Skip to main content

tv   Mark Dolan Tonight  GB News  November 20, 2022 9:00pm-11:01pm GMT

9:00 pm
all mark dolan tonight in regards to the world cup, we've got big sam allardyce live the show. in my big opinion is rishi sunak risking a brexit betrayal with plans for a switch type deal. with plans for a switch type deal . do this with plans for a switch type deal. do this and with plans for a switch type deal . do this and the tories deal. do this and the tories toast forever. my mates guest is brexit former labour mp john he's live in the studio after ten. this is the man that took and defeated jeremy corbyn in the big question all the tories
9:01 pm
facing an existential crisis will debate that with former tory government ann widdecombe and ukip mep godfrey bloom and in the news agenda with my brilliant panel labour right to scrap the house of lords was joe lycett wrong to shred scrap the house of lords was joe lycett wrong to shre d £10,000 in lycett wrong to shred £10,000 in cash during a of living crisis for a stunt and can you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter lots to get through and don't forget big sam allardyce on the programme, but my big opinion follows the headlines . opinion follows the headlines. rhiannon jones. opinion follows the headlines. rhiannon jones . our team my rhiannon jones. our team my husband wears shorts in the winter . i'm husband wears shorts in the winter. i'm rhiannon jones in the gb news i'm going to tell the gb news i'm going to tell the stories. the 2022 fifa world cup kicked off today with the hosts castle beaten two nil by ecuador. hosts castle beaten two nil by ecuador . it's the first time the
9:02 pm
ecuador. it's the first time the tournament's been held in a muslim country in the middle east and the build on spain overshadowed by a number of control cases. fifa is hoping the action , the pitch will turn the action, the pitch will turn the action, the pitch will turn the spotlight back on the football . but england manager football. but england manager gareth southgate confirmed his players will take the knee ahead of their world cup opener against iran tomorrow . against iran tomorrow. meanwhile, the football association's to get clarification over whether captains will be booked if they wear the one love armband nine countries including england and wales had planned to wear it to promote diversity and inclusion . in promote diversity and inclusion. in tomorrow against the usa . promote diversity and inclusion. in tomorrow against the usa. their first world cup appearance in 64 years. captain gareth bale says he hopes his achievement will inspire generation. well gb news to welsh fans in qatar about it means to them . it's crazy. means to them. it's crazy. i means to them. it's crazy. i mean 64 years i mean we finally made it and feel like this is
9:03 pm
one of our last opportunities really of this taking the most out of this generation of players so really excited . you players so really excited. you ever think you'd see this day.7 no no. never felt proud to . be no no. never felt proud to. be welsh should be here. yeah absolutely. yeah yeah, we hope so. but really do hope that wales do beat . so. but really do hope that wales do beat. england . it wales do beat. england. it wasn't a great start . the fans wasn't a great start. the fans around an hour ahead of kick off tonight there were chaos scenes at the fifa fans festival the venue can hold up to 40,000 people but at least double to gain access for and a while organisers were letting too into a holding area . it took place a holding area. it took place around an hour to . get around an hour to. get frustrated supporters back of the venue police in nottingham have launched a murder investigation after two children were killed in a fire at a flat say was started deliberately . say was started deliberately. fire and rescue were called an address at ferrol close in clifton in the early hours of
9:04 pm
this morning. the children, aged one and three were treated at the scene for smoke but later died in hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition in the us. five people have been killed and, 18 injured in a shooting at a gay nightclub in a shooting at a gay nightclub in colorado springs . police have in colorado springs. police have named the suspect as 22 year old anderson lea aldridge . he's anderson lea aldridge. he's currently in custody and receiving treatment for his injuries. the motive for the attack isn't yet known the deputy police chief thanked clubgoers for risking own lives, trying to stop the attacker, calling them heroic tv online and ap plus radio. this is gb news. now it's back to mark dolan tonight. many thanks , rhiannon, and many thanks, rhiannon, and congratulations to your husband
9:05 pm
