stars who are
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not afraid to vocalise their views and via twitter rights. to be fair, we've always known john simpson holds some unusual views. your verdict now in 91% of you agree with me that simpson's tweet proves bbc is biased. the bbc news is biased. with just 9% of you say it doesn't. now now, meghan kelly, tom bower, laurence fox, all standing by. first, the weather looks like things are heating up. >> boxt boilers are proud sponsors of weather on gb news news. hello there and greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast. >> we have storm agnes on the way, bringing some very strong winds, some disruptive weather, heavy rain in places too. so we can see that on the bigger picture, this deep area of low pressure will push across the uk as we head through wednesday. large coastal waves, some strong winds, particularly across the north and the west of the uk.
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heavy rain to this evening, fairly out there . some fairly quiet out there. some clear spells remaining showers gradually clearing as we head overnight. the cloud thickening from the southwest that storm from the southwest as that storm approaches . but places dry approaches. but most places dry under the clearer skies. northern ireland and scotland dipping into single figures. but for 12 to 14 celsius to for most, 12 to 14 celsius to take us into wednesday morning . take us into wednesday morning. so a dry start, but it won't take long before the cloud thickens. the wind picks up and the move into the rain starts to move into western areas. this pushing north through the day. north eastwards through the day. best of the sunshine holding on across and also across north scotland and also south—east england. but we could see gusts as 70, possibly 80 miles an towards the north miles an hour towards the north and the west, combined with heavy to some heavy rain, will lead to some disruption. warnings heavy rain, will lead to some disforce. n. warnings heavy rain, will lead to some disforce. n. feeling warnings heavy rain, will lead to some disforce. n. feeling day nings heavy rain, will lead to some disforce. n. feeling day here, in force. cool feeling day here, but in any sunshine, temperatures lifting to around 22 celsius into thursday. that storm system moves out the way andifs storm system moves out the way and it's a mixture of sunny spells and showers across the north and the west. some heavy bursts possible elsewhere, generally quite cloudy, some sunny spells between. sunny spells in between. and then later on, rain arriving from the west as we end the week
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and go into the weekend, it looks like further showers are possible, drier as we possible, perhaps drier as we head saturday. head to saturday. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news coming up of weather on. gb news coming up as a black lives matter ringleader behind the protests which saw edward colston's statue toppled in bristol admits fraud after £30,000 raised from donors disappeared . donors disappeared. >> does it make the groups actions that day even more despicable? and does it prove blm was just money making blm was just a money making scam? meghan kelly this scam? meghan kelly on this soon. but first in the fox report, has the chilling state overreach led by caroline dinenage and other meddling mps , only intensified meddling mps, only intensified the there's an the view that there's an establishment de—man establishment plot to de—man monetise and cancel russell brand. laurence fox investigates
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isabel, monday to thursdays from six till 930 . six till 930. >> us media megastar meghan kelly standing by on why taylor swift has found herself in a controversial relationship with someone pushing the pfizer covid vaccine . but first, the fox vaccine. but first, the fox report with lawrence and russell bland returned to his rumble channel yesterday after facing a week of serious sexual allegations , posting a 20 minute allegations, posting a 20 minute live stream to the platform in which he railed against the state global media and authoritarian centralised power. >> look corporatist state and global media war against free
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speech is in full swing. how do i know ? take a guess . today, of i know? take a guess. today, of course , we're talking about course, we're talking about events of the last week, but in particular the collusion between big tech and government and an apparent concerted effort by legacy media and now the state and big tech to silence independent media voices. >> unlike youtube and the bbc, rumble has hit back at british government attempts to censor or demonetise brands content on their platform . after the their platform. after the conservative mp media select committee chair caroline dinenage wrote to them last week demanding action. that unprecedented intervention has led to questions over the presumption of brands guilt. despite the comedian not actually being charged or found guilty of any crime. lawrence welcome back to the show. these are worrying times for the free media. when a government select committee is presuming guilt and demanding as demanding someone as de—platformed followed no de—platformed having followed no due process . due process. >> yes , dan, the government
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>> yes, dan, the government exists . we're private citizens, exists. we're private citizens, right? so we are all our rights are protected by them . and are protected by them. and caroline dineage is behaviour is has just added fuel to the fire here with, with what's happened with russell brand and i think anyone who came out um, you know, sort of going, oh, this is sort of middle ground that we can take here is it must be shown to be absolutely wrong . shown to be absolutely wrong. we're having a government, the only thing that separates us out from communist states is the fact that we presume innocence and we allow free speech. and caroline, danish and the conservative party have just shown that neither to shown that neither are valid to them . so basically we live in them. so basically we live in a communist country which pretends to be a democracy as far as i'm concerned. >> and of course, caroline is a former minister, now the head of the select committee. but i think there has been complete silence. not not one government minister has spoken out against her, which is pretty telling , her, which is pretty telling, isn't it? well they speak to me in private. >> you know, and ultimately, you
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know, what's going to happen is we're going to get five years of real communism labour real communism from the labour party and hopefully the conservatives will will will gather together. but these gather back together. but these are dark days . you know, are dark, dark days. you know, and say this and i've said it and i say this and i've said it before, i find russell brand about irritating, about the most irritating, annoying in the whole world. >> it's not about that . exactly. >> it's not about that. exactly. don't like him. >> i don't like a lot of what he says either. but for someone to go after his livelihood and his income makes me believe that caroline dinenage, who herself has some allegations whirling around to deal with herself , is around to deal with herself, is someone who's trying to silence a private citizen . and we've got a private citizen. and we've got to remember that in this country, we are the powerful people. they are our servants. >> and by the way , i felt >> and by the way, i felt exactly the same about the untrue allegations that were levelled against the actor noel clarke. despite right. the fact he was probably considered a figure on the left. he was despicable. he cancelled two with no due process . he's now
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with no due process. he's now suing the guardian. lawrence for £10 million, and i hope he wins because he deserves to. so for me , this is nothing about politics. >> he's not going to get he's not going to get to sue the guardian because no one's going to support him. and problem to support him. and the problem with noel clarke he he tried with noel clarke is he he tried to straddle the fence of truth for long and he didn't take for too long and he didn't take a stand. what noel clarke's a stand. and what noel clarke's going to he's not going to going to do is he's not going to get £10 million out of the guardian. no one's going to get £10 million out of the guardian. it's no it's a post—truth world. no one cares the truth it's cares what the truth is. it's what the what someone feels about. the truth whatever you think truth is, whatever you think about and i've about russell brand and i've been with been in close contact with people close to russell people that are close to russell and lives are getting and their lives are getting cancelled so it's not just cancelled too. so it's not just him . no. and also also just to him. no. and also also just to say that and i will say this in a in a in a careful way , they've a in a in a careful way, they've had just had a baby. right right. so how dare the british public, the british media who think that we clap along like seals to them, think that we
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have any sympathy for them. we need to rise up and revolt against these despicable people i >> -- >> yeah. you know, i'm with you on this, lawrence. i'm absolutely with you. and i completely agree. it doesn't matter about the politics. it doesn't whether doesn't matter about whether you agree particular agree with this particular person. this is about what is right we right and wrong. and we are going down dangerous path in going down a dangerous path in this look, let's this country. but look, let's move on to the bbc, lawrence, because though, again, because though, once again, under hard under fire for allowing the hard left commentator ava santina to mock and smirk during comedian geoff norcott emotional plea for a minister for men , which he a minister for men, which he helps could fight the epidemic. really of male suicide. currently ravaging the uk. watch what happened . what happened. >> if you flipped those things , >> if you flipped those things, i.e. that the biggest cause of death for men under 50 is suicide, men are less likely to go to the doctors. >> you know, men are less likely to maintain friendships that to maintain friendships if that was for women, we'd often look at, society making at, well, why is society making that whereas with men that happen? whereas with men the often why are the argument is often why are they doing that to themselves? >> it feeds into >> i think that it feeds into the culture a little bit. this minister men argument and
