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tv   Headliners  GB News  May 5, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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gb news. i'm and listening to gb news. i'm sam francis. a look at the headunes sam francis. a look at the headlines at 11:00. the liberal democrats claim that rishi sunak is living on cloud cuckoo land. after a disappointing set of local election results for the conservatives this week. the biggest upset saw labour's richard parker win in the west midlands, defeating andy street by just 1500 votes. the conservatives also lost all mayoral elections except one. ben houchen remains in his post in teesside, but labour's national campaign coordinator , national campaign coordinator, pat mcfadden, says his party shouldn't be too complacent . shouldn't be too complacent. >> but two things have guided our position all along. one is the one that you just mentioned, which is israel's right to defend itself after the appalling attacks on october the 7th. that will remain. we will stick up for that. but we also want to see a better future for the palestinian people. and if we were to be elected at the coming election, that would be a big foreign policy priority for us. >> us. >> we've heard tonight that
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veteran party activist graham mccormick has pulled out of the race to become leader of the snp and scotland's next first minister. it leaves just john swinney as the official candidate to succeed humza yousaf, after the former leader announced he's stepping down. mr mccormick says that he'll be backing mr swinney's nomination for the role instead, after the pair had, he said, a fruitful conversation . a candlelit vigil conversation. a candlelit vigil has been held for a teenager who was stabbed in north—east london earlier this week. 14 year old daniel anjorin was attacked on his way to school by a man with a sword for other people were also injured in the attack. four men have been arrested . believe men have been arrested. believe this is a different story. men have been arrested. believe this is a different story . we'll this is a different story. we'll move on. four men have been arrested after £40 million worth of cocaine was found in east yorkshire. around 500 kilos of the drug were discovered in the back of a van in a pub car park. officers believe the haul had
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been brought ashore in a boat, transporting it from a larger vessel off the coast of hull . vessel off the coast of hull. senior investigators say that it's a major blow to the organised crime group attempting to smuggle it into the uk . a to smuggle it into the uk. a manhunt is ongoing tonight for a prisoner who's escaped from jail in suffolk. ricky wall was reported missing in woodbridge on saturday morning when he failed to appear for roll call. the 23 year old is serving a seven year sentence for aggravated burglary, and police are now appealing for help to trace him . and finally, water is trace him. and finally, water is gradually being restored to more than 32,000 homes in east sussex after a pipe there burst three days ago. southern water has issued an apology to customers after businesses in hastings and saint leonards on sea said it had been catastrophic . in had been catastrophic. in a statement, though, the firm said they do hope that full return of water supplies will happen between now and tomorrow morning . for the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the code on your screen or go to gb news. com slash
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alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> you run through the next day's newspapers with three comedians. >> i'm leo carson. tonight i'm joined by paul cox. >> the people's gammon and louis shaffer, a man who works so well with paul , he shaffer, a man who works so well with paul, he must be shaffer, a man who works so well with paul , he must be the with paul, he must be the people's little ring of pineapple. >> do you get it.7 >> do you get it.7 >> i'm not suggesting you've got a little ring. >> i'm suggesting all that it tastes of pineapple. you're saying because . because he's saying because. because he's gammon, i must be pineapple . gammon, i must be pineapple. because pineapple goes on gammon.7 >> because you're such a good combination . ian. combination. ian. >> you know, when we have to explain the jokes, it's not a good joke . i got it, man. good joke. i got it, man. >> anyway, that's the awkward chit chat. out of the way. >> let's have a look at tomorrow's front pages. >> the daily mail leads with dozens of pro gaza activists elected. >> we're going to cover that in
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a second. >> the times has uk heading for a hung parliament, says sunak. >> he hopes it express has only big tax cuts and growth can save the tories. now the guardian has labour set sights on blue wall seats at next election . seats at next election. >> the mirror has. >> the mirror has. >> our hearts are heavy, the pain is deep. our faith is strong. that's the tragic death of that 14 year old boy. and finally, the daily star has a few . few. >> and those were your front pages. >> and let's have a closer look at those front pages, starting with the daily mail poll. >> yeah, dozens of pro garzon, activists elected, elected across councils, all across britain, actually. >> and these candidates clearly represent their communities. because if they don't, then how are they getting voted in.7 and if you are concerned in any way by this, well, it's kind of your fault because this guy, the particularly the green guy. moeen ali. he was voted in with 3072 votes. that is not a lot of
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votes. there are more people watching us now than than that. >> but these are these are, councillors . so, i mean, they're councillors. so, i mean, they're deaung councillors. so, i mean, they're dealing with smaller constituencies. >> they are indeed . >> they are indeed. >> they are indeed. >> but and i mean, i think it's quite it's quite a wake up call to see so many people. >> so 40, apparently 40 people have been elected based on their stance on gaza and for a foreign war to have such an outsized impact on elections in the uk, you think maybe british issues would be something that british people would be worried about? >> it's a wake up call. who's it? a wake up call for you. is it? a wake up call for you. is it a wake up call? no it's not it's not a wake up call for me. i don't know who. it's a wake up call who voted for. i'm not allowed to vote. i'm not allowed to vote. and thank god i'm not allowed to vote. i'm afraid we're where i put my vote. the point is, is that is that there are now three, three and a half, 4 million people in a country of 65 million or 70 million people. there's a lot of people, and they're all young and they all
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vote in a certain way, and they all have a belief system. and if labour thinks that they're going to get away with this, they're not going to get away with it. >> and we've got a clip of, of the green party candidate for, i'm not sure exactly where moth and ali, we've got a clip of him when he, when he is a victory was announced. >> he's going to palestine. >> he's going to palestine. >> i mean, hello, hello. i mean, green party. >> party candidates have changed a bit since i was a kid. oh, so woolly jumpers. and, you know, please recycle responsibly. and now it's agbank . now it's agbank. >> absolutely crazy. >> absolutely crazy. >> all totally normal green party stuff , like you say. i party stuff, like you say. i mean, you know, save the planet, preserve the countryside down with the jews. >> yeah. all that, all that sort , all that, all that clear green party messaging. in fairness, i think allah akbar is arabic for, for please separate your recycling into the correct bins. >> is these people these pro gazan people. it's i think people are beginning to read and i don't think they're beginning to realise. i don't think they realise it. i think it's the end. it's the end of the