who wears shorts the winter. he's clearly got a lovely pair of pins. welcome to mark dolan tonight in just 1 minutes time. in my big opinion. rishi sunak risking a betrayal with rumoured plan for a switzerland type deal plan for a switzerland type deal. do this . the tories all deal. do this. the tories all toast in the big question following a budget in which taxes have risen to the highest levels since the 1940s. all the conservatives facing an crisis debate that with former tory minister ann widdecombe and ex ukip mep godfrey bloom . my mark ukip mep godfrey bloom. my mark meets guest is supporting former labour mp john mann. he opposed jeremy and has quite the story tell as he now sits in the house of lords. he's live in the studio after ten. what a great guy in the news agenda with my panel all labour right to scrap the house of lords was comedian joe louis wrong and
9:06 pm
irresponsible . to shred joe louis wrong and irresponsible. to shre d £10,000 irresponsible. to shred £10,000 dunng irresponsible. to shred £10,000 during a cost of living crisis as part of online stunt and you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter. it's good enough for . my brilliant local postman steve. but do you do you get your pins out in the cold weather. let me no market with me throughout the show reacting to all of the big stories of the day we have emma webb , uk day we have emma webb, uk director of the common sense society , britain's longest society, britain's longest serving editor and the man with quite the best legs in fleet street . nigel nelson quite the best legs in fleet street. nigel nelson and former gurkha and bestselling author adrian hayes. now i want to hear from you throughout the show. mark at gb news dot uk, the best part of the is when you get in touch and this programme has a golden rule, do you know what that rule is. faye, are you ready ready? we don't do boring . not on my watch. i just won't
9:07 pm
have. . not on my watch. i just won't have . so. there you go. well have. so. there you go. well done, faye. quicker than sebastien . for the next 2 hours, sebastien. for the next 2 hours, we've got big debates, big guests and always big opinions. and don't forget , big sam and don't forget, big sam allardyce live on the programme before ten talking about the world cup. but let's start with this . why is brexit so this. why is brexit so important? because people voted for it . that's how democracy for it. that's how democracy works , how shocking. therefore works, how shocking. therefore that's a conservative government that's a conservative government that delivered the will of the people and got brexit done should be the ones to potentially it the sunday times in a brilliant of journalism report that senior government figures are planning put britain on the towards a swiss style relationship with the european union switzerland has access to the european single through a series of bilateral agreements.
9:08 pm
however the model also involves more eu migration and payments to the eu . sound familiar with to the eu. sound familiar with the bloc ? recent years also the bloc? recent years also pushing the european court of justice have greater oversight . justice have greater oversight. the swiss eu relate and ship even the free movement of people is not off the table . far be it is not off the table. far be it for me to the alarm about what looks like a subtle and insidious attempt to get us back into the bloc by using the snake oil language of unfettered access , frictionless trade . not access, frictionless trade. not everything that glitters is gold. and it's very much the view of the godfather of brexit , the man who really moved the dial in those negotiations with brussels, lord david frost. he's not having it . last brussels, lord david frost. he's not having it. last night, as reported by the sunday times, he said approach requiring the uk to align with eu rules to get trade benefits whether as part of a swiss style approach or any
9:09 pm
other would be quite unacceptable, he on boris johnson and i fought very hard to avoid any such requirements in 2020 and ensure uk could set its own laws and we should not contemplate giving this away in future. what hero? unlike many remainers in 2016? i instantly accepted the result as any democrat should , and it seems democrat should, and it seems like i've got a better idea of how brexit works even better than many brexit tiers, including the prime minister, rishi, who appears to be on this issue . he needs to give his head issue. he needs to give his head a wobble if the pm reverses by stealth in this way the tories won't just be out of power for a generation. they will be finished altogether . sunak will finished altogether. sunak will be sunk. rishi will be swimming with the fishes . the whole point with the fishes. the whole point of is you go hard or you go
9:10 pm
