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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 27, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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party of the right. nationalist party of the right. announcing that decision in the observer newspaper, the former health minister said it is abundantly clear that the labour party alone has the will and the trust to restore and reform the nhs . he's trust to restore and reform the nhs. he's urging rishi sunak to call a general election as soon as possible . a tory party as possible. a tory party spokesperson described the news as disappointing . labour leader as disappointing. labour leader sir keir starmer says it's fantastic that doctor poulter, who represents central suffolk and north ipswich, will take the labour whip until the next election. the prime minister says a recent influx of migrants into ireland shows the deterrent effect of his rwanda plan is working. the comment comes after deputy irish premier micheal martin said the uk's asylum policy is driving migrants from northern ireland into the republic. northern ireland into the repubuc.the northern ireland into the republic. the government wants to send asylum seekers on a one way flight to the east african nation. the irish government will now consider legal proposals on returning asylum seekers who've travelled from the uk . two men have been
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the uk. two men have been arrested at a pro—palestine protest in london today. police say one was holding a placard with a swastika and the other made a racist remark towards counter protesters. the event, organised by the palestine solidarity campaign, was calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza. for an immediate ceasefire in gaza . part of the march route gaza. part of the march route tookit gaza. part of the march route took it past a fixed pro—israeli demonstration on pall mall. earlier, a counter demo organised by the campaign against anti—semitism was cancelled , with organisers cancelled, with organisers saying that the safety of jews was at risk . saying that the safety of jews was at risk. humza yousaf is asking leaders of rival parties to find common ground with the snp . as his leadership hangs in snp. as his leadership hangs in the balance, he's inviting them to talks at his official residence to see how they can work with his minority government. the scottish first minister says he will not resign ahead of a crunch vote on his leadership next week. it comes after the collapse of the snp's power sharing deal with the
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greens last thursday , and a gold greens last thursday, and a gold pocket watch recovered from the body of the richest man on the titanic has been sold at auction for a record breaking £1,175,000. now it had been expected to fetch only around 150 k the previous high amount paid for a titanic artefact was 1.1 million for a violin, which was played as the ship sunk. businessman john jacob astor was 47 when he went down with the ship in 1912. after seeing his wife first madeline, onto a lifeboat. then, rather than attempt to get on to the boat himself, the businessman was last seen smoking a cigarette and chatting with a fellow passenger. old school style. for the latest stories , sign up to the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gbnews.com/alerts. now, as promised, our headliners .
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promised, our headliners. >> hello and welcome to headline is your first look at sunday's newspapers with three comedians. because comedians always tell the truth. >> apart from my joke about being a bad lover, i'm josh howie. >> i'm delighted to be joined by the ross and rachel of the headliners crew, chris de wetten and nick dixon . headliners crew, chris de wetten and nick dixon. i'm sorry i actually wrote that when paul was still doing the show, so it was still doing the show, so it was paul and nick. >> they are on a break and i'm stepping in for paul. >> i think chris does come out well out of that. like rachel's like an icon, famous haircut, fabulous hair. schwimmer's a kind of. well, ross is a kind of sad sack, isn't he.7 works kind of. well, ross is a kind of sad sack, isn't he? works with dinosaur bones. he's. how dare you, jewish guy. >> i know . stop that now. sorry, >> i know. stop that now. sorry, right. we're going to move to on sunday's front pages. >> first, we have the mail on sunday. police are so cowed by the anti—semitic mob, they even cover up the holocaust. the sunday telegraph tory rebels on warpath after mp defects to
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laboun warpath after mp defects to labour. the sunday times threat to mps over cash for blood victims. the observer exclusive top tory mp defects to labour in fury at nhs crisis. the sunday express keir i'll keep pension triple lock finally, the daily star sunday spaceman there are millions of aliens and those were your front pages. first up were your front pages. first up we have the sunday telegraph. cressida. >> yes we do. they've got a big picture of reggio. >> reggio on the front cover who has had a wobble on air. >> but i think he's, he's going to be okay. >> well, they might have been stroke. >> we don't know what the medical right situation was . medical right situation was. >> so people watching this were obviously thinking, what's going on here? >> has he been to the pub? >> has he been to the pub? >> what is it? he was slurring, obviously he's a very professional . professional. >> yes. news reader. yeah. >> yes. news reader. yeah. >> we get a lot of similar messages about louis schaefer, but that's just how he is. to be fair, i watched the clip online and they were like, my god,
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something's wrong with him. >> and i have a attempted to host sport with this. >> you aspire to that ? >> you aspire to that? >> you aspire to that? >> like he's doing really well. >> like he's doing really well. >> like he's doing really well. >> like what? what is wrong? i couldn't see it personally, but yes, people were very concerned and it seems like he really thought it anyway. yes. we hope that your best wishes. >> they've also got tory rebels on warpath after mp defects to laboun on warpath after mp defects to labour. so apparently some rebels in the tory party are. they've got a 100 day roadmap to save the tories. i mean how about a 14 year roadmap? that would have been a good idea wouldn't it? >> they just left it to the last minute to improve the country, just like my gcse coursework. >> and they won't pass , >> and they won't pass, conservative rebels are working on 100 day robot. yes, we've just said that , so this is just said that, so this is because or what's one of the things that's triggered this is that dan poulter has left the tories . he's crossed the floor tories. he's crossed the floor and gone to the other side, which he says is because of the way the tories have handled the nhs. i mean, it's also a good way to make sure you've got a job in six months, isn't it? >> how cynical. yeah, i just
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think he just believes in his mission. but yeah, i mean, absolutely absurd. i mean, one of their ideas is to bring in penny morton as leader. they keep going back to this appalling idea. maybe it'll work. she's carried a sword so well. she was so good. everybody all you need. >> i know now she was a reservist. she's into swords. she's like leo kirch. it was such a big sword. >> and she did it with such dignity in the cape, i know. >> and in the in the medium, especially social media age, that's all you need. but. yeah. and the other thing, as quaestor says, dan poulter has gone. what i found amusing about dan poulter's statement . he said the poulter's statement. he said the conservatives have become a nationalist party of the right . nationalist party of the right. i mean, arguably the most left wing government of all time. i mean, cameron's a—list obsession with diversity , proud of he was with diversity, proud of he was so proud of gay marriage as his main thing. higher immigration numbers than even tony blair dared to try. you know, diversity built britain coin highest taxes since the 40s by some metrics. what is right wing? what is conservative? david, tony blair actually tried to get those numbers down before. so saying that he was going for higher numbers isn't is actually false . he.
