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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 27, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST

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refugee kyrees saadallah targeted them in a town centre park. the coroner said failings by the home office and the local nhs community mental health team contributed to their deaths . contributed to their deaths. james furlong's father, gary, said he has very little confidence that an attack like this will not happen again. humza yousaf says he will not resign as scotland's first minister, ahead of a crucial test of his leadership next week . he says that as a minority government, his party will need to make some concessions as it negotiates with other parties. it's after the collapse of the snp's power sharing deal with the greens yesterday. but humza yousaf says he'll fight on. >> i fully intend to not just win that vote, but i intend to fight to make sure that the government stays, not just the government stays, not just the government continues to deliver on the priorities of the people, like, for example, investing in affordable housing. so there's all that political game playing happening from the opposition .
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happening from the opposition. it will not be taking part. it will be getting, of course, on with the job. and when the vote comes, i fully intend to win . comes, i fully intend to win. >> the foreign office has summoned the russian ambassador after a british man was allegedly recruited as a russian spy. 20 year old dylan earl has been charged with conducting hostile activity in the uk to benefit russia. he's accused of masterminding an arsenal plot on london businesses. four other men were also charged in connection with the same investigation . well, those are investigation. well, those are the top stories and for all the latest do sign up to gb news alerts. just scan the qr code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash alerts. now it's time for headliners . for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at
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saturday's newspaper . i'm andrew saturday's newspaper. i'm andrew doyle and i'm joined tonight by two headliner ogs, josh howie and leo curse. yeah. josh, what was that gesture? just keeping it real, mate. yeah. >> west side. you know what those symbols mean? >> what do they mean? >> what do they mean? >> they mean you stole a bike. oh really? >> okay, well, there we go. well, you shouldn't be two bikes. subliminal messaging to support criminality. josh, what is the matter with you? apologise to the gb news viewers. outrageous. okay, well, look, we're going to start by looking at saturday's front pages. the daily mail is leading with smiles that say king is going back to work. the guardian scale of teacher shortage crisis in schools revealed. the i toxic gas surge from us chicken farms apparently will get to that in two seconds. the times has got the king's story returning to pubuc the king's story returning to public life. the telegraph, the return of the king. those were your front pages . all right, so
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your front pages. all right, so we saw there that most of the front covers for saturday are going with the king. and, good news, josh . yeah. great news. news, josh. yeah. great news. we've obviously been affected. he's wearing here he is on the daily mail. >> he's wearing a pink shirt. you and i are wearing our pink shirts because we care and love him. leo has gone with the black t shirt. tshirt. >> t shirt. >> the colour of the republican. >> the colour of the republican. >> really? really. a massive sign of disrespect there. >> but. >> but. >> yeah, it's good news. he's obviously he's got cancer. this is . seems like the treatment obviously he's got cancer. this is. seems like the treatment is going well enough for him to return to public life. yes looking at the daily mail who've just gone for the big overall photo, i don't know if this is just me just having a look at camilla and i hope this isn't too disrespectful, but i think she's getting fitter, josh, i don't think that's really the. do you think she's getting focus of this story? >> i'm not answering that question. i'm just saying i think she's getting fitter. and that could also be why he's looking so happy. >> do you mean fitter? as in more , athletic? or do you mean more, athletic? or do you mean in the kind of laddish kind of street patois ?
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street patois? >> look, they're zooming in on her. i think she's looking more attractive as she's getting older. and i think king charles is like, poor. i'm just saying, like, i don't want to be disrespectful. cancer, serious and the king and all that. i just think there could be some sexual things. is this does this fall under the bracket of treason? >> i don't know if she's getting more attractive or if josh is just his standards are gradually lowering, until it's like, oh , i lowering, until it's like, oh, i think she's looking fit. >> she looks very she looks wonderful . leo. wonderful. leo. >> it's great that he's great that he's, you know, he's fit enough to return to duties. and the royal family have been hammered with health problems over the last. the last. someone's getting hammered . josh howie. >> i'm gonna have to rein you in. i'm sorry , but why is he not in. i'm sorry, but why is he not working on being immortal? >> if you're. if you're that rich, i think he owns. he owns the duchy of cornwall or something. or organic farm. i know there's some sort of organic farming going on, but he's got. he's got money. i've seen his house. he's definitely rich. so why not work on, you know, invest instead of i'll tell you why. greenhouses and climate change and stuff. invest
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in some sort of immortality. >> well, i'll tell you why. because that is not possible. you see, all these billionaires desperate to find the elixir of life and to live forever. it cannot happen. >> it is possible . and also, i >> it is possible. and also, i think we're going to crack it. i think we're going to crack it. i think the. they're not lobsters . think the. they're not lobsters. i think the last i think the people that are getting old now will be the last people to, to get old. i think we're going to we're going to crack it because we're going to crack it because we need to, because we've got falling fertility in the west. so we need people to live longer to work. sorry. >> king charles needs to work longer. >> but yeah. so he's back at work. his first official visit is to a cancer treatment centre . is to a cancer treatment centre. yeah, that seems a bit like a busman's holiday type thing . busman's holiday type thing. >> yeah, but it's good. it's a positive story, isn't it? because i don't know if he's well enough to do it, so it's inspirational. i've got cancer, i'm being treated for cancer and i've got to go on my work day and go to a cancer treatment. i think it was deliberate. of course it's deliberate. >> they just happened to be on the schedule. there was a no. they were like, it's too much cancen they were like, it's too much cancer. okay, i'm just saying go to a school or something. >> go to a school. okay. well there's josh, harry's advice.