home. it's or nothing. brexit is about control of our money , about control of our money, borders, our courts and our trade. you can't a half brexit in the same way that you can't be half pregnant or half drunk . be half pregnant or half drunk. if we're going to do , it's got if we're going to do, it's got to be the whole thing the big kahuna, the full english a full fat, red blooded con virus brexit, not in name only , which brexit, not in name only, which makes a mug of anyone voted for it, and which the colossal opportunity ts that brexit bnngs opportunity ts that brexit brings i've been willing to tolerate thursday's particularly unkind budget, which will deepen the recession in hope that the tough economic medicine currently being administered will facilitate tax cuts and a more competitive in the medium to long term . i know many to long term. i know many conservative supporters hated the autumn statement and they felt that it could have come . felt that it could have come. the pen of keir starmer . but
9:11 pm
the pen of keir starmer. but fiscal prudence is enough of a selling point to me on board at this . but i'm selling point to me on board at this. but i'm not having brexit u—turn because this is about the only thing the tories can hang to on as their support collapses across , the country they were at across, the country they were at least the party to get us out . least the party to get us out. but if they renege on this and allow britain to sleepwalk back the bosom of brussels, they will be out to out of sorts, out order and out of power. a u—turn if you want to this present is not for turning . i'll swallow not for turning. i'll swallow budget on thursday if it delivers the economy, but i'm not having a brexit u—turn. what's your market gb news dot uk you go hard or you go home. that's my view. let me know your thoughts especially if you
9:12 pm
disagree reacting to big opinion and all of the big stories the day we have. emma webb uk , day we have. emma webb uk, director of the common sense society , former gurkha officer society, former gurkha officer and bestselling author adrian hayes and britain's longest serving political editor nigel nelson . emma webb, let me nelson. emma webb, let me welcome you back the show. what's your reaction this we've heard the snake oil language of trade but i'm not buying i smell a rat and everything that you have said, mark other than the fact that i am much, much pessimistic about that budget , i pessimistic about that budget, i think they using economic situation to try and this by suggesting we may need to give away some of our sovereignty and expects accept some eu laws in return for the slight economic benefits . having frictionless benefits. having frictionless trade with the eu , i think it's trade with the eu, i think it's a complete joke. i think jacob rees—mogg was absolutely right . rees—mogg was absolutely right. he said that this is brexit , the he said that this is brexit, the teeth, but instead of having the teeth, but instead of having the teeth they haven't even replaced with dentures. think this is with dentures. i think this is absolutely appalling . i think absolutely appalling. i think the conservative party are so
9:13 pm
off the rails that i don't even them anymore. i think this is devastating and many people around the country will be looking at this with the hairs on the back of neck standing up, feeling, frankly quite sick at it seems they're trying to do because it feels as if they're trying to really screw everybody over. trying to really screw everybody over . adrian hayes, the over. adrian hayes, the government argue they're doing everything they can to boost the british economy. and if that involves fewer trade barriers with the eu, then bring it on. that's their view. what do you think my views on brexit really mirror mervyn king's views about four years ago when the may government they were discussing which way was going to go and, king said. they were advantages in staying in the eu and their advantage in leaving , but there advantage in leaving, but there was no point for seeking the advantages of staying without maximising the advice to leaving . and i think four years on we've got we've lost all the
9:14 pm
advantages, which i think that's just expand a bit. the trade deals with the eu , but all the deals with the eu, but all the supposed benefits of leaving. so you said in your monologue money courts , borders, immigration. we courts, borders, immigration. we have done nothing. why are we done nothing. that's for people's opinion. so i'm sort of now a be honest, it's sort of the fence. however, having said that it's what we did vote for, but we either do it, as you said in your monologue, you do it properly and get all those advantages or because what's in the because we've the meantime? because we've plundered a plundered 400 billion on a certain lockdown. so trade has has perhaps even got the balance and we do need to maximise trade benefits in any way we can so i'm not i don't blame but it does go against what people voted for, what the government promised . voted for, what the government promised. but voted for, what the government promised . but when voted for, what the government promised. but when is this government u—turn on any promises ? nigel nelson number promises? nigel nelson number has said no customs union, no single markets . has said no customs union, no single markets. has this story been missed characterised all our brexit is rightly concerned.