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minister for men argument and i think, a lot of think, you know, a lot of ministers bandy ministers kind of bandy this about i'm sorry , but about to sort of i'm sorry, but make out of women. about to sort of i'm sorry, but makemean, out of women. about to sort of i'm sorry, but makemean, literally of women. about to sort of i'm sorry, but makemean, literally be women. about to sort of i'm sorry, but makemean, literally be the1en. >> i mean, literally be the biggest of men under 50 biggest killer of men under 50 is suicide. that is an arrest in statistic. and if that doesn't warrant specific attention, mental an umbrella issue. >> i have to say that it's also because are unsuccessful, because women are unsuccessful, that is that there's a lot of that is feeds statistic . feeds into that statistic. >> lawrence's total disdain there , man. there, man. >> what a wave of feminism are we on? is it fourth, fifth at this juncture? we're past the watershed. so i can say this , watershed. so i can say this, um, show me a single self—respecting man that would like to climb into bed with that woman. ever who wasn't an woman. ever ever who wasn't an incel who wasn't a cucked little incel that little woman has been fed spoon fed oppression. day after day after day after day , after day after day after day, starting with the lie of the gender wage gap and she sat there and i'm going, like, if i met you in a bar? and that was like sentence three chances of me just walking away are just
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huge. me just walking away are just huge . we need powerful, strong , huge. we need powerful, strong, amazing women who make great points for themselves. we don't need these sort of feminist 4.0. they're pathetic and embarrassing. who'd want to that? >> oh, lawrence . well, look, she >> oh, lawrence. well, look, she . sorry i'm just. i'm just. i'm just going to provide a touch of balance from her because she did actually actually respond to this earlier today by saying that she regretted her comments, but she didn't apologise . uh, but she didn't apologise. uh, yes. so so, so, so there you go . and she's very beautiful. woman, lawrence. very beautiful woman. there you go. although i'm probably not. i'm probably not allowed to say that either. if and walk if you would turn away and walk away that beautiful away from that beautiful woman just she's so just because she's so fundamentally irritating , it fundamentally irritating, it goes to show that women are not attractive to in way . attractive to men in that way. >> those sort of women men are repulsed by. we find them disgusting. how dare you do
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that? geoff norcott? geoff that? to geoff norcott? geoff norcott is a very reasonable guy and was pointing out the and he was pointing out the suicide in men under is the suicide in men under 50 is the biggest cause in under suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen.:ause in under suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen. also in under suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen. also 100% in under suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen. also 100% of in under suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen. also 100% of the jnder suicide in men under 50 is the bigmen. also 100% of the causes 50 men. also 100% of the causes of death armed conflict and of death in armed conflict and people come to protect our people who come to protect our country like need country. so women like that need to go and do one. and they need to go and do one. and they need to be told to do one as well. you wanted equality. let's treat you men. we find you boring i >> k one laurence fox with the >> do one laurence fox with the fox thank you, lawrence fox report. thank you, lawrence . great to chat. now coming up with of tory with the right of the tory party set a rally at the party set to use a rally at the party conference to demand common sense rishi sunak sense policies from rishi sunak , including cutting taxes . are , including cutting taxes. are the new conservatives right to challenge the pm in way? my challenge the pm in this way? my superstar debate that superstar panel debate that soon. black lives soon. but next, the black lives matter scam continues to unravel. the organisers of this protest ended with edward protest that ended with edward colston in bristol colston statue in bristol harbour has admitted fraud after £30,000 raised from donors disappeared . so does blm have disappeared. so does blm have any credibility left? meghan kelly live after this
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aus a us media superstar , megan a us media superstar, megan kelly is live. and breaking tonight, an organiser of the 2020 black lives matter protests in bristol that saw the statue toppling of slave trader edward colston has admitted fraud after £30,000 of blm donations went missing. so zara salim, previously known as yvonne minor, set up a crowdfunder for face masks and other equipment needed for blm marchers . she needed for blm marchers. she promised excess funds would go to a local youth group so youngsters could go on trips to africa. that all sounded nice, right? however for none of the cash raised made its way to the charity . and this is the latest charity. and this is the latest in a string of questionable incidents involving black lives matter funds across the globe . matter funds across the globe. and megan kelly does this prove it's a blm money making scam all along ? because i know you've along? because i know you've exposed lots of what's gone on in america. now we have a case here in the uk to i mean, how many cases do we need before the
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verdict is officially in? >> don't give to this group unless you like to flush your money but let's money down the toilet. but let's be , donations be honest, the donations to these were basically these groups were basically insurance. was , if i donate insurance. it was, if i donate to your group , don't call me a to your group, don't call me a racist. don't come down on me. if i do something wrong or if i say something wrong, or if don't post the little black box on my instagram the right day. it's instagram on the right day. it's insurance and you insurance money. and so, you know, point, guess know, at this point, guess they've benefit they've gotten the benefit of their as in the their bargain because as in the case of ibram kendi and henry rogers name here in the rogers is his name here in the states , he's also under states, he's also under investigation now at boston university after receiving $43 million. and employees are now saying, quote, i don't know where the money went . so now where the money went. so now he's being investigated. where did the money go? what did you do with it? where's all our anti racist the donors did racist policies? the donors did get their benefit, candy turns around and says, i didn't call you racist. right had you you a racist. right you had you had side there. had me on your side there. you go. these donors go. that's what these donors wanted . and don't feel sorry wanted. and so don't feel sorry for dan don't feel wanted. and so don't feel sorry for we dan don't feel wanted. and so don't feel sorry for we all1 don't feel wanted. and so don't feel sorry for we all knewn't feel wanted. and so don't feel sorry for we all knew it feel wanted. and so don't feel sorry for we all knew it was. sorry. we all knew it was a scam. we all knew why people were donating to these groups to
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make feel better or make themselves feel better or to the outside to make to show the outside world racist. i gave world i'm not a racist. i gave to i gave to this group to kendi, i gave to this group or that group. it's all bs. or that group. well it's all bs. it's such a scam. and now it's all such a scam. and now it's as scam. it's been outed as a scam. there's no feel sorry there's no one to feel sorry for. there's another one that's getting coverage . van getting less coverage. van jones, van jones got $100 jones, cnn's van jones got $100 million a blank check from jeff bezos , amazon's jeff bezos. he bezos, amazon's jeff bezos. he just got booted off the board. van jones did. again, the allegations, to according the new york post internal ranker fiscal mismanagement questions of fiscal stewardship. there too. they're not sure what's being done with the money. how is it being run? where are the benefits? we don't know. you give to these groups a good luck to you. you deserve what you get i >> -- >> yeah, exam >> yeah, very good warning. now look, megan, i've got to talk to you about taylor swift, right? because everyone's been talking about over the past 24 about this over the past 24 hours. she's continuing her search prince charming. new search for prince charming. new man, another man. but this guy is an american football star
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called travis. is it kelsey ? called travis. is it kelsey? who's raised eyebrows because he's sucked up to big pharma in a big money vaccine deal with pfizer. now given he's also done bud light commercials and took the knee for the national anthem . um, he's sounding pretty woke this guy is so what do you make of this relationship and is this all a pr stunt? >> i don't think it's a pr stunt. i mean, she's gone through a men like most of us go through a men like most of us go through underwear like she's she can't hold on to a man. and she doesn't seem very good about getting over the break—ups . so getting over the break—ups. so i have a feeling i know how this one's out, too. one's going to work out, too. it's everybody to it's fine. everybody wants to be in love, for it . but with in love, so go for it. but with respect and his pfizer respect to him and his pfizer advertising on the heels of his bud light promotion when he doesn't know what he's doing . so doesn't know what he's doing. so first of all, guess he has no respect for because respect for women, because if you're promote bud you're going to promote bud light mulvaney light after the dylan mulvaney debacle, you no respect for debacle, you have no respect for actual women. and how offensive of dylan mulvaney is to us. as a