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we're going to move on now to the guardian. they have a different story. leo. they're not going with the king. yeah. surprise >> they've gone with the more guardian style story. so it says scale of teacher shortage. crisis in schools revealed. so nearly 40% of teaching assistants cover classes. research has found. and this is a routine thing. it was introduced teaching assistants introduced teaching assistants in 2004. this rule was introduced that allowed them to sort of, supervise a class if a teacher was off sick or had to leave for an emergency. and now it's just like a standard thing. so hundreds of thousands of pupils in england and wales are being educated on the cheap by these , low paid teaching these, low paid teaching assistants. they earn as little assistants. they earn as little as £14,000. >> yeah, that's because teachers, are off sick or have quit , i teachers, are off sick or have quit, i didn't know we could do this. why don't we not just getting rid of all the teachers and these. these people are so cheap, we can they cheaply slash the school budget. >> but they're not. they're not trained. they're not equipped pianist. and they're not trained. they're not teachers. ultimately, teachers are essentially babysitters paid for by the state. >> so what? you've got to open a
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book. you've got to open a website, point at a blackboard . website, point at a blackboard. how difficult. >> i know you're being facetious there, but the skill of teaching there, but the skill of teaching the school. yeah, yeah, but perhaps your teachers are not representative. perhaps your teachers might be responsible for the way you turned out. oh maybe you're denigrating the scottish education system . yeah, scottish education system. yeah, well, i'm denigrating the education system that produced you. yeah, but i don't know what you. yeah, but i don't know what you hired me . josh, what do you you hired me. josh, what do you think teaching is bloody hard, by the way. well, this is it. >> after homeschooling, like , >> after homeschooling, like, teachers should be paid way more. it's way. i always joke, but it is super duper, insanely hard to actually impart any tell leo that he doesn't believe it. >> they can. >> they can. >> they can get paid more if they work really hard and get to a private school . but i don't a private school. but i don't know. is that your plan? >> do teachers a private school? >> do teachers a private school? >> i've already been through schools like your daughter. >> are you going to be happy to send her to leo? >> i have, i have to say i think they should pay teachers twice as much. yeah, give them half the timetable so they can actually prepare and it becomes actually prepare and it becomes a competitive job. and that
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solves all of society's ills because you get much better education. >> but you can see that about any job. and it's like, where's this money going to come from? there's loads of teachers . the there's loads of teachers. the problem is that they're allowed to go off sick. now, if you've got a job with sick pay, people will get sick . will get sick. >> well, no, but if you if you get vocational teachers, people who actually care about pedagogy, people who actually want to make the next generation better paedos we don't want we don't want pedagogy . don't want pedagogy. >> paedos ltns with you, with your big words. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that's it, but yeah. look, you're i'm right. >> no, i tell you why. because it does filter down to absolutely every other problem in society. >> 100% agree with you. no government is ever going to be think that long term or they tried to. to be fair, michael gove has did try his best to open his system. he did make some good changes actually. yeah, to be fair, but of course make that investment there. but you're going to get the payoff is going to be 20 years from now. and governments don't think that long term. and it's a real shame. but i 100% agree with you, the good news is that schools there are less people
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going to school because the numbers are on the decline. fewer. so fewer teachers. yes. >> you see, and you would have known that if we'd have had a better education system that's private school. that's private school. >> i'm just warning you, private school doesn't necessarily. >> yeah. you think private school is the elixir. but i tell you what. i've taught a private schools. some of my colleagues were pretty dim, right ? schools. some of my colleagues were pretty dim, right? i'm not naming names, but maybe i'll do that when i want to sell some more. >> teacher. our producer here was a teacher with you as well. wasn't he? >> he was a teaching assistant. are anyway, we're going to move on now. i hope he's not watching this. i'm going to move on to the ai. josh, what's going on? front cover of the ai toxic gas surge from my oh us style chicken farms supplying uk supermarkets. right. what's going on here? we have chickens, chicken. >> we eat over a billion chickens a year in this country. we love them. we love them. cheap £5 for a big old large chicken . and they create a lot chicken. and they create a lot of ammonia through their urine and their faeces . and this is, and their faeces. and this is, creating an environmental issue. the actual ammonia has got. oh
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my god, who was that? was that king charles who got angry about me dissing? i was i was complimenting your wife. it was a glitch in the matrix. >> it was just a glitch in the matrix. it was because you were talking about the chickens. >> it wasn't the chickens. do you think they're controlling everything? >> i think they control the matrix. >> we are. the ammonia has gone down since 2017. the amount that we as a country are producing . we as a country are producing. but in these areas with these big chicken farms like norfolk , big chicken farms like norfolk, they've got a couple, they've gone up like 40. so if you live around a big chicken farm, you could have some real issues. >> well, not only that, i mean, there's the image on the front cover of those chickens packed together. they don't look comfortable . leo, maybe we comfortable. leo, maybe we should just move towards a vegan diet. they're going to be even less comfortable when they're in my oven. >> i mean, i think it's, you know, it's great. everyone could be like, oh, we should, you know, the chickens should live free range. and the should the teacher should get paid twice as much. but in the real world, i mean, chicken is now meat. protein is now incredibly cheap by historical standards. as a portion of your salary, the amount you know, compared to like the 1950s or whatever that
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you can buy a chicken for, which means that poor people have access to high quality protein, which makes a huge difference. and what about the chickens health chickens? man the chickens, they're made of meat. they should have thought about being made out of meat before they decided to be made out of meat. >> they deserve a decent life, and if you actually go to public school, they should, you know, walking holidays and stuff, just things that they should have a good life until you kill them and eat them. that's my view. >> well, hobart encouraging wildfowling encouraging . what wildfowling encouraging. what about putting tvs in the i actually worked in a turkey farm for a bit. yeah, they crammed them all in. yeah, but if they put some tvs up and maybe we could hide chicken, you know, and then they could watch gb news that would, you know, help with us with the advertising and then they'd want to die. they wouldn't mind when they got the it depends who was on watching headliners when you're on there. >> okay. well look that's all we've got time for in this section. but coming up humza yousaf inaya lists that he won't be resigning. sadiq khan issues a grovelling apology, and the home office asks civil servants to move to rwanda.