9:15 pm
no i think that this is a deliberate leak by number type and i'm not quite sure how it got there, but i've these things happen before it's floating an without putting any fingerprint on it. so you had steve on the tv this who says that he didn't recognise the story now that's a minister's code for no one's told me about it but it could well be happening. so what i think number ten or up to is wanted to throw it out the they wanted to throw it out the they want to see what the reaction be and sparked debates like this one if it goes against them, it'll be quietly forgotten. if looks like it might have legs , looks like it might have legs, they will gradually bring it forward . and as far as the forward. and as far as the actual deal itself goes, that you're to you just said that you lost the like i did back in 2016. so what we've got do is embrace brexit and problem is that the oven ready deal that
9:16 pm
bofis that the oven ready deal that boris johnson promised is actually pretty half baked . and actually pretty half baked. and what we've got to find is some way of getting brexit done, especially when it comes to northern ireland. and so in the event that we could find , a way event that we could find, a way of making the rules common across the whole uk that's that's effectively being back in the single market and that would solve the northern ireland indeed but that of course is a non—starter after. what do you think about this emma number ten of just flying a kite ? well, i of just flying a kite? well, i hope that the reaction will sink it. i think it's possible that that's what they're doing. and i know that this is something that does happen. but i think all the more reason for people to be very, very that is just very, very that this is just simply not an acceptable suggestion . i also think that suggestion. i also think that under the current given the budget that has just been announced the fact that there will be some people example graduates who in paying back their student loans will overall
9:17 pm
be taxed 51% that this could serve at a party is not looking recognisable . many of those recognisable. many of those people who lent it to use boris johnson's language lent the conservative party their vote 2019. i think they're starting to unrecognisable and think the british public need to be very very clear that things that are fundamentally unconscious services are also completely . services are also completely. adrian hayes briefly, if you can, when are we going to have a prime minister that serious about delivering the opportunities that brexit presents , we're still waiting . a presents, we're still waiting. a quick answer. presents, we're still waiting. a quick answer . look, presents, we're still waiting. a quick answer. look, i think as emma said, the conservative party whatever your politics is not representative of what it promised to be, what it used be. and as i said , i just think and as i said, ijust think i mean, just take one aspects of brexit , our borders we've had brexit, our borders we've had let alone illegal immigrants crossing the channel which gets the publicity. where is the 300,000 the size of a medium sized city in the uk coming to the uk every year. so we're
9:18 pm
already, we've got free of people in practise so i personally don't see much difference actually joining a swiss arrangement where we can to have free movement movement of people officially, but as you say, we just don't have promise. and i'm going to hopefully speak a bit later. but a prime minister with courage. we've got cowards in government and i think the opposition as well. we've got politicians who are lacking actually lacking the ball to actually make hard decisions in walks of political life . lord david frost political life. lord david frost , if you're watching your country needs, you seriously deposit guy in a safe tory seat and let him rescue brexit . and let him rescue brexit. what's your view? market gb news uk fabulous panel. tonight they'll be at 1030 reacting to they'll be at 1030 reacting to the papers, of course, which are already looking pretty explosive . and we'll get their reaction to a range of news agenda topics . well throughout the show so many great talking points tonight can't wait for that all labour right to scrap the house of lords is something we'll be discussing with comedian joe lycett literally shred
9:19 pm
lycett wrong to literally shred a £10,000 during a cost of living crisis part of a stunt and can you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter ? i wears shorts in the winter? i do. is that naughty ? i'm off the do. is that naughty? i'm off the ten. my mark meets. is brexit supporting . former labour mp supporting. former labour mp lord john man who conducted a war against corbyn and one. and don't forget big sam allardyce before ten talking about the world cup . but next up are the world cup. but next up are the tories facing an existential crisis will be asking godfrey bloom and ann widdecombe surely .