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same with all these wokesters they think they're virtue signalling. in fact , they're signalling. in fact, they're offending us. doesn't know offending us. he doesn't know what he's promoting there. and if , it's even worse. if he does, it's even worse. but with respect to the vaccine is what me on it. travis what bothers me on it. travis kelsey, far as i can tell, kelsey, as far as i can tell, just deal, just signed a $57 million deal, not including all of his endorsements. he's a multi, multi millionaire . if he multi million millionaire. if he marries taylor swift , it'll be marries taylor swift, it'll be even richer. she's one of the richest people in the world. does about the young does he give two about the young 16 and 17 year old men who are his followers ? right. he doesn't his followers? right. he doesn't have a bunch of 80 year old ladies following him. he's got young look up to him who young men who look up to him who are now going to go get their third shot of the covid vaccine because of him and the myocarditis that could follow, which can potentially deadly, which can be potentially deadly, which can be potentially deadly, which serious. it can which can be potentially deadly, which serious . it can result which is serious. it can result time and time again and has in serious heart scarring . just serious heart scarring. just listen to dr. vinay prasad . he's listen to dr. vinay prasad. he's very, very legitimate. he's over here. he's not controversial at all. and he's been doing yeoman's work, interviewing paediatric cardiologists on the
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heart damage that they're seeing after shots two and potentially three and beyond on this vaccine . does travis kelce, that's his fan base, does he think about them ? because when i talk about them? because when i talk about this on the air and it gets posted on youtube, youtube adds little asterisks on my conversation. with the conversation. oh, check with the cdc real information on the cdc for real information on the myocarditis on covid vaccines and the health benefits . well, and the health benefits. well, we know that these vaccine companies were suppressing and the cdc was suppressing the negative vaccine outcomes as they were pushing them on. all of us. i've interviewed people who are vaccine injured, who were dropped from the clinical trials and not mentioned the trials and not mentioned in the results . and myocarditis has now results. and myocarditis has now been recognised even by those same suppressors of inflammation as a real side effect of these vaccines. and what the vaccine lunatics will tell you is way more people get myocarde itis from covid than they get from the vaccines. well, guess what? virtually everyone has had covid and yet these same insane
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lunatics are forcing them to get the vaccines anyway. and the double shot of covid plus the vaccine is even more dangerous toward creating a myocarditis . toward creating a myocarditis. >> and he was also saying he was also saying take the flu jab to watch out. if you're 21 years old and healthy, it's completely nuts. my megan kelly and of course, both sides of the story on gb news pfizer would say that their vaccine does reduce side effects. now, megan, of course , effects. now, megan, of course, star of the megan kelly show , star of the megan kelly show, which you can find on youtube coming up, netflix has released a documentary about a brand new documentary about the still unsolved murder tv the still unsolved murder of tv star 20 years after star jill dando. 20 years after it stunned the nation . mark it stunned the nation. mark williams—thomas gives his verdict on that shortly. but is it time rishi sunak adopted common sense policies like tackling problems and tax tackling woke problems and tax cuts will debate that in the media. buzz >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar the proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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weather on. gb news. >> hello there i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb weather forecast. we have storm agnes on the way, bringing some very strong winds , some very strong winds, some disruptive weather, heavy rain in places too. so we can see that on the bigger picture. this deep area of low pressure will push across the uk as we head through wednesday . large coastal through wednesday. large coastal waves, some strong winds, particularly across the north and the west of the uk. heavy rain , too, this evening, fairly rain, too, this evening, fairly quiet out there. some clear spells remaining, quiet out there. some clear spells remaining , showers spells remaining, showers gradually clearing as we head overnight. the cloud thickening from the southwest that storm from the southwest as that storm approaches . but places dry approaches. but most places dry under the clearest skies. northern ireland scotland northern ireland and scotland dipping into single figures. but for of 12 to 14 celsius to for most of 12 to 14 celsius to take us into wednesday morning. so dry start , but it won't so a dry start, but it won't take long before the cloud thickens . the picks and thickens. the wind picks up and the starts move into thickens. the wind picks up and the areas. move into thickens. the wind picks up and the areas. thisove into thickens. the wind picks up and the areas. this pushing western areas. this pushing north eastwards through the day. best sunshine holding on best of the sunshine holding on across and also across north scotland and also south—east but we could south—east england. but we could see gusts of 70, possibly 80 miles hour towards the north
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miles an hour towards the north and the west, combined with heavy will to some heavy rain, will lead to some disruption. risk warnings disruption. metal risk warnings in cool feeling day here, disruption. metal risk warnings in in cool feeling day here, disruption. metal risk warnings in in anyyol feeling day here, disruption. metal risk warnings in in any sunshine, day here, but in any sunshine, temperatures lifting to around 22 celsius into thursday . that 22 celsius into thursday. that storm system moves out the way andifs storm system moves out the way and it's a mixture of sunny spells and showers across the north west. some heavy north and the west. some heavy bursts elsewhere, bursts possible elsewhere, generally , some generally quite cloudy, some sunny between . and sunny spells in between. and then later on, rain arriving from the west as we end the week and go into the weekend, it looks like further showers are possible, drier we looks like further showers are possiito , drier we looks like further showers are possiito . drier we looks like further showers are possiito . saturdayirier we head to. saturday >> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . on.
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gb news. >> it's ten. i'm dan wootton. tonight it's do or die for rishi sunak's premier ship. he's shown signs of metal but the pm now
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faces a rally from the tory right . who are demanding a wave right. who are demanding a wave of common sense policies. the new conservatives will host a major rally at conference urging sunak to tackle the echr britain's woke scourge and crippling taxes. so does he need to act on their demands to salvage election victory? that's the big debate with my superstar panel the big debate with my superstar panel. and tonight, i'm joined by mcvey. kelvin robinson by esther mcvey. kelvin robinson and rebecca reid . and as the and rebecca reid. and as the tories enjoy a poll boost in the wake of sunaks net zero bonfire, just look how it's riled the established media. >> rishi sunak done that. that's great. i think there's a there's a blueprint for this. there's a blueprint for a new type of sort of populist leader. >> i will share that full unhinged meltdown from the former bbc darling turned hard left flamethrower. emily maitlis. also tonight, one of the beeb's existing activists , the beeb's existing activists, veteran john simpson, is forced to apologise for openly campaigning against surging donald trump, one of britain's
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best journalists. former bbc man tom bower gets stuck into his old employees latest embarrassing impartiality. row in uncanceled as well as delivering a major exclusive on harry and meghan. stand by for that. meanwhile, will this new netflix documentary finally answer the mystery of who killed jill dando , the golden girl of jill dando, the golden girl of british television , murdered on british television, murdered on her doorstep in broad daylight ? her doorstep in broad daylight? investigative journalist and former top cop mark williams—thomas gives his view on the 25 year old murder probe after gaining exclusive insight via thousands of reports, documents and bombshell video evidence . he's live shortly. and evidence. he's live shortly. and is david walliams right to sue? britain's got talent after being forced to resign over leaked audio recordings. forced to resign over leaked audio recordings . meanwhile, audio recordings. meanwhile, who's to blame for 90s pop band eternal scrapping their reunion after some band mates claim the gay community was being by the
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trans movement. we'll devote a debate . both those pop culture debate. both those pop culture stories in the media buzz and a brand new greatest britain union jack crown . plus tomorrow's jack crown. plus tomorrow's newspaper front pages first before all of that, though, the news headlines with polly middlehurst . middlehurst. >> dan, thank you and good evening. the home secretary says migrants arriving in small boats have put an unsustainable pressure on the uk's asylum system. and the british taxpayer . delivering a speech in washington in the united states earlier on today. washington in the united states earlier on today . suella earlier on today. suella braverman also argued that being discriminated against for being gay or being a woman was not enough to qualify for being asylum. >> where individuals are being persecuted . and it is right that persecuted. and it is right that we offer sanctuary , but we will we offer sanctuary, but we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if, in effect simply being gay or a woman or fearful
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of discrimination in your country of origin is sufficient to qualify for protection . to qualify for protection. >> well, labour immediately hit back with the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper, accusing the government of failing to set out any plans to tackle the small boats crisis to try and target lesbian and gay people from countries like uganda, where they face serious persecution, when they also only make up around 2% of asylum applications in the uk is just trying to distract people from her own failure where she should instead be getting a grip rather than ramping up the rhetoric and focusing on her failure to tackle the criminal gangs or to sort out the chaos in the asylum system . a court in the united system. a court in the united states has ruled that the former president donald trump, and his family business were found liable for fraud , for illegally liable for fraud, for illegally inflating assets and net worth. the ruling came after a civil lawsuit brought by new york's attorney general, letitia james.