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welcome back to headliners. it's your first look at saturday's newspapers . i'm andrew doyle. newspapers. i'm andrew doyle. i'm still here with josh howie and leo kearse. and we're going to begin this section with the telegraph. humza yousaf pretty tenacious . telegraph. humza yousaf pretty tenacious. he's sticking on isn't he. >> josh sticking on. >> josh sticking on. >> well yes yusuf insists he won't resign and will fight attempts to oust him. there are going to be two votes next week , going to be two votes next week, one basically for him, but no confidence . confidence. >> no confidence. >> no confidence. >> one for the government. >> one for the government. >> yeah, and, but he says it doesn't really matter because he isn't. >> he doesn't have to go even if he loses. right. i think he might as well just stick in there. he would just be like, you know what? i don't care if you know what? i don't care if you hate me. i'm. >> i'm. well you know, the snp has a bit of an authoritarian streak , so it would be, at least streak, so it would be, at least in character. leo, remind me you're not a fan of the snp, is that right? >> no, no. and humza yousaf in particular. i mean, he was the person who brought through the ridiculous hate crime act, which
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has been one of his catastrophic mistakes. that's you know, made him hugely unpopular with, with people. but it's not just that i mean under i mean, he's not responsible for the gender laws as well. but, you know, that came through under under sturgeon. well he wasn't exactly complaining about them. yeah. but and, and the whole , the but and, and the whole, the whole of the snp have just the last couple of years have just been they've fallen off a cliff with, you know, there's the branch form arrests. so peter murrell the husband of, nicola sturgeon and the former. what was he, was he the treasurer or the chief executive or some of the chief executive or some of the snp? he was rearrested, they've had they've rolled back they've had they've rolled back the green rules. they said they were going to hit net zero by next tuesday or something. so, so that's that means the greens are fractured with them and having their vote overridden by westminster. >> that's very humiliating. and humiliating. we now we now know that labour is probably going to end up with a majority seats in scotland. >> exactly. yes. they've squandered they've squandered the majority . they've they've the majority. they've they've introduced rent caps that caused the rent to go up. they've got soaring drug deaths because everybody would rather be dead
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than done anything good tram those a tram that was there was a good tram. >> wasn't there a tram somewhere? >> i don't think there was because they said they were going to build. they were going to build a tram . yes. edinburgh to build a tram. yes. edinburgh council and you know, i think we're several, light years on. >> there is a tram there now. i think it gets you to the i think in spite of all that litany of failure, you can get to the airport ten minutes quicker. >> heroin is cheaper. >> heroin is cheaper. >> oh, it is cheaper. yeah, that's a good point. yeah. >> the alcohol is more expensive . and they launched. they said they were going to launch these ferries to take people to the islands in scotland. mersey and they launched the ferries. they said oh we've got the ferries. they're the big photo opportunity . but the ferries opportunity. but the ferries weren't finished. they'd painted on windows. so that's the level of potemkin village we've got in scotland now. >> josh of course, as an outsider, you don't want to pontificate too much about scotland, but i think from what leo described, it does look like an absolute disaster for the snp. but isn't it good to now we can finally break this one party state? even if it is labour, we can do something different for while. >> yeah, it's going to be. it's going to be interesting to see
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if that, if the, if labour is going to come in and maybe a few more tory seats are going to actually make a difference to the idea of devolution like it was so tied up with the this kind of nationalistic movement . kind of nationalistic movement. but can they do local governance? well? >> well, they had a bit of momentum a number of years ago, and it feels like this has really squandered it or the polling is suggesting of that. i mean, it's gone down. support for scottish independence has gone down over the past five years. so is there any chance they can rerecord that momentum? >> yeah, i mean there's nationalism is a very, you know, the sort of call of patriotism like calling people's hearts that's always going to be an emotive. we sort of with brexit, we see it, you know, with, with other parties across europe. that's something that that calls to people beyond, you know, oh, look, the economy is a shambles. and, you know, this is being mismanaged. you know, that primal urge to, you know, for self—governance. >> that's what they should get back. >> that's what they should get back . you know, humza should back. you know, humza should paint his face with woad and scream freedom in an australian if they maybe they should rerelease, you know, the
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braveheart. >> yeah. put that back in the cinemas. it was in the cinemas for years, wasn't it? >> yeah, yeah, maybe bring that in. >> i'm just. i'm. in.— >> i'm just. i'm. if you in. >> i'm just. i'm. if you want to hire me as a political adviser. yes. that would be my advice to this time. >> it's personal. braveheart two. there we go . although two. there we go. although didn't he get his entrails pulled out at the end of the first one? >> electric boogaloo. >> electric boogaloo. >> what's that? >> what's that? >> braveheart two. i'm just. i'm just. i'm just spitballing. >> you're riffing. riffing? i don't like this riffing . don't like this riffing. >> electric boogaloo. >> electric boogaloo. >> it's meaningless. josh we're going to move on now to the daily mail. sadiq khan is apologising. leo, he should apologise for quite a few things. >> yeah, but this time he's issued a grovelling apology for suggesting that the chief rabbis criticism of his gaza ceasefire call was down to his muslim sounding name. >> that's quite an allegation , >> that's quite an allegation, isn't it? >> yeah. he said there'd be no equivalent response when manchester mayor andy burnham called for an immediate ceasefire. but burnham could be could be a muslim name. it could be one of the isis guys like burnham in a cage. that could be something that's. but yeah, sadiq khan said, what motivated
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them to come out in the way they did against the mayor of london and the mayor of greater manchester? i'll give you a clue. he's he's not called ahmed budhrani, he's called andy burnham, whereas i'm called sadiq khan, we'll give it give it a few. give it a decade or two and it will probably be called ahmed barrani with the demographic shift we're seeing, but yeah, he's at the issue this apology to the chief rabbi who, you know, he accused. >> i mean, it's really outrageous, isn't it? just all this mind reading thing like that, you see it a lot now, like, i take issue with something you've said and therefore i'm going to assume intuit some kind of pernicious motive . that's what's happened motive. that's what's happened here. it was an incredibly unfair accusation against the chief rabbi. i think they also work together. yeah, they worked together on lots of interfaith youth outreach stuff. >> and the idea was, first of all, london is our capital city. london is also where most of the jews in the uk live, and it's been the centre of these six months of hate marches. >> right. so it's more relevant than manchester in this case is what you're saying. >> exactly. so and the idea and also it was such a, it was such also it was such a, it was such a gentle criticism. he just all he said was in a tweet was i met