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country. it's time to. >> it's interesting that the left wing, like the green party, are a far left political party. in the past they wanted to, you know, they were anti—capitalist, you know, really, really, quite, quite radically socialist. and they're they seem to have allied themselves with, with this with, with the muslim vote, with islamists to a certain extent. and what happened, what's happenedin and what happened, what's happened in other countries? i mean, if you look at iran before the iranian revolution , so the the iranian revolution, so the leftists allied with the islamists to depose the shah. and then once they'd done that , and then once they'd done that, the islamists were in power and they executed the leftists. so, you know, some of these green party members , i'm looking party members, i'm looking forward to it. i'm looking forward to it. i'm looking forward to it. i'm looking forward to our future in 20 years when we have the, you know, we start. i don't think you're letting my family down for a for a picnic and enjoy our diversity. >> you're gonna laugh, but they've already killed you already. you're a go on or two because. because you're on the you're on the other side is it? but there, there was these bonding. it's like it's like every political party is a mixture of all the different
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beliefs of all the different people. and you don't believe everything, but you have to believe something. >> and i think i think, you know, if you look at the tory party and the labour party as well, to a certain extent, you know, you've got people with different belief systems, but they're all united under, you know, common western liberal democratic values, whereas i'm not sure that's happening with all these candidates. >> i disagree with you. i don't think i don't think no evidence at all. no. i think the tories and the labour, i think when it comes down to it, let's say we live in a world where it's just the tories and the labour. they will hack each other to death. >> okay, i don't think they will. >> i don't think that's going to become i think we just, i think i think paul is doing a good job and you're always happy. it's just let's let's laugh at the fact that the country's doomed. this is just the doom of the country. >> yeah. let's find some enjoyment in our country's death spiral. anyway, that's a bit of a bit of a not very cheery in the first story on, but lewis, what are the times leading with, uk heading for a hung parliament? >> it says sunak and, and,
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basically he's, he's looking over the results and the results are not good. it's all it's all laboun are not good. it's all it's all labour. but that's what happens nowadays. it's like they're in power. they've been in power for so long. the tories that eventually you get just get sick of it. and even the people who like the tories, half of them are sick of the tories. and they founded the reform party. so he's putting a brave face on it. he's saying it's going to be okay, everything's going to be okay. don't worry about it, everything's going to be okay. but as i said before, everything's not okay. it's the tories are dead, i think. >> i mean, are you this pessimistic because i've heard some people say, you know, there are some chinks of light for the for the tories in the election results. there's the tees valley mayor stayed on. that's about it. yeah, but but famously over history, the local elections haven't always been replicated within the general election because people are voting for different things. >> and i think i saw a statistic on friday that said that this would have meant that labour would have meant that labour would have meant that labour would have won a 29% majority, now, 29% is not as big as people are predicting, right? so it is
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possible, particularly with, you don't mean 29. what do i mean? >> 20? do you mean 29? >> 20? do you mean 29? >> seat 29. seat no, 29% of the vote. >> i mean, i do mean 29. that's why i wonder why you challenged it. >> because 29% is not even 5,029% lead on the tories . oh, 5,029% lead on the tories. oh, okay, i didn't understand. did you understand that? >> i didn't totally understand. but i nodded and pretended that's what it. >> so the delta difference between the two is roughly 30% and you know a third difference. yeah well, they're using words that no one understands anymore. i said percentage in delta. right. okay. >> the difference between the number of counters in the in the pot for tories and labour was different by 30, which is big and would give them a decent majority if it was extrapolated from local to general. >> but it's not as big as people have been threatening. so >> because why? because because the islamists, the muslims are voting for their own political parties. yeah. >> the, the they've left the
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labour party, they've left the labour party, they've left the labour party. >> and eventually it'll be the tories are going to look at each other and say, you know, maybe we should be friends. i think that's what's going to happen. >> well, there are the labour services, aren't they? i mean, but i think, you know, keir has actually done well to, to push out the sort of more extreme elements of, you know, islamists from the labour party because it makes the labour party more appealing to middle england than, you know, than the labour party was under jeremy corbyn, who for some reason didn't have any problem with the extreme extremist elements. no, he posted him up, but but, let's just say there is a hung parliament. and i used to say this a lot until about 2 or 3 months ago, and then everyone said to me, you're mad. and i'm starting to believe that they're right, but let's say they do. who is going to prop them up? it can only be the lib dems or the snp and greens or, well, all the far, the far left greens of, green aston. they, they, they i don't know what i'm saying now. i think i've been here too long. >> you've forgotten who you are. he used to be. he used to be the most to down earth basic guy,
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brand new jacket, brand new toy. that's what i'm saying. >> i'd like to apologise to all the little rashes out there. but who's going to prop up? who's going to prop him up? that's what i want to know, because starmer keeps saying he's not going to go in to do any deals with anybody. but obviously that's a lot of bunkum. >> we could do a deal with the tories, seeing as they're virtually identical parties at the moment. anyway, moving on, what if the guardian got in the front cover? >> labour set sights on blue wall seats in next election. so the shadow cabinet minister, pat mcfadden, has said that labour were advancing in southern tory heartlands and it was wrong to think the lib dems were the only challengers to the conservatives in the south. because really and truly, i live in the south and places like chichester. are tory at the moment and they've got a very strong lib dem candidate down there and a lady called jess brown filler, and it is , it jess brown filler, and it is, it is for me, usually just between the two. you do get labour, you do get labour voters. but in the sort of very metro metropolitan areas, amongst some of the working classes. but the working class is now are leaving labour
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and they're going to, i don't know where they're going to be honest. reform you would think. but i don't know. they did go to the tories. i don't know where they go in the general election. labour can, particularly in some of the denser populated areas where diversity is the strength . where diversity is the strength. so where there are huge, muslim populations within big cities, in places like portsmouth and southampton , i can see labour southampton, i can see labour winning votes. but it's going to be really interesting because i think naturally these people go from conservative to lib dem. they don't go because they're fed up with tories, they're just looking for a change. it's like changing your colour of socks because it's a tuesday. >> but it does feel as well, louis, that the tories aren't the same party that they were, you know, during margaret thatcher's time. they're no longer the party of free enterprise and low regulation and less state intervention and lower taxes and less state spending. >> well, i agree with you. i don't even know what they are. i don't even know what they are. i don't know what rishi sunak is. he's he's not he doesn't strike me. he's not exactly labour, but he's not exactly a tory either .
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he's not exactly a tory either. yeah, i think i think his it's just is he team world. >> he's a southampton fan which i really find disgusting . oh is i really find disgusting. oh is he really. he is a southampton fan. his trousers are too short. >> he lives in yorkshire and he supports. so they they. >> i don't know if you know this, but all they do is they put they put you in really easy seats to win. oh and then you win that and you have nothing to do with the local area. but you pretend to do and you get people advising you, saying, just say this and just say that. >> what does that mean? his seats, his trousers are too short. he's like a very short quy- short. he's like a very short guy.so short. he's like a very short guy. so yeah, but and he wears short trousers. so how can that be? >> well, it's supposed to give. why? we're never on topic tonight, are we? yeah. it's supposed to give the impression that you're slightly taller, but it doesn't. when you're five foot two, it doesn't matter how short trousers, shorts he's wearing. sort of three quarter length shorts like it's 2003. >> i'm not sure why we're talking about rishi sunak trousers, but that is the front pageis trousers, but that is the front page is dealt with. but
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maybe not. welcome back to headliners emily carr. still with gb news answer to harvey weinstein and jeffrey epstein. paul cox and lewis schaffer. >> that can't be a thing i should. >> i didn't write that. that just appeared in the mail prompt. that's the deep state that has got jonathan kogan written all over it . anyway, written all over it. anyway, we've got the sun now and can rishi turn things around before the next election? obviously not. but he says he's going to try lewis. >> he's going to try fighting, fighting spirit. i think we did the story before, but whatever, we'll do it again. fighting spirit, fighting very defiant. rishi sunak vows to work as hard as ever to take fight to labour after andy street outs ousted in the west midlands. and this is andy street, who was the head of birmingham and birmingham, declared bankruptcy . so of declared bankruptcy. so of course he should lose if you got to kick the guy out, if your guy, whatever, whatever he is, labour or anything and so he says we're going to fight on.
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>> but, was that the responsibility of the mayor, though? i mean, i guess the mayor is the ultimate, you know, top figurehead for, for the council or whatever the he should have said he should his first, his first day there, he should have said, we're going to declare bankruptcy. >> and then he might have gotten away with it. but he didn't say it. so when they declared bankruptcy, it was like, what were you doing? >> you got to check the books and your first day in. if you're and your first day in. if you're a politician like javier milei, yeah, you're your go to favourite. >> yeah, i love clip, you can work as hard as he likes rishi sunak, but unless you start sort of punching illegals in the face and slashing taxes by 90, i don't see him gaining like any position in this. in the general election. it will be interesting and he's got to do it. i mean, what would be more amusing from our standpoint as comedians if we just come out and went, what a mess we are, we are in some serious trouble, lads. >> just drop the facade. >> just drop the facade. >> yeah, and he just went, look, i am so glad that mrs. is a billionaire because i, i, i am out of here. yeah yeah. >> that green card for the
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state. i said i was going to get rid of. i've still got it. and good luck. >> does he have a green card? >> does he have a green card? >> he did that. and that was, that was, part of the scandal because, you know, you expect, you know, the prime minister have a way out. he's been a minister of the country to, you know, be more committed to living in britain and being british than, you know, having the right to work in other countries and also not paying tax in this country. >> yeah. are you saying that that's what's going to happen eventually? >> why do you think that's one of the things that's hobbled rishi. he's not really seen as a as a man of the people. i don't know why a billionaire hasn't seen as the man of the people, but yeah, he's, he doesn't have that common touch that, you know, boris did. even though bofisis know, boris did. even though boris is also an immensely wealthy man. >> yeah, but it's charisma, isn't it? that's the thing that separates those two. yeah, but bofis separates those two. yeah, but boris had loads of charisma and he used it to impregnate half of north london. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> for yourself . i've been >> for yourself. i've been nowhere near the guy . nowhere near the guy. >> we've got the telegraph. and now in the next labour
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government have been advised to act like every single previous labour government. >> paul is ridiculous, isn't it? just when they're on the up corbyn economic economics guru urges starmer to borrow and spend more. this is joseph stiglitz and he is an economic guru. i can't say economic tonight, can i? guru of the political left. and he's calling for labour to be more radical, after under—promising in the run up to the general election. and it's like these people have collective amnesia. you've only got i mean, it's all on wikipedia. if you want to have a look, you can see what happened under labour in the 90s. you can see what happened under labour in the 70s. you can then go back and look at what happened to labourin and look at what happened to labour in the 40s and 50s. and the only, you know , we've got the only, you know, we've got we've been there, we've done it. we've got the repossession orders to show us what happens if you do this. yeah. and the only way borrowing more and spending more works is if you die before you have to pay it back. and unfortunately, you pass that on to the next
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generation. and what we end up with is ten years of labour. everything's brilliant. we're all covered in honey and milk, and then in ten years time, nobody's got anything again. but you forgot. >> you forget about the last. the last tour, labour administration. which which are the tories ? which. yeah, absolutely. >> yeah. the tories are supposed to, you know, come in when a when a country, when a government is overspent and, you know, left the left the country in financial penury, the tories are supposed to come in and set the set the boat right. but the tories have done it this time. yeah. >> they've spent exactly. they've spent all the money that can be spent. and so there's no more money that can be spent. so whatever they say, we've got to spend money. if there's no money, if no one wants to loan the country any money, they're not going to get any. >> and also being being an economics adviser to jeremy corbyn is like being a nutritionist for james corden, thatis nutritionist for james corden, that is not i mean, how does that is not i mean, how does that even work ? like the guys, that even work? like the guys, the guy's basically a marxist. economics is not anything that he's going to going to go anywhere near anyway. moving on. we've got the mail now and we're paying we've got the mail now and we're paying £290 million to rwanda to
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take our illegal migrants. but now that the checks cleared, they're being a bit cagey about their side of the deal. >> louis. yes, which is quite scary. rwanda refuses to guarantee how many uk migrants it will take under the £200 million deal, as government says , as the government of rwanda says that living in the beautiful east asian east african state is not a punishment . and this is very, punishment. and this is very, very scary. it means it means that these people, these people that these people, these people that we respected are supposedly respected or should respect. they're the ones who are good with money. they had no, they didn't dot the i's with money. they had no, they didn't dot the 1's and follow the t's. they don't. so we don't know how many people they are forced to take. if they have to take, they've already taken. they say they're going to take thousands, but there might be need to take tens of. >> well, it was, it was reported in, in some of the left wing press that rwanda had only agreed to take 200. but this person in fact says that, that that's a myth. and that was just, you know, an initial or they showed a facility that had for space 200 and that was seen
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as, you know, the entire capacity , which isn't true. so capacity, which isn't true. so they are going to they are going to take thousands according they are going to we're going to send them anyway, aren't we? >> i mean, whether they like it or not, they're going there. >> the plane's going to take off before they can. >> and it is a really long dinghy ride from rwanda to, to doven dinghy ride from rwanda to, to dover. so good luck, boys. getting back. but i mean, this does create a bit of a paradox for the left. i think, because in order for the left to poo poo the rwanda deal, because they're talking in here about being a beautiful eastern, african state, the left have got to argue that the rwanda is a terrible place for people to live. yeah. and it's clearly not. yeah. it can't be otherwise why we would send our people there. so, you know, when enoch powell said something like that, there was all hell to pay for decades. but with the left at the moment are banging on about how rwanda is not a nice place to go. yeah. if you look on premier league grounds, they've got rwanda going around the edge, but they're selling holidays to rwanda. >> yeah, looking at the photos, i mean, i know our sphere of reference for rwanda was the, you know, the war between the hutus and the tutsis and, you
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know, looked horrific. but looking at it now, it's a modern, vibrant state with skyscrapers and everything. it looks, it looks, it looks a lot better than britain, to be honest. >> you know what? if you look at it from, you know, a dv, every place looks great on tv. i think berlin wasn't good on tv. berlin was really nice in 1938 as well. so you know, that doesn't mean some people didn't have problems with it. i think what they're trying to do is they're not this quy- trying to do is they're not this guy. whatever his name is, rishi sunak , he's not doing his job. sunak, he's not doing his job. yeah, he's he's trying to like, scare people. this is his only plan. and it's not it's not going to be it's not going to work. yeah. >> okay. well we'll see. we've got the mail now. a new york university protesters are pretending to be jihadis. probably not the best thing to do given new york's history. paul do given new york's history. paul. no. >> good point. nyu protesters call for the death of america or death to america . and long live death to america. and long live intifada. lovely work, chaps , intifada. lovely work, chaps, sinister protest pro—hamas flyers have emerged on the nyu campus campus amid fears of a
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rampant anti—semitism and threatening behaviour at demonstrations. now, these protests and protesters have come have become so progressive that they've made being anti—jewish woke. >> yeah, so we find ourselves in a point now where they have just followed the pied piper far enough so they have no idea anymore a what they believe in, b what they're chanting for, and see what the impact of that is. yeah, well, i think they do . yeah, well, i think they do. they think they know what they believe in because critical race theory and anti whiteness was allowed to flourish on university campuses . and this university campuses. and this this is openly accepted. nobody stepped in. no politician said you know, oh no you need to you need to treat everybody equally. you know equal rights is the bafis you know equal rights is the basis of a of a stable liberal society. and instead, you know, they're allowed to foment this righteous hatred against against white people. and we're seeing now that then being transferred onto jews, a lot of these , you onto jews, a lot of these, you know, far left, extremists on these campuses see jews as the ultimate white people. and
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they're using the same language like colonisation. they're saying , you know, israel has saying, you know, israel has colonised, colony , that land and colonised, colony, that land and the they're using the same, same language as they did. and i think if people had stepped in sooner to stop critical race theory and to stop anti whiteness, we wouldn't be be seeing this situation. now. what do you think, louis? you know you're paid by the word sorry i just this sounds very bad . just this sounds very bad. >> it sounds really bad. i mean i mean you have to laugh. you have to laugh at the whole thing. i mean, this reminds me of what it was like in the 1960s and 60s, early 60s, early 70s, when i was a young kid, and we were like, against the war in vietnam and the things that we used to say about this, you know, killing, the killing, whatever it is we were against. so this is what this is what they're doing, what what's going to they're going to be in for a surprise when they when they realise how messed up they will be without america and without the belief system of america and
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britain. because it's happening here, because the people here are imitating it. it's a very bad time right now, which is why i am leaving the country. i'm not going to be here next week. ihave not going to be here next week. i have to go to rwanda queuing up for rwanda plane. >> i feel like rwanda is going to be the only safe country left. >> i'm not even joking. i'd give it a go. i mean, gb news rwanda. i'm in. >> well, they killed the people that they want to kill and they're probably not going to kill them for a while. it's like with germany, they it's funny you mentioned germany , you know, you mentioned germany, you know, 19305 you mentioned germany, you know, 1930s germany because we're seeing the same righteous fury this. >> and you see some of them, they're taking joy in their anti—semitism. they're taking joy anti—semitism. they're taking joy in the horrible genocidal things that they're chanting, and they're chanting things that are exactly the same as the nazis chanted. and when people ask, how could the nazis happen? it's happening right now. this is this is the same mindset being being fomented. >> we are doomed. we're doomed. i'm doomed. but i think you're doomed too . i think everybody i doomed too. i think everybody i think, i think, you know, realise you're doomed. i think people think, well, it's not
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nice to me to be mean to the jews, but you're next. >> and. and that's good night from us. see you later. >> that's it for part two bit coming up. if we manage to make it to part three in this doom spiral, a stonewall loses another supporter. israel attacks al jazeera . and what's attacks al jazeera. and what's racist today? find out
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the mail now with more bad news for stonewall. as another organiser drops out of their protection racket. sorry. i mean, their diversity scheme, louis. >> well, that is totally, totally true. sports england cuts ties with stonewall amid warnings quangos should distance themselves from lgbtq lobby group. but you got to make sure you say all those things because if you just say lgbt, it's one thing. >> and if you got to say an irs two plus plus hyphen, asterisk,
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we'll just call it , just call we'll just call it, just call them the alphabet people. >> they love all that. you might have to, but some alphabet people are some. yeah, yeah, yeah. anyway anyway, so what it is, is that, is that sports england who is like in charge of all the sports. i guess this in england, in england, in england, in england has been paying £2,500 a year to stonewall. it is telling its people don't give them any money because yeah, they're making they're making a funding cut. >> and this, this comes after i think kemi badenoch said that no, no, government quangos or organisations should be giving money to stonewall, which is, you know, it's become a hugely controversial organisation station. yeah. because of the support for gender ideology . and support for gender ideology. and it's really sort of, radical stance on pushing transgender women into, into sport, which does make women's sport more interesting. but i can understand why, you know, not all women like it. yeah. >> yeah, i did really well in the under nines girls wrestling last year. yeah. >> well done. you know, brave and stunning. oh my god. >> thank you very much, mate,
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it's . yeah, it's fascinating, it's. yeah, it's fascinating, isn't it? we find ourselves in this position quite interestingly, just very quietly interestingly, just very quietly in the background. there are a few actual tory tories like kemi badenoch doing some things at the moment. gillian keegan as health secretary, just sort of eradicating some of the craziness before they go out, maybe setting themselves up for a tory leadership battle at some point. but there are definitely some more sort of conservative type policies coming out just out of the woodwork over the last couple of months. >> it took them 14 years. >> it took them 14 years. >> yeah. but it's just it's like a last, you know, they know they're going to have to go and get other jobs. >> so yeah. yeah and hopefully lose these, these policies that are coming through are going to be kept on by the starmer government. >> so yeah. no they're not they're not going to be you know they're not going to be you know they're not going to be you know they're not going to be. and i think it's what i'd like what i, what i'd like to see. but i think what we'd all see is, is these people all banging the islamists and saying, who, who believes in what they believe in more. i think i think the lgbt whatever. q plus people, i think
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they're they're up for a fight. they're willing was interesting in the netherlands. >> yeah. so geert wilders, who's, you know , quite an who's, you know, quite an anti—islamist politician, he got anti—islamist politician, he got a huge amount of support from metropolitan areas where there are and from the lgbtq community, because they can see that their rights are threatened by the growth of, of islam in the netherlands . so, yeah, it's the netherlands. so, yeah, it's interesting. and also the green lobby , i wonder if they're going lobby, i wonder if they're going to start questioning , you know, to start questioning, you know, some of the, some of their policies around because at the moment they say they've got an open borders policy, but then if somebody comes from, say, the from the congo to the uk, their carbon footprint increases exponentially. we're talking like, you know, over 100 times. so it's clearly bad for carbon emissions. >> if we have open borders and now is the time to see that we're in a state of war. i said this two years ago, we're a state of war. and what what are people fighting over? who's the who is? i don't know what the
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right word is. the gayest. do you support? do you support lgbtq+ or do you support just lgbtq+ or do you support just lgbt without the plus, who is the guy who is who is the who is the guy who is who is the who is the cover for that? >> and to be honest, saturday night tv. >> and in the meantime, welcome to who is the gayest with me? >> the people's gammon. >> the people's gammon. >> well, with me the whatever. the pineapple people's princess, pineapples ring. is that is that that's what that's one of the questions. the questions is without muslims then there isn't a question. there isn't. there is a green party, but the green party is fighting sort of a similar battle that we, the rest of the people have . of the people have. >> okay. well moving on, we've got the guardian now and universities are cutting their courses on race and colonialism, but without those courses , how but without those courses, how will young people learn to hate themselves in their country? paul themselves in their country? paul, this is a good point. >> uk university courses on race and colonialism facing axed due to cuts. and this is this is largely because of gillian keegan who's the education secretary. again i was talking about kemi badenoch a moment
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ago, coming out with a fairly sensible conservative policy that says, look, enough's enough.the that says, look, enough's enough. the cuts to arts and humanities subjects within higher education will be damaging, will have damaging implications for our understanding of race and colonialism. academics have warned. good. i mean, what more is there to learn? who now needs a degree to find out or be told that white people are bad? yeah, basically we've got no you can just watch an ad just to find that out. find one, you know, birds eye, fish fingers. now the geezers like , you know, it's geezers like, you know, it's unbelievable, i don't know, but anyway, i don't know what i'm saying, geezer. i don't know why i went working class or something like that. apologise to the rashers once again, but it feels to me like there are some sensible, sensible policies coming out. this this is not radical. it'sjust coming out. this this is not radical. it's just saying whoa whoa whoa, the stuff this stuff is mad. >> and also, i don't see the pointless of having these courses on colonialism because, you know, it's not curing cancer . it's not providing anything, you know, beneficial for society. >> it isn't. except i think people need to know that they're
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part of a tribe. and i think what's happened is we've had a total breakdown of tribes over the past 100, 200, 300. how many years have this country been around that people want to be part of something, so they want to be part of the of this tribe thatis to be part of the of this tribe that is bashing on the other the other tribe. yeah. >> but it seems to be very selective because when they when they talk about colonialism, i mean, they always say that israel is a colonising entity. it's the colonial force in that in that region, sort of ignoring the fact that it's surrounded by millions of square miles of land that's been colonised by, you know, a different religious ideology. >> yeah. well, that's just part of the whole thing. it's just one of those, what do they call the intersectional stuff, which i don't really understand. it's people want to be on a team. yeah. we're not we're not team world. so we're team britain. yeah i guess, but that doesn't mean we don't need to have a team britain. >> maybe we need a team britain. yeah. we've got the telegraph now and a news outlet has been shut down. don't worry, it's not
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gb news. labour aren't empowered just yet. >> no, that could happen. really benjamin netanyahu orders a japanese now. could be. i was looking at his name. >> so he works for fujitsu . >> so he works for fujitsu. >> so he works for fujitsu. >> i mean, his name was probably benjamin nathan or something. yeah yeah, it's a chew it up. he had a jew in it because he's got israel. this is what happens when you move to israel. orders al jazeera to shut israeli offices. and al jazeera is the band state owned media of qatar . band state owned media of qatar. it's got 300 employees. and it's basically it's basically if someone wanted it's basically if the irish said to the to the bbc, we don't want you. yeah. >> well, i mean, although al jazeera is state owned by qatar and qatar obviously does have an influence and al jazeera has got a slant, it's not actually as as bad a bias as you might expect as the bbc is. >> yeah. no >> yeah. no >> you can. have you ever watched it. yes. all right. it's not so bad. you know. it's not so bad. i'm not advising anyone to watch it. watch us. but i
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don't think it would be a good idea anyway. i never think shutting down media outlets is a good idea. yeah, it doesn't assure its propaganda. everything's got an element of propaganda to it. you're trying to get something across, but . to get something across, but. but don't cancel it. debate it. yeah, that's the only way. that's the only way you're going to achieve anything. because if you just say if you just shut it down, those, those viewers don't go away. and it's not like the vast majority of people in israel are watching al jazeera, and most of them will understand it's propaganda. and those that are watching it well also don't i don't think the issue is that it's propaganda. >> i mean, al jazeera has reported on some i mean, although it has, you know, spread some things that later turned out to be not true. but then other news outlets such as then other news outlets such as the guardian, the bbc did the same, such as the hospital bombing that turned out to be a rocket that fell short. but al jazeera has reported on things that have been very inconvenient for israel in terms of public opinion. so it's reported on things that, you know, terrible things that, you know, terrible things that, you know, terrible things that the idf have done. >> unless we accept that that region is at war. and i don't think we do accept that enough.
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and if they are at war, let's just let's just, you know, we always go back to world war ii, but let's just say we're in world war ii now. and there was, you know, there was a nazi, news station. we would want to close that down and they would be saying some inconvenient things. so we either accept the rat war and netanyahu is trying to protect israel and keep his, you know , his side's pecker up, or know, his side's pecker up, or we don't know how he would do that, a bit of a ruffle on the scruff, i guess. but, you know, if we accept we're at war and therefore the rules of war apply or we don't. so what are we? i think we're at war. >> i agree with you. we're at war. so to let them close the thing down is that they're not closing the, whatever it is al jazeera down, they're just saying you can't operate in israel territory. so they'll go across the line to somewhere else. they'll get their news somewhere else. this happens. there are millions, not millions, but there are thousands of these media organisations which are, i think , israel right now. they're in a bad way because they they acted in a certain way that they thought would help their case, which is destroying the homes in
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gaza. >> they they're destroying hamas . but unfortunately, there's a there's collateral damage. >> i don't think so. no i think that they went, they went and they, they destroyed 80% of the homes in northern gaza . homes in northern gaza. >> did you did you see that in al jazeera? >> anyway , we've got the >> anyway, we've got the independent now, and the tories have been told not to be right wing, even though their current wet lefty stance is extremely unpopular . unpopular. >> paul. yeah, this is mad. this really tories warn not to embrace right wing extremism after disastrous local elections . it's important to point out here that this is in the independent, which is, rubbish. tory mps have been warned that the reason for their electoral drubbing was not that they were not right wing or extreme enough. as battle over the party's future begins. enough. as battle over the party's future begins . and this party's future begins. and this is coming from former director of communications to boris johnson. zahawi. and it came as the darling of the right wing suella braverman said quite the opposite today, and i don't think there is any lurching there isn't any. it depends what you want. if you want this uni
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party, then the team world party, the team world party, then perhaps it is a lurch. but if people just stood still where conservatism was born , then conservatism was born, then yeah, then nobody would be lurching anywhere. they would just be conservatives. no, they. >> no, because you want the party. the way parties work in this country is basically they're a uniform voice. they come behind closed doors, they debate it and then they come up with something. and that's what the tories haven't done. they haven't. they don't have a uniform voice and that's what they're arguing about. so why why is the independent saying have a uniform voice. >> well also i mean parties in the uk don't seem to represent what people want. if you look at opinion polls on, you know, say for example, mass migration. yeah, most people are in favour of a, you know, a much more restricted , no illegal restricted, no illegal immigration and a sort of stable and steady, sustainable level of legal migration. and that's, you know, the both both main parties don't have that as a system. >> in order to be conservative, you have to have encouraged
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people. there is something worth conserving. so where conservatism works around the world is where people are relatively patriotic. they believe in the country, they believe in the country, they believe in the values of their community, and they want to stand by it. what we've seen in the last 20 to 50 years in this country is the erosion of that. no one knows what they're trying to conserve anymore. these conservatives are wandering around like christians who no longer believe in god. they've got they don't. they don't know what the message is anymore. they've been told they're bad. they've been told they're bad. they've been told right wing is bad. yeah, right wing is bad. it just happens to be the opposite of left wing. we have to put the word extreme in front of it just to get people's attention. >> now, i think that's what hitler was saying. >> yeah, but hitler was marles over there. i mean, hitler was right wing, but he was mega right wing, but he was mega right wing, but he was mega right wing by today's standards. >> a lot of people would say he's mega left wing. i mean, yeah, i mean, he was socialists. >> good point. >> good point. >> so and really, when you get to that level of totalitarianism and authoritarianism, there's really very little difference between, you know, communism and fascism. they're both the complete corruption of all state agencies and, and private businesses. >> right. but we should let we should let the in fact, the
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independent is sticking their nose into this and saying, oh, they shouldn't be debating this thing is ridiculous. let the people let the conservatives debate it and whichever one wins, then that's the one that's going to move forward. >> and if they don't, then everybody is going to vote reform that wants some actual real conservative policies. moving on. we've got the telegraph now. and what's racist today? today a crime writing award is racist. lewis. >> yeah, you got to put that in your little youtube thing. put it in my youtube thing. lewis schaffer crime writing award criticised over all white, white long list and there's a believe it or not, there's a festival going on the theakston old peculier crime writing festival in harrogate and with a, where they're voting on what? the novel of the year in terms of crime writing, crime writing is and all 18 entries for the festival's novel of the year were all white people. unlike in the past, there wasn't like it's been white people forever and they just happen to notice it. just this year was all all white
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people, and there's been a bit of a bit of dissension of whether that should be. i personally don't care. >> yeah. i mean, i'd have thought, you know, in 2024, if it's if it's an all white list that it comes down to, i very much doubt that that's because of frothing mouthed racists. yeah. >> no, no. and the anti—racists all seem quite racist to me anyway. i mean, i don't know , i anyway. i mean, i don't know, i don't i don't know why they keep talking about the right side of history. i don't know what history. i don't know what history they're looking at, but they've become obsessed. seriously obsessed with race. i mean, you can't apply it to anything else. and they're talking about it doesn't reflect the real world. people are creating worlds, and they're measuring against something that's within their imagination . that's within their imagination. on this is in harrogate, perhaps it's not. you know, perhaps that doesn't represent harrogate. i mean, what are we going to be complaining about next? we're going to say 99% of washing machines are white. yeah they are because they were they're called white goods. you know what i mean? well they call them goods. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> oh my god. white good. >> oh my god. white good. >> this is systemic racism. anyway that's it for part three. but coming up in the final section, a sex recession, the
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health benefits of mushroom coffee and how women deal with creeps. i think this
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the daily star now, with the news that we should be having more sex to get more work done. this doesn't make sense. i find it hard to balance a laptop and my wife's back. >> paul, i'm glad we don't have to have more sex here tonight. sex recession should have bosses begging workers to get bonking again, for just clarity, this begging workers to get bonking again, forjust clarity, this is again, for just clarity, this is in the daily star. a lack of fiery bedroom antics at home is having a pretty negative impact in the workplace, according to research. so this is from the 2021 general social survey, which revealed that 26% of americans age 18 and older hadnt americans age 18 and older hadn't had sex in a year. now we keep seeing stories like this, but what we never really see and we certainly don't in this story by the start, is the comparison, the comparator. what are we comparing? do you remember the
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time where we were all having sex and being wonderfully productive at work? because i think i missed that point in time. >> i remember when i was 18 and ihadnt >> i remember when i was 18 and i hadn't had sex in 18 years. yeah, never mind one year. you know, it's a lot. >> it was like, but this, this story, you didn't read it closely enough. and how dare you? because the general social survey was done in 2021. they asked in the past year, in the past year, what happened in 2020? covid happened. oh, covid stopped everybody having sex. so it's like a non—issue. we can't trust these. >> it's a non—story, a non—story . we've got the independent now reporting on how women are using the internet to persecute men. lewis. >> yes? what is this? is that the one that i'm talking? good news. it is. it is good news. go to my go to lewis schaefer at youtube. at not youtube. what is it called? the internet at x anyway, this woman, shameen suleiman, she she wrote she was talking she wrote a book called the chain. it's like it's about how women are, like involved with toxic men. and this toxic man was her boyfriend , who she man was her boyfriend, who she got very upset about because he dumped her after she, i don't
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even want to say it. it's horrible. >> he's the story, so you can say it. >> aborted her baby, so he. she aborted his baby . aborted his baby. >> i think i know this guy really? isn't this is what he was a comedian. >> you can't mention the guy's. >> you can't mention the guy's. >> i'm not going to say the quy's >> i'm not going to say the guy's name in case it's a different guy. >> it sounds like the sort of thing a comedian would do. yeah. >> yes, yeah. this is, by the way, written by the independent again, which they're not only rubbish, everyone's a simp who writes there because they're always trying to play up to this toxic masculinity thing. yeah. now, no one's denying that some men are bad and all that business, and we all get that. but if we if we ever stop to wonder why young men now are really, really struggling. yeah, it's because of stuff like this. we're not teaching them. and this story aside, okay, this is one story. i have no reason not to believe it. and if it's true, then, you know, it's a bit of a sad story, but why do we always have to hear about this? like like in these relationships, there are two people all the time . yeah, but we only ever
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time. yeah, but we only ever hear about one side because women are the ones who sit about, think about it and complain about it. >> anyway. they're showing is nearly over, so let's take another quick look at monday's front pages . the daily mail front pages. the daily mail leads with dozens of pro gaza activists elected. the times has uk heading for a hung parliament, says sunak. the express has only big tax cuts and growth can save the tories now the guardian leads with labour set sights on blue wall seats at the next election. the mirror has our hearts are heavy, the pain is deep, our faith is strong. that was the 14 year old boy who sadly killed. and finally the daily star has curfew. we're going to get a heat wave. and those were front pages and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, paul cox and louis shaffer. simon evans will be here tomorrow at 11 pm. with me and josh howie. and if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. good night and god bless. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb
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news. >> hello! welcome to your gb news weather update brought to you by the met office. it's going to be staying rather cloudy this evening, but for bank holiday monday, it's a case of sunny spells and showers, but hopefully a little bit more settled as we go into next week. but we have got low pressure firmly in charge, especially across southern parts of england. this is brought quite a lot of cloud and rain. that cloud and rain is going to continue to push its way south and push its way northwards, affecting southern parts of wales but generally fizzling out across a northern ireland and scotland, holding on to a lot of cloud here. still some outbreaks of showers, heaviest in the north and east, but a lot of cloud around, so temperatures aren't really dipping tonight, but we could see some mist and fog patches develop where we see the clearest skies as we go through bank holiday monday. then we've got a few watch points, especially across the south east england. as we start the day, we've got outbreaks of rain that could turn quite heavy at times. elsewhere, sunny spells , but also some showers spells, but also some showers breaking out again, some of these could be on the heavy
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side, turning dry across northern ireland, but rather cloudy. temperatures around average but in the sunshine. feeling warm with highs of 17 or 18 as we go through. tuesday a dner 18 as we go through. tuesday a drier theme, many places starting off with some sunny spells, but also quite a lot of low cloud, especially across the north—east coast of england and then through the day some showers are going to be bubbling up, but high pressure is going to be dominating into next week. that will keep things a bit more settled. with temperatures also on the rise , that warm feeling on the rise, that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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>> very good evening to you. you're watching and listening to gb news. i'm sam francis. the
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time is 7:00. the top story tonight. the liberal democrats claim that the conservatives are living on cloud cuckoo land. after a disappointing set of local election results for the party, the conservative mayor for the west midlands, andy street, was defeated by labour's richard parker, while sadiq khan is beginning his third term as london mayor after securing a majority of 275,000 votes. former home secretary suella braverman told us this morning that rishi sunak needs to urgently change course. >> there's no time to change leaders, so the prime minister is going to be leading us into the next general election, whether we like it or not. what he needs to do to salvage this dire situation is to accept the enormity of the problem, these terrible results, and quickly and urgently change course. so make sure that there are meaningful tax cuts that people can feel and benefit from. put a cap on legal migration. take us out of the european convention on human rights so that we actually stop the boats and make
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sure that we reclaim our streets back from the extremists, suella braverman there speaking to us earlier this morning. >> well, while opposition leaders are calling for a general election now, government minister mark harper insists the conservatives are focusing on the priorities of the british people. >> i think all conservatives now need to get behind the prime minister. as the chairman said in his article this morning and take that message to the country . we see from the analysis the experts have done that . the experts have done that. the results show that the position is closer than the polls are suggesting. so it's everything is delightful for the next election, and we're absolutely up for that fight. >> mark harper well, in other news, a candle lit vigil has been held today for a teenager who was stabbed in north—east london earlier this week, 14 year old daniel anjorin was attacked on his way to school by attacked on his way to school by a man with a sword for other people, including two. police officers were also injured in the attack . marcus monzo, a the attack. marcus monzo, a spanish brazilian dual national, has been charged with murder and
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attempted murder

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