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is actually false. he. >> no, no, i'm i'm saying the same point as you i'm saying the tories have gone i've had higher immigration than even blair would dare to do or would have done. >> but no, but the idea is that it almost feels like you're trying to say that he would have wanted more when actually he didn't want more. >> no, i'm saying because someone said it to me and i'm copying it, is that the tories are kind of they've they've copied the blair agenda, but they're so bad and don't understand it that they've done it recklessly, whereas blair takes it so seriously that he did it well and carefully. he would never have done it so recklessly, because then, you know, it'll ruin it. whereas the tories don't even understand what the agenda is. they've just sort of copied it anyway. but the idea that they're nationalist and so on, the right, i mean, richie himself is the most globalist figure possible in his person, in his demeanour, in his policies. you know, the idea. he's a nationalist is so ridiculous. i mean, okay, pro—brexit, but that's about it. >> yeah, i mean cresta he was the health minister, so it feels a little bit like he's it's like he's set the exam and then he's blaming the results afterwards . blaming the results afterwards. >> he's been well. so his health minister under cameron from 12 to 15, 2012 to 2015. and he says he's seen a right wing drift
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ever since, as you say on his watch. and obviously we've had all the covid fiasco and everyone's getting older and we've got immigration and people are getting fatter and so on and so on. so the nhs is under all this strain. and then he's gone and spent a few nights working in a&e and he says, i can't look people in the eye anymore. so here's some mates again. >> doesn't he just want someone to talk to him at david starkey of elianne strategy, you can't say. >> could be a lazy eye. ironically, he needs to see see someone about that. >> well, i just want to stick with this for one more second because in a recent gb poll of gb news viewers, the nhs was the top concern for our viewers. so we should stick with this. it is damning in terms of not just saying in terms of nick, what the tories have failed the nhs, but he also seems to be quite positive about what he thinks labour can do for the nhs and wes streeting seems to be a bit of an adult in this in terms of focusing on preventative care, child health, the social causes of poor health. these are key. i mean, this does make a lot of sense . sense. >> well, yeah, but the question is always where's the money going to come from? but yes, labour always have more
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political capital to fix the nhs because they won't get called the nasty tories. but you could argue the nhs is a labour idea that's flawed from its beginning. not that the tories have ruined it with underfunding, just that it can never be funded enough because it's inherently flawed idea. i feel like it might argue during tony's time , we're first name basis. >> what's the mail on sunday going with nick? >> so the mail has. police are so cowed by the antisemitic mob, they even cover up the holocaust. mail on sunday. you're right. i forgot what day it was . absolutely shocking. it was. absolutely shocking. this is in hyde park, and they've had to cover up this holocaust memorial. of course, it doesn't get attacked by the pro—palestinian bunch. and it's much like the churchill statue having to be protected . and it's having to be protected. and it's just the failure of our entire culture, really. it's the we've lost a high trust, cohesive society we had. it's a mixture of immigration, of course, and education, educating people to hate the country and not understand things like the holocaust and also the people coming in who hate israel and domestic people who hate israel. and another little fact, jews. i mean, they hate jews, right?
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right. if in some cases , yes. if right. if in some cases, yes. if it wasn't bad enough, these protests have cost taxpayers 38.4 million because of the police costs. yeah. over the last six months of these. >> cressida, to live in a country that needs to cover up a memorial for the death of 6 million people is in insane under under any circumstances. >> and this is just after we've had the guy in romford attacking a muslim woman . and i'm not a muslim woman. and i'm not saying obviously, i'm not saying that's a good idea. i mean, awful bloke, but these are the kinds of things when i read through the comments on the daily mail, what the public were saying about that man, they were all condemning him, saying, what an awful bloke. and then they talked about two tier policing every time. and i just think this doesn't help, does it? >> i've just realised it kind of looks like it's got a burqa on it, doesn't it? the the memorial, i, i've never seen a blue confirmation bias. >> burqa to be fair, yeah. i mean, we just got these new, these papers very, momentarily.
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it's all been a bit of a rush. all i know is i feel anger inside and i'm not really able to articulate myself, but that's normal for you . normal for you. >> it's not happening. >> it's not happening. >> and maybe people will send me. good. well, no , it is true. me. good. well, no, it is true. but, this upsets me. and disgusts me, frankly. let's move on to the sunday express. cressida >> kia. i'll keep pension triple lock, so , yeah, kia's promising lock, so, yeah, kia's promising that there's going to be lots of lovely for money the old people when he gets in. and this is coming just as jeremy hunt's promised that the tory manifesto will also commit to keeping the lock. so we're coming up to an election. everyone's making lots of lovely promises. and, this is this is a commitment that he's making. following labour's other moves likely to appeal to old conservative people, which include saluting margaret thatcher for trying to drag britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurial ism , ruling out entrepreneurial ism, ruling out a return to the eu single market or customs union and, talking about the uk's commitment to nuclear weapons, saying it's unshakeable. so it's this thing starmer is doing more and more
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conservative. what would have been called conservative. >> he just really wants to win . >> he just really wants to win. >> he just really wants to win. >> he. yeah, he wants gold and then some. >> yeah, yeah . they're calling >> yeah, yeah. they're calling it the grey vote. it's not the red wall. it's the grey wall. you want to worry about. because the 75 plus age group is the only one in which more people support the tories compared to laboun support the tories compared to labour. so they're going to hit that grey vote. >> do you think it will make a difference? >> yeah. probably people people are very concerned about their pensions. i mean whoever i mean it depends who can promise more. it's a battle of who can help the boomers more already the generation that has everything . generation that has everything. but it's just like who can help them because. because tories are also kind of quite keen on helping them with pensions. so, you know, it's a bidding war. so but it will make a difference which one they think is most likely to keep the pensions in place. >> it's a shame that none of our leaders have the bravery to address what is a looming issue with with this and to be continually kowtowing. and i know probably a lot of our viewers are pensioners, so now they're going to get angry at me, but they're not on twitter, so i'm fine there. >> some are, some are my mum is, some are there. >> yeah. but you know, tex—mex. nick instead. right. that's the
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front pages expertly caressed. coming up, we undress the newspapers to reveal deflecting mps, diverting judges. and the french are actually doing their job.