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with, sadiq khan . we had a great with, sadiq khan. we had a great meeting and i explained why i thought that ceasefire is a bad idea. >> yeah, that was all it is. >> yeah, that was all it is. >> so for him to sort of go out on this speech and by the way, being interviewed by media who's very problematic individual who has said a few very dodgy things, is and then sort of go, oh, woe is me. and like this victimisation whilst accusing the chief rabbi and it was it's crazy. >> so he's apologised. >> so he's apologised. >> he's apologised rightly so. but but why would he. and this is the thing as you said, reading out that quote this ahmed barani, it's that's obviously something he's said before or planned or written and sounds scripted doesn't it? >> it sounds scripted. >> it sounds scripted. >> so he thought that that was genuinely a good idea. >> is it possible that they can carry on working together? it's like if one of you guys suggested that i was secretly anti—scottish, you know, and i'm quite explicitly anti—scottish chief rabbi , really upset about chief rabbi, really upset about it is a very sort of, gentle dude. he's not call him a dude. >> yeah, he's just like, he's all about religion. and he's a very learned man. just he's not
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a very sort of alpha male in the room type guy. he's, you know, he's he's he's he's sort of quite homely, right. he's a, he's a just a nice guy. so i imagine he will accept it in the, in the, in the effort to make peace with the world. >> well of course he has to. >> well of course he has to. >> he has to. yeah. because sadiq khan is going to be mayor again. he's still 19 points ahead.cani again. he's still 19 points ahead. can i ask about that? >> i don't understand how he keeps winning. i mean, i genuinely don't because it's such a terrible he's never done anything good. >> i agree with you . but this >> i agree with you. but this time there's just no real plausible alternative. it just seems like the tories kind of gave up in their selection process . no, i don't know susan process. no, i don't know susan hall particularly well, but it doesn't. she doesn't seem to be setting the world alight, but he uses the fireworks to express his political views. >> like that's that's pathetic . >> like that's that's pathetic. >> like that's that's pathetic. >> yeah, but most people don't mind about stuff like that. and you got to, got to remember , you you got to, got to remember, you know, london has changed a lot over the last 20 years. so it's not the same. i'm not i'm not suggesting that, you know, left wing governments, open the borders to put the thumb on the scales of democracy until the electorate in their favour. but
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really, because it sounds like a phrase you've thought about quite a lot. >> yeah, but i would suggest that actually londoners could do a whole lot better. yeah. >> someone who would you vote for instead, then? >> well, i that's a good question. i don't know, i would rather someone who worked for everyone and for everyone's concerns and didn't have politically partisan fireworks. to me, it's all about the fireworks. >> probably the bucket head guy. >> probably the bucket head guy. >> the bucket head guy. yeah. you know, the loony party? yeah. yeah, maybe. certainly. actually, none of the major political parties i'd go that far. all right. we're going to move on to the eye now. and more on rwanda. and josh, every night there's a story about rwanda because this is the thing that rishi wants as his legacy. that and smoking and everyone has to do maths. >> you know what they say, what wishy wants. he is that phrase. got anything? no, i don't know. >> well, you can coin a phrase. >> well, you can coin a phrase. >> yeah, well rishi wants he's going to get in this country. he's going to happen home office asking civil servants to move to rwanda to oversee asylum scheme. this is the punishment for anybody in the home office who has spoken out against it. >> well, that's actually not bad. >> it's like send them to siberia. yeah, but the civil service is so sort of rife with
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problems actually sending them away to rwanda seems like it's like a win win. the thing is, it would be bad for our net immigration numbers because it would be like more people moving away with more people coming in. so it's like it would it would not help the numbers. >> but this does suggest, not help the numbers. >> but this does suggest , leo, >> but this does suggest, leo, that he's serious about this, that he's serious about this, that he's serious about this, that he's actually going to go through with it . yeah. through with it. yeah. >> at least he's, at least he's asking before he sticks them on flights to rwanda. yeah, so it's a voluntary thing for the for the civil servants , which, you the civil servants, which, you know, arguably it shouldn't be, but yeah, i think our asylum system is clearly broken, you know, we've got mass travel and social media that we didn't have when the asylum system rules were made back in, you know, whenever it was the old days and also the civil service are systemically woke and are ideologically committed to open borders. and, you know, we've got human rights lawyers who know how to game the system. so the whole thing is completely corrupt and broken. yes. >> but what they're suggesting is that since all the asylum seekers, those who arrive illegally will be processed in rwanda, and even if their applications are successful, that doesn't mean they'll come
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back.in that doesn't mean they'll come back. in fact, they won't come back. in fact, they won't come back. so actually, this this will as a and we'll be talking about this the other night. but as a disincentive to the people traffickers. this could potentially work. well. >> we've seen already more people going into ireland because to avoid the uk for exactly this reason . but it does exactly this reason. but it does seem a bit strange that the reason they'd be sending out these home office is to train their local rwandans. i thought their local rwandans. i thought the point was that it was just like a place to process for them to wait. whilst they were processing the application. i didn't realise that rwanda itself was going to be processing these. >> yes, it looks like that's the case. that's what. yeah, yeah. okay. well, maybe it'll work. we shall wait and see. we're going to move on now to this story. this is in the telegraph and this is more on that , fallout this is more on that, fallout from the police officer who accused a man of being openly jewish. what's the latest, leo? >> that's right . so jewish. what's the latest, leo? >> that's right. so this jewish. what's the latest, leo? >> that's right . so this is jewish. what's the latest, leo? >> that's right. so this is the campaign against anti—semitism. why are you getting all the jewish stories ? i don't know, george. >> you got the scottish story. >> you got the scottish story. >> yeah . this is a real we say >> yeah. this is a real we say in the right sees today. >> no, we're just flipping it
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up. you've got it. you know, you've got to keep you on your toes. fair enough. you know. >> yeah. the campaign against anti—semitism has cancelled their london march amid security concerns. so gideon falter is the chief executive of the caa, had called for supporters to gather and walk through central london in defiance of the weekly anti—israel protests . he was the anti—israel protests. he was the guy who was threatened with arrest for looking openly jewish, openly jewish. >> and the thing about this is it's a risk . >> and the thing about this is it's a risk. he he made this very good point, which is okay, well, so we're going to march. we're going to show a solidarity walk, walk, walk in london, which any free citizen can do, apparently. but now he's saying it's too dangerous. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> you're allowed to do it. if you basically if you've got a big enough mob, then the police will say, oh, we can't do anything because they've got such numbers. we've just got to stand and take the knee and help them out and hand them water. >> so that's the thing they always say, isn't it, josh? that ultimately their priority is keeping the peace. so if you have a massive mob and one person is defying the mob, they have to what? move the person away. yeah. >> and arrest in this case which is what they did. >> yeah.
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>> yeah. >> which they've done before with other. do you remember the guy with the sign saying hamas a terrorist? yeah, he's the guy they pulled away. >> they still target him even though he's went to court to have the right to show this poster. but yeah, they've basically he's this gideon, foster said that there's been hostile actors involved and there's threats, so they're going to be targeting i myself have been planning to go. i've had it in my diary for the last week since since this was announced, i was going to go along and meet up with everybody and my yarmulke ready to look openly jewish, to look openly jewish. and i and he sort of said, oh, people can still go. but i've got to be honest, i'm a bit scared and i'm well, if they're saying, you know, they're saying, you know, they're worried about the security, i thought if i was go with them. yeah. and the other thing is like if, if i was attacked , i would like it to be attacked, i would like it to be filmed. like i don't want it to be, of course. >> so there has to be at least two people. >> someone else has to. i'd be happy you'd be the guy. yeah. >> so you come along . >> so you come along. >> so you come along. >> i can bring some people jewish. i don't mind getting beaten up , jewish. i don't mind getting beaten up, but i just don't want it to be like. like waking up in the woods. >> no, it's got to be a viral hit. >> it's got to be. yeah, it's
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got to be. yeah but now someone's going to look at this if i do get beaten up. yeah. now someone's going to be like, look, the jews. mossad had some thing and it was all said ahead of time. yeah. so maybe don't beat me up. and that's like a double triple bluff. >> just don't show your hand . >> just don't show your hand. >> just don't show your hand. >> don't show my yarmulke. >> don't show my yarmulke. >> don't show my yarmulke. >> don't do any of that. all right. okay. well we're going to finish this section with this story from the independent. and this is to do with a certain social media influencer, andrew tate. josh. indeed. >> andrew tate and brother to be tried on trafficking charges in romania . court rules. so they've romania. court rules. so they've been held since ten months. this is when they were originally, charged . but now it's like this charged. but now it's like this court case is going ahead. >> it's going ahead. and they were trying to stop it from going ahead weren't they? yeah. yeah, it can still be appealed . yeah, it can still be appealed. but they, they had to go through all the evidence, the prosecutors and they said, yeah, we've got the case here and now we're going to do it. >> okay, there's very little to say about that because of. >> but it's interesting. it feels like that we we've crossed peak tate. that was peak tate was maybe around that a year ago. and it feels now like well yeah. because the establishment came from and shut down all the
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social media. and this feels like, you know, i believe as a good progressive person, i believe that sex work is real work. so pimp work is real work. this is pimp shaming. >> pimp shaming. that's one i haven't heard before. >> you said he had to sleep with, like, five women a day to keep everybody happy. he put so much effort into that job and he had to do it well, like that was the point. he couldn't just call it in like, oh, i know so little about what it takes to be pimp. >> but what i would suggest is if he's broken the law, then he needs to be held accountable for it. >> and that's why you have a trial and that's why. >> and that's also why we can't really talk about it, because we don't know what the outcome is going to be. no, i think we're over. >> oven >>i oven >> i just think it's blatantly the, you know, the establishment coming for somebody . okay. coming for somebody. okay. >> right. well, that is halfway in the second half. we're going to be discussing the policing minister, confusing the countries of rwanda and the congo on question time. the labour party competing with lord cameron to woo trump and saudi arabia's first opera.
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welcome back to headliners. your first look at saturday's newspapers. i'm andrew doyle. i'm here with josh and leo. we're going to go on with the telegraph now. and this is a video that's gone viral. a bit embarrassing for the policing minister. >> that's right. so the policing minister, chris philp, has been ridiculed on question time for asking if rwanda and congo are different countries, little, little hint there they are, different countries . different countries. >> they are different countries. but look, geography is tough. >> geography is tough. he's the policing minister. and also he was, you know, like basically an audience member who said that he came from the democratic repubuc came from the democratic republic of the congo, asked him, you know, had my family members come from goma, which is a city on the country's border? yeah, on a crossing right now. would they be sent back to the country? they were supposedly warring rwanda. does that make any sense to you? and mr phillips said , no. i think phillips said, no. i think there's an exclusion on people from rwanda being sent to rwanda. so he's obviously confused. >> he was confused by the way it was. >> he was confused by the way it was phrased. and also, i'm glad he doesn't know. why should a
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policing minister in this country know the geography of africa? i want him to focus on policing in this country. he should definitely wipe any knowledge he has of africa out of his head. i want him to know about british things, mostly with this audience member. if i quizzed him about what's bigger money ivor thornhill or pinpoint he's not going to know. he's not an expert on south west scotland's geography. >> i think we should have a look at the clip so we can see what we're dealing with here. >> no, i think there's an exclusion on people from rwanda being sent from rwanda. >> they're from congo, from congo and they're supposedly from congo. they're supposedly war in these people, from rwanda. are they then going to be sent to rwanda if they came here on a crossing from from congo? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> surely . josh, that's >> surely. josh, that's forgivable, isn't it? >> yeah. look, he's it's it is confusing. i'm confused. i've read it three times. i still don't understand what's going on. i'm pretty certain that they are separate countries , but what are separate countries, but what he was, i think the reason was he was, i think the reason was he was, i think the reason was he was trapped in his brain because he was trying to make a point. >> yeah, that there's an exclusion within the bill that you're not going to be sent to
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somewhere that could cause problem. >> so he was trying to make that point. yeah. and then was confused about how he could try and make it. also he was taught by a teacher's assistant. >> yeah. so we have to forgive him for geography. yeah. well, how's your african geography? >> can i let me do my congo accent? >> no, absolutely not. really. because your accents are terrible. not because i think it'll be misconstrued as racist. i want to hear it. he was doing his italian the other day, leo? i mean, look, i'm from from the congo. i mean, look, i'm from from the congo . what is that? congo. what is that? >> that's my congo accent. >> that's my congo accent. >> what ? but that's that's >> what? but that's that's scottish, but a congo. >> you grew up in scotland, in ireland, but ultimately , you ireland, but ultimately, you know, i know that i think a couple of labour mps have thrown this out and said, you know, this out and said, you know, this is outrageous, etc. but the thing is, like, you could always catch a politician out about general knowledge. >> yeah. i mean really easily. yeah >> or just basic arithmetic or most things we don't, we don't have the calibre of political figures we really need. and that's because they're subjected so much scrutiny that who'd want to be a politician? yeah.
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>> it seems . yeah, it seems >> it seems. yeah, it seems a bit unfair to me. anyway, we're going to stick with the telegraph now. the labour party is competing with lord cameron to curry favour with donald trump . yes. well they have to, trump. yes. well they have to, don't they, josh? because ultimately we all know trump is probably going to win it. >> that's how it looks on paper. labour competing with cameron to woo trump, david lammy has gone over to america like six times in the last year. they made a mistake last time , when trump mistake last time, when trump got in, because no one sort of reached out to him and that kind of soured relations. >> and with trump, that's a big problem . yeah, because. problem. yeah, because. >> because it's all about kissing his bottom. >> yeah. basically he likes people who like him and dislikes people who like him and dislikes people who like him and dislikes people who dislike him. it's as simple as that. that's all the politicians. >> most of us are like that to a degree . degree. >> we grow out of it a little bit. no, i'm still like that. are you okay? fair enough. you're a lot like trump, i thought pretty much. >> yeah. if someone likes me, i'm pretty. i i'm sort of willing to forgive. >> but lammy i mean, i can't imagine david lammy liking trump particularly. no. >> and also david cameron has said in his book he said, oh, he was a xenophobic and a misogynistic because this is in 2019 when he before he was thrown the lifeline to resurrect his political career, which
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should never have happened anyway , and, but yes, and anyway, and, but yes, and there's also been a senior adviser to his went along to a dnnks adviser to his went along to a drinks reception at the british embassy in washington. yeah, i believe ferrero rocher was served . served. >> everybody will be happy to in a pyramid form. >> that's the only way to serve it. >> now, leo, the thing is, they are just being very pragmatic here. i mean, he's going to be in charge. you're going to have to forge a decent relationship. >> yeah. and also, trump is surprisingly pragmatic and sort of into real politic. i don't know what the verb for that is, himself like, so he's, you know, even if you kiss his bottom, there's no guarantee that he's going to cut you any special favours or any deals. he's still going to be pushing for europe to, to not, you know, send cheap goods to america and pushing for europe to, to fund. yeah. but you're also chair of nato. >> he does bear grudges. like if he thinks that the ruling party in the uk don't like him, he's not going to help at all. >> his whole political career is based on a grudge. >> exactly, exactly, exactly. >> exactly, exactly, exactly. >> it's all from that washington dinner. yeah. >> it was when obama offended
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him. and he's like, i'm going to do it then. yeah, i'll show you. i mean, it's so childish, isn't it? but unfortunately, that is the situation we're in. >> you're really committed to it, though. yeah. i mean, kind of respect that. >> to be fair, you've got to respect that a little bit. okay. we're going to move on to the times now saudi arabia is keen to modernise. >> so saudi arabia's first opera sets the stage for the kingdom. for a kingdom keen to modernise, somebody should tell him the opera's not modern. it's from the old days. if you want modern stuff, you want a transformers movie or k—pop or some k—pop, something like that. saudi arabia and k—pop. yeah, that's p0p- arabia and k—pop. yeah, that's pop. until recently , mixed pop. until recently, mixed gender shows were banned in saudi arabia, but an influx of foreign stars of sports stage and screen because they love having money, shows the regime's desire to show a new open side, so this guy saleh zaman was asked to write the libretto for saudi arabia's first opera, he dusted off this ancient arab legend of zarqaa al—yamamah, a soothsayer whose prophecies were ignored before a king stabbed out her eyes, which is actually government policy in saudi
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arabia. so that's. but yeah, i mean, i think it's better than funding wahhabist madrassas in the, in the uk. so it's good there. i think it is. if you've ever been to the opera. >> but that's the thing joshua , >> but that's the thing joshua, you might say opera is not the most modern way forward , you most modern way forward, you know. but on the other hand, given that this is saudi arabia , given that this is saudi arabia, where they kill people for being gay, it's a step forward to go for the opera , which is one of for the opera, which is one of the gayest art forms. >> that's interesting. this is appealing . do you think this >> that's interesting. this is appealing. do you think this is like a submessage? >> yeah, like opera washing ? >> yeah, like opera washing? maybe a little bit, a little bit. although let's not forget that saudi arabia is still pretty backward on all sorts of things. women's rights, gay rights, all that sort. i mean, it's not like putting on an opera is going to make them go. >> they've done an opera about a journalist visiting an embassy to get a visa. >> maybe that could have been a bit more cutting edge. >> we'll see. they've there , >> we'll see. they've there, aren't they? >> yeah. well, look, i, you know , you've got to make small steps, especially when you, when you're from a society that is there is stand up there now as well. >> there's, they stand up there for you. yeah. but people are going across there's a bit of, there's i remember but going the first stand up gigs i did in the
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uae like 20 years ago. yeah. like don't whatever you do, don't say there was a certain word you couldn't say. and also don't say anything about the royal family. they were like , so royal family. they were like, so oh really? like here we live in a great country. i can say, whoa , the queen's fit and it's all i could do on telly . could do on telly. >> yeah, i mean, you're going to get fired after the show, but yeah, you can, but i won't be killed. hopefully. no, but that'd be interesting. so would you do stand up in saudi arabia? how much are you offering? maybe you amiga over the gay and the jew like i think. i think it would go down really well there. >> the gay and the jew and leo and leo. >> yeah, that'd be like, you know, when joe pesci gets made in goodfellas or casino or whatever, it's like, where's the gig? >> and yeah, yeah , okay, well, >> and yeah, yeah, okay, well, let's move on now, the daily mail now oh , and, this is mount mail now oh, and, this is mount fuji. >> beautiful, beautiful and to be blocked up. >> why japanese town erects giant 65 foot screen to block off the views of mount fuji to put off disrespectful tourists at overcrowded . at overcrowded. >> you don't have to explain this one, but we've seen the tourist spots around the world. >> they've got their camera
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phones now. they want their selfies , and there's one spot in selfies, and there's one spot in this town and they're dropping rubbish and they're parking badly, and the locals are sick of it. and they're like, and people are climbing up on some dentist roof and they're like, no, you know what? we're going to block it off. >> but that means they're punishing absolutely everyone for the behaviour of a few rogue tourists. yeah, but there's more than a few. >> there's been like 3 million of them. and we're seeing this. we did a story the other day about venice. there. now there's so many tourists. >> so you punish everyone. >> so you punish everyone. >> that's the idea, so no one can see it. what you could do is buy some mount fuji bottled water and stick it up. i mean, or you could walk . the billboard or you could walk. the billboard is just 65ft, so you can just walk around it, and then you can still walk 70ft from all, but from all other angles. you can still see mount fuji. >> yeah, but what i really object to this, i think it's not their right to block out this. >> i think it is. it's japan. it's their country. they've, they've they've kept it japanese . right. and, yeah. but what's interesting is so many tourists actually sort of agree with this. and more than half of british people said they'd be
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less likely to visit a location if they were aware of locals protesting or complaining about overtourism. >> but i thought tourism was good for the locals. >> i thought they'd want more tourism, but not in japan, not when you're building microchips and stuff. >> better for the economy. >> better for the economy. >> no, no need to sell a beer for ,1. but unfortunately, the problem with tourism is tourists. >> yeah, that's the problem. you know what this reminds me of? you know, in the 18th century, the guy, the priest who owned william shakespeare's house, new place in stratford. there were so many tourists coming to rip a branch of the juniper bush that shakespeare had planted , that he shakespeare had planted, that he demolished the whole house. so now we don't have the house anymore. it'sjust now we don't have the house anymore. it's just ridiculous. anyway one last section to go. we've got the secret to eternal youth. the great reset conspiracy, and a flamethrower wielding robot dog. you don't want to miss that
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welcome back to headliners. it's your first look at saturday's newspapers . we're going to kick newspapers. we're going to kick off with the telegraph. now. josh you got this one. yeah. >> it's okay to call your boss a d k, but only once. court rules. this is in spain, where it seems impossible to be fired. there's a word called i think we ofcom because it's a foreign where we're allowed to say it gilipollas which means the stupid idiot. but like but but a bit more crude stupid willy like they are. >> but you are so the court is basically saying it's fine as long as you don't make a habit of it. that's the gist of it. >> yeah. i mean, you're my boss. i don't know if i'm so i would technically, if we were in spain, i could call you at one time. yes. that's it.
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>> we're not in spain. josh no. >> we're not in spain. josh no. >> so i will keep myself to myself. yes. >> for this story, you wait until i leave as normal? yes, exactly. put it on twitter and i can find out from the recording devices i've cleverly put around the room. >> yes . also, you got to see >> yes. also, you got to see this. so he called his boss the slur because he was told there's a meeting he must attend at two 5050 5 pm, five minutes before the end of his shift. i mean, is that not the most stereotypically spanish thing you've ever heard? yeah. like that's like, oh, we're going to work until 3 pm. what do they think they are? teachers. yeah. >> okay . we're going to move on >> okay. we're going to move on now to the next story in the guardian. the secret to eternal youth. leo. >> so this is john cleese extolling the virtues of stem cell treatment. he's been having stem cell treatment for the past two decades at his private swiss clinic, paying £17,000 every roughly every year for stem cell therapy that he credits for looking. not bad for his age. so he's he's 84 years old and he thinks it's going to also buy him a few extra years. but experts say that there's no clinical trials that have, you know, proved or, you know, shown
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the efficacy of this or the safety of it. >> but my understanding is stem cells sort of create every other cells sort of create every other cell in the body. so they've surely got to be something to it. right >> but as you get older they don't do that as well, don't they? that's that's the idea that the body doesn't accept them as well. but you know, they're another way of looking at this is that you andrew doyle saved his life. >> what do you mean by that? well, you know, you you produced the show. >> they came on the channel. that must have paid for a couple of years. >> well, i don't know if he used that money specifically . they might. >> it might have gone. i'm going on gb news. this is my life saving money. so i'm just saying this. you have saved his john cleese's life . and also stem cleese's life. and also stem cells sometimes work and they don't know why. so when people have got severed spinal cords, they in china, they inject stem cell, the stem cell serum into the spinal fluid. and people get feeling back in their legs. the spinal fluid. and people get feeling back in their legs . they feeling back in their legs. they move their legs again and it tails off. and they don't know why, but it clearly, you know, there's something going on. >> i mean, it feels like why not exactly. but like i was saying to you earlier, you know, the thing about the tortoise is the tortoises can't get cancer. yeah, they regenerate , but
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yeah, they regenerate, but they're, you know, maybe we need to, you know, you were saying also about how, like, queen camilla, like, maybe she's had some of it . some of it. >> i didn't say that. just like that might be why she's looking so good. >> you're obsessed with how good i think they're. >> look , she's just. look, i've >> look, she's just. look, i've just i've never. she's never doneit just i've never. she's never done it for me in the past. >> and now and i'm looking. >> and now and i'm looking. >> i'm going something. something's clicking there. you know the royal family have got they've got experience with photoshop now. so yeah. >> could just be an airbrushing situation an okay i think we should stop objectifying. >> delete that wallpaper . >> delete that wallpaper. >> delete that wallpaper. >> okay then let's move. let's move on to the metro . the great move on to the metro. the great reset. josh, i hear this phrase a lot . the great reset. talk to a lot. the great reset. talk to us. what's this story about? what's going on? so we actually mentioned yesterday i was on the front page. >> there's a there's a school with, in manchester that in stockport where they're teaching this great reset. >> and it's, it's a rehash of the sort of 1960s 70s conspiracy theory of, the new world order, which is itself a rehash of like
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a 1920s. basically, they're sort of saying jews taking over the world, but this doesn't mention jews in the. well, it does, the earlier ones do. interesting that you did, josh. what do you know? but anyway, the great reset, but the great reset is based on a real thing. the wf, the world economic forum put out this idea of a great reset, which was the idea was a fairer economic and social system and into that space because it happened around covid time, a lot of people have gone like, oh, because nick's got that whole thing about eating bugs, eating the bugs. this is part of it. the 15, 15 minutes, cities. so all of this ties into it. and like these conspiracy, even though there's contradictions and people can sort of justify what they want to. but the main thing is that, and i remember speaking to someone around that time, like being in the cab , and time, like being in the cab, and this guy was going on about it to me, and i was just like , to me, and i was just like, well, what? it's backfired. the whole point is, if there was this thing where covid happened, it was deliberately created to stick people at home. well, we're obviously not home. we're out and about now. and i'd say if anything, people have actually become more aware of their rights and more needing to
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fight. lockdown revealed to the government and to the establishment that people will throw away their rights for an ounce of illusionary safety. and that's, that's a, that's a do you think that people learn the lesson? people always thought people always thought that. no, not at all. i think people people are hankering for another lockdown . they're like, punish lockdown. they're like, punish me harder, daddy. >> yeah, but, leo, this idea, i mean, this school is teaching other conspiracy theories. people never stop with the satanic cabal that runs the world. they go on to. dinosaurs didn't exist . the moon landings didn't exist. the moon landings were faked. >> these dinosaurs didn't exist . >> these dinosaurs didn't exist. and these teachers, these teachers aren't going off sick and getting replaced by teaching assistants. i'm sending my kid to this school. it sounds brilliant. >> you think this is valuable? i think this is an incredible. >> you'd have. you'd have to move to stockport. i'll do it. it's worth it. wow. that's whatever it costs. >> but . but why whatever it costs. >> but. but why can't whatever it costs. >> but . but why can't they just >> but. but why can't they just stop at the one conspiracy theory? why do they so. >> because if you've eaten in stockport, it does. the food is like insects. >> is that what it is? >> is that what it is? >> so that's justifying like, oh look, we're eating insects. so this is why. >> okay. well that's the, the great reset covered. i think we've covered that pretty comprehensively. well done, both of you. i'm still not convinced ,
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of you. i'm still not convinced, if i'm completely honest with you. anyway, the show is nearly oven you. anyway, the show is nearly over, so we're going to have another quick look at saturday's front pages . so the daily mail front pages. so the daily mail is leading with our main story of the day , which is that the of the day, which is that the king is well enough to go back to work. there's a picture of him there with queen camilla, the guardian , who josh is the guardian, who josh is apparently very enamoured by. the guardian has got scale of teacher shortage crisis in schools revealed . the i has a schools revealed. the i has a story about chicken farms and the toxic gas surge that emits there thereof. the times has got king returns to public life. the telegraph also returning with with the story of king charles thatis with the story of king charles that is all we've got time for. however, thank you ever so much to my guests. josh howie and to leo kearse. we are back tomorrow at 11:00 where josh will be in the hosting chair with nick dixon and paul cox. and by the way, if you are watching the 5 am. repeat of headliners, a.m. repeat of headliners, please do stick around because now it's time for breakfast. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb
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news . news. news. news. >> hello again. good evening. welcome to your latest gb news weather update. it's going to be another cold night tonight and rain will spread into the south and east through this weekend with the best of the dry weather around the north and west. once again, much as it has been throughout this week. but to the south we've got low pressure arriving and some weather fronts through this evening, so some heavy rain for many southern counties of england through this evening, as well as southern areas of wales by tomorrow morning , there's going to be a morning, there's going to be a lot of cloud around. it will be a milder night across the south, however, in the north, with cloud clearing and turning much dnen cloud clearing and turning much drier, it's going to be another cold start on saturday morning. could be down as low as —4 or 5, so expect a frost really for parts of scotland and northern ireland. but there will be, as today , lots of sunshine around, today, lots of sunshine around, particularly across the north and west. the best of the sunshine will be through the morning. cloud will bubble up into the afternoon, but across central areas, parts of wales
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and into the midlands are going to be quite a cloudy and cold feeling day . and into the feeling day. and into the southeast we'll start to see some showery outbreaks of rain. but in any sunshine it will start to feel that much milder with highs of 14 or 15 degrees. now on sunday. as i said, it is turning much wetter. this swathe of rain moves up to the north and east of the uk , bringing and east of the uk, bringing outbreaks of rain across many eastern areas, but particularly across the southeast throughout the morning. that area of rain will push away to the east for sunday evening and into monday. then we pick up a southerly wind, which is going to pick up our temperatures closer to 19 degrees for tuesday. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsor of weather on
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good morning to you. at 6:00 on saturday, the 27th of april. today a royal return . the king today a royal return. the king set to resume royal duties on tuesday following cancer treatment. buckingham palace made the announcement yesterday . made the announcement yesterday. >> humza yousaf faces political . >> humza yousaf faces political. chaos. scotland's first minister has insisted he will not resign despite facing a vote of no confidence in his leadership. >> critics are wrong on rwanda, the home secretary hits out, saying opposition to the policy wilfully ignores the progress made by the african state and will be meeting legendary singer marty wilde to tell us about his new album and his career spanning over 65 years. >> good morning leicester city have sealed promotion back to the premier league at the first attempt without even kicking a ball last night, as leeds were
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thrashed four nil at queens

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