9:20 pm
9:21 pm
9:22 pm
big sam allardyce . with us big sam allardyce. with us shortly to talk about the world england playing tomorrow also come wales. seriously i'll be so if either england or wales win the world cup we can. but dream. look before get to that big
9:23 pm
response to my big opinion monologue, steve says , mark, i, monologue, steve says, mark, i, for one, love this brexit pullback because it will usher in a new party who will deliver brexit and rid this of woke and scrounging boat people. it is coming . strong words from steve coming. strong words from steve that we will discuss a potential new destroying the tories very shortly. how about who says mark? i'm so angry at the government already that if they sell out on brexit it will be the first time in my life i would take to the streets in revolt. we to get rid of these cowardly. angela dear mark, europe should be trying to us the best deal as we import from them than we export . so the pm them than we export. so the pm stealthily moving us back into the eu is both immoral unnecessary. mark you're right this will destroy the tory party we as a lifelong tory voters will never vote for them again . will never vote for them again. angela not happy, not pulling her punches . alan with just her punches. alan with just a few words says mark brexit in
9:24 pm
four words, in fact, treasonous , treacherous, traitorous tories in the back pockets of globalists . you go on the anger globalists. you go on the anger is palpable and we'll get some more of your thoughts very shortly. market gb news uk. it's time now for this this. shortly. market gb news uk. it's time now for this this . yes, time now for this this. yes, it's time now for this this. yes, wsfime time now for this this. yes, it's time for the big question in which we tackle a major news story of the day tonight with an inability to get on top of illegal migration, having presided over the woke takeover of our institutions and just inflicted the highest tax since the 1940s. all the concern . the 1940s. all the concern. facing an existential crisis. to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome former tory government minister and bestselling author widdecombe, who joins us sunday at 920. i'm delighted to say. and an old friend of the show format, ukip mep , political format, ukip mep, political commentator godfrey . godfrey do
9:25 pm
commentator godfrey. godfrey do the tories face potential . the tories face potential. extinction well , almost extinction well, almost impossible to that they can continue in this manner the highest tax nation since war. the conservatives have traditionally been in favour small business, low regulation on the small business and all this kind of thing. and they've abandoned debt . we it's quite abandoned debt. we it's quite clear now that rishi sunak takes his instructions from klaus schwab at the wef screamingly obvious. now even rural tories go . probably just about those go. probably just about those stupid people on planet and we have hunt who as chancellor of the exchequer who rejected by the exchequer who rejected by the conservative party rejected by the membership . so we've got by the membership. so we've got these two characters actually in charge who aren't conservatives at all. these people are simply not conservative. we have a supine mainstream media and we have bunk back benchers who are simply cowards frightened to
9:26 pm
actually speak . when rishi sunak actually speak. when rishi sunak said a couple of days ago that he can't stop dover invasion overnight . well, let me put it overnight. well, let me put it this way, mark. i bloody well could mobilise the royal navy, not ten of the buggers, but it can be done overnight. people are just bloody useless . and are just bloody useless. and took comes. you left the conservatives than you were a member of the brexit party and a brexit party mep . do you think brexit party mep. do you think that a smaller party of the right could be a threat to the tories ? i think that if they tories? i think that if they really do go down route to reverse brexit, which is effectively what it is if they really do go down that road, i think they're just at the moment see what happens. but if they do down that route, then i they are certainly done for the next election and i think there could then be a whole question about then be a whole question about the future of the tories now. you know, small parties this
9:27 pm
country and general elections do not do well even when are of the level of importance of the sdp . level of importance of the sdp. if you remember back in the eighties you had huge figures and everybody said, yes, this is it is a sea change in british politics. no, it wasn't because i'm a general. politics. no, it wasn't because i'm a general . everybody politics. no, it wasn't because i'm a general. everybody is asking themselves one question. they're not asking who do they want? they're asking who they don't want. and that was why the brexit party couldn't make any headway in the last general election. for the simple reason people were saying congress is letting corbyn in. therefore most must vote the conservatives. so i don't think that any time in the near we're going to see a small party used up the conservative position . up the conservative position. but i think after the next election that threat could become bigger , however, and become bigger, however, and smaller parties of the right, the heritage party, ukip reform
9:28 pm