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welcome back to headliners, the top newspaper review show. we're featuring comedians during the 5 am. repeat. i think we're the. a.m. repeat. i think we're the. i think we're the number one review. oh, you mean top in that slot in that 5 am. slot? i'm pretty sure we are featuring comics. >> it's us versus the test. >> it's us versus the test. >> the one, the gb news one. anyway, i'm josh howie for reasons, for our success here we have chris de wetten and nick dixon. now we're going to go to the sunday telegraph. nick. and i'm starting to suspect that rishi really wants this rwanda thing to happen. >> he's keen on, isn't he? so it's pm warned diverting judges to rwanda appeals will drive backlog and saw asylum hotel bills . basic backlog and saw asylum hotel bills. basic points are he wants judges to be diverted. his first
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tier tribunal judges, not just any judges and they're going to oversee this so he can get it through. but there's already a massive asylum backlog. and so everyone's saying, well, where is this going to come from? where are these judges? you can't spare them. and the judiciary is saying, well, it's up to us. we'll be making a decision. and david blunkett chipping in, saying, well, this is ludicrous because you're going to have even if you do get this rwanda thing off the ground, no pun intended. you'll have a few hundred versus the thousands already stuck in the system. and this is going to make the backlog even worse. although rishi, by the way, is defending the rwanda plan, saying, well, the fact that they're all going to ireland shows it's already working as a deterrent, which i liked. >> well, there's an argument also that it's somewhat preventative cresta in that it will stop the next 10,000 backlog. yes >> and i think that's a really good argument. but it's also quite funny that the legal people are saying, are there a bit of job creation on their part, isn't it? they're saying, we'll tell you how to use our services and potentially making more work for themselves later on. >> yeah, it they're not really deaung >> yeah, it they're not really dealing with the other side, which is the whole process needs massive investment and we should
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have enough judges really to do both. and it's kind of the, the, the asylum delays that have got us into this situation in the first place. we've got a we've got a longer system than france, germany, they're much quicker at deaung germany, they're much quicker at dealing with these claims. and then of course, you're not paying for hotels . and of course paying for hotels. and of course then it gives it's less people are able to less disappear into the system. so it feels like a lot of effort should be put put, have an efficient system and also close loopholes and maybe there are there are people obviously abusing the system here that need to be dealt with as well, all right. well, let's move on to something totally different. cresta in the mail on sunday, they discovered the secret to stopping the dinghy crossings. thumbtacks sakura blown. >> french police use knives to sink asylum seekers boats in dunkirk before an army of migrants then go on to overpower tear gas cops and ride on another dinghy to the uk. so this is very dramatic, so the french authorities have been accused in the past of being too
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soft on migrants. they haven't done enough to stop the boats , done enough to stop the boats, on tuesday we had the deaths of five migrants, including a young girl. really awful scenes where one group of migrants kind of boarded another group's boat and people were just killed in the crush, so they're now taking this very sort of action man, bear grylls kind of thing. they're wading into the surf with a great big knife and just slashing the dinghies, which does seem kind of obvious, doesn't it, it seems like a good, a good move apparently, up to now, they haven't wanted to get involved. they haven't wanted to have violence with the migrants . wanted to have violence with the migrants. but this wanted to have violence with the migrants . but this is this is migrants. but this is this is their new plan. >> is that british taxpayers been paying them hundreds of millions of pounds or euros to deal with this. and now, finally, they're able to deal with this , obviously on the back with this, obviously on the back of an incredible tragedy. >> nick. yeah, but they're also not able to deal with it really, because migrants are overpowering the cops . and these overpowering the cops. and these are the migrants are jumping onto boats to attack other migrants , if that even makes migrants, if that even makes sense of the sentence with sticks and knives and you know, and, and people are falling over the side . so yeah, like as you
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the side. so yeah, like as you said, the migrants are at war with other migrants and with the police. and we've just been too soft, both us and you . i mean, soft, both us and you. i mean, we used to, you know, fight them on the beaches. france less so . on the beaches. france less so. but we've lost the moral authority to even deal with this issue because, you know, the gradual decline , you know, the gradual decline, you know, the gradual decline, you know, the gradual invasion into our institutions by the left is or institutions by the left is or in general, the forces of decline has made us morally impotent to deal with it. you know, we can't deal with it because it's seen as imagine what the media would say if you dean what the media would say if you dealt with it with any force. ben habib the other day suggested, you know, we need a it's called a border force because it's a force at the border. we don't need to let these people in. we should tackle them. and he was accused of being sort of heartless and wanting them to drown and everything. so it's hard politically to deal with it. but when it's causing the death of other migrants completely. >> yeah , i agree, the thing is >> yeah, i agree, the thing is that this tragedy can be utilised by both sides in terms of like however they want to use it. >> we need to open up more the borders or ensure that their safety here and then other people say, let's prevent this
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from happening by stopping them getting in the water in the first place. so everybody's going to use it. but taking your point, nick, and maybe moving to the question, cressida , do you the question, cressida, do you think that people are and when i say people, i don't mean just gb news audience or, people on the right or just across the spectrum are coming to appreciate that this is a real issue that has to be grappled with in a mature fashion, which starts with conversation without accusations of you being racist. well maybe, but i think most people have known that for a long time. >> i mean, the reason rishi put it in his pledges was because people knew it was a big deal. and then just continued not to address it. >> but labour have also put it in their well in their pledges and they're going to be dealing with it. they say. >> but they haven't been great on detail. no, but, we'll see what happens. >> we've only got a few more months to go. right. more male now, nick. and does this trial have the most convictions for people with the same name? >> well, yes. it's more than 20. sexual predators are jailed for total of 346 years after eight
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young girls were raped, abused and trafficked in west yorkshire. it's another horrific instance of these grooming gangs, whatever you want to call them. we've seen it in rotherham and telford and so on and now this is in batley and dewsbury between 1999 and 2012, over 13 years. imagine allowing this to go on that long. partly it's a complex investigation, but we all know partly they didn't act in many of these cases because of political correctness . and so of political correctness. and so yeah, absolutely horrific. but now, you know, the women are being praised for coming forward and not letting it lie. and they've eventually managed to track them down. i've seen some people on twitter or x already saying that the sentences aren't enough , because really, some of enough, because really, some of them will be out quite quickly, but some of them have got things like 22 years or 30 years in jail. so you hope they'll actually serve it. and if, you know, i would, i wouldn't even bother with the jail. but, you know, those are my views. but we get into that if you want. but hopefully they actually serve these, you know, long prison sentences. but it's disgusting. >> yeah. i mean, one thing that's frankly not mentioned in this article is, their cultural
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background. now, some people want to use this as an opportunity for muslim bashing, but there is a that's right. we're talking about there's a cultural issue here. there is a commonality to this group of people in terms of shared . and, people in terms of shared. and, i don't know if it's ethnic background, cultural background , background, cultural background, whatever you want to call it. but there's a big problem. you just you look at this list and, you know, nasa hussain. anas sarwar . you know, nasa hussain. anas sarwar. hakim. asif ali. mohammed jabbar, that's a problem. and that is not mentioned in this article. it's not i know people have talked about this in the past, but i don't feel like it's still being grappled with that. there is a need to address cultural problems here. >> i mean, to be fairto problems here. >> i mean, to be fair to the paper , you've just read the list paper, you've just read the list of names so that. yeah, it's there isn't it? what do you think they should sort of explicitly just it's just it's all just no one is saying, talking about this element of
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the crime. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> not no one i think people are now. no, no. of course initially when they sent in the article initially when you did, you got booted out of the labour party for doing so. but yeah, over time it's become more and more talked about and the kind of people that tried to raise it, of course, got smeared as evil and far right. and now they're just they were just correct because as you say, you know, this just needs to be dealt with. it's one of those things about multiculturalism that hasn't worked. and you know, they talk about the unbelievably callous and degrading way in which they were treated. part of thatis which they were treated. part of that is because you can treat someone from a different culture as if they're not a human, you know, if those are your values, you don't care about them in the same way. that's clearly an element of what happened here, and cresta , just just in terms and cresta, just just in terms of i'd found that the police statement here at the end where they're saying, talking about they're saying, talking about the victims and saying, i hope they can find some closure and satisfaction knowing they've enabled the police and partners to mount a huge for me, it's like, i wonder if the victims do feel that. i wonder if they don't feel just incredibly angry and let down by the system that didn't back them and allowed this to go on for years. >> i imagine they do feel like that. >> i imagine they do feel like that . and what i find so that. and what i find so surprising is that we live in a
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time where we're very sensitive about sexual assault, to the point that that term, often the grey areas, in my opinion , there grey areas, in my opinion, there are grey areas with sexual assault and there's different grades, if you like different classes. and this is clearly at the far end. it involves children , it's gone on for children, it's gone on for a long time. it's horrific. but the language being used is almost less . hyperbolus, if you almost less. hyperbolus, if you like. almost less. hyperbolus, if you uke.than almost less. hyperbolus, if you like. than than what? we might hear about some relatively lesser cases . yeah, i completely lesser cases. yeah, i completely agree. and the only really the i mean, the language , it's quite mean, the language, it's quite bare. and then really what tells you that it was bad stuff is the length of the sentences. there's no description of the acts. and i'm not saying there should be. but yeah, it's pretty cold. yeah. >> it does feel sort of a sort of very brief article for, for the horrors that happened . all the horrors that happened. all right. taking us to the break if we've got the independent press. so it turns out putin's actually a great guy. >> us intelligence believes putin probably didn't order his rival navalny's killing report claims, but that doesn't mean he
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wasn't into it. it just means they don't think that. he said right now and he didn't press the button. and then the doctor evil floor opened with the he just did a nod, maybe like they were like, do we kill him? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> don't not kill him. i don't know , it's very unclear. i think know, it's very unclear. i think given the conditions he was living in, it's not a shock to anybody that he's not no longer with us. and putin says that's such a shame that he died because we were just about to give him to the west and swap him. oh darn it. >> oh, god. the timing was every time. >> unluckiest guy in the world. yeah.i >> unluckiest guy in the world. yeah. i mean, to be fair, they asked putin if he was involved, but he gave him a 25 minute lecture about the history of poland, and they sort of nodded off. but yeah, i mean, you know, the timing did seem odd in a way that there was no real advantage to putin. but as you say, there was this prisoner swap being planned that allegedly us and german officials were involved. and so you can imagine it was done before he was allowed to be released. it's not it's not the most far fetched. maybe it was one of his underlings like wanted to suck up to him, just
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try to impress him. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> just like, oh, hey, i got him here. >> yeah, murder this guy. >> yeah, murder this guy. >> it's. it's. but yeah, whether he did or he didn't, i mean, he was held, as you say, in this terrible place. he had been prison colony before . but it is prison colony before. but it is interesting that the cia have to sort of come out and say this. it's a it's a slightly strange position for them to investigate, to spend their resources on sort of getting to the bottom of this, to then come out and go, well, yeah, it's broadly accepted in the intelligence community that it wasn't putin, including the cia. >> so yeah, officially they've not managed to find any ties or that's what they're telling us. who knows? i don't know, i don't know. >> we'll see. right. congratulations. you have made it halfway, which means you get the treat. the next section with rees—mogg, peacemaker , rees—mogg, peacemaker, alternative pride. and you want to be a bbc journalist ? we're to be a bbc journalist? we're going to
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welcome back to headliners. straight into the observer.
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nick. where rees—mogg turns the other cheek. >> yes. jacob rees—mogg says university protests against him were legitimate if noisy . university protests against him were legitimate if noisy. he's called them legitimate and peaceful if noisy. this is the new. your impression of him? well, i sort of i did a little bit. i did a little bit of it. not too much. but yeah, it's the new fiery but mostly peaceful, isn't it? and, you know, mr rees—mogg, he's a colleague. he's a great man. but he, he's very hardy about these things and he makes a point of being quite robust about them . he's quite robust about them. he's had that debate where people came into his wasn't a debate, it was a he was speaking and people came to the back to intimidate him. people have come to his to home intimidate him. he's got a clip. clip. >> we've got a clip. he is surrounded by some angry protesters and lots of security guards. yeah. as well, they're also. i've seen the clip a bit
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closer and there seems to be someone dressed up like. i'm assuming it's his son, because he says in this article, he says that it's mini mogg. yeah. he says there wasn't any physicality , but you could physicality, but you could clearly see a bit of pushing going on with. i'm guessing it's his son. >> i didn't see his son there, but yeah, that makes it even worse. but they've come to his house before, so it's nothing new. but mark's argument is or rees—mogg we should call him is thatis rees—mogg we should call him is that is that it's just simply, you know, all within the realm of free speech and so on and protest. but i'm not sure because, you know, you look at the tragic death of sir david amess, and the same guy was profiling michael gove and changed the aims. you know, we know about jo cox, all these things. so i don't know. it is pretty serious at this point. >> it's kind of looking good. he's coming out of this. well, you know farage had to go and eat body parts in the jungle and he's just doing this to kind of he's just doing this to kind of he looks he comes out of it really well. but i think this is borderline and i think that lots of people will. so jo stevens, shadow welsh secretary, she came out and said she's concerned by the footage, i disagree with him
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on almost everything, but we cannot accept a culture of intimidation in our politics. and similarly, the people from the university have come out and said it's not on and i, i don't think he's wrong. i think good for him. i love that kind of stoic attitude, but i don't think this behaviour is okay. it's a university . it's a university. >> he could be doing 4d chess next expression. it could be, it could be doing that. but yes, the fact is there's no question that that behaviour is at the very least intimidation. and there was violence there . there was violence there. >> and the great thing, of course, for the pro—israel side is it just makes them look much better because this doesn't help the palestine cause at all. >> this is the crazy thing about all of these causes, cresta, is that they never look good after throwing paint paintings, destroying , in this case, people destroying, in this case, people on the other side to him have come out and said, look, that's not on. >> we don't want to be associated with that, which is great, you know, because, well, this is it. >> it was the welsh underground network. what a bunch of cool dudes, the cardiff communists, communists and they're saying he left her with anger at his zionism , angry at his cruelty to zionism, angry at his cruelty to the working class, anger at his
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very existence . very existence. >> yeah, these guys need to be. >> yeah, these guys need to be. >> yes. but looked at cardiff labour students condemned them and said it was clearly abuse . and said it was clearly abuse. and that's good because sometimes that's sorry. >> yeah . like he was going to >> yeah. like he was going to do. what's really weird is i know like two a couple of normal remainer centrist dads types who both told me that they think jacob rees—mogg should be in jail. and you go, why? and it doesn't seem to be any reason. the anger against jacob rees—mogg, not just from cardiff communists, but from the sort of allegedly moderate kind of remainer type people is immense. they have , you know, he's a sort they have, you know, he's a sort of bogeyman for them. it's kind of bogeyman for them. it's kind of absurd given he's afraid. >> but when you watch a clip like that, i believe it backfires on them. people cannot not feel sympathy for him. deaung not feel sympathy for him. dealing with dignity with a bunch of abusive idiots. right? telegraph next crestor. and what does the acronym fafo mean ? does the acronym fafo mean? >> i've got no idea . >> i've got no idea. >> i've got no idea. >> a.f.o do you really not know what it means? >> no. is it something you can't say on air? yeah, f a f it means it's fear of missing out. >> oh. oh, no. >> that's fine. watch something
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around. >> find out. >> find out. >> testing me. >> testing me. >> you never something around? >> you never something around? >> find out. oh, yes, i do. okay. >> yes . most of okay. >> yes. most of britain didn't get that. >> we've seen richard's twitter andifs >> we've seen richard's twitter and it's terrifying. if you see and it's terrifying. if you see an f, whatever it is, it can be awful. anyway. in other news, columbia university bans protest leader over zionist zionist remarks. right i get it now, so this guy, kimani james, who's 20, has apologised for viral comments made in the heat of the moment. so give him a break, guys. what did he say, well, he said, the same way we're very comfortable accepting that nazis don't deserve to live, fascists don't deserve to live, fascists don't deserve to live, fascists don't deserve to live, and racists don't deserve to live zionists, they shouldn't live in this world, actually , no, we this world, actually, no, we don't all think that i've never wanted to kill aka 96% of jews. it's not cool. and the reason he was saying this was because he's trying to sort out a previous problem. he was already in trouble for saying i don't fight to injure, or for there to be a winner or a loser. i fight to
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kill. i mean, he'sjust he's kill. i mean, he's just he's a wally, isn't he? he's talking about fighting a zionist there as well. >> and he said that people should be grateful he wasn't murdering zionists. now, nick, for me , the most incredible part for me, the most incredible part of this is that, as krista says, this happened twice. and the second time was actually to the columbia board who were dealing with the initial complaints. so he doubled down on it. but because it happened in january and now the footage is being released, it's taken a couple, what, four months for them to actually take action like they were fine with it up till now. and now that it's become public now they've gone, oh, we better suspend him. >> and what action have they taken? because it says it's not immediately clear if he's been suspended or expelled. so has he even been expelled now? and why has he not been arrested? i mean , has he not been arrested? i mean i , has he not been arrested? i mean , i mean, this is incredible. yeah. as you say, be grateful that i'm not going out and murdering zionists. i'll add that to my daily gratitude list. but the idea look at this sentence as well. the, there's been heated debate over whether the pro—palestine protests are tinged with anti—semitic perspectives. tinged. it's just a tinge. josh, i mean, unhinged.
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>> yes, this is what it is. it's a guy who i was just watching a video about, but he comes from a single mom background. he got a scholarship to columbia, so the point was made in this video that, the system worked for him. >> it's the lack of fathers, though. in it. there it is. you see, your dad would stop this early on, right? >> well, telegraph again, nick. and what exactly will make fed up lesbians happy? and does it take batteries? >> how dare you? so it's proposed. >> is that a cheap joke? >> is that a cheap joke? >> this can't go out at 5 am. this is cancel now. it will go straight to the test. >> can't ask mummy. what does that mean? >> proposed. let's all be sensible and i get it back on the rails. proposed pride march could be alternative for fed up lesbians this summer. and this is jenny watson, who has been on free speech nation with andrew doyle, and she is organised an alternative march because she thinks pride has become hyper sexualised. it's basically straight men doing a load of degenerate sexualised things when it should be a day out for the family, which i don't know if that's quite true either, but it certainly can't be now because it's become so debauched that even, i mean, even people
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who formerly went to it are going, no, this is too much. we need our own day. and the lesbians basically are the new conservatives is what's happened. they're the new. >> that's what has happened. and they're not in reality. but the whole movement , the fight back whole movement, the fight back against this gender ideology has been left wing lesbians who are in this fight years before anybody else, and then have been kind of attacked as neo nazis, which is utterly ridiculous. but that's not where the movement started at all. >> no, not at all. what i like about this is they're not trying to stop anybody doing anything . to stop anybody doing anything. they're not saying this should be banned. they're saying we're gonna go do our own thing, which is cool, isn't it? because you don't see much of that these days. having said that, all of this stuff, pride and so on. i wonder whether we still need it. it's not for me to say i'm straight, but in a i sort of think like, hasn't the war been won in that you're allowed to be a lesbian now or a gay person and the way i feel about lots of the feminist stuff is like, okay, cool, i'm here now, is it about being allowed or is it just what it says on the tin, which is pride , to go out and
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which is pride, to go out and have a nice day out with a bunch of other lesbians and have a laugh ? laugh? >> okay, good for them. >> okay, good for them. >> i agree with it. all the all the rights have been achieved. that's what i had to have the add the tea and the weird dogs and stuff. you see at the march. what's that dog thing about celebrate when they pretend to be dogs like it's a celebration? >> i guess you can, but i would be horrified if somebody thought my sexuality was important enough that they needed to know that unless they were going to date me or, you know, it's i don't know what other people. >> it depends. some people, it's such an integral part of their personality. and for some people they just get on with it and it's different. >> but anyway, i love the way she's gone about this. she is a legend. everything she's done so far to this point has been brilliant. yeah, i've been a real lesbian. >> jews will be welcome because i know if you saw that footage from a few years ago where they turned up with a star of david and they were all kicked out of the pride in, i think it was in washington. so, yeah. >> can i have one boring fact? they say they're going to start the parade at the statue of millicent fawcett, the suffragette leader. she's actually a suffragist, which is the non—violent, more moderate side. it's quite different. yes. thanks for the people at home. >> very good, christa, you get this section's mail on sunday. cancel land. mine. >> brilliant. families of three
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men killed in reading terror attack. tell of their disgust after coroner rules. significant failings by police led to libyan asylum seekers knife rampage . as asylum seekers knife rampage. as grieving father says. our boys did not stand a chance getting a theme here. yeah, so they've they've had the hearing and the judge said that the deaths of these three people that were killed by this guy, were contributed to by the failings of multiple agencies to stop him. so it's another of these stories where it was already known that he was very violent. he'd committed crimes in his own country before he came here. and, of course, the family are just horrified because had that been acted upon , i think he was been acted upon, i think he was he was in a he was part of a terrorist organisation, proscribed terrorist group. >> he'd murdered people. he confessed to throwing grenades at people in libya. >> grenade. >> grenade. >> he couldn't have given any more. i mean, like, do you think he's going to do it? yeah, i think he's going to do it. >> you imagine being the family they're sitting and just hearing pubuc they're sitting and just hearing public or group after public
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group organisation talking about their failings and how they not informed the other one. and those people hadn't pulled that one and just it fell through the bureaucratic cracks in a shameful way, as you said, throwing grenades in libya. >> then we're like, yeah, come into this country. absolutely disgusting . total failure again disgusting. total failure again to police the borders properly. shouldn't have been here. and again, by the way, hate to go on about it. the majority of people in this country support the death penalty for terrorist murders. why is this guy just getting a life sentence? that's just. >> well, i remember this when it happened, and it was hardly felt like it was not reported. like three men being killed, stabbed to death, three other men injured as well. the guy shouting allahu akbar. and they were all gay again that well, that's not that factor isn't mentioned at all here. so it could well be a homophobic attack that you wouldn't know if you'd read this article. but i remember douglas murray at the time wrote in the spectator, talking about how this was about hierarchy , and we dare not hierarchy, and we dare not mention this hierarchy because it gets top trump, and even the mail doesn't mention this element to it. >> it's graceful, you say even
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the mail. but a lot of the journalists and mail are lefties, like most journalists and, you know, and they use pronouns and, you know, trans pronouns and, you know, trans pronouns and, you know, trans pronouns and stuff. the mail. so it's not really the mail isn't the right wing paper necessarily anymore. >> yeah. okay then. well, look, we're going to do one more story before the break. nick, what is the chance that the bbc news will report on this? sunday telegraph story? >> well, i hope so. it's1 in 3 >> well, i hope so. it's 1 in 3 bbc journalism scheme. trainees are white britons, so it's only 1 in 3. so 71.79% of the spots are taken by women as well and 28% by men. 7 in 10 to women. >> so this one angers you more. nick. >> it's tricky. >> it's tricky. >> ten it's as a straight white man thing . yeah. man thing. yeah. >> i mean none of it's great because as it pointed out here, positive discrimination as they call it ludicrously is just discrimination is unlawful under the equality act 2010. now it's getting round that with a loophole because you can as long as there's evidence that the relevant group is disadvantaged. i mean, you know, obviously this is why i don't think we should have the equality act.
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>> i think it should be one person, one heartbeat, one, you know, whoever you are, no, whoever you are in the eyes of the law or god, if that's what you're into, it shouldn't matter about your characteristics . you about your characteristics. you should be. >> this is a very sort of radical, do you think thought process here? >> no, i don't like the no, i don't think it sounds like you sounds like martin luther king sitting next to martin luther king. very, very good. josh howie. >> no, but you're right. >> no, but you're right. >> no, but you're right. >> no, of course i'm right. when was i ever wrong? yeah. no, it's just infuriating. and this drives me absolutely nuts because every time you get hired for anything, you think, am i any good at my job, or did they need a woman? i get a lot of work when women drop out of stuff, which is great. that's a career strategy. it's legit, but it's not cool. some friends of mine are, because how dare you? >> it's because she's. >> it's because she's. >> because she's a woman. >> because she's a woman. >> because she's a woman. >> because i provide feminine energy. shut up. listen, some friends of mine are running a thing where they're in the board. >> they're gonna. >> they're gonna. >> oh my god, camera i come on >> oh my god, camera! come on back. there we go. some friends of mine are running an event soon at sacred cows, where they're having this professor, alex edmunds in to talk about.
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he's done some research into whether or not die actually benefits organisations and i'll benefits organisations and i'll be going down to ladbrokes and placing a tenner on no , i was placing a tenner on no, i was going to tell you the date, but i haven't written it down, so that's brilliant. it's in the next week, i'll put it on my twitter. but isn't that interesting? they're going to actually look at because the idea is it's supposed to make things better, but surely . things better, but surely. >> well, it makes it better for the people who got on this course. coui'se. >> course. >> it's based on flawed studies that say it's better. but by the way, even under their own premise that it's helping disadvantaged people, well, that also includes white men who are disadvantaged by things like this. >> yeah, right. just the last section to go. and you know, we won't disappoint you. we've got the death calculator, glass data cubes and gender revealing killing birds. see you in a
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you're going to run a marathon. hey, welcome back to headliners cressida. the metro knows when i'm going to die. is it next weekend's gig when i'm playing jongleurs blackpool. >> when you do the marathon at the end of this show. josh.
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urgent warning for anyone using scarily accurate ai death calculator, why would you want to do that , so this amazing team to do that, so this amazing team have built a death calculator that takes a bunch of information about you, like your income, your profession in medical history, and so on. it's got 78% accuracy. >> how many daily mail stories you cover in one day? yeah. brilliant stuff, and the problem is as if that. >> i mean, why isn't that just the story on its own? that's hideous. it would do your head in, wouldn't it? yeah. 78% accuracy. but that's not the story. the story is that there's a fake one out there. and if you use that , it won't be accurate. use that, it won't be accurate. and they're just trying to get your data and other sensitive information. yeah. >> so nick is this i mean what is the moral ramifications here for finding out when you are going to die? would you want to know when you're going to die? >> i would, yeah, just because i'm so anxious about all the time that i'd rather, you know, if it was really soon, it would freak me out. i could plan at least. you know what i mean. i like planning, the problem is with the scam app. that's fake is what if it just tells you tomorrow and you're like, but
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it's just a fake. they're just messing with you. that's the dangen messing with you. that's the danger. yeah. >> all right, that's not find out great news from the sunday times. now, nick, my facebook data can be saved for eternity . data can be saved for eternity. >> yeah, i like the way it stayed on me there when i was doing a weird face. so the tiny glass blocks that can preserve your data for centuries . for your data for centuries. for centuries. josh? yes, with your hard drive stuff . so the aliens hard drive stuff. so the aliens finding out what you were into . finding out what you were into. >> oh, my. my certain searches. >> oh, my. my certain searches. >> yeah, yeah, yeah , but it's >> yeah, yeah, yeah, but it's all about palestine anyway. sorry that's ridiculous, the point is that little bits of glass they store, they're less prone to damage. they don't they don't have problems with heating. you don't have to keep copying them every few years across because of magnetic damage and so on. you just have all the data on a tiny bit of glass forever. >> yeah, that's pretty cool. >> yeah, that's pretty cool. >> is it though? glass? hello. have you never been drunk and knocked over a bunch of glasses? it sounds like the worst thing to put it in. >> maybe it would be like tough, tough glass. anyway, it's an interesting idea. and, i mean, it shows that this problem of data storage is something that needs to be worked on. and unfortunately, it seems like the uk seems to be the leader of
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glass storage. so that's a pro uk story there coming at the end of the show, right? more metro crestor and it seems like gender reveals are for the birds . reveals are for the birds. >> rspca issues warning over gender reveal fad. that is killing birds. what is wrong with people? apparently people are getting a pigeon and dyeing it blue or pink, killing it when it's a girl. >> is that what's happening? is that the story ? that the story? >> it's not the story. >> it's not the story. >> oh, okay. in china okay. yeah cooking it. >> yum, yum. always worse. yeah. they're they're i mean, firstly, how do you catch a pigeon? we don't. that's not near impossible. that's covered in this. >> i've got that i'll tell you after the show. brilliant. and then the pink. yeah. >> painting. dyeing it pink . i >> painting. dyeing it pink. i mean, if you're pregnant, haven't you got enough to worry about without catching birds? i just think this is hideous. and surprise, surprise, the rspca have said , don't do that. have said, don't do that. >> what happens if your baby is going to be trans? >> how does that work? well great point. >> all right. sad news for gerbil owners. and the telegraph. nick. >> yes. vet warns that people are shooting their own animals because they cannot afford vet bills. i mean, this is sitting in a sort of comic section, but
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it's not really a light story, is it? it's kind of like the decline in dentistry and people are doing it, you know, diy. this is david thompson and he's a vet who's offering much cheaper services because they're saying that the world has been taken over by big corporations. it's risen. there was 10% of vet practice were run by large corporations. 2013 that's gone up by 60, and they're all ripping people off. someone quoted £9,000 for a pelvic fracture of a dog, and so they're ripping people off. so they're ripping people off. so they're just taking them home, dog shooting them. >> i shoot the dog. >> i shoot the dog. >> yeah, well, you get paid to do it on the weekends. don't talk about this story for hours. >> so what would you like your pet? lobster would you cook it? >> my pet pet pigeon. i think there's a lot going on here, people. >> i mean, why, it's in the final section. it's not funny. it's horrible. don't shoot your dog. but also having a dog put down is. no it doesn't. oh, you don't like dogs? josh doesn't like dogs. doesn't like dogs. >> what a freak. >> what a freak. >> wrong to eat meat. i don't mind dogs. i'm fine. i'm just saying i'm not going to pay £9,000. >> it is very expensive to have a dog. and a lot of that is because we're not having babies. we're having dogs instead. and there's lots of. i used to work in doggy day—care, which is a
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great industry. i don't i'm not resentful about it. but you know , there's people with money who want to look after their dogs. >> i didn't know you were so eminently qualified for that story. right. finally, cresta, the star has china's next illegal acquisition, the moon. >> china wants to own the moon. as nasa's suspicions of permanent moon base grow, so china may be looking to control the moon. china? i mean, are they , though? how do you. i they, though? how do you. i don't know how you prove this, they will aim to have a permanent moon base by 2040. according to an expert backing nasa's outer space suspicions. >> yeah, this nick is this nasa just wanting more money and scaring us? >> no, it's the chinese are always doing 4d chess charts. they're always way ahead and they're already planning to win they're already planning to win the moon. it'd be china versus elon musk , and they can win spacex. >> they can do space lasers. that was the interesting thing for this article to be right. the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at sunday's front pages . first, we sunday's front pages. first, we have the mail on sunday. police are so cowed by the anti—semitic mob, they even cover up the holocaust . at the sunday
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holocaust. at the sunday telegraph, tory rebels on warpath after mp defects to laboun warpath after mp defects to labour. the sunday times threat to mps over cash for blood victims. the observer exclusive top tory mp defects to labour in fury at nhs crisis and the sunday express kie i'll keep pension triple lock and the daily star sunday spaceman. there are millions of aliens and those were your front pages. thatis those were your front pages. that is all that we have time for. thank you very much to my guests. chris. the weapon's weapon, weapon, weapon . and nick weapon, weapon, weapon. and nick dixon. we're going to be back tomorrow at 11 pm. when steve allen be joined by leo kearse and louis schaefer. and if you're watching at 5 pm, stay tuned for breakfast. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello! here's your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. we hold on to rather unsettled weather across the uk over the next few days, but temperatures will
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gradually start to climb too . gradually start to climb too. we've got low pressure sitting towards the south of the uk at the moment. that's starting to push weather fronts up from the south and certainly as we go through this evening into the overnight period, we'll see outbreaks of rain working their way in from the south across many southern and eastern parts of england, some of that rain turning quite heavy, particularly as we go into the early hours of sunday. and that rain also reaching the south—east of wales by the early hours to towards the north and northwest. it's a clearer picture. a few showers around here and turning quite chilly with those clear spells could see a touch of frost in places by sunday morning. temperatures locally below freezing but holding up with the cloud and the rain towards the south and east, that takes us into a pretty wet day across many eastern and southeastern parts of england tomorrow, some heavy bursts of rain still to come. nofice bursts of rain still to come. notice things brightening up, perhaps for a time across the south—east of england, giving some heavy showers, but generally a pretty wet picture. quite windy too, and that rain pushing up into eastern parts of scotland into the afternoon as well . whereas out towards the well. whereas out towards the west it's a brighter picture. sunshine and showers but pretty chilly wherever you are. temperatures no better than 12 or 13 degrees. as for monday, we'll see an east west split
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once again, but a reversal of fortunes this time with the east and southeast seeing the brightest skies out towards the west. quite a few showers to come, those showers merging in places to give some longer spells of rain. and as we head into the coming week , we hold into the coming week, we hold onto a pretty unsettled picture. outbreaks of rain for most areas at times, but notice those temperatures picking up to into the high teens or low 20s. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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a conservative mp, defects to laboun a conservative mp, defects to labour, but the tories can still win. >> the scottish greens are more interested in trans and kids
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than the supposed climate emergency. our asylum system is nuttier than any mental asylum . nuttier than any mental asylum. >> are we expecting too much of our cancer stricken king? and as a mega poll puts donald trump behind joe biden, is maga going down? >> it's 6 pm. and this is the saturday five. a very good evening, folks. to you at home. now, if you like calm, considered and reflective debate where mature and responsible adults discuss the issues of the day, i'm afraid question time is having the night off. if you prefer watching five egotistic know it alls hurling abuse at each other. welcome along to the saturday five. delighted to have your company know i'll be this week, unfortunately. but ben leo and benjamin butterworth are on duty as usual, and we're also joined by the brilliant political commentator chloe dobbs and former tory advisor charlie rowley, who knows a
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sinking ship when he sees one and now works as a commentator and now works as a commentator and broadcast for himself. and of course, we want to know your views as well . send your views views as well. send your views and post your comments by visiting gbnews.com/yoursay don't forget, we need all your questions for ask the five as well. but before we start tearing each other apart, it's time for your saturday night news with ray addison . news with ray addison. >> thanks, darren. good evening. our top stories tonight. and we start with that breaking, developing story . conservative developing story. conservative mp doctor dan poulter, as we've been hearing, has defected to laboun been hearing, has defected to labour. announcing his decision in the observer newspaper, the former health minister said it was abundantly clear that the labour party alone has the will and the trust to restore and reform the nhs. he's also urging rishi sunak to call a general election as soon as possible.
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doctor poulter, who represents central suffolk

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