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she accused him of inflating the value of his assets by as much as 2.9 billion to access preferable loan terms. the assets included his mar a lago estate in florida, his apartment in trump tower and other buildings and golf courses. a trial is scheduled for october the 2nd. back here at home and the 2nd. back here at home and the mayor of greater manchester said today he could take legal action against the tory party if the northern leg of hs2 two is scrapped. andy burnham says labour will build hs2 if it wins the election because a failure to do so would have massive implications for the north. the prime minister is reported to be alarmed by the runaway cost of the high speed rail link, believed to exceed £100 billion of taxpayers . money and the of taxpayers. money and the former cop, 26 president alok sharma , has announced he won't sharma, has announced he won't stand as a tory mp at the next
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election . his announcement comes election. his announcement comes a few days after he raised concerns about rishi sunak weakening net zero policies. the former cabinet minister says he's not been an easy decision, but he'll still champion the climate action agenda for the remainder remaining time in parliament. us gb news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news. channel >> tomorrow's news tonight. now in our media buzz, i've got the first front pages here. let's look at them kicking off with our lead story tonight , two. our lead story tonight, two. home secretary superwoman suella made this brilliant speech in washington, dc earlier today . washington, dc earlier today. the paper says she argued it's too easy to be a refugee and she called for an overhaul of un rules . she's completely right, rules. she's completely right, by the way. she also said multiculturalism doesn't work . multiculturalism doesn't work. nhs staff to scared to report
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rogue nurses who abused patients. that's the headline in the independent with the paper obtaining leaked documents which show staff accused of sexual and racial abuse are kept on phone because of a culture of fear . my because of a culture of fear. my superstar panel back with me now, former conservative cabinet minister and gb news presenter esther mcvey , the conservative esther mcvey, the conservative commentator calvin robinson, and the author and broadcaster rebecca reid. now rishi sunak net zero bonfire last week has been rewarded in the polls with the tories up by five points and labour down by three, but with many conservative mps still convinced that they face electoral oblivion, truss let me, when i say that the pm will get no respite from the intense civil war gripping the tories as he heads to party conference in manchester next week. indeed, one group of influential mps dubbed the new conservatives and spearheaded by rising stars like danny kruger and miriam cates,
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alongside deputy tory chairman lee anderson . and although he's lee anderson. and although he's unofficially part of it, given his role and the veteran mp sir john hayes will stage a rally calling on sunak to return to true conservative values. now, these include taking action on our echr membership , cutting our echr membership, cutting taxes and confronting the woke mob . that's a direct contrast to mob. that's a direct contrast to sunak back with his five pledges, which they see there. they are branding theirs the red walls right ? all five pledges. walls right? all five pledges. so now, esther mcvey, look, this is difficult for you, isn't it? because there is a civil war group in your party. we saw some good things from sunak over the past week, but lots of your colleagues are very nervous. they are about to lose their job. so what's the atmosphere going to be like at conference and what do you make of these new conservatives launching rival pledges ? rival pledges? >> i don't like the name new conservative. it sounds like new labour to get rid of that straight away. the name look, we've of we've always had groups of people, within the tory
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people, groups within the tory party. i had blue collar party. i had the blue collar conservatives. the conservatives. there's the common sense, there's the one nation. so you've all the erg famously erg absolutely. so but it's like what do they want to do? and how are they doing it? so if they're just saying we're going pressure to make going to apply pressure to make sure we can make rishi sure that we can make rishi sunak more so he sunak even more robust so he comes out with reducing taxes . comes out with reducing taxes. so he looks at sort of immigration, though. i mean, i would say he was doing all of these things and i think i said a few weeks back i wanted rishi to find his inner thatcher we'd seen. he has. and i think he is definitely doing that. he's coming forward . i felt we'd been coming forward. i felt we'd been through the stage of consolidation about being competent, about doing the bookwork . he had to move to the bookwork. he had to move to the next which calvin next phase, which calvin robinson you know what robinson will say, you know what he's to say to you, esther? >> he's talk, action, but >> he's all talk, no action, but he's into action, hasn't he? >> that was bold of him to come out to say those unrealistic net zero targets have to. >> calvin wasn't impressed last week. well, the populist was because they went up by 5.
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>> i'm excited and >> but i'm excited by this. and hs2 too. i hope he actually comes forward and has the strength to say it needs to stop now, out of control . now, spiralling out of control. and doing what? >> you've opposed to >> and you've been opposed to what's been on with hs2 what's been going on with hs2 for . for some time. >> so i think he is. this >> so i think he is. so this group, i it be group, i think it could be a force for good. meant to force for good. it's meant to be. wonder for the timing be. but i wonder for the timing ain't great if you're thinking it's a year to a general election, do you need more groups of people saying more things in a fragmented way? possibly not. but if it allows him you agree with the new conservative pledges, the new right have looking for new conservatives. >> right. they're new >> you're right. they're not new conservatives. you. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> been >> we've been looking for conservatives in the conservative so long, conservative party for so long, so and there real power so and there are some real power is in the membership the is in the membership of the party. forget that party. and people forget that and the members quiet. but if and the members go quiet. but if the stand and we the members stand up and say, we want we want to look want this, we want you to look at education, at social issues, education, immigration, do immigration, cutting taxes, do the proper conservative things they can make rishi but don't interact . interact. >> rishi is doing that. don't you think speaking? you think he's still speaking? >> speaking . he's good at >> he's speaking. he's good at speaking. good
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speaking. he's really good at it. but i haven't seen him. >> he to get the timing >> then he has to get the timing right. i've to right. he'll think i've got to do it now. that i get the do it now. so that i get the value for what's being and value for what's being done and the do you of >> rebecca what do you think of this civil war? >> rebecca what do you think of thisi civil war? >> rebecca what do you think of thisi think vil war? >> rebecca what do you think of thisi think you're ? >> rebecca what do you think of thisi think you're right to >> i think you're right to suggest to suggest that it's not helpful to have people. think have multiple people. i think giving the country the suggestion that there is infighting and instability is a really bad idea because one of the things makes the things that makes people keep incumbent keep voting for the incumbent party of instability. party is a fear of instability. but if you have instability from the who are incumbent, the people who are incumbent, then more then you're going to be more likely i also likely to take a risk. i also i just add one thing where i think they will be helpful. >> when got a left >> when you've got such a left wing media to sometimes your party needs to be shored up. yes yes. >> and actually this moves connects perfectly with what i want to show you . okay. because want to show you. okay. because isn't it in incredible how quickly former bbc presenters who were supposed to be impartial have gone down the rabbit hole of hard left commentary? so i want to show you former newsnight presenter emily maitlis making this ridiculous claim that the very
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moderate rishi sunak has now become a pin up boy for populist authoritarians . authoritarians. >> if trump is imagining a future for years and we know he is, then i don't think he's going to be prioritising environmental levies. i don't think he's going to be prioritising green taxes . so he prioritising green taxes. so he and many others like him , sort and many others like him, sort of populist authoritarian leaders will be looking around the the room and the room, around the room and saying, rishi sunak has done that. think that. that's great. i think there's a blueprint there's a there's a blueprint for a blueprint for this. there's a blueprint for this. there's a blueprint for of sort of for a new type of sort of populist leader. now that prompted guido fawkes to ask what should we call these left of centre commentators who have exhed of centre commentators who have exited the reality based community? >> well, i'd call them the mainstream media. and that's what you're up against. i mean, thatis what you're up against. i mean, that is ludicrous. i mean, he's literally meeting what the eu is doing and all of a sudden he's a pin up boy for authoritarians. what is she on? >> i wondered who she was talking about her. when the name came forward, it was like a comedy moment. she's talking absolute rubbish.
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>> you see this again? if you absolute rubbish. >> the see this again? if you absolute rubbish. >> the stuffhis again? if you absolute rubbish. >> the stuff he'sgain? if you absolute rubbish. >> the stuff he's tryingf you absolute rubbish. >> the stuff he's trying to ou absolute rubbish. >> the stuff he's trying to do see the stuff he's trying to do with think there was with smoking. i think there was a i think he's being really a real i think he's being really weirdly controlling and authoritative weirdly controlling and autireallyive weirdly controlling and autireally creepy that she's it's really creepy that she's talking about activist and it's not. well, it sort of is . it not. well, it sort of is. it isn't populist because there is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind)pulist because there is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind of|list because there is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind of nanny cause there is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind of nanny state there is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind of nanny state ism 'e is not. well, it sort of is. it iskind of nanny state ism which a kind of nanny state ism which is sort of the nanny statism is socialism for you. >> that's why i don't agree with it. emily is still being authoritarian . authoritarian. >> he does. >> he does. >> he's very gripping. >> he's very gripping. >> i mean, emily maitlis has no longer got any obligation. >> said she left and >> you once said she left and now she said, i'll say whatever he wants her to leave. and that's why she left. that's and that's why she left. >> i encourage to >> i encourage encouraged to leave the idea to leave. and i applauded leave. applauded her to leave. but rebecca, you admit that it rebecca, you must admit that it is telling that all is very, very telling that all of a sudden the moment that these former bbc presenters leave, don't come and join leave, they don't come and join us. gb news they go down a hard left rabbit hole. >> i think two things are very telling. think very telling. i think it's very interesting that interesting and telling that the most people most educated, successful people in often in this country are very often left leaning there a left leaning and there is a reason media dominated by reason the media is dominated by those people. and it's because the go through doing
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those people. and it's because the degrees go through doing those people. and it's because the degrees who through doing those people. and it's because the degrees who haveigh doing those degrees who have that level interest the level of interest in the media tend what tend to be less leaning. what are what am are you implying? what am i implying? weren't implying? i thought we weren't implying? i thought we weren't implying thought implying anything. i thought statements. i thought it was just thought just facts. i thought we were allowed things . allowed to say things. >> an implication, >> there was an implication, though. was it not? >> when i suggested that >> earlier when i suggested that making a statement that and making a statement with that and then leaving, it didn't giving your ? well, your opinion, not facts? well, the majority of people who work in wing. in the media are left wing. >> the majority of creative >> no, the majority of creative people wing. said people are left wing. you said something else, too. >> did i say? >> what else did i say? >> what else did i say? >> you're talking intelligence. >> implying >> you're implying exactly right. wrong. >> i the majority of >> i think the majority of creative people working in this country are left wing. >> that you had, >> okay, well, that bit you had, right. trying >> okay, well, that bit you had, rigtalk trying >> okay, well, that bit you had, rigtalk about trying >> okay, well, that bit you had, rigtalk about superior trying to talk about superior intelligence, seemed you intelligence, it seemed like you were something. were trying to say something. >> think away with the >> well, i think away with the birdies. there an birdies. i think there was an interesting tally between education educational outcomes. >> what's interesting about it, i think an interesting con on descending , that's the left all descending, that's the left all ovenisnt descending, that's the left all over, isn't it ? descending, that's the left all over, isn't it? robinson i can't stomach may shocking. >> we just saw an example of it there now coming up david walliams goes to war over his britain's got talent sacking and
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seek substantial damage is running into the millions . running into the millions. meanwhile, who's to blame for 90s pop band eternal scrapping their big reunion tour after some band mates said the gay community was being by trans extremists. most panel will return to debate these two big p0p return to debate these two big pop culture stories soon. but next, a new netflix documentary bids to unravel the 24 year puzzle of jill dando's murder. investigative journalist and former top cop mark williams—thomas joins me live with a treasure trove of exclusive evidence that threatens to blow the lid of one of britain's biggest murder mysteries. he's live .
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patrick christys on gb news and gb news radio . gb news radio. >> welcome back. the newsreader and crimewatch presenter jill dando was a household name and beloved tv personality up and down the country . but on the down the country. but on the 26th of april 1999, she was shot dead outside her home in fulham, 24 years on, her shocking killing remains frustratingly unexplained and unsolved . but unexplained and unsolved. but released today was a brand new netflix documentary that asked the question who killed jill dando? look she was so polished and so professional. >> jill dando in many ways, i think people saw jill as a tv. >> diana so glamorous. >> diana so glamorous. >> it's wonderful . >> it's wonderful. >> it's wonderful. >> jill was at the top of her game . game. >> she was the nation's
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sweetheart , the golden girl of sweetheart, the golden girl of british television murdered on her doorstep in broad daylight . her doorstep in broad daylight. >> now, barry george, a local sex offender, was convicted of jill's murder in 2001. >> but after serving seven years of a life sentence , was of a life sentence, was acquitted at a retry trial. since then, there have been several theories about jill's killings , such as she was a killings, such as she was a victim of a professional hit or mistake , an identity. but mistake, an identity. but earlier today, her brother nigel revealed his belief about what really happened . really happened. >> and so my theory , which i >> and so my theory, which i still stick to, i don't know how true it is. again, people may say it's quite fanciful, but that jill was just in the wrong place the time . i tend place at the wrong time. i tend to be joined now by the investigative journalist , former investigative journalist, former policeman williams—thomas . policeman mark williams—thomas. >> mark, you have uniquely had access to thousands of pieces of evidence from the met's inquiry into jill dando's murder. evidence from the met's inquiry into jill dando's murder . yeah. into jill dando's murder. yeah. so firstly , do you agree with
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so firstly, do you agree with her brother's theory ? her brother's theory? >> no. good evening, dan no, i mean, this was a professional hit all day long. >> the police initially thought it was a professional hit. >> then a year later, that's when barry george comes into the frame and. >> and detective chief inspector hamish campbell at the time, who was leading the investigation, became fixated on barry became utterly fixated on barry george. and as a result of that, they then looked for evidence to be able to fit him to the crime. and as a result of that, even the third offender profile was designed to identify , defy and designed to identify, defy and to fit barry george. offender profile should never do that. in fact, it offended profile shouldn't be written when you have a potential suspect in mind . and the whole investigation was fundamentally flawed, had unique access to every single police case file of the investigation . and a number of investigation. and a number of years ago, i put a programme together which you can view on
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amazon and actually on youtube, and that programme analysed in real detail every aspect of that case. and we looked at certain aspects, for example , there were aspects, for example, there were over 100 suspects that the police had never bothered to, to follow up on, and that is because they became utterly fixated on barry george . fixated on barry george. >> now you have i've spoken to barry george today , i believe barry george today, i believe there are still some who want to throw him under the bus. and you're outraged about this, aren't you, mark? because you are, sir. certain of his innocence ? innocence? >> absolutely . when i approached >> absolutely. when i approached barry george a number of years ago for my programme, i was like others, very sceptical and thought, you know what? he's been acquitted . but let's look been acquitted. but let's look at the evidence and see where it goes. i i had the goes. and as i say, i had the unique access to see all of the files and watch our and hours of videos interviews with him where
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he gave his answers and i can tell you very clearly that there is no way that barry george committed that crime. it was a professional hit, a single shot to the back of the ear, clearly by a organised criminal who knew exactly what they were doing and of course haven't been caught, which plays into very much the aspect of how professional they were. barry george doesn't fit the profile in any way at all, and that's why they became fixated on him. i spoke to barry today. he did that netflix interview with his lawyer and he hasn't seen what's been cut yet . but i also spoke to his sister . one of the things that concerns me and it's the same line that actually hamish campbell took on the bbc panorama programme when he when he was asked in relation to who he was asked in relation to who he thought committed the crime. he says his mind hasn't been changed. he's been very clear to say in his view that it is barry george , barry george was george, barry george was acquitted by a court , but the
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acquitted by a court, but the evidence is over whelming that he wasn't responsible and actually he hamish campbell, would be much better accepting some responsibility for a fundamentally flawed investing allegation where they failed to follow up on numerous lines of inquiry. and still to date, many of those lines of inquiries that still haven't been done. what hamish campbell be saying hamish campbell should be saying and the metropolitan and indeed what the metropolitan police we're police should be saying is we're reopening this investigation. there are huge amounts of lines of inquiry haven't been of inquiry that haven't been done. even had the director done. we even had the director of public prosecutions at the time alison not being time, alison saunders, not being truthful in relation to a fender profiles being taken place this is the biggest unsolved high profile murder investigation in the capital and i'm sure that and michael mansfield's called for it. i'm calling for it this case should be reopened . case should be reopened. >> and do you think this netflix documentary , which of course, documentary, which of course, will catapult this story to an international audience, makes it more likely that we could ever
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see see the mystery solved and find out who indeed did kill jill dando ? jill dando? >> well , this case is only going >> well, this case is only going to be solved if the metropolitan police take the stance to reopen it. >> hamish campbell has come out and said very clearly that he believes that barry george is responsible and he may well fall foul of those words if the lawyers decide to take action against him . but what is against him. but what is interesting is whether or not the metropolitan police have that view. he is a retired senior officer. he led the investigation . and i'm waiting investigation. and i'm waiting for a response from the metropolitan police what their stance is in respect of that. i say there was no reference or no reply from the metropolitan police in relation to the programme . i don't know if they programme. i don't know if they were even given a right to reply in respect of it, but want to in respect of it, but i want to know metropolitan know what the metropolitan police do police are saying about this. do they george they believe that barry george is still responsible? he's been acquitted by a and they acquitted by a court and they now need to open this
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investigation . so it's great investigation. so it's great that it's now got a public platform. shows that platform. it clearly shows that barry george is not responsible . now we need the metropolitan police to eat a bit of humble pie, reopen this investigation and follow up the many lines of inquiry that hamish campbell and the rest of his team failed to do. >> mark williams—thomas on the horrifying and still unsolved murder of jill dando. fascinating stuff. thank you so much, mark. now one of britain's best journalist, tom bower, on standby to tackle the bbc and he's got some bombshells on the royals, of course. first, though, weather that warm though, the weather that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello there. i'm greg jewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast. we have storm agnes on the way, bringing some very strong winds, some disruptive weather, heavy rain in places too . so we can rain in places too. so we can see that on the bigger picture, this deep area of low pressure
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will push across the uk as we head through wednesday. large coastal waves, some strong winds , particularly across the north and the west of the uk. heavy rain, too, this evening. fairly quiet out there. some clear spells remaining, showers gradually as we head gradually clear as we head overnight. the cloud thickening from the southwest as that storm approaches. most dry approaches. but most places dry under the clear skies. northern ireland and scotland dipping into single figures . but for into single figures. but for most, 12 to 14 celsius to take us into wednesday morning . so us into wednesday morning. so a dry start, but it won't take long before the cloud thickens. the up the rain the wind picks up and the rain starts move into western starts to move into western areas. north areas. this pushing north eastwards through the best eastwards through the day. best of sunshine holding of the sunshine holding on across scotland and also across north scotland and also south—east england. but we could see of 70, possibly 80 see gusts of 70, possibly 80 miles hour towards the north miles an hour towards the north and west, combined with and the west, combined with heavy lead some heavy rain, will lead to some disruption. risk warnings disruption. metal risk warnings in cool feeling day here, in force. cool feeling day here, but sunshine, but in any sunshine, temperatures lifting to around 22 celsius into thursday. that storm system moves out the way andifs storm system moves out the way and it's a mixture of sunny spells and showers the spells and showers across the north some heavy
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north and the west. some heavy bursts elsewhere , bursts possible elsewhere, generally quite some generally quite cloudy, some sunny spells in between. and then on, rain arriving then later on, rain arriving from the west as we end the week and go into the weekend, it looks like further showers are possible, drier as we possible, perhaps drier as we head saturday. head to saturday. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> coming up, one of britain's best journalists and former bbc man tom bower weighs into the corporation's latest impartiality row. after a top star, john simpson, openly campaigns against surging donald trump. and after a year to forget, for meghan markle, what's next for the coasting duchess bower here shortly with a big exclusive . but next, david a big exclusive. but next, david walliams prepares to lock horns with simon cowell's britain's got talent and the courts as he seeks damages after his dramatic sacking and 90s pop band eternal scrap , their big reunion tour scrap, their big reunion tour after some of the group complained about the trans movement hijacking the gay
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community by superstar panel debate. both those big culture war stories. we're back