uk don't they risk diluting the votes on the right and diluting the tories support and gifting keir number ten which is surely the worst scenario for any concern motive supporter well as i've just said , the mere fact i've just said, the mere fact that small parties don't do well in elections means that frankly it doesn't much matter if there are 506 small parties. but but and ukip all reform uk could stop tories winning in marginal constituencies . hang on let me constituencies. hang on let me finish what i was saying. i didn't think it actually matters and for this reason that the last general nigel stood down all the brexit candidates against all the conservatives , against all the conservatives, he didn't want to risk corbyn . he didn't want to risk corbyn. now, you know, maybe we could have we could have taken of those marginal seats that are likely . it is those marginal seats that are likely. it is we those marginal seats that are likely . it is we would simply likely. it is we would simply have sent them to the nearest opponent. but we might just have
9:29 pm
taken some of those seats. well, we wouldn't ever going to do was to form a majority and that was at the back of thinking. now i'm being very realistic, i would love i really would love a new party of genuine conservative low tax small state making the most of strong defence, strong law and order low in aggression, all those i would like to see and i do believe it's perfectly possible for the conservatives do that. but for a small party to come from nowhere and do it, i don't want to be a wet blanket , but i actually , in all reality , but i actually, in all reality think it's unlike clegg in the near future . the near future. near future. the near future. godfrey, let's talk about this possible threat to the conservative party at the next election from , smaller parties election from, smaller parties of the right. do you with and or do you think actually the likes of richard could keep rishi
9:30 pm
sunak of number ten. well i totally agree with that and you know i was a founding member virtually ukip. know i was a founding member virtually ukip . it took us 20 virtually ukip. it took us 20 years to build ukip. it took us 20 years of hard and delivering leaflets and knocking on doors. and most of the time it looked absolutely impossible that could do it. and we got the referee them and we won the referendum all. the people , the people that all. the people, the people that want to leave, we all got on that and that and that was good. but as hammond says, you build these parties overnight . and of these parties overnight. and of course, it's tribal example. there are constituencies in country where if people didn't vote conservative, if i live in one, and how did and hold nest. holderness people here they think they didn't vote and served if their hand simply drop off if they went into the into the booth and voted for anybody but the conservative party it's totally tribal it almost doesn't matter how bad these
9:31 pm
conservatives are or how conservatives are or how conservative they are, they will always have that core vote . and always have that core vote. and of course, we talk left and right, which i think is a little bit passe. what we're talking about here is the left are all also homeless. where is the old labour party you'll be talking to john mann later on. yeah that was old labour, noble sticking up for the english indigenous working man . never up for the english indigenous working man. never mind up for the english indigenous working man . never mind the working man. never mind the engush working man. never mind the english middle class business people. nobody standing up for anybody who is a good, honest british. they've been abandoned .look british. they've been abandoned . look at this. we're sending money to the ukraine. we're sending money to the ukraine. we're sendin g £1,000,000,000 a month sending £1,000,000,000 a month in foreign aid . we've got index in foreign aid. we've got index unked in foreign aid. we've got index linked public sector pensions. we've nearly a thousand paying goes. you this the budget that was just talking about was a disaster he's increasing our tax almost exactly the same amount he's increasing it by he's sending abroad he's sending it to abroad. it's scandalous he
9:32 pm
should be in the tower of london . this isn't a clever budget. this isn't an austerity budget. i reach out to 200 billion a year that's still going . these year that's still going. these people have absolutely no idea how to run an economy they're hopeless. but course, we don't run ourselves anymore. we've got to admit that. we don't run ourselves anymore. this is a world economic forum. it's globalism they all have the same phrases. build back better, etc. etc, etc. parliament is mute. the house of lords mute even now even now. sadly, we have monarch who is on the side of wef. this is tragedy and it's not going to get any time soon. we'll look obviously many would question where the evidence that rishi sunakis where the evidence that rishi sunak is somehow globalist puppet. but i will say, godfrey, you're not the only one to take that view. what seems very clear and is that the tories at the moment are in the hands of the
9:33 pm
tory. who, of course, margaret thatcher battled in the eighties, the left of the party. do you think that the tories change and be more on brexit and immigration or ? are they now immigration or? are they now institutionally wing? they being institutionally wing? they being institutionally left ever since david cameron and we had that very brief period when we had bofis very brief period when we had boris and, then we had liz truss when it looked if we were going in a slightly different direction. but i mean, you know, david cameron perfectly david cameron was perfectly happy, lib dem happy, happy with the lib dem coalition that he was part he was perfectly happy with that . was perfectly happy with that. he would have been perfectly happy for it to continue. don't look because if you know the takeover the tory wets is takeover by the tory wets is something going something new, it's been going on which why have on for years which why we have resolutely repel all woke stuff it's all part of that and of course what we're now seeing is the triumph , the remainers, it's the triumph, the remainers, it's people who want to get us back into the eu under stand that they can't do it just like that.
9:34 pm
but you want to start the building blocks of that off and what we need to make sure that the entire red wall understands that you know all the seats there will be lost if it actually back on brexit mean it's bad enough they wrote back on every other promise that they made in manifesto. i know yvonne i buy entirely that you know we had covid and, we had an emergency and now we've ukraine and by the way i disagree with completely musk send money abroad to ukraine we you know we have an interest in what happens with russia and ukraine we have a very serious interest in it so i think we have to do not but not much said liz truss. if she bungled the delivery completely and probably deserved what came but nevertheless yes she was speaking tory. oh no you make the country attract enough to investment you come plead with
9:35 pm
the eu you free up people's money so that they can decide what to do with it. you make it worthwhile setting up enterprise . you make it work for other people coming abroad to work. if you don't do that by out a message, come to britain and taxed to the eyeballs and we widdecombe that's the best monologue we've had on this show for a long time. my deep to an who returns in a week's time and wonderful to welcome godfrey bloom back to show former ukip mep and dropper of truth bombs. what's your reaction market gb news dot uk coming up after ted mark meets guest is brexit former labour mp very much the voice of common sense within the labour party. hugely lord john man who conducted a war against jeremy corbyn and one plus we got the papers at 1030 with full panel reaction. but next, one of the most highly regarded and
9:36 pm
success poll managers of his generation and of course, former england head coach sam allardyce is .
9:37 pm
9:38 pm
9:39 pm
well the football world cup in qatar kicked off this afternoon after 12 years of controversy since the gulf nation was awarded the competition. the hosts lost two nil to ecuador in the opening game . england kick the opening game. england kick off their tournament tomorrow afternoon against iran. wales face the usa in their first world cup for 64 years and the prime ister is even getting in the mood. take a look back to a high .
9:40 pm
high. i quite like that anyway. come on, england, and come on, wales. joining me now to discuss england and wales is prospects. this year is one of the most highly regarded and successful managers of his generation and of course, former england head coach as well. sam allardyce. evening, gaffer . good evening coach as well. sam allardyce. evening, gaffer. good evening . evening, gaffer. good evening. absolute privilege to have you on the show. i'll start with an easy one, sam. can england win the world cup ? yes, i think they the world cup? yes, i think they can . i think we're all looking can. i think we're all looking forward to it. even the last and that the difficult time in the nafions that the difficult time in the nations cup. and i think that now that's over. i think that's after the last world cup , the after the last world cup, the euro championships and this squad and the manager and his coaching staff have enough experience to take us all the way this time whenever we need to. and obviously when we get there, that's it. that's a different matter. but certainly i think they've got the
9:41 pm
capabilities and know the talent and the experience both in the backroom staff and in the squad . what's your appraisal? what's .what's your appraisal? what's your appraisal, sam, of the mentality of the team? we know the talent's there , but what the talent's there, but what about their frame of mind? well i think the frame of mind should be. should be very, very good based on the international football and what's happened in the premier league and not what's what's happened to him before that. i think that they know that in the last two big major competitions in the world, they've done absolutely beyond expectation . so this time that expectation. so this time that bnngs expectation. so this time that brings a little bit more pressure that's absolutely certain about that. but they got to accept that pressure and they got to use it in a positive manner. and go out there and prove that they can go all the way again and this time try and win it . sam, way again and this time try and win it. sam, will the way again and this time try and win it . sam, will the whole win it. sam, will the whole climate be a factor for all british players ? well, i'm sure
9:42 pm
british players? well, i'm sure i'm back from dubai now, so it's about 28 degrees. and of course , that means that it has eased off a huge amount . so i think off a huge amount. so i think the temperature is not enough to worry the players. and of course , the sports science team behind the england squad. i've no idea in terms of mixing up their nutrition , their fluids, their nutrition, their fluids, their electrolytes . so i think that electrolytes. so i think that side of it will be absolutely fine. i think what is maybe a problem is a little bit of mental fatigue with the amount of pressure. they've had them with the games they played last summer and of course played in the premier league . that's left the premier league. that's left them not too much time to rest up to go into this massive to implement . what's your view sam implement. what's your view sam , of the world cup taking place in qatar . i , of the world cup taking place in qatar. i think we've lost , of the world cup taking place in qatar . i think we've lost the in qatar. i think we've lost the line to big sam. what an absolute hero. oh, sam , sam,
9:43 pm
absolute hero. oh, sam, sam, you're back. sorry. we just lost you're back. sorry. we just lost you for a second. what do you think about qatar being the hosