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tv   Patrick Christys Tonight  GB News  May 2, 2024 3:00am-5:01am BST

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ready britain. here we go. d0 ready britain. here we go. do we have a problem with foreign rapists .7 next. foreign rapists? next. >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the gb news newsroom, and we start with some breaking news this evening, 36 year old marcus aurelio arduini . monzo has been aurelio arduini. monzo has been charged with the murder of 14 year old daniel and turin. following a sword attack in east london. daniel was fatally injured as he walked to school on tuesday morning. for other people , including two police people, including two police officers were hospitalised. people have been gathering to lay flowers at the scene, with police officers among those laying those tributes, one card read may your beautiful son rest in peace. met police say monzo , in peace. met police say monzo, of newham, is a dual spanish brazilian national. he's also been charged with two counts of attempted murder, two counts of grievous bodily harm, aggravated
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burglary and possession of a bladed article. he'll appear at barking side magistrates court tomorrow . police believe a piece tomorrow. police believe a piece of glass may have been used as a weapon during an incident at a school in sheffield. 17 year old boy has been arrested for attempted murder after three people were hurt at the birley academy this morning. police have praised the actions of school staff during what was a frightening ordeal. school staff during what was a frightening ordeal . the frightening ordeal. the government looks set to face more legal challenges over its rwanda plan after detaining the first group of migrants to be deported, both men and women have been taken into custody in a series of operations across the country. officials won't confirm how many people have been detained or where they were taken so far . the fda trade taken so far. the fda trade union, which represents senior civil servants , is threatening civil servants, is threatening legal action over the plan . legal action over the plan. well, meanwhile, gb news can reveal that more than 1700 small boat migrants have crossed the engush
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boat migrants have crossed the english channel in just over a week early this morning, a boat load of around 70 people was taken to dover harbour by lifeboat. in total, around 400 people have been taken to the border force migrant processing centre . scotland's snp centre. scotland's snp government has survived a confidence vote at the scottish parliament. the leader of scottish labour, anas sarwar, tabled the motion after a power sharing deal between the snp and the greens collapsed . the motion the greens collapsed. the motion was defeated by 70 votes to 58. meanwhile, two msps thought to be considering running to replace scotland's first minister have held private talks. john swinney and kate forbes met at holyrood yesterday. both have received support from senior members of their party after humza yousaf announced that he was stepping down. the meeting has been described as informal and both politicians are still weighing up their options. for the latest stories , sign up to gb news stories, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code
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on your screen or go to gbnews.com/alerts. back now to . patrick. >> the devastating sexual assault, rape and violence statistics involving foreign nationals just keep coming. the establishment media don't want you to hear about it, but i think you have every right oberm. moyo has been sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 27 years for murdering a 35 year old woman he was in a relationship with. the detail on this is shocking. he was, in fact an illegal immigrant, denied asylum and on prison licence following release from a 14 year sentence for a serious assault on a previous partner. why was he still able to slaughter a woman in the street in britain, stabbing her to death after chasing her down the road? how many more obe moyo's are there? well, regular viewers and listeners of this show will know that the ministry of justice won't tell us. they've refused our freedom of information request and our offer to pay for that
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information, which is why we are pushing for a change to the law, so that governments have to tell us how many foreign nationals commit horrendous offences in britain. i am hoping that we'll have an update on that for you in the next couple of weeks. but this isn't just our problem. new figures from paris show that 77% of solved rape cases last year were committed. apparently by foreign nationals. the majority of these targeted tourist hot spots as if they were looking for prey in denmark, the native danes ranked 42nd on the list of violent crime convictions in their own country. questions like this have been asked in the european parliament for some time. countries that have received large numbers of migrants, such as germany, sweden and the united kingdom are now seeing an increase in sexual crimes, including rape against white women and girls. significantly, although the number of reports of such crimes is increasing, the number of convictions for them is falling. that question was asked in the eu parliament. well, the eu's
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response was this was quite shocking actually. it focuses on promoting european values such as equality is a long standing objective of the eu in its support to national integration policies . the eu action plan on policies. the eu action plan on integration and inclusion sets out a framework to strengthen and step up integration, inclusion policies across the eu. look, germany has had massive issues as we all know. we all know . back massive issues as we all know. we all know. back in massive issues as we all know. we all know . back in 2016, we all know. back in 2016, around 1200 women were attacked by around 2000 mostly north african men in one night in cologne. will we ever know how many of those men or men like them have made their way to britain? this isn't really about integration and inclusion, is it? this is about politicians letting the wrong people in and putting women and girls at risk and then refusing to tell us the truth. how many more women have to be killed or sexually assaulted by men like obermaier? we shouldn't have to get the law changed for them to tell us the
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truth . let's get the thoughts on truth. let's get the thoughts on my panel this evening. i am joined by mark littlewood, the director of popular conservatives . i've also got conservatives. i've also got activist and boxer adam brooks and author and commentator rebecca reid. mark, i'll start with you on this. i saw that case today and i just thought, here we go again. you know this guy? what on earth was he doing prowling the streets ? prowling the streets? >> yeah, i endorsed your campaign here, patrick. we're possibly 1 or 2 riders. i mean, i think we should follow the truth wherever it leads us. and if data and statistics can help uncover the truth, so be it. and you've been very fair to say you're not presuming any correlation or causation here. but i think we need to know. but i think we need to be very specific what we're looking for here. are we looking for foreign nationals? are we looking specifically for foreign nationals who are seeking asylum? >> what i've gone for is asylum seekers and people with a pending visa application. >> okay. i mean, i think that well, that's rather different to foreign nationals, right? i mean, i'm not suggesting there is one, but hypothetically, you could have an outbreak of crime
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by foreign tourists, which might lead you to change your tourism policy . so i think that we policy. so i think that we should look into this and my worry. you didn't imply it. and i don't want to sound too conspiratorial, is sometimes we don't like unearthing the truth, or the government doesn't like providing us with the stats because the sort of things it might tell us are a bit disquieting. that's no reason to hold it back. and from what i understand, the ministry of justice basically have these numbers or can get them. they're just not willing to give them to you. that's bad government. >> i won't hold back because it's pretty clear we are importing tens of thousands of unknown, unverifiable men from countries in africa, from the middle east, from south asia that have very different cultural beliefs to us, different morals, different values, treat women differently. >> and there is there is. i've spoken to former police officers that have said, you will be shocked at the crime that emanates from the migrant population in this country, and
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i think it's clear you only have to go on tiktok or instagram and see the paedophile hunters . most see the paedophile hunters. most of the people they catch cannot speak english. it's a problem and we need to know what problem we've got on the streets of britain . we've got families. britain. we've got families. these people are being housed in hotels and barracks, near schools, near women's refuges, nean schools, near women's refuges, near, you know, where there's families . near, you know, where there's families. this near, you know, where there's families . this is near, you know, where there's families. this is dangerous. and the home office is putting the country at risk. >> rebecca, you know, i read that case today from greater manchester police, and i just thought, you know , why did that thought, you know, why did that woman really have to die? she didn't . there was no need for didn't. there was no need for it. i mean, he was an illegal migrant who was refused asylum. this is what the police have said had served a previous conviction for a previous assault against a previous partner. how he was even tagged, i believe as well. which makes me wonder. well, you know, you can't even tag these. it can be overin can't even tag these. it can be over in the blink of an eye. >> i need you to let me finish. so i'm going to start by saying
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something a little bit controversial, which is that i have been on gb news for two and a half years, and this is the first time i've had any conversation about violence against women or sexual assault towards women. and i think we're talking about it because the people doing this are predominantly muslim . now, predominantly muslim. now, i fully, fully agree that if you do not think that a woman should be allowed to walk down the street in a short skirt and be free from harassment, you do not deserve to live here. i do agree that some cultures do not respect women and therefore are incompatible with life here. but i also think that there are people who only want to talk about rape and sexual violence towards women when it is a demographic they already don't like. so if we're going to talk about this, which we should, we also have to talk about the fact that 1 in 4 women in the uk have been sexually assaulted or raped, and that is not just brown men or muslim men. that is men. and the only thing that this has in common is that 98% of these of these accounts are men attacking women. >> you're here, but we do not need to import more. and we are importing more. >> and i and we and we agree. i think that, a british national, there will be information on.
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>> we can go back. we can we can investigate them. these men are unknown. >> tragically, we don't rape is effectively legalised here. people. the police cannot handle it. they're not properly trained. they don't have the resources. so women being raped is my issue here. and but i completely agree . if somebody completely agree. if somebody comes here and they are a rapist, whatever their religion, i don't want them living in this country or i want them in prison, you mentioned that and i suspect there's quite a lot of truth to what you said, which is that if the reality was put out there, that it could end up being devastating and the conservatives would have to face up to the fact that a lot of this had happened on their watch. but what would also happen is, as we suspect, we may well end up with a labour government going forward quite soon. possibly that then labour might have to actually enact some policies about it . my point some policies about it. my point is it needs to be part of the conversation. >> you're exactly right. and my fear, i mean the ministry of justice have not said this to you and gb news, but my fear is sometimes we don't allow this information to go for public fear that it will, as i said, tell us things that are
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uncomfortable . this might be in uncomfortable. this might be in part about race. rebecca makes a very good point, by the way. we readily accept that the overwhelming majority of violent crimes are committed by men. we don't consider that to be a sexist thing to say. i mean, it's just a fact that men commit many more violent crimes than women. i mean, by a factor of, i don't know, 50 or so. and i think we should also bury to down nationality, race and asylum status in order to work out what the categories are, we need to police . the thing is need to police. the thing is this, patrick, you present a very popular news show. your viewers will care about this , viewers will care about this, but i'm actually interested in its implications for public policy . and if you don't have policy. and if you don't have the right data out there, you don't know what you're searching for. you don't know how big the problem is, how are you supposed to make decent public policy conversation and the policy making machine, if everything else can be part of the conversation ? conversation? >> how many times have we seen the rwanda plan go back and forth from the lords and unfortunate ali? i have not really heard the sexual violence against women argument really
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raised that many times by a lot of luvvie lords. >> look, the lords live in their ivory towers. they don't go down high roads and see the problem with with these migrants. about same as mps . a lot of the mps same as mps. a lot of the mps are not in touch with the public, so they're voting on things they have no idea about. so if these statistics get put out there and they get put on the front page of the daily mail on the guardian, there is no arguing. we've got, i won't be on the front page of the guardian, but we've got a problem. places like germany, italy, france, gang rapes are up almost 50% over the last ten years. that's no coincidence that we've been importing tens or hundreds of thousands of migrants in that period. >> all i would say, just to temper that is that there has been so between 2021 and 2022. so 32% jump in reporting . that so 32% jump in reporting. that sounds terrible, but it's actually a triumph. it's the fact that the cps had a target. it's the fact that outreach was done that charities worked incredibly hard. the metoo movement and women supporting other women and reporting rapes. so an increased reporting rate
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is actually a really good thing. it's not just about immigrants, it's about a lot of other things. >> there is no there absolutely is some truth to that, that because more people are reporting things, which implies that people feel more comfortable reporting things, which is a good thing. okay then, yet you will see those things go up. but adam, you are having a look as well, i think at some of the stats from denmark, which denmark has got the most comprehensive migrant crime database or stats. >> now . so non—european first >> now. so non—european first generation migrants are 279% more likely to commit murder, 464% more likely to commit rape , 464% more likely to commit rape, 220% more likely to commit assault. now these people are on our streets to a lot of the people from europe are now over here. we don't know where they are . are. >> yeah, it's quite a complex data set. i mean, those statistics are incredibly arresting, patrick. and without intruding too much into personal privacy, which the danish do ,
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privacy, which the danish do, i'd like us to have those sort of data sets here. they really help policy. but you then need to cross—index things like, you need to match that against poverty, for example. generally speaking , it's just a fact of speaking, it's just a fact of the matter. those who generally tend to be poorer commit more violent crimes than those who tend to be richer. so you then need to cross—index race with poverty. is it a racial phenomenon or is it just that people of this particular demographic tend to be poorer? you've got to do all of those cross tabs. you might be looking for particular nationality as well. is this a bigger problem with people from country x than country y? or are we grouping all asylum seekers together, or can we actually hone in on a particular territory that seems to be particularly problematic? and then you might want to have a separate policy. so go for it. but it's going to be one hell of a complicated spreadsheet. i mean, female asylum seekers, for instance, are not committing crimes like this. >> so perhaps we say yes to women and kids and not to men. we have to have the conversation. >> i also think it's important that we should have more of the demographics of the victims as well, because if it is the case that the vast majority of the victims are white, women are or
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women who are native to that particular european country or britain, i would also argue that that is, again , another reason that is, again, another reason why we should be having that influencing policy. >> i think that who is being raped should matter. anybody who is assaulting anybody shouldn't live here or should be in prison. >> i want to be very clear on that. but i also want to say that. but i also want to say that that would lend a strength to the argument that women who are already in this country would be put more at risk by people coming. yeah, absolutely. >> including asylum seekers, including women who weren't born here, though. >> yeah. once the data came out, it was unarguable, unarguable that there was a problem and you can't hide it. but the left has to talk about it. >> and i fully acknowledge that the left has to be able to have the left has to be able to have the conversation. otherwise you are sacrificing women. >> all right, guys, good start. thank you very much. difficult subject matter. but i do think it's important to address coming up.can it's important to address coming up. can you guess what happens next after this clip . but up next after this clip. but up next, should we stop apologising now for slavery? slavery
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apparently did not make britain rich and may even have made the nafion rich and may even have made the nation poorer. that's according to a new study. i'll go into the detail on that. we will have to debate this. okay. i've got two great guests to make sure you stay tuned
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all right. welcome back to patrick christys tonight on gb news. and it's time now for our head to head. so, a new study
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from the institute of economic affairs has stated that slavery and colonialism , did not make and colonialism, did not make britain rich and may, in fact , britain rich and may, in fact, have actually made the nation poorer. so it found that the profits and riches of the slave trade were concentrated in a few families, while the rest of the nafion families, while the rest of the nation footed the bill for extra military and administrative spending. so when slavery was legal , the report states that it legal, the report states that it accounted for less than 1.5% of british ships and less than 3% of british shipping tonnage . so of british shipping tonnage. so is it now time to stop apologising for it , especially apologising for it, especially in light of the fact that we appear to have an archbishop of canterbury who is desperate, desperate to give around £1 billion in slavery reparations away . joining me to discuss this away. joining me to discuss this now is researcher in democracy , now is researcher in democracy, politics and governance, doctor ricky barson, and the director of this sanctuary foundation, doctor chris candia. chris, i'll start with you, if that's all right, yeah. look, do we need to
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just stop apologising now? is this the end of the chat of slavery reparations for you? >> i don't think so. no. even this report that's just been released tells us that slavery might not have made britain fichen might not have made britain richer, but it definitely made the rest of the world poorer. 3.4 million people were taken from africa by british ships and sailors to america . half sailors to america. half a million of them died on the journey and when slavery was made illegal, we paid reparation not to the slaves, but to the slave owners. 40,000 slave owners. do you know when we stopped paying those people back 2015 because it was so much money that was owed by the british government to buy these slaves back ? it was 40% of our slaves back? it was 40% of our total expenditure. so slaves did not got worse. life results as a result of what we were doing, and we made those countries poorer. okay. >> so doctor ricky, we owe these countries upwards of £1 billion.
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why stop at a billion? why not just just empty our bank accounts and give it to a load of different countries ? of different countries? >> well, i think for me, patrick, what we need to move towards is a more constructive framework in terms of developing our trade and investment relationships, with countries which were a former colonies of the british empire and in fact, we have the commonwealth, which could be a very useful arena to develop and foster those relationships. there's no doubt for me, though, that in what slavery did, it did make a select number of british families and key industrialists very rich. there's no two ways about that, and the report also also clearly says is that colonised land certainly suffered. there's no two ways about that. so it calls it it says it's more of a sort of a negative sum gain. it questions the benefits, for those, european colonial powers. but it says that for the colonised lands this was not beneficial at all. which which in a way it does shatter those myths. for
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example, people say that india is in such a strong position because of the investment of the british railways and all the rest of it, which i think has been somewhat exaggerated. but i think we need to move forwards in terms of how do we have a more constructive framework and how do we help countries which are aspirational and on that path towards development? yeah, we can play a positive part in that. >> but, you know, it also made a lot of black people and a lot of muslim people very rich as well. the people who were at source involved in the slave trade. so shouldn't the reparations just come from them? why am i paying ? come from them? why am i paying? >> i think we should play our part. yes, there are other nafions part. yes, there are other nations involved in slavery, but we should take responsibility for what we've done and to say, i haven't done anything , have i? i haven't done anything, have i? sorry. well, our country did . sorry. well, our country did. our people did, our institutions did. even. this report tells us that. so it's not up for us to decide when it's stop time to saying sorry. it's like a like a rape, a rapist telling the rape victims it's time for them to stop complaining. >> i think it might be more with
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respect. i think it might be more like my irish family from white peasant stock and my greek cypriot family from quite peasant stock , really, peasant stock, really, legitimately saying we had nothing to do with this. so why should i pay creche? >> well, our country and our institutions did make a lot of money. so some of our biggest banks, some of our biggest institutions, they built their, their, their livelihoods off the back of 3.5 million slaves being shipped from one continent to another. >> okay. i mean, ricky , maybe we >> okay. i mean, ricky, maybe we could reach a compromise here. and only the people who are the descendants of the families that actually benefited from this should be made to pay. if anyone's paying at all. >> i think for me, generally, i think the debate on reparations, if there's any reparations, perhaps it's those families who are who well and truly benefited from the slave trade . they can from the slave trade. they can be included in that. i think, in terms of making this some kind of nation wide compensation, i don't think that's right at all. i think it should be something that's more private and in my view, involving those, specific families. but i think more generally, i think we need to
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move the debate away from this idea that britain was built on slavery. i think that's actually an americanisation of british economic history. and i think that more generally , the idea that more generally, the idea that more generally, the idea that if you had a pioneering large , colonial empire, that large, colonial empire, that that's a strong predictor of current day wealth, that's actually not true. because if that was true, then spain and portugal, for example, would be in a far better position. and germany and switzerland wouldn't be in such a good position. so we have to look at the quality of domestic policies, domestic ingentu of domestic policies, domestic ingenuity and those process of industrialisation within particular nation states. so i think what we need, we just need more nuance in the discussion. >> okay. i mean, chris, is there not an argument to say that britain's incredibly lenient immigration policy, since goodness knows when, has meant that people from other countries, countries that may well did suffer as a result of the slave trade or colonialism , the slave trade or colonialism, you know, have now had the opportunity to come and work in britain and, you know, earn a good life and all of that. we're not we're not paying back in that respect. maybe britain has been generous to some groups of
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refugees, people from ukraine, hong kong and recently from afghanistan . afghanistan. >> but our latest policy actually won't listen to anyone who's claiming that they are being trafficked or a victim of modern day slavery. we're going to send them straight to rwanda. so it doesn't seem like we're learning from our slave trading paths . paths. >> i was talking more about legal immigration. chris >> well, i'm really open to legal migration . ian. it seems legal migration. ian. it seems like this government really isn't because it's trying to bnng isn't because it's trying to bring down net migration as well as illegal migration. >> and you. okay. and you would just keep net migration because we're just worse off gdp per caphais we're just worse off gdp per capita is all i might say to that, chris. >> i think migration actually bnngs >> i think migration actually brings a lot of wealth into our country. you can see international students adding £35 billion worth of student fees into our coffers. so i don't think the, i don't think the economics is on your side there. patrick >> well, gdp per capita, it
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absolutely is. so there we go . absolutely is. so there we go. but raqib, could i just ask you about this? i mean, what what more could britain do, do you think? seriously now? i mean, okay, so we should have a more constructive discussion with countries. i mean, do not ask to draw a line at some point. do we then end up with that old thing about talking about, well , you about talking about, well, you know, do we come for reparations from the french or the vikings , from the french or the vikings, you know. >> well, i just think that we need to we need to move forwards. we need to be future oriented. i think that through associations such as the commonwealth, we should look to deepen trade and investment relationships with other countries and not just former british colonies. and i think that this is actually a very important point, that if you look at the uk , in the post look at the uk, in the post colonial era through the commonwealth, it's attracted countries which were former french colonies, for example , french colonies, for example, togo and gabon. so i think that the uk can play a leading role in terms of developing a sort of post—colonial economic framework which can help to lift aspirational countries, developing countries, especially in asia and africa . i think i'd in asia and africa. i think i'd like to see us move into that
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direction. >> all right . so both of you, >> all right. so both of you, thank you very, very much. great stuff there. that is, of course, the researcher in democracy, politics and governance at san and director of the sanctuary foundation, doctor krish kandiah . so look, where are you guys on this? i've been asking you, should we stop apologising for slavery? and 87.2% of you said yes. it is time that we stop apologising. 12.8% of you said no. we should continue coming up.can no. we should continue coming up. can you tell me what happens next? here . but first, it looks next? here. but first, it looks like the tories rwanda plan might work after all. have they spiked reform's guns ? plus, spiked reform's guns? plus, would you vote for this man? >> look, of my brief understanding of nato, right . understanding of nato, right. it's there to protect the you know, the european union isn't it, grief. okay. lee anderson will be joining me very shortly to give us his thoughts on everything from rwanda to monty panesar . and that is a sentence
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all right. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. now, is the rwanda plan actually working for the tories? the home office said today that the first migrants identified for deportation have been detained. so we're actually looking at footage here. if you are watching us on the tv or online, being detained in preparation for flights to the east african nation, it comes after months of speculation as to whether rishi
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sunak plan would ever get off the ground. so there was even more good news for sunak this week, though, because immigration levels are officially falling. that's after the government's crackdown on foreign student visas specifically then bringing the number of dependents over. well, they have now actually fallen by 80. that's according to home office stats, which is actually genuinely a win because before people could take the absolute mick, couldn't they come over from mickey mouse university degree and bring four of your relatives over? but does the fact that the only migrants to have actually reached rwanda so far went because the government paid him three grand, somewhat undermined rishi sunaks success? joining me now is the reform uk mp for ashfield , italy. mp for ashfield, italy. anderson. right, leigh, thank you very, very much. and i will start with the rwanda thing here. i mean, the irish think is a deterrent. some of the migrants interviewed by a couple of news channels really regret coming here because of the threat of rwanda. and we have actually sent one bloke there. it's working now . it's working now. >> well, i mean, it's nonsense,
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patrick, as you well know . i patrick, as you well know. i mean, when we was drafting the rwanda bill, nobody mentioned the irish deterrent. nobody mentioned the fact that once it, was, made an act of parliament that these illegal migrants would be scarpering over the border to the republic of ireland. so that's that's just an absolute nonsense. it's one person, patrick, that's gone to rwanda , bearing in mind in that rwanda, bearing in mind in that time we've spent, you know, billions on accommodation and legal fees for illegal migrants. we've given the french, you know, hundreds of millions of pounds about, i think , four pounds about, i think, four different home secretaries. these people died in the channel and they still keep coming. over 120,000 have dropped on our shores in the last 3 or 4 years. and we said, one measly migrant back or over to rwanda. and we're hailing this as a success. i think, you know, i've got a lot of time for some of the stuff in number 10, but if they're spinning this as a good news message , then really they news message, then really they need to get out more. i think. >> i think something that just is good news now, though, leigh, is good news now, though, leigh, is the idea that 80% of student
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visa dependents have been cut. i mean, that i think is arguably a bigger win, right? >> this is good news, patrick. but let's let's be clear where this came from. you know, when i was a conservative party member of parliament, this was the conversation that me and some to the right of the party were having with home secretaries for the past 3 or 4 years. this is not come from number 10. this is come from pressure from the back benches on the right of the party. and, you know, we've got to give some credit here to people like suella braverman, and pretty and, and robert jenrick who pushed for this behind, behind the scenes. you know, the pm and number 10 didn't see migration, legal migration as a problem at all. in fact, they encouraged it. they thought it made us economically better off and we no different. >> yeah. all right. i mean, it has happened though under rishi sunak it has happened under james cleverly. and so i mean really there has to be an element of credit for that. i suppose they could have blocked it and i dare say it definitely wouldn't have happened under a labour government. oh it
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definitely wouldn't happen. >> you know, it is good news. and, you know, we're probably the sad thing is, you know, if we get a labour government this yean we get a labour government this year, which is looking increasingly likely, they will probably claim credit for this , probably claim credit for this, even though, you know, they want open borders, you know, one thing, i'm just looking down here because i've got in my, notes here a message i was sent earlier today. >> right. i'm going to read this, read this out now, which is apparently, apparently . lee, is apparently, apparently. lee, you'll laugh at this senior labour figures right. unnamed say that the party may retain the rwanda scheme where if they if they come into government. so i mean that that could be surely that could be keir starmer's biggest uttar. >> well, it'd be a massive u—turn, he said. you know it constantly that the plan was was doomed to failure, that he would scrap it, he would reverse it. he's going to have a lot of trouble, though, patrick, from his backbenchers, if he even thinks about, you know, keeping the rwanda plan in place , he'll the rwanda plan in place, he'll have massive problems, you know, from the, the john mcdonald's and the and the angela rayner and the and the angela rayner and people like that. so it's
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another bandwagon. it's another u—turn. and you know, this man, we said it before he would do anything to get to number 10. okay lee, just before i move on to my next topic, i've got to ask you, you know, if the government, rightly so, can point to student visas dropping, that being a massive slap in the face to a lot of people, they point to that at the time the next election comes and they can point to the idea that they have actually flown people off to rwanda who did come across the channel rwanda who did come across the channel, unlike this man that we've basically given £3,000 spending money to nip off back to africa, if they can point to that and it is shown to be a deterrent reform are bang in trouble, aren't they? >> no, they're not patrick, because the country's made their mind up. we've had, you know, and i was part of it for four years. the country's definitely made the mind up, you know, time and time again, each election , and time again, each election, they promised to control immigration. and it's only by pressure from some of the back benches and conservative party like myself and, you know, other people we have on your show and, and suella and, and robert jenrick that this has actually happened.soi jenrick that this has actually happened. so i think it's a bit
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rich if, you know, if the pm starts claiming credit for this, but the voters out there in the real world, patrick, they've made their mind up. >> well now look, former cricket ace monty panesar has announced that he's standing as an mp for george galloway , the workers george galloway, the workers party of britain. monty panesar was working the media rounds this morning. and here's what he had to say on times radio. >> i don't have a deep understanding of nato like this is what i said, but what is it? >> but what is it? >> but what is it? >> look, of my brief understanding of nato, right. it's there to protect the you know, the european union, isn't it, is to dare to protect, you know, everyone in, in the, in european union. well, it's got america. >> its got america in it though. >> its got america in it though. >> yeah i know it's got america in it. >> it's not about the european union in that sense . union in that sense. >> yeah okay. not a great start. and we also popped up on on gb news as well . news as well. >> this quiz by the way stomp the panesar. >> stomp the panesar okay. >> stomp the panesar okay. >> do you know the cost of a prescription in england i think it's about £15.
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>> no £9.90. >> no £9.90. >> oh okay. what's the population of ealing . population of ealing. >> 200,000 366,000. >> 200,000 366,000. >> living wage . >> living wage. >> living wage. >> average living wage. >> average living wage. >> there is a there's an agreed living wage . yeah, 40,000 per living wage. yeah, 40,000 per hour per hour. it's nothing. you've got to go a bit lower than that. yeah, yeah. >> £15 1144. >> £15 1144. >> so you've got some work. you've got some work to do. you. >> all right. but look. hey lee, just before i come to you on this, i thought it was a bit mean, right? because what did we expect from the guy who did this on mastermind ? on mastermind? >> what is the title of the first volume of cs. lewis's chronicles of narnia to be published chronologically? it follows the magician's nephew , follows the magician's nephew, c.j. lewis, the lion, the witch and the wardrobe. >> yeah, i mean, there was a lot of that, lee, what do you have him in reform, though? because he's anti—net zero, isn't he? he apparently wants to bring migration down. and, you know, i wonder if he does actually share some of the policies that you have. >> i mean, some of the policies
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that he likes, you know, is encouraging patrick. but, you know, that's monty panesar, a great cricketer. but that what you just that clip you've just shown is more like monty python. i mean it was it was hysterical. he was, i mean it was a little bit unfair on him asking him some questions there, which obviously didn't know the answers to. and i think, some of the reporters there were a little bit cruel to him, but, you know, he seems a nice guy , i you know, he seems a nice guy, i think i think he's is well intentioned, but maybe maybe he's, you know, politics is not for him, if he's coming out with ridiculous answers like that. >> well, maybe, maybe . but i do >> well, maybe, maybe. but i do wonder if maybe he's he's in the wrong party, though. perhaps if he doesn't really know about nato, he's come out and said that he doesn't really know too much about about gaza. he leaves that stuff to george galloway. i mean, would you would you would you throw reforms doors open to monty? i think we'd have to have a long chat before that happened. >> but we are a broad church. but, you know, you've got to know your onions in this game. you want to know a little bit
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about everything. you've got to be a jack of all trades when you're involved in politics. probably a little bit naive of him . he probably needs to go him. he probably needs to go away and do his own work. i'm sure if you know, if he did the work, put the hard yards in and he's a decent guy and he'd be okay, but he needs to just be careful. you know, doing the media rounds when he's not clued up. >> i mean, there is there is the reason why i'm asking you this, as i'm sure you've clocked onto right now, is because you did put a tweet out. welcome to the reform party, monty , loving your reform party, monty, loving your loving your policies. having said that , i mean, now we've said that, i mean, now we've obviously just shown you, you know, some of monty's greatest hits, as it were. you maybe, maybe once, maybe once . a maybe once, maybe once. a reverse on that. and how much of a threat do you think george galloway is now? he's got he's got people like monty standing behind him. all right. how much of a threat is it? >> let me tell you about george galloway, who i get on with reasonably well in the house. he not just a threat to political parties , patrick. he's a threat parties, patrick. he's a threat to this country. you know, i sometimes have the misfortune to sit between him and mr corbyn.
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and i think my word. what have i done here? being sat with these, these these people for me in my humble opinion, are dangerous. they i mean, george, bless his soul, he, he campaigned when he, when he won the rochdale by—election. i don't think he ever mentioned rochdale once. all he campaigned on was a gaza ticket. he's not interested in the people of rochdale. he's interested in his own political ideology, which at the moment is gaza. ideology, which at the moment is gaza . gaza, gaza. gaza. gaza, gaza. >> yeah. very. finally, with you late, what does go through your mind when you you see yourself sitting between jeremy corbyn and george galloway? >> i wished i'd backed down the pit on a 12 hour shift. >> lee anderson there, thank you very, very much. so i'll see you in a bit . that is lee very, very much. so i'll see you in a bit. that is lee anderson, the reform mp for ashfield. right. coming up, can you guess what happens next in this clip. okay. all right. now look coming up at 10 pm. i am very concerned about whether or not
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extremism, extreme views and other forms of quite radical ideology has infiltrated loads of different sectors of our core institutions. and i've done a little round up for you that's coming your way in a few minutes. but next they will be stacking shelves in their local supermarkets . if it wasn't for supermarkets. if it wasn't for her, but the stars of harry potter still want to pick a fight with jk rowling. women's rights activist kelly j. keane will join me to tee off on
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all right. welcome back to patrick christys tonight. as the cast review proved, authorjk cast review proved, author jk rowling has been right on. well, pretty much everything. when it comes to the gender ideology debate. however, the previously unknown actors who she turned into multi multi—million heirs are unrepentant for slagging her off when she did not embrace
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their woke agenda. harry potter himself, daniel radcliffe, says he won't be apologising okay to detransitioners harmed by being given puberty blockers and that he does not owe rowling the things he truly believes. he does not owe an apology to her because he truly believes in the things that he said. i mean, it's astonishing, isn't it, really the way that those cast or a lot of members of the cast of harry potter, who i firmly believe seriously, especially in the case of daniel radcliffe, would be stacking shelves at lidl if it wasn't the fact that he looked a little bit like harry potter early doors. they just shunned her. they wanted a name taken off books. this is all according to reports. they didn't want to be pictured with her at premieres. anyway, here with me live to discuss. this is the founder of let women speak, kelly j the founder of let women speak, kellyj king kellyj thank you kellyj king kelly j thank you very, very much. what do you make of daniel radcliffe now you're sticking to his guns? >> i think, what he's come out and said, vaulting and obnoxious and said, vaulting and obnoxious and ungrateful, but it's his
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silence when she was being horrifically targeted , when horrifically targeted, when people were standing outside of her house, the death threats she's received, the fact that not once did he stand up and say, hey, not in my name. like i made with the woman. but none of this is in my name. back off, she created a world that you all adore. and it's just totally inappropriate behaviour. >> yeah. i mean, surely there were a massive apology. really? i mean, he was asked directly, do you not think you owe her? and he says no. he says their rift makes him really sad. i think the absolute scandal here is that she turned this guy into presumably a multi—million vie multi—millionaire, and that he's decided to stick two fingers up to her. yeah, but look, once you're in the cult, all bets are off about how bad your behaviour is. >> i mean, is.— >> i mean, he he is. >> i mean, he he could have. he's totally wrong, right? he's totally wrong. he's endorsed and promoted , the harm to
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promoted, the harm to vulnerable, teenagers and young people. so he's he's he's so totally wrong, it's going to be very, very, delicious to watch him find out just wrong is do you think that actually, we will get to a point where lovey celebrities really do genuinely understand that they've backed the wrong horse when it comes to this ? yeah, i do look, i think, this? yeah, i do look, i think, the whole landscape of films and, hollywood is changing dramatically anyway. so i think, covid certainly did serious damage where we all saw behind the curtain, i think all of them will eventually get to a place where they'll pretend that they never said anything that they said, and they didn't support any of this, but it'll be it'll be nice to watch daniel radcliffe's berm, but like i said, i think the greatest harm is the fact that he had the power over the people that turned on her. he had the power
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to say, please stop it. and he chose to . not chose to. not >> i think that's actually the really salient point in all of this, which is it's one thing, let's say . i this, which is it's one thing, let's say. i mean, i very much doubt you'd thought that deeply into it. like a lot of these people, i don't i think if they had done, they possibly wouldn't have come out and said some of the things they'd said. but, you know, it's one thing just sitting there and just toeing the old woke hollywood line. it's another thing watching the woman who really is responsible for the only reason anyone knows who you are facing death threats, facing people outside her house, facing all of this vile, vile, vile stuff and not saying, look, you can disagree with her if you want to , but do with her if you want to, but do you mind not threatening to kill her? and there wasn't any of that. i imagine she's probably a bit jaded by all this . bit jaded by all this. >> yeah, none of them did it, did they? none of the obnoxious , did they? none of the obnoxious, talentless, actors, did it? not not one single one of them for a moment. look, i have made, numerous enemies by speaking the truth , but there is not one of truth, but there is not one of them. that if everybody came for
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them. that if everybody came for them in the mass sort of grotesque way that they did jk rowling, that i wouldn't have spoken up and said, look, if you're doing this on my behalf, you're doing this on my behalf, you need to stop it right now. yeah yeah it is. >> it is absolutely astonishing, really, when i think about the kind of level of silence and it's funny, isn't it, because they usually say things like silence is violence when it comes to not being a trans ally or all of that stuff, but silence, certainly wasn't violence when it came to actually stopping or speaking out against against genuine violence. and, i mean, how do you think jk rowling actually feels about all this? because do you think she actually wants or needs an apology, or is she just content in the in the realm of being correct? >> now, i truly hope that doesn't care at all, i have no idea, but i hope she really, really doesn't care, i think that the funny thing is, with daniel radcliffe's position, it's because he's so kind and he's so humane. except when it comes to rowling now, he's. so he's just so accepting and inclusive and kind and wonderful, which is why he's so
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sad about how she feels about this , but he has absolutely no this, but he has absolutely no empathy whatsoever for her, and some of the kind of threats, i mean, you've experienced this stuff as well, and you've you've it got me thinking earlier today , actually. i mean, jk rowling has got, i don't know how many presumably hundreds of millions of pounds in the bank, all of which hard earned and thoroughly deserved . and the platform and, deserved. and the platform and, you know, quite a few people in her corner. yeah. ordinary people out there on the street who share the exact same views as her. i just wonder how many of those people have lost everything . everything. >> oh, look, i spoke to a lady today whose daughter, and she won't see her grandchildren again , you know, these are for again, you know, these are for some women. they. they walk away. they don't even they they don't make a fuss. they don't complain. they just leave their jobs or they stop going to their fitness classes, or they stop using the gym or, you know, they don't go to their meetings anymore and they just quietly just self—exclude. so the damage
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is, is horrendous. and so widespread, but, you know, telling the truth and, and we're going to be right. so i guess. >> right. and it's so easy to throw out the word salad. i will continue to support the rights of all lgbtq people . and you of all lgbtq people. and you think, well, all right. okay. what about women's rights , what about women's rights, though? what about the rights? you could flip it on its head completely, couldn't you say, what about the right of people not to have to have a sex offender in their changing rooms? all of this stuff? obviously not saying that all trans people are sex offenders before the internet goes mental, right? look, curly j, thank you very , very much. great to have very, very much. great to have you on the show. as ever. you take care. that's kellyj keane there, the founder of let women speak. no doubt daniel radcliffe would deny that he'd ever endorsed anything to do with the harm of children. of course. look, coming up at one point, astrazeneca were absolutely adamant that there were no problems with their vaccine . but problems with their vaccine. but in a major u—turn, they have now confirmed that in certain rare cases, it can have side effects.
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i'll be speaking with someone who's got very personal experiences of vaccine injury . experiences of vaccine injury. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there! welcome to the latest weather update from the met office for gb news. heavy rain overnight in the south continuing into much of thursday. risk of thunderstorms in places but it will be much dner in places but it will be much drier further north. we've got an area of low pressure across the continent that's going to push some humid and warm air into much of the uk overnight, but on the boundary between that and the cooler air out in the atlantic , we've got this atlantic, we've got this reactivation of a frontal zone bringing some heavy rain to northern ireland, wales and then increasingly southern england . increasingly southern england. the persistent wet weather will affect south wales and the southwest of england by dawn, but thundery showers will turn up across the midlands , southern up across the midlands, southern england as well, and they'll tend to drift their way northwards and westwards into mid wales and continue for some
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time through the morning. eventually the rain does ease in many places. we keep the cloud cover in the south, but much dner cover in the south, but much drier and brighter weather is expected further north. i think for northern england , scotland for northern england, scotland and northern ireland, some decent sunny spells will turn up . however, on the north sea coast, a lot of low cloud will be prevalent and that will limit temperatures 11 to 12 celsius whilst it goes up to 21 to 23 celsius in western scotland . celsius in western scotland. similar temperature contrast across northern scotland on friday, warm in the west, cool in the east. southern england some warm sunshine as well, but in between outbreaks of rain continuing even some thundery showers on saturday. the fine weather moves north but there'll be further rain coming up from the south. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> it's 10 pm. i'm patrick christys tonight . enough! christys tonight. enough! enough!enough christys tonight. enough! enough! enough has extremism captured our institutions? and do you remember this ? that. see? do you remember this? that. see? yep and then this happened. >> i want you to look into my eyes, rishi sunak. and i want you to look at the pain, the trauma, and the regret i have in my eyes. >> well, now, astrazeneca admits rare covid shot blood clots also i >> immigration. >> immigration. >> the rwanda roundup begins. plus . watch what? ha
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plus. watch what? ha ha ha ! plus. watch what? ha ha ha! >> come . on. >> come. on. >> yeah! knives are now everywhere in britain. we need knives off the streets on my panel tonight is the director of popular conservatives, mark littlewood, activist and boxer adam brooks. and author rebecca reid. oh, yeah , and look what reid. oh, yeah, and look what led up to this. reid. oh, yeah, and look what led up to this . get ready, led up to this. get ready, britain. here we go. have terrorists captured our institutions? next . institutions? next. >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the gb news room. >> our top stories. 36 year old marcus aurelio arduini. monzo
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has been charged with the murder of 14 year old daniel anjorin following a sword attack in east london. daniel was fatally injured as he walked to school on tuesday morning. four other people, including two police officers, were hospitalised. people have been gathering to lay flowers at the scene, with police officers among those laying tributes. one card read may your beautiful son rest in peace. met police say monzo, of newham , is a dual spanish newham, is a dual spanish brazilian national. he's also been charged with two counts of attempted murder, two counts of grievous bodily harm, aggravated burglary and possession of a bladed article. he'll appear at barkingside magistrate court tomorrow. well, police believe a piece of glass may have been used as a weapon during an incident at a school in sheffield. the 17 year old boy has been arrested for attempted murder after three people were hurt at the birley academy this morning . police have praised the morning. police have praised the actions of school staff during what they described as a frightening ordeal. the
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government looks set to face more legal challenges over its rwanda plan. after detaining the first group of migrants to be deported , both men and women deported, both men and women have been taken into custody in a series of operations across the country. officials won't confirm how many people have been detained or where they were taken into custody. so far, the fda trade union, which represents senior civil servants, is threatening legal action over the plan. well, meanwhile, gb news can reveal that more than 1700 small boat migrants have crossed the engush migrants have crossed the english channel in just over a week. early this morning, a boatload of around 70 people was taken to dover harbour by lifeboat . in total, around 400 lifeboat. in total, around 400 people have been taken to the border force migrant processing centre today . scotland's snp centre today. scotland's snp government has survived a confidence vote at the scottish parliament. the leader of scottish labour, anas sarwar, tabled the motion after a power sharing deal between the snp and the greens collapsed. the motion was defeated by 70 votes to 58.
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well, two msps thought to be considering running to replace scotland's first minister have held private talks. john swinney and kate forbes met at holyrood yesterday . both have received yesterday. both have received support from senior members of their party, after humza yousaf announced that he was stepping down the meeting has been described as informal. both politicians are still weighing up their options for the latest stories , you can sign up to gb stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen, or go to gbnews.com/alerts. back now to . patrick. >> welcome along. do our nations institutions have a problem with extremism ? there are continuing extremism? there are continuing seriously worrying issues here and i have been busy preparing a little collection. so the nhs , little collection. so the nhs, for example, a former leader of banned terror group hizb ut—tahrir , chaired the islamic ut—tahrir, chaired the islamic terror organisations meetings whilst working as a gp in harrow
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. there was outrage after a muslim chaplain went off to meet the taliban wasn't there in manchester, a hospital trust faced allegations that pro—palestine nurses denied correct care to a nine year old jewish boy. should we move on to education now, shall we? the head of the national education union, daniel covid, was accused of whipping up violence after he reportedly called for a global intifada at a pro—palestine rally in 2022. a primary school teacher who gave money to islamist terrorists was banned from the classroom. it emerged that she actually believed that violent jihad was the correct interpretation of islamic teaching, but lied about her actions and beliefs . the civil actions and beliefs. the civil service now zahawi the civil service now zahawi the civil service muslim network, was suspended pending an investigation after reports that it had hosted events during which speakers had encouraged officials to lobby colleagues to change the government's policy on the conflict in gaza. they reportedly told colleagues
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israel was evil. the civil servant , hear from the servant, hear from the department for work and pensions was on the stump at a george galloway rally. he's the head of diversity and inclusion, apparently classic. and to cap it all off, on monday, gb news revealed leaked messages from staff at the bbc which appeared to show a jewish member of staff begging pro—palestine colleagues to be mindful of the fact that hamas did actually kill and rape people. what does that imply ? people. what does that imply? anybody has the media are state broadcaster now actually being captured too? there are serious questions about whether key institutions in britain from our health sector, education sector, civil service and the media have been infiltrated by some incredibly dodgy characters. let's get the thoughts of my panel tonight. i am joined by mark littlewood, who is the director of the popular conservatives. i've also got adam brooks, of course, a businessman, activist, boxer and author and broadcaster rebecca reid. mark, i'll start with you
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everywhere you look around the core institutions, it does appear as though there are elements of them that i would regard as being a bit nefarious. yes. >> you know, i think that's fair. and you've given a good roll call there of a number of very worrying cases. we need to distinguish between, i think, different types of profession. i'm very worried about police officers, for example, siding with one side over the other . with one side over the other. trade union leaders well, might disapprove of their politics, but they're not obviously public servants. but i'm not so sure. the problem, patrick, is infiltration or indeed extremism. i think it's tolerance of extremism. if you're a civil servant at a political rally, you need to lose your job like that straight out the door . lose your job like that straight out the door. and once you do a few of these things, the deterrent effect, pour encourager les autres , as the encourager les autres, as the french say, i think would be pretty high. so when you find it, it needs to be case closed, job gone , career over, i mean, job gone, career over, i mean, you don't tend to see stories
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about this, about members of the rampant far right having infiltrated the nhs, the education system and the civil. >> let me tell you, if that guy was called steve and his whatsapp messages were supporting the far right, then that headline would be all over the media that the far right, you know, is on the rise. and we've got a huge problem . this we've got a huge problem. this is a problem. and i believe it's because people who have been calling for jihad because people who have been calling forjihad on the streets calling for jihad on the streets of london, they've been anti—semitic, they've threatened jews and nothing has happened to them. these people almost feel emboldened by the fact that, you know, that has happened. and you know, that has happened. and you know, it's mps , it's teachers, know, it's mps, it's teachers, it's uni lecturers, doctors, celebs . how can a doctor, a celebs. how can a doctor, a person that's meant to help you celebrate hamas killing people that were at peace festival, butchering people now , just butchering people now, just because you work for the nhs
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does not make you a nice person because of your job. there are because of yourjob. there are evil people in all walks of life. >> reports of nhs staff rebecca walking around with pro—palestine boundaries and stickers on their on their chest there. i mean, the former leader of a now banned terrorist organisation was working as a gp in harrow . in harrow. >> i think if you don't want people to wear any kind of political insignia at work, for instance, in a public organisation like the nhs, that would make sense. but that means no pride badges, no poppies, no anything . and i think that would anything. and i think that would make perfect sense. political? yes. and i think absolutely fine to say nothing. it's always the poppy- to say nothing. it's always the poppy. that's the one that everyone always wants a free pass for all of. we should just say none. none. no crucifix. i'm a christian. no crucifix, no poppy, "0 a christian. no crucifix, no poppy, no pride a christian. no crucifix, no poppy, no pride badge, a christian. no crucifix, no poppy, no pride badge, no nothing. >> we wouldn't have an nhs if it wasn't for the heroes that saved this country. well, no , we this country. well, no, we wouldn't have nhs for aneurin bevan who started it off. we wouldn't have a country. let's just remember, we would not have a country. we probably would. >> but i'm not sure we have time to go into the specific economic motivations. but going back to
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just institution , i do agree just institution, i do agree that it would be cleaner to get rid of all of it, but realistically you get a few nutters in every job. i had midwives who told me that all vaccines caused autism. they're idiots . they're not idiots. they're not representation of the whole of the nhs. there is a difference between being pro—palestine and being pro—hamas , and obviously being pro—hamas, and obviously the latter shouldn't be working, shouldn't be talking. here's the problem, isn't it? >> i mean, on the emblems or the badges or the logos you might wear in, let's say, the nhs, i think the question would be, might that emblem lead to you being partial? right. so if you're wearing, i don't know , a you're wearing, i don't know, a big conservative rosette, perhaps you're going to be discriminating against labour politicians or vice versa. if you're wearing some pro—palestinian thing, it might be considered that you're signalling. we've seen that. i'm not quite sure why wearing a poppy not quite sure why wearing a poppy would indicate that you were the treatment you would dispense would be different to different, because you're being treated by somebody who has an allegiance in a specific way. >> yeah, but i can't i can't work out either. >> you hang on, rebecca. i can't work out what cohort of patients
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might be treated differently in virtue of you wearing a poppy. so to my mind , it's does it show so to my mind, it's does it show partiality that is inappropriate to your job right now for politicians. you mentioned adam quite rightly. there's a lot of mps who, my view, have pretty intolerable views like george galloway, but kind of fair enough. he's elected to have views. he can express whatever he wants . he's supposed to be he wants. he's supposed to be partial, but if in the nhs or in the police or in the classroom, you are expressing views or displaying imagery which would give the impression, what about if you're not partial amongst the people, you're you said, but you said that, and you said that any civil servant who's at any political rally shouldn't be allowed to continue to have their job. >> so if theirjob. >> so if i want if he were anti—fox hunting, you should lose your job. well, you can't i mean, you can vote if you go to work, you go to a march, but hang on. >> yeah. no civil servants are allowed to vote. but there used to be. i don't know if they still apply. now, you weren't supposed to put political posters in your window, for example, so you're allowed to vote. but as a civil servant,
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you are not supposed to publicly. let's just get down to the crux of this. >> it has become trendy to be anti—israel now, to be anti jews. that's true. right? it's not trendy . it has become trendy not trendy. it has become trendy in certain sections of trendy on sukh. >> these are, these are the bits that i live in. it's not trendy like we saw with blm. >> it was the trendy thing for youth to jump on. half of them didn't know what they was jumping on or why they was jumping on or why they was jumping on or why they was jumping on it, but they did. it's a trend. >> yeah, and anti—semitism is not a trend. it's a crime. >> my point is this, right. if i rattled off all of those different examples that i've had there and okay, there is a sliding scale on the ones that i've said you've got from the bloke who cosies up with the taliban down to someone who is very george galloway . right. and very george galloway. right. and there is a difference there. but if that sliding scale was of all the people who were varying different degrees of far right, that would be making headlines, that would be making headlines, that would be leading the 10:00 news. >> these are realistically the majority of people in those industries are more left leaning. so you are getting that naturally occurring because more people who work in the nhs are left wing . more more activists
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left wing. more more activists are left wing, more journalists are left wing, more journalists are left wing, more journalists are left wing, more producers. those are left wing jobs. they are inclined to support hamas. >> is that what you're saying ? >> is that what you're saying? >> is that what you're saying? >> i'm. i think we're conflating supporting hamas and being pro—israel or being pro palestine, and those aren't the same thing . but, you know, same thing. but, you know, a terrorist organisation and no sane person is public, is supporting hamas. >> again, the issue goes to are you showing partiality? it might well be the case that i don't know a disproportionate number of nhs workers vote labour compared to the wider population. fine but they should not be wearing labour. they shouldn't be wearing anything. they can vote. of course they can vote. that's the problem, isn't it? whether your partiality is public, it's not that you shouldn't be wearing any of them. >> you shouldn't be wearing a help for heroes wristband, and you shouldn't be wearing whether it's partiality . it's partiality. >> if you're wearing a help the heroes wristband, does that mean you're not going to treat. >> i think it's just the like the ones. i think it's the ones that you like that you're saying wouldn't inform people's behaviour. >> i don't mind if you're wearing, say, the usa flag. i
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don't think that means you're going to treat americans more than other cohorts. are you going to be biased? >> you do not need us wear any insignia at work. a police officer that is meant to protect us, to protect the public, is siding with a terrorist organisation. >> and in 2023, 1500 mps case. >> and in 2023, 1500 mps case. >> so we'll leave it there. but yeah, if 1500 members of the police had an accusation of domestic violence or abuse against them in 2023, 1500in six months, were accused of that . months, were accused of that. >> there are bad people working in every institution . in every institution. >> but look at this. but look, you're right, we had massive reports on that that was leading the agenda. >> one story in the guardian, the news agenda. >> there's been loads. there's been! >> there's been loads. there's been i know everywhere all the time. loads and loads and loads of reports about the absolute epidemic of sexual assault taking place against nurses in hostels. where are all of the reports? where are the massive reports? where are the massive reports into our education system? when the head of the eu is calling for a global intifada? if he was calling for if the head of the eu had come
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out and been pictured at a rally that was turned, the boats back in the channel now and had said something fruity about channel migrants that guy, that guy whose face is plastered all over the bbc. >> but we need to make both of those unacceptable, patrick. that's my point, right? so i agree with you. there is a preponderance. see, for these to be progressive left occasionally extremist causes , but generally extremist causes, but generally progressive left causes, it just needs to be stamped out . it is needs to be stamped out. it is not okay for a senior civil servant to be seen publicly at a political rally. it is not okay. they can vote for george galloway, but they can't actively support him in public. >> i think it speaks to the attitude of certain organisations that people who work within them think it's okay, presumably to tell their colleagues that you just nipping off to afghanistan to go and meet the taliban. i think that, to me implies that there is a certain kind of mindset there where that is acceptable. but it's still to come. tonight yes, that's right, a little bit of feline fun was caught on camera dunng feline fun was caught on camera during a safari . yes, we will be
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during a safari. yes, we will be a bit like them revealing all very shortly, but next, astrazeneca has admitted that its covid vaccine can cause a rare side effect that's in court documents . and it's for the documents. and it's for the first time i'm going to be joined by jon watts and alex mitchell, who were ill after taking, albeit from different manufacturers in one of their cases, a covid vaccine . i'm cases, a covid vaccine. i'm asking why has it taken this to long get a little bit of basic admittance about certain elements of this jab? it's patrick christys tonight we're on
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gb news. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight now, in what many are describing as a major u—turn , astrazeneca has admitted u—turn, astrazeneca has admitted finally, apparently, for the first time in court documents, that its covid vaccine causes a very rare side effect. so in a letter of response sent in may 2023 during a legal case brought by a man called jamie scott, who sadly suffered a brain injury days after getting the astrazeneca vaccine, astrazeneca said we do not accept that tts is caused by the vaccine at a genenc is caused by the vaccine at a generic level. okay, so that's what they initially said. however, in a legal document submitted to the high court in february, astrazeneca said it is admitted that the astrazeneca vaccine can in very rare cases, cause tts. the causal mechanism is not known. further, tts can also occur in the absence of the
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astrazeneca vaccine. causation in any individual case will be a matter for expert evidence. well, the astrazeneca vaccine is no longer being offered in the uk. apparently. it must be stressed that studies over charmingly suggest the risk of an adverse event post—vaccination is extremely low. but with me now to discuss this is a chap called john watt, who was diagnosed with a number of health conditions after taking his third booster shot, and alex mitchell as well, who lost his leg. sadly, as a result of the vaccine and received £120,000 in compensation from the government. chaps, thank you very much for coming on. great to have you back on the show, alex. if it's all right, i'll start with you, because my understanding is i think this relates slightly, slightly more to you in the astrazeneca sense. could you just talk to me a bit about what happened to you, please, i got my first one and only astrazeneca vaccine on the 20th of march 2021. i'm a scaffolder on the 1st of april, i thought i'd pulled some muscles . i collapsed i thought i'd pulled some muscles. i collapsed on i thought i'd pulled some muscles . i collapsed on the 4th
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muscles. i collapsed on the 4th of april and spent 7.5 hours in surgery that i was told i wasn't going to survive. my family was told there was no hope, i came round after the 7.5 hours of surgery to be told, we don't know why you're still here. here you are, and it was explained at that time they didn't know what it was, that they had a concern for my left leg. and within 15 minutes, it went from a concern to there will be an amputation. i was amputated a week later, and i left the hospital being confirmed as thrombotic from athena. and within two weeks it was classified as a condition called vhit . vaccine induced called vhit. vaccine induced thrombotic thrombasthenia. now now. and my understanding there's a difference between tts and vitt , you know, but that's and vitt, you know, but that's not for me to argue that case. i'll leave that to my lawyers, who obviously i'm part of the same class action as jamie and the many, many others that have been left abandon by the very
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company that i'll just i'll just stick with you for, for now, alex, on that because i think it's an important point, because we read out a statement previously from astrazeneca. >> this was all backed up, by the way, by a load of the old tv doctors and the usual type of individual who were, you know, going on and banging the drum for, for the vaccines, early doors. and throughout this pandemic, they have been very reluctant , very reluctant to reluctant, very reluctant to acknowledge any real. i would argue, any real issues or side effects until until quite recently. so this is a bit of a change. and, i'm just wondering how it makes you feel to see that they are now finally , you that they are now finally, you know, starting to admit certain things in court. although they do you know, they do say it's very rare. >> three years too late for many of us because i've known for a long time they were notified a long time they were notified a long time they were notified a long time ago, not just by people like myself reporting it to them, but by governments ,
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to them, but by governments, health agencies across the world who notified them there was a problem with this thing, and they would rather spend billions defending what they can't defend anymore . why are we all how is anymore. why are we all how is this company has been fined 32 times for crimes in the last 2220 years, with fines totalling 1.5 billion in the range of crimes goes from bribery to misrepresentative data to you can go through it as public information. this is not a company that should ever be trusted . so yes, they're going trusted. so yes, they're going to defend it. am i surprised ? to defend it. am i surprised? not really. i am surprised that they acknowledge that . they acknowledge that. >> okay. all right. what i'll do is i'll whiz through a couple of, a couple of bits and bobs from astrazeneca , and i'll come from astrazeneca, and i'll come to you on this, john, because i know that you've been on the channel before. so we reached out to them. right. and, well, initially we didn't get a particularly we didn't think we got a particularly good response from them. so we did actually bother to reach out to them again. it must be said, they
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pointed out product information relating to the astrazeneca oxford vaccine was updated in april 2021 with the approval of the uk regulator mhra , to the uk regulator mhra, to include the possibility that the astrazeneca oxford vaccine is capable, in very rare cases, of being a trigger for thrombosis and tts . okay, they say that the and tts. okay, they say that the update was well documented and publicly available. john, i know you've got strong views about this now. i suppose the implication is, look, if it's taking this long and it's this difficult to get this kind of information out about them, i think it's reasonable for people to raise questions about about whether or not there should have been more forthcoming. now >> i mean, i it's fantastic that the mainstream media are now talking on this. patrick that is a positive. but what's not a positive and is an insult to the to the vaccine injured arm, obviously, pfizer and alex's astrazeneca . but what's an
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astrazeneca. but what's an inqu astrazeneca. but what's an insult to all of us as a community, as we all keep getting this for the greater good, and we also get told that this is real. now i put a video up on one of my social media platforms . the comments don't platforms. the comments don't lie. the comments that i'm getting under these videos, 90% of people are saying i've not been right ever since i took my vaccine. i have not been right ever since i took this thing. this is massive and on a scale, andifs this is massive and on a scale, and it's like alex said, it's been three years too long and we've been screaming for help and support, and i'm going to put it in there. patrick, i'm still waiting in rishi sunak to get in contact with me. yeah, and not nobody in the mainstream media touched that. and i just want to touch on as well. myself and alex were trying our hardest to help the injured and raise awareness on this important subject. we've we're doing an eventin subject. we've we're doing an event in glasgow at the classic grand in the 2nd of june to try and raise money for the vaccine angel and raise money for the vaccine angel, because these people need
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help and support these , we need help and support these, we need them to get the proper testing and these people need proper help and support, and we're trying to do our best by getting we've got fantastic speakers on that stage . doctor, i see that stage. doctor, i see maholtra, doctor, john campbell, tina pearce, neale hanvey mp who's speaking out on the excess deaths. so for anyone that doesn't believe it, come along in the 2nd of june and question these doctors. come and question us because i can tell you right now, the nation and everybody is now, the nation and everybody is now starting to realise they have not been right . and the have not been right. and the informed consent get taken away from us all. patrick there was a huge amount of pressure. >> yeah, loads of people felt incredibly pressured. alex i'm just reading this, you know , i just reading this, you know, i would like your view on this. it says, 51 cases have been lodged in the high court, victims and grieving relatives are seeking damages estimated to be worth up to about £100 million. is that ultimately your objective? obviously, to , you know, get get
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obviously, to, you know, get get get something back so that you can, you know, go on and try and i know it'll never bring your health back. right. but is that is that what you're after as well? >> now i've got no other option because i'm on basic state benefits. you mentioned i get compensation . there's no such compensation. there's no such thing as a compensation scheme in the uk. patrick it's a vaccine damage payment scheme. so i want a world of £120,000, of which 98.3% of claimants fail . so it's only 1.7 people get the payment. so that's not fallback. >> and they've been indemnified against it aren't they? i can i can remember reporting on this. it's in this article here as well about how governments really did indemnify a lot of the vaccine companies against, well, stuff like this really which made it which made it even more difficult. john. final word to you, mate. john. patrick, what can i say ? what can i say? >> other pharmaceutical drugs have been pulled for less . have been pulled for less. charlotte wright lost her husband and other people have have died from this jag, from this vaccine . it's time for the
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this vaccine. it's time for the government. it's time for the mhra , and it's time for the mhra, and it's time for the pharmaceutical companies to own up to their responsibility and compensate and look after the people that have been affected by it, because we are getting sick of it. i can tell you what, patrick, we're not going anywhere , anywhere soon. anywhere, anywhere soon. >> okay. but both of you, thank you very much for coming on tonight. and no doubt we'll be talking again very, very soon. look after yourselves. that's john watt there. and alex mitchell, i am going to read out a statement from astrazeneca. yes. okay. so again i will emphasise we went to astrazeneca twice today. an astrazeneca spokesman said this. our sympathy goes out to anyone who has lost loved ones or reported health problems, patient safety is our highest priority and regulatory authorities have clear and stringent standards to ensure the safe use of all medicines, including vaccines , medicines, including vaccines, from the body of evidence in clinical trials and real world data. the astrazeneca oxford vaccine has continuously been shown to have acceptable safety
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profile and regulators around the world consistently state that the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks of extremely rare potential side effects. so thatis rare potential side effects. so that is the statement that astrazeneca gave to us. we will obviously hear on gb news. and here on this show. keep across that story coming up . what on that story coming up. what on earth is happening here? brian . earth is happening here? brian. yes, well, a bit like that chap i will be revealing all shortly. but next, tomorrow's newspaper front pages have landed. i've got the front pages right now, and i'll
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welcome back to patrick christys tonight. now it's time to bring you all of the latest front pages. let's do it . okay, we pages. let's do it. okay, we start with the daily telegraph ireland sends police to border in migrant row. so ireland sends police to border in migrant row . so the ireland sends police to border in migrant row. so the dublin. sorry. dublin must not jeopardise peace process by
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reinstating checkpoints, rishi sunak warns. and there is also the picture story there of the young schoolboy , who has been young schoolboy, who has been identified as the boy who was killed in a sword attack in north—east london on tuesday morning . there's another story morning. there's another story there which has piqued my interest, i must say, as well . interest, i must say, as well. civil servants hatch legal plot to sink the rwanda plan so civil servants are threatening to scupper rishi sunak's rwanda plan by mounting the first legal challenge to the legislation. so there we go, deep state. anyone the daily mail have gone day. the daily mail have gone day. the rwanda became a reality. first migrants handcuffed and detained in dramatic raids. there's also that picture story there. they've said a true scholar, daniel, 14, killed in sword attack, was a teacher's son. gosh, let's go to the eye now. uk rwanda plan could be delayed as civil servants sue the government. so yeah, a bit more of that. the metro double tragedy of samurai killing are fresh sorrow, school sadness
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over murdered daniel. so it turns out that the school that that poor lad went to was also the same school that grace grace o'malley kumar went to as well. who was one of the victims of the nottingham knife man, which, yeah, i mean, well, yeah , i yeah, i mean, well, yeah, i mean, it's not not the right words for it, is there? really? look the feet will go to the financial times quickly on this now labour to dilute promises on workers rights. they say in push to win business backing. let's just finish off on the times and i'll go to my panel and labour plan for channel migrants to get asylum. tens of thousands have arrived illegally. could stay. i did actually say that this could happen quite a few weeks ago, because the civil service apparently did advise this government and the former immigration minister that he could just have an amnesty and clear the backlog and that same offer presumably will be offered to labour. look, let's just just quickly run through a couple of the front pages here with my panel mark, i'll start with you on this and just just talk about that. that civil service essentially being undermining the rwanda scheme. it's on the front of the eye. uk rwanda plan
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could be delayed as civil servants sue the government. i mean, this is astonishing. >> who runs britain ? who runs >> who runs britain? who runs britain, my understanding is that the complaint is it might be some breach of the civil service code . look, you've service code. look, you've covered extensively on gb news this rwanda safety rwanda bill. it ping pong between parliament. it ping pong between parliament. it is now the law. the civil servants job is to carry out. this is absolutely unbelievable . this is absolutely unbelievable. having faced down the house of lords, rishi sunak is now going to have to face down his politicised civil service and we're paying their wages and we're paying their wages and we're paying their wages and we're paying it's taxpayers. it's unconscionable. there is no case for the civil service trying to block this legislation i >> rebecca, what do you think of this? depher? >> i mean, i think they're union objects to it for a reason, and i think they feel they're being put in a position where they're obuged put in a position where they're obliged to carry out something that either would be immoral or illegal or in, in, opposition to what their contract stipulates, and therefore , that's the and therefore, that's the union's job. >> okay, look , there's a reason >> okay, look, there's a reason why i've not come to you on this. because i'm very keen to talk to you about something
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else. now, let's crack on with with this story . so else. now, let's crack on with with this story. so campaigners have been speaking out today about how easy it is to obtain knives following yesterday's sword attack in hainault. now, as you might know one of my panellists this evening, it's fair to say he's a friend of the show . he's certainly a friend of show. he's certainly a friend of mine and he's a friend of the channel. adam brookes has taken part in several big boxing matches for a variety of different causes, and adam is set to step back into the area. look at the form on that guy, look at him . he's set to step look at him. he's set to step back into the ring on saturday the 11th of may with the message knives down as he attempts to encourage kids on our streets to stop carrying weapons. and adam, i just wanted to throw it over to you a bit, really, and just tell our viewers and our listeners a little bit about why this means so much to you and what you're hoping to achieve. look i spoke about many times, but at the age of 11, i lost my father to a machete gang , in our father to a machete gang, in our family pub. >> so knife crime has always been a part of my life , but
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been a part of my life, but growing up, you know, i've been stabbed. owning clubs, pubs and bars. you know, i've seen a lot of violent incidents over the years, and it's something now i've got a teenage boy. he's 14. i've got a teenage boy. he's14. i've got a teenage boy. he's14. i worry about the future that my children have got. not just my son, but my girls. and my boy tells me there's local boys that carry knives. they're not bad kids, he assures me. but normal children , normal kids are children, normal kids are carrying knives. not because they think they're gangsters, because they think it's cool. they get clout. and a lot of kids are scared. normal kids. they're not gang members or criminals. they think, you know, they're scared and they want the clout of carrying . so look, i, clout of carrying. so look, i, i've been lucky enough to be selected to be on misfits boxing, which is a huge worldwide boxing platform, it's got sort of millions of viewers around the world, but in the uk, the demographic of its audience is very young. it's teenagers .
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is very young. it's teenagers. so, you know, i've put knives down on my shorts , on my boots, down on my shorts, on my boots, on my gumshield, on my gloves, on my gumshield, on my gloves, on everything. because if i stop one kid carrying a knife or feeling guilty, what they're doing, then it was worth me doing, then it was worth me doing that. and i think i encourage other celebs to speak out about knife crime we've seen over the last few days, months and years the tragedies that are happening. we're having stabbings in schools. you know, these are these are kids that are going to school and stabbing people now in teenage years, when you throw in alcohol and you throw in drugs, that kid that doesn't think he's going to use that knife, but it's just, you know, he's carrying it because he thinks it's cool. suddenly we all all, all sort of inhibitions go out the window. he could kill someone. he could end up in prison for the rest of his life. there's no winners. through carrying knives. and look again. if i can influence one kid, i've done my job. >> and just to emphasise. so
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this is saturday the 11th of may. yeah. you're getting into the ring . yeah. the ring. yeah. >> i'm fighting. a lot of the kids will know a guy called king kenny. he's a youtuber that's had seven fights. he's very good. his brother's a pro trainer. he looks very silky . trainer. he looks very silky. he's 17 years younger than me, but i'm going to give it a go. and, you know, it's live on the zone and the tickets if anyone wants to support. there is, pinned to my twitter and it's on my instagram as well . my instagram as well. >> all right. well, so i, i'm going to stream it. right. so you can watch it either from the comfort of your own home, or you can turn up, i mean, still tickets available. so i'm going to do that. but, look , given to do that. but, look, given especially in light of what he's all over the vast majority of the front pages today was over the front pages today was over the front pages yesterday. and given the way that things seem to be going in this country at the moment, we're quite possibly be over the front pages again tomorrow if there's another incident. i think this is the timing of this, adam, and what you're doing is really important. >> i just want people to help spread that message. you know, i haven't got a charity or anything like this. it's about
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sending that message. have the chat to your child. you might not think you're 15 year old son carries a knife. let me tell you, at some point he might do have the chat. talk to your grandkids , your nieces, your grandkids, your nieces, your nephews. girls carry knives as well. nowadays it's a scary world and we've got to try and dissuade them and tell them the consequences of their actions. >> one of the things i'm becoming increasingly worried aboutis becoming increasingly worried about is that is that knives in this country. mark, i'll come to you on this. is this going to be like our american style school shootings? >> yeah, it's look, it's a huge worry. props to adam for getting in the ring. braverman doing a good task. i see the book. you say you've got a 10% chance. yeah. i'm not as a tottenham hotspur. it's a tottenham hotspur. it's a tottenham hotspur fan. you're probably used to those sort of odds in this one, but i raised awareness. cray. i find this really troubling about what what can we actually do to stop it? because you can say it's easy to get knives. so of course it is. i mean, i've probably got dangerous knives in my kitchen drawer right? and they don't leave my kitchen. but, we've probably got to have more severe punishment for actually carrying
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them. kids have got to know if you are found carrying one, you are going to face severe. >> i'm massively in favour of more stop and search. >> i think that's right. >> i think that's right. >> i think that's right. >> i don't know where you are on that but yeah. go on. >> no, i think it's predominantly about education, which is what i've been saying, but also poverty rates, positive male role models. there's so much that can be done. prevention. we don't want to get to the point where people are going to prison. we want to stop it before it starts just quickly. >> i'm not going to influence gangsters or criminals. i'm talking about trying to influence the kids in schools . influence the kids in schools. the normal everyday kids, whether they're white, black or brown. we've got to get that message across now. message across how. >> message across now. >> good for you. good for you . >> good for you. good for you. massively good for you. and i will be watching as well now as they say, it's time for something completely different. okay, so massive shift in tone. let's have a quick look at one of our viral videos. this evening. we've been teasing this. they don't make safari tours like they used . to. so tours like they used. to. so this bunch of people on a safari, which is driving around
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in the safari wagon, and then all of a sudden a line comes on the roof, then another one, gets on the roof, and then they start doing what, well, what lions do . doing what, well, what lions do. but he's finished now, and he's off for a second. that was quick. he's off for a cigarette. and she looks happy enough, though, to be fair. bless her. but but. but yeah, i'm not sure. i'm not sure if that's an advert for a safari tour or not, but. but yeah, i hope there were no kids in that in that safari bus. if any of you ever been on safari at all. yeah >> never got a glimpse of something as. >> never got a glimpse of something as . what are you something as. what are you supposed to call it? all right. does that you don't see any hons does that you don't see any lions have barbed penises, so it's a very uncomfortable experience. >> the lions, you know that? >> the lions, you know that? >> yeah. i want on a very boring safari. when i was 15, it was a bad week, but i learnt a lot of facts about lions . facts about lions. >> well, there we go. there we go. >> i don't know whether that's made you at home more, more or less inclined to want to go on a safari. but i thought that video was quite funny. anyway, so we are coming up my favourite moment of the show. yes, i get to crown tonight's greatest britain and union jackass and an amateur angler has landed. what is believed to be the uk's
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biggest ever fish, caught by a rod in fresh water. i'll be revealing the sheer size of that fish very shortly. stay tuned
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all right. welcome back to patrick christys. tonight we are only on gb news. and i've got another front page for you. now, this one is the sun. so the sun lead with trent and jude. law's girl . england and liverpool star girl. england and liverpool star trent alexander—arnold enjoys a date with actor jude law's model date with actorjude law's model daughter, iris. date with actorjude law's model daughter, iris . a source told daughter, iris. a source told the duo he met last month on a fashion shoot are excited to see where things go well , there we where things go well, there we 90, where things go well, there we go, so that is their lead story. they've also gone down the side there with rwanda. raids on migrants go ahead and family's tributes to sword lad 14, which i think is actually quite a poor turn of phrase that really considering the lad was, you
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know, law says that front page news really the trent alexander—arnold no child of celebrity. >> i think that's a disgrace from the sun. to have that as front page, to have a celebrity child date in big letters and an actual child's death getting weirder and weirder. >> the sun . >> the sun. >> the sun. >> can we bring that up? i don't know if we can bring it up strangely, strangely on set of priorities. >> it's become a no. >> it's become a no. >> it's interesting because obviously normally what we do, the papers we talk about, like we pass out the stories. but i am often i don't give two whatevers about that relationship, and i don't think the nation does either. >> and we've got proper news out there at the moment. we've got a knife crisis. we've got children being killed . yeah. and the sun being killed. yeah. and the sun has gone with, you know, no marks that are dated. >> they're competing with the daily star readership , is my prediction. >> i think if you were the parents of that little boy, you'd be so horrified. >> it's also the phrasing as well, by the way, i don't i don't normally slate the sun. i don't normally slate the sun. i don't normally slate the sun. i don't normally have a problem with it at all, and things happen, but sword lad, yeah, that's a bit weird.
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>> horrible. >> horrible. >> you're trying to get it on two small lines. so you've had to go for short words? >> well, yes. not not. that's actually isn't it. that is literally it, okay. all right. well look, we've done new front pages there, so yes , another pages there, so yes, another inside story for you now, okay. and we just wanted to, bring this to your attention because it's a bit of a bonkers story. so it's called dan rice, and he was, he's caught what is believed to be the biggest fish ever caught in the uk. so the catfish weighed £143, which i'm reliably informed is about ten stone. all right. i mean, it looks pretty terrifying, but he's got a, he's got quite an interesting track record. this guy, he's saying he suffered some kind of head injuries. he was attacked in a nightclub. he was, he also works as a binman. and, he decided to go start going carp fishing as a way of deaung going carp fishing as a way of dealing with his mental health issues. and then he's now managed to land himself the biggest ever carp caught, again. time for something completely different. what's going on here? in just a second. brian .
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in just a second. brian. mark, would you like to apologise ? would you like to apologise? >> i'd had a i'd had a heavy afternoon on the sauce. i mean, what can you do? what can you do 7 what can you do? what can you do ? but it's cold as well. >> hey, there he is . >> hey, there he is. >> hey, there he is. >> the old ones are the old ones. >> the old ones are the old ones, right. look for radio listeners that was a long haired, skinny white guy running away from some coppers and he didn't look like he was going to get caught. >> and also, he was completely, completely in the nod, all right. yes. and also, this is another big one. it's a potential flip flop from the labour party. this time, senior figures in labour have said that in government, the party may have to retain the rwanda scheme, something keir starmer has previously said he would scrap. that i think is actually fascinating. so we speak a lot about the labour party's u—turns, don't we? i mean that surely would be the biggest u—turn. >> pretty huge given the opposition that they mustered to it. here's my prediction . it. here's my prediction. they'll probably say that they will unwind the scheme as
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circumstances allow. it will be something like that , they're something like that, they're waiting and biding their time. see if it works. early indications look like it might work, but that's what they'll say. >> it would just show them as massive hypocrites. >> what do you reckon on this? do you think that they would get away with u turning on rwanda? >> an unnamed person with a source that we haven't had any information about has said that it's possible that they might keep it running. you're not buying. get something else going. >> you're not buying this u—turn. >> i think honestly , the tories >> i think honestly, the tories have so many things that they could be cross about and they could be cross about and they could get labour on. why is this what they're going? >> well, it is, it is the tory by by john rentoul actually he's no but either way anyway. all right. okay. time to reveal today's greatest britain and union jackass. today's greatest britain and union jackass . right. mark your union jackass. right. mark your greatest britain, please, my good man. >> kemi badenoch . i've nominated >> kemi badenoch. i've nominated her several times. i'll keep nominating her until she eventually wins, she. you had this earlier on your show, patrick. my old stomping ground. the institute of economic affairs had released this report. i think it's a very useful contribution to the debate. kemi badenoch backed up the iea. slavery is not what
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made britain rich. that doesn't excuse slavery. but we've got to stop believing that we're all rich and affluent because we had slavery back in the day. good for kemi for being outspoken to the point and saying what some people thinks the unsayable. >> well , people thinks the unsayable. >> well, yeah. >> well, yeah. >> and well be, you know, doing the old argue, we'll just throw a lump £1 billion. what, are you going to give it somewhere? why don't you give it to christians who are being persecuted all over the world? adam, who's your greatest britain? >> i live in loughton, which is five minutes from hainault. so yesterday's event have really upset a lot of people in the local community. i've got a 14 year old boy myself, so this hits home. i'm going to nominate daniel andrew gwynne. who was brutally killed by by the knife attack yesterday, rest in peace . attack yesterday, rest in peace. thoughts to his friends and his family. >> yes, indeed . and rebecca, >> yes, indeed. and rebecca, your greatest britain. >> so it's unlike me to praise the police , but i've nominated the police, but i've nominated the police, but i've nominated the police, but i've nominated the police officers who were involved in capturing the attacker yesterday, who were incredibly brave and really did put themselves in the firing
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line. >> well, apparently one of them, a female officer , as a female officer, as i understand, had to pretty much have one of her hands reattached, and yeah, as you've said, you know, we give the police a bit of a kicking every now and again, and i think rightly so. but this is something where you think, goodness, brave the frontline. >> this is but also this is individuals, not the institutions . yeah. individual institutions. yeah. individual people. rafe. >> well we've got we've got joint winners of today's greatest britain. and again, i do think that is correct. it is, of course, the poor lad who was , of course, the poor lad who was, sadly knifed to death. that's daniel hundred and the police officers who raced to the scene . officers who raced to the scene. right. let's go to union jacks time now, mark. >> honorary nomination a i think she's a phd student at columbia university in the states. johanna king slutsky for giving the most jaw dropping media interview i've ever heard. well, here it is. >> it's ultimately a question of what kind of community and obugafion what kind of community and obligation columbia feels it has to its students, do you want students to die of dehydration and starvation or get severely
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ill even if they disagree with you? if the answer is no, then you? if the answer is no, then you should allow basic. i mean, it's crazy to say because we're on an ivy league campus, but this is like basic humanitarian aid. we're asking for. like, could people please have a glass of water? >> i mean , the worst revolution >> i mean, the worst revolution evenisnt >> i mean, the worst revolution ever, isn't it? >> it's unbelievable . it's one >> it's unbelievable. it's one thing to protest about gaza. she thinks she's actually in gaza . thinks she's actually in gaza. she's a $100,000 a year university . university. >> it's cultural appropriation. she's appropriating actual suffering . suffering. >> she can actually walk out at any time and go starbucks or mcdonald's. and she's demanding that food and water is brought to her as basic humanitarian. >> mine is keir starmer for being a complete hypocrite over pensions and to let people know there is actually a pensions law with his name on it. >> okay, well, i'll look into that a bit more then go on back up. mine is kate forbes, who once again just trying to be the head of the snp, despite the fact that she would be looking after a country full of people who are gay and have or have children out of people, it's got people, it's got gays and it's got people who have got kids out
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of wedlock. >> and she doesn't approve either of those. and i don't want a homophobe, single mum hating woman in charge. >> oh, okay. >> oh, okay. >> kate forbes would probably deny a few of those things, but she would herself, right. okay, so today's union jackass is joanna king slutsky. and wherever you are, joanna, i imagine locked self imprisoned in a basement in columbia university somewhere. just leave. seriously you can walk out any time you like. there we go. right. look. thank you. thank you, thank you. i've really enjoyed tonight's show. i hope you have at home as well. i'll be back tomorrow at 9 pm. it's headliners next. for even more at the front pages. and what's inside the book? until next time, keep fighting the good fight . good fight. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hi there! welcome to the latest weather update from the met office for gb news. heavy rain overnight in the south. continuing into much of thursday. risk of thunderstorms in places but it will be much dner in places but it will be much drier further north. we've got
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an area of low pressure across the continent that's going to push some humid and warm air into much of the uk overnight, but on the boundary between that and the cooler air out in the atlantic, we've got this reactivation of a frontal zone bringing some heavy rain to northern ireland, wales and then increasingly southern england . increasingly southern england. the persistent wet weather will affect south wales and the southwest of england by dawn, but thundery showers will turn up across the midlands, southern england as well, and they'll tend to drift their way northwards and westwards into mid wales and continue for some time through the morning, eventually the rain does ease in many places. we keep the cloud cover in the south, but much dner cover in the south, but much drier and brighter weather is expected further north, i think for northern england, scotland and northern ireland some decent sunny spells will turn up. however, on the north sea coast a lot of low cloud will be prevalent and that will limit temperatures 11 to 12 celsius whilst it goes up to 21 to 23 celsius in western scotland , celsius in western scotland, similar temperature contrast across northern scotland on
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friday, warm in the west, cool in the east, southern england some warm sunshine as well, but in between outbreaks of rain continuing even some thundery showers on saturday. the fine weather moves north, but there will be further rain coming up from the south. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the gp newsroom . in the gp newsroom. >> coming up is headliners. but first, our top stories tonight. 36 year old marcus aurelio arduini. monzo has been charged with the murder of 14 year old daniel anjorin. following a sword attack in east london. daniel was fatally injured as he walked to school on tuesday morning. four other people, including two police officers, were hospitalised and people have been gathering to lay flowers at the scene with police officers . among those laying officers. among those laying those tributes, one card read may your beautiful son rest in peace. met police say monzo , of peace. met police say monzo, of newham, is a dual spanish brazilian national. he's also been charged with two counts of attempted murder, two counts of grievous bodily harm, aggravated burglary and possession of a bladed article. he'll appear at barkingside magistrates court tomorrow . well, police believe tomorrow. well, police believe a piece of glass may have been used as a weapon during an
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incident at a school in sheffield . 17 year old boy has sheffield. 17 year old boy has been arrested for attempted murder after three people were hurt at the birley academy this morning . police have praised the morning. police have praised the actions of school staff, describing the events as a frightening ordeal. describing the events as a frightening ordeal . the frightening ordeal. the government looks set to face more legal challenges over its rwanda plan. after detaining the first group of migrants to be deported, both men and women have been taken into custody in a series of operations across the country, officials won't confirm how many people have been detained or where they were taken from. so far, the fda trade union, which represents senior civil servants, is threatening legal action over the plan. well, meanwhile, gb news can reveal that more than 1700 small boat migrants have crossed the english channel in just over a week. early this morning , a boatload of around 70 morning, a boatload of around 70 people was taken to dover harbour by lifeboat . in total, harbour by lifeboat. in total, around 400 people have been taken to the border force migrant processing centre today .
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migrant processing centre today. scotland's snp government has survived a confidence vote at the scottish parliament. the leader of scottish labour, anas sarwar, tabled the motion after a power sharing deal between the snp and the greens collapsed. the motion was defeated by 70 votes to 58. meanwhile, two msps thought to be considering running to replace scotland's first minister have held private talks together. john swinney and kate forbes met at holyrood yesterday. both have received support from senior members of their party after humza yousaf announced that he was stepping down. the meeting has been described as informal. both politicians are still weighing up their options well. for the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to news.com.au . it's time now to news.com.au. it's time now for headliners .

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