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radio. >> let's return to newsnight now on our mediabuzz more front pages are in three very different stories here. labour's class war begins on day one. that's a headline in the daily mail as the party faced a backlash over plans to immediately add vat to school fees if starmer gets the keys to number ten, the telegraph tonight , the very important tonight, the very important story locked down damage to children was was preventable. the government has been told in a new report. leading campaigners will argue that harm could have been avoided if children's rights had been considered ministers made considered when ministers made lockdown decisions and the sun leeds are with an exclusive about a british airways pilot who was hauled off a flight to london from south africa for weeks ago after boasting to an air stewardess about a booze and
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drug orgy hours before he was due to fly on the plane home, he apparently told the colleague on the flight deck, i've been a very naughty boy before . she very naughty boy before. she raised the alarm and the flight was cancelled, costing . ba was cancelled, costing. ba £100,000. my superstar panel returned. now former conservative cabinet minister host of saturday mornings here on tv news. esther mcvey , the on tv news. esther mcvey, the conservative commentator , and conservative commentator, and calvin robinson. also a host of his common sense crusade . his common sense crusade. saturday night on gb news and the best selling author , rebecca the best selling author, rebecca reid. now louise redknapp has sparked an extra ordinary public row with her bandmates after she pulled out of the upcoming eternal reunion tour. the r&b group, my goodness, i loved them in the 90s had a number one single. remember this song so good, i want to be the only one. the only one to hold you , touch the only one to hold you, touch you from the one i really only
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want to see you but the line up the line up is split into two. opposing camps. after squabbling about performances at lgbt festival . so the sisters , esther festival. so the sisters, esther and vernie bennett, who are both christians, have been accused by redknapp and kelly bryan of blocking the planned pride gigs because they believe the gay community has been by the trans battle. in a statement provided to the bbc, redknapp publicist said she was a huge supporter and ally of the lgbt community and ally of the lgbt community and that both her and bryan would not work with anyone who held these views . however, the held these views. however, the band's manager, dave ingoldsby, hit back on behalf of the bennetts, telling the daily mirror newspaper louise and her team have thrown their mum under the bus. vernie said she had some concerns about the pride movement being, and not movement being, and she's not alone. but this has now been weaponised against her, with louise's trying to get her louise's team trying to get her cancelled and calvin, this really worries me. i mean, i love eternal number one. it
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would have been great to see them reunited. louise redknapp is lovely woman who is a very lovely woman who hasn't been with the band since the the 90s. why this the since the 90s. why this makes so that i think makes me so sad is that i think it is indicative of what's happening in society now. basically we can't be friends with people. we can't work with people unless we agree with them. >> and it's on everything . >> and it's on everything. >> and it's on everything. >> so intolerant. >> so intolerant. >> yeah, of course it is. but i think these two, the bennetts, are absolutely right. good christians, standing up christians, they're standing up for this trans for children because this trans movement is about the mutilation, chemical mutilation, the chemical castration the drugging castration and the drugging of children . it's abhorrent. for children. it's abhorrent. so for them up and say, no, we them to stand up and say, no, we don't part it while don't want any part of it while they're in the music industry, that so they my that is bold. so they get my full this. i think full support in this. i think louise to be louise has shown herself to be woke and the bad type of populist to what populist in wanting to do what the trend the current trend is. >> but what if she says, well, actually, no, i want to support the community? the trans community? >> do you know what? i can't really get het up about this story at all. you see, because i believe choice. believe in freedom of choice. freedom get freedom of expression. you get on, you can on, you don't get on. you can see why the band fell apart. i
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mean, eternal, mean mean, eternal, who cares? i mean , they certainly eternal , they certainly aren't eternal at last century, at all. they're so last century, as i'm concerned . so at all. they're so last century, as get i'm concerned . so at all. they're so last century, as get i'mofyncerned . so at all. they're so last century, as get i'mof them ed . so at all. they're so last century, as get i'mof them .d . so at all. they're so last century, as get i'mof them . but'>o at all. they're so last century, as get i'mof them . but i let's get rid of them. but i would much rather say instead of everybody falling out , breaking everybody falling out, breaking out, not being able to have a conversation and not being able to decide what they want to do, i just think she's just tried to go limb to get some go out on a limb to get some pubuchy go out on a limb to get some publicity because she was flagging it. >> this worked. rebecca reid, how about this one? how do you feel about this one? because actually it's really sad to me . to me. >> i sort of agree with that story. it's not a band that i've got any real experience of love for, so i don't feel viscerally about it, but i do . about it, but i do. >> i would say eternal's best song, by the way, beautiful ballad, recommended . i am ballad, highly recommended. i am blessed. very >> i would i would say i do think it's really sad that they've made it public. i think it's distasteful. i do think it's distasteful. and i do think there to be there is a conversation to be had the trans had about whether the trans movement lgbt movement movement and the lgbt movement at the t being trans could be better served separately because being trans isn't a sexuality . being trans isn't a sexuality. and that's all the sisters are
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saying. and it's unfortunate that we never get to have that discussion in a non—weaponized way always and way. it's always shouting and horrible. upset . it horrible. everyone is upset. it is you ever and is nice because if you ever and i say this as a gay man, if you ever want to talk about lgb, you're accused of you're a immediately accused of being transphobic. >> the difficulties are different . different. >> they are two very different things that have been of things that have been kind of shoved think shoved together. and i think it's bit a maybe it's a it's a bit of a maybe it's a disservice everybody both sides. >> okay, breaking tonight, >> okay, now breaking tonight, the former britain's got talent judge david walliams is sensationally suing his former bosses after being axed last year over leaked audio recordings to the guardian on of him calling contestants a very different c word . the 52 year different c word. the 52 year old star of stage and screen is seeking significant damages from production company fremantle, who he accuses of a data breach after the private comments recorded and filming breaks way back in 2020 were leaked almost three years later. now walliams made a public apology when the story broke back in november 2022. but it wasn't enough to save his job on the show. and i
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think this could get very nasty , esther, because it looks like there is a concerted attempt to cancel david walliams. this has been going on for some time . we been going on for some time. we know what cancel culture is like. we've seen what's happened to clarke, seen to noel clarke, we've seen what's happened to russell brand. go brand. now they're wanting to go for walliams. he's saying for david walliams. he's saying , putting line in the , and he's putting a line in the sand very early on and saying, be careful , sand very early on and saying, be careful, be sand very early on and saying, be careful , be careful if sand very early on and saying, be careful, be careful if you're trying to cancel . trying to cancel. >> now, i think this is a much more intriguing story. how did those private words make their way out into the public arena? were they just trying to get rid of him in one way or another, expose someone was trying to finish off. somebody finish him off. somebody was trying to finish off in one trying to finish him off in one way and how does way or another. and how does this go? i actually would stand by him and say, yes, i probably would case this. by him and say, yes, i probably vidoi'i'l case this. by him and say, yes, i probably vidoi'i'l where case this. by him and say, yes, i probably vidoi'i'l where case goings. by him and say, yes, i probably vidoi'i'l where case going to i don't know where he's going to go. really sure what go. i'm not really sure what firm got on there. firm footing he's got on there. he's to private he's trying to say the private discussions wondering discussions. i'm wondering if he was a way and he was forced out in a way and he said had resign. is there
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said he had to resign. is there a constructive case a constructive dismissal case there but basically was there? but basically he was saying these were private comments. it comments. you're not seeing it in its entirety. don't think in its entirety. i don't think he's questioning that were he's questioning that they were crude or this, that or crude or vulgar or this, that or the other. wasn't. but he the other. he wasn't. but he knew at that moment. >> yes. yes were cameras >> yes. yes there were cameras there. know how there. but we know how television you're television works. you're sometimes for sometimes sitting there for hours hours a day. and at hours and hours a day. and at that moment in time, the cameras were the television, that moment in time, the cameras wer
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could have had that conversation had he not resigned. i think also be a also we may well be having a different discussion about this at that's why at some point. but that's why a constructive if constructive dismissal, if they've forced him to resign. >> well, rebecca's >> well, as rebecca's just hinting this hinting at there, kelvin, this is is another one. this is is this is another one. this is another one who the cancel culture mob because culture mob are after because we're these rumours we're hearing all these rumours and , well, salacious and salacious, well, salacious rumours about him. >> anything about >> i don't know anything about it. don't know any facts about it. i don't know any facts about it. i don't know any facts about it. know is what i'm it. all i know is what i'm heanng it. all i know is what i'm hearing on twitter and in the green problem. green room this is the problem. it's culture. they're it's cancel culture. they're clearly coming him. don't clearly coming for him. i don't know true, maybe know why. maybe it's true, maybe it's surely if he's it's not. but surely if he's done anything illegal, it should be he's done be tried in court. if he's done anything it be anything immoral, it should be between he's between him and the people he's addressing. we're addressing. the fact that we're having this right having all of this right now shows and people are shows exactly and people are leaking disgusting as well. leaking is disgusting as well. >> it's >> that's why i said it's intriguing >> that's why i said it's intrthere is a big difference >> there is a big difference between is between cancel culture, which is getting because getting rid of somebody because you opinion. they you don't like one opinion. they expressed. like expressed. and something like russell we it's russell brand, we know it's a matter they matter of fact, they had a relationship 16 year matter of fact, they had a relawheniip 16 year matter of fact, they had a relawhen he 16 year matter of fact, they had a relawhen he was 16 year matter of fact, they had a relawhen he was 31. 16 year matter of fact, they had a relawhen he was 31. 16 yyou are old when he was 31. and you are allowed an employer, say allowed to, as an employer, say thatis allowed to, as an employer, say that is reputationally damaging. we work with you we do not want to work with you anymore. cancel we do not want to work with you anymorthat cancel we do not want to work with you anymorthat is cancel we do not want to work with you anymorthat is holdingancel we do not want to work with you anymorthat is holding people. culture that is holding people. how did become of how did it become a kind of moralgot leaked there in
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>> it got leaked out there in the first place. that's the don't that way. don't do it that way. >> day, looking back don't do it that way. >> it's day, looking back don't do it that way. >> it's a day, looking back don't do it that way. >> it's a very ay, looking back don't do it that way. >> it's a very disturbing back world. >> if we cannot have a private conversation that isn't leaked while set, while we are at work on set, surrounded cameras, wearing a surrounded by cameras, wearing a microphone, well, i'm not sure you'd have your you'd be happy to have your conversations room conversations in this green room leaked. would feel leaked. i'm sure you would feel very, invaded . very, very personally invaded. but i don't i don't call people cunous but i don't i don't call people curious if that was done to you. so put yourself in that so maybe put yourself in that situation. rebecca put yourself in have called two people >> i have called two people tonight in the green room. >> any this lot >> not any of this lot politicians. and be and i'd politicians. and i'd be and i'd be happy either politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. happy either politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. but happy either politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. but ifippy either politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. but if you either politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. but if you were ither politicians. and i'd be and i'd bethose. but if you were having of those. but if you were having a private conversation about of those. but if you were having a pri life conversation about of those. but if you were having a pri life orynversation about of those. but if you were having a pri life or doing|tion about of those. but if you were having a pri life or doing something of those. but if you were having a priwas or doing something of those. but if you were having a priwas then ing something of those. but if you were having a priwas then going mething of those. but if you were having a priwas then going me be 1g that was then going to be weaponised against you, three years think you'd years later, i think you'd probably have lost your work probably have you lost your work because of it you knew it because of it and you knew it was a private conversation with those the green room. those three in the green room. >> about those three in the green room. >> private about those three in the green room. >> private conversation. about the private conversation. >> estimate you >> calvin robinson estimate you continue private continue your private conversations in the i conversations in the break. i hope wasn't called a. hope i wasn't being called a. probably now coming up as superwoman suella gives a pioneering speech on illegal immigration in the states. is she to declare she right to declare multiculturalism a failure? we'll debate we reveal
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we'll debate as we reveal tonight's greatest britain union jackass. tonight's greatest britain union jackass . but next is bbc star jackass. but next is bbc star john simpson. campaigns against donald trump the state donald trump is the state broadcaster being run by the biased elite? biased metropolitan elite? and as markle suffers, this as meghan markle suffers, this embarrassing mike mishap at kevin costner's celeb bashes the duchess now on the decline. well, the esteemed journalist and royal biographer, tom bower, is live with exclusive reporting. you don't want to go anywhere because is in anywhere because tom bower is in the studio in just two minutes time
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tom bower is uncancelled . and tom bower is uncancelled. and this is where britain's top commentators speak out on controversial issues without the fear of the cancel culture sweep , keeping the rest of the media and the bbc has been thrown into another major impartiality row after one of its star journalists launched an impromptu attack on donald trump. john simpson , who has trump. john simpson, who has served as the beeb's world
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affairs editor since 1988, posted a since deleted tweet yesterday which read the poll, which showed trump ten points ahead of biden in the us may well be inaccurate. that doesn't mean we in the west shouldn't be working really hard to strengthen ourselves against the possibility that trump might win. don't any sign of win. i don't see any sign of this at present. simpson has since posted what the bbc press office tonight called a clarification , explaining he clarification, explaining he deleted the original tweet because it was badly expressed before , once again warning the before, once again warning the world of consequences of a world of the consequences of a second presidency . so, second trump presidency. so, tom, you worked at the . bbc for tom, you worked at the. bbc for 25 years. john simpson is meant to be regarded as a bbc great. so what's happened to this organisation? what's going on? >> well, nothing has changed. i mean, it's always been filled with people, with opinions. what has happened really is though, that the so—called director general, tim davie, has absolutely no control, editorial control over what his staff are
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saying . so he failed immediately saying. so he failed immediately with gary lineker, as you recall , and with gary lineker, who was absolutely prepared to let the man in the end dictate how he was going to tweet and what he was going to tweet and what he was going to tweet. but really, what worrying is that what is really worrying is that they to accept they don't want to accept vis a vis trump, that it isn't some sort of small cabal that would vote him. and i'm very anti vote for him. and i'm very anti trump. i think it'd be terrible if be next president, if he'd be the next president, especially prison. especially if he'd be in prison. but it's the but what's apparent is it's the electorate and this is what the bbc does want accept, bbc does want to accept, that somehow the polls show that trump is ahead because the people america , for one people of america, for one reason or another at the moment, favour trump biden and favour trump over biden and really what's happening in the bbc is it's sort of implosion of editorial control. no report yet on huw edwards, the bashir thing, the tim davies seeking to cover up the cover , up the cover cover up the cover, up the cover up, all the time. there's no direction . and the other day direction. and the other day when nick robinson interviewed sunak on the today programme, he was so aggressive and actually at one stage said to the prime
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minister , you're taking too minister, you're taking too long, really, in answering . the long, really, in answering. the question is i've got so many questions to go through. in other question is, are other words, my question is, are more important than your answers . all the time . and the bias is all the time coming through because the director general, the editor in chief, tim davie, doesn't assert at his control. so this simpson thing is just another example . thing is just another example. all of what is happening at the bbc is actually running out of control . it needs to actually be control. it needs to actually be brought to the back to understand it's meant to be impartial and facts , not impartial and deliver facts, not opinions in that way. >> yeah, no, indeed . >> yeah, no, indeed. >> yeah, no, indeed. >> indeed it the problem is, though, all of these people who leave the bbc. right. so we've seen in emily maitlis , jon seen in emily maitlis, jon sopel seen in emily maitlis, jon sopel, lewis goodall, all of them are becoming hardened left wing activist journalists , i wing activist journalists, i guess you would say. so it's becoming increasingly difficult, i think, for the bbc to cover up what's going on, especially given their tweets are at given their tweets are not at all controlled . old tom davies
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all controlled. old tom davies lost control because of the strike by gary lineker. exactly >> and that's the problem. when emily maitlis was in the and emily maitlis was in the bbc and jeffrey goodall, we all knew she was left wing. she supported was a left wing. she supported labour and she was incredibly entitled problem was that entitled to the problem was that she views into the she put her views into the airwaves and it was always on balanced. that is the problem , balanced. that is the problem, that it's okay. of course these people have every journalist has got opinion. there's nothing got an opinion. there's nothing wrong that you've wrong with that, is that you've got it and show that got to balance it and show that you understand there's an alternative and the way alternative view. and the way the runs is run at the bbc runs is run at the moment you really the moment. you really think all the time that it is anti—government. you believe it is pro cancel culture, you think that it is very woke and there's no balance, there's no striving for impartiality. balance, there's no striving for impartiality . and this the impartiality. and this the moment that you really had it come out, really appallingly was obviously the lineker case. but also with huw edwards, the way they newsnight launched an investigation into their broadcast . it was just broadcast. it was just astonishing thing to do . and, astonishing thing to do. and, you know, the same with the
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bashir, the cover up is just it's got to end . and so in the it's got to end. and so in the end, we've got to decide really that director general must that the director general must get control back over the bbc. >> yes, indeed. now, tom, yesterday day we played this hilarious mic flop moment. there it is. when meghan was denied the microphone at this star studded charity event hosted by kevin costner . and studded charity event hosted by kevin costner. and this has gone viral all over the internet. but you have some more exclusive information about the event. >> well, i what's hilarious is that meghan really did think i'm told that when she paid $12,000 for the right to go to this event and stand next to kevin costner, that would give her speaking rights to. after all, she just come from germany, where she had been lauded at the invictus . but that wasn't invictus games. but that wasn't hollywood. to do the hollywood. she wanted to do the same in hollywood, and she was convinced was going to get convinced she was going to get the make the same sort the right to make the same sort of which, know, the of speech, which, you know, the great about a great of speech, which, you know, the great and about a great of speech, which, you know, the great and deeply|t a great of speech, which, you know, the great and deeply affecteda great
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of speech, which, you know, the great and deeply affected by'eat of speech, which, you know, the great and deeply affected by all lobby and deeply affected by all the poverty and all the rest of it. but they were having none of it. but they were having none of it. so she was snubbed by hollywood really is hollywood and that really is pretty you can buy pretty sad to think you can buy a microphone for $12,000 when really if she paid 100,000, she would have had the right to speak. she too speak. but she was too cheapskate pay full rate i >> -- >> indeed. and look, tom, really, really disturbing moment with the snp this week because princess anne was left waiting for 40 minutes and official event at aberdeen in aberdeen harbour after humza yousaf this deputy shona robinson arrived late. it's a move that has been described as disgraceful . the described as disgraceful. the scottish government have blamed urgent business, but is this further proof that there does seem to be a real row brewing in scotland between the snp and the monarchy ? monarchy? >> well, i think the snp is clearly republican. they stated it and yusuf himself has said that he wants the monarchy abolished , but his real problem abolished, but his real problem is that the scots don't want the monarchy scots monarchy abolished. the scots majority in favour of the
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majority is in favour of the monarchy. but what's awful is that princess anne is such a hard working, that princess anne is such a hard working , decent woman. she hard working, decent woman. she is trouper for the is really such a trouper for the royal family and for britain as well . though left her well. though to have left her waiting all that time was so rude , so unnecessary. and the rude, so unnecessary. and the idea that the deputy leader was so busy that she couldn't make it in time because affairs of state or affairs of state are there in scotland, that that mean that you don't arrive on time. and what i think it does is it drives another nail into the coffin of the snp . it shows the coffin of the snp. it shows that they really are a declining force as a government, which is now so under investigation through nicola sturgeon and the whole police investigate action, they really are tainted and i'm sure the great scottish people will see that as another reason not to vote for the snp because in the end the royal family embraces their values much more than the snp does . than the snp does. >> very good point. very well put . tom bower, thank you so put. tom bower, thank you so much. we will speak next week,
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but it's time now to reveal tonight's greatest britain union. has my superstar union. jack has my superstar panel return . esther mcvey, who panel return. esther mcvey, who is your nominee ? is your nominee? >> right. my great britain is rishi sunak this week for an outbreak in common sense that he stopped that ridiculous net zero timetable. hopefully he's to going stop hs2. and of course , going stop hs2. and of course, he's being feted by the public. the polls have gone up by 5. yes you've still got a long way to 90, you've still got a long way to go, but it's the start, esther. >> it's a start. calvin robinson, your nominee. >> so diksha thurman, this is the 19 year old girl who until recently we had to call patient street . she's the one who had street. she's the one who had a degenerative illness . and the degenerative illness. and the doctors she was going doctors said she was going to die. to fight. die. she said, i want to fight. i die fighting to i want to die fighting to live. and said , you must be and the doctor said, you must be delusional because don't delusional because you don't follow advice. and the judge follow our advice. and the judge has on her. has put a gagging order on her. and weren't to and she we weren't allowed to say now are . say her name, but now we are. >> rebecca reid, your nominee . >> rebecca reid, your nominee. >> rebecca reid, your nominee. >> is the writers guild of >> mine is the writers guild of america who have to a deal
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america who have come to a deal , which means that everybody can get back to which we get back to work, which means we can next can have some tv next year, which need. which i think we all need. >> yeah, look, of course, >> yeah, well, look, of course, tonight it's got to be calvin robinson and siddiq, because , as robinson and siddiq, because, as calvin says, finally we are allowed to say her name . really, allowed to say her name. really, really shocking story . esther really shocking story. esther mcvey, your union jackass nominee . nominee. >> union jackass has to be bbc journalist john simpson. there he was with his tweet about trump . now we see it. now we trump. now we see it. now we don't. he removes it. he puts up another one. here is somebody, a left wing campaigner masquerading as an impartial journalist. and now that mask has slipped. and we've seen what is all about. yes. i don't mind him having opinions, but if he wants to, don't pretend you're an impartial journalist and don't money from the state. don't take money from the state. >> calvin robinson, your union jackass nominee, dame caroline dinenage, because she still hasn't resigned for this government overreach, this parliamentary overreach of engaging in cancel culture
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against russell brand and rebecca reid, your union jackass nominee, you'll be shocked to hear mine. >> suella braverman for saying that being gay a woman is not that being gay or a woman is not sufficient to qualify for a protection. i think we're sleepwalking a very sleepwalking into a very dangerous where people dangerous situation where people who will be who need our help will not be given who need our help will not be giv> it's all she ever does is just say big words and then achieve nothing. >> well, we'll see. see. >> well, we'll see. we'll see. but public will be but i think the public will be on side this. really, on her side with this. i really, really i'm actually really do. but i'm actually going to go with esther mcvey and john simpson . it's been and john simpson. it's been another theme of the show today, the bias at the bbc. i think
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it's very, very shocking to have a journalist who we thought we could trust openly campaigning against donald trump. whatever you think about him, that isn't the role of the bbc. the role of the role of the bbc. the role of the is report the news. the bbc is to report the news. so mcvey, calvin so esther mcvey, calvin robinson, rebecca read my superstar panel. thank you so much. again tomorrow much. i'm back again tomorrow from p.m. next up, though, from 9 pm. next up, though, it's night . it's headliners. good night. >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar the proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm greg dewhurst and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast. we have storm agnes on the way, bringing some very strong winds , some disruptive weather, heavy rain in places too. so we can see that on the bigger picture. this deep area of low pressure will push across the uk as we head through wednesday . large head through wednesday. large coastal waves, some strong winds, particularly across the north and the west of the uk. heavy rain , too, this evening, heavy rain, too, this evening, fairly quiet out there. some clear spells remaining, fairly quiet out there. some clear spells remaining , showers clear spells remaining, showers gradually clearing as we head
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overnight. the cloud thickening from the southwest that storm from the southwest as that storm approaches . most dry approaches. but most places dry under the clearer skies. northern ireland and scotland dipping into single but dipping into single figures. but for of 12 to 14 celsius to for most of 12 to 14 celsius to take us into wednesday morning. so a dry start , but it won't so a dry start, but it won't take long before the cloud thickens . the wind picks take long before the cloud thickens. the wind picks and thickens. the wind picks up and the to move into the rain starts to move into western pushing western areas. this pushing north eastwards day. north eastwards through the day. best sunshine holding on best of the sunshine holding on across and also across north scotland and also south—east england. but could south—east england. but we could see gusts of 70, possibly 80 miles an hour towards the north and west, combined with and the west, combined with heavy to heavy rain, will lead to some disruption. risk warnings disruption. metal risk warnings in force. cool feeling day here, but sunshine, but in any sunshine, temperatures lifting to around 22 celsius into thursday . that 22 celsius into thursday. that storm system moves out the way andifs storm system moves out the way and it's a mixture of sunny spells and showers across the north west. some heavy north and the west. some heavy bursts possible elsewhere, generally , some generally quite cloudy, some sunny between . and sunny spells in between. and then later on, rain arriving from the west as we end the week and go into the weekend, it looks like further showers are possible. drier as we possible. perhaps drier as we head to saturday.
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>> the temperatures rising . boxt >> the temperatures rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on
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gb news with gb news. >> the top story tonight , the >> the top story tonight, the home secretary says migrants arriving in small boats has put an unsustainable pressure on the uk's asylum system . and the
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uk's asylum system. and the british taxpayer . delivering british taxpayer. delivering a speech in washington this afternoon, suella braverman also argued that being discriminated against for being gay or being a woman was not enough to qualify for asylum. where individuals are being persecuted . are being persecuted. >> and it is right that we offer sanctuary , but we will not be sanctuary, but we will not be able to sustain an asylum system if, in effect simply being gay or a woman or fearful of discrimination in your country of origin is sufficient to qualify for protection in well , qualify for protection in well, labour hit back the shadow home secretary , yvette cooper, secretary, yvette cooper, accusing the government of failing to set out any new plans to tackle the small boats crisis to tackle the small boats crisis to try and target hit lesbian and gay people from countries like uganda, where they face serious persecution even when they also only make up around 2% of asylum applications in the uk is just trying to distract people from her own failure where she should instead be
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getting a grip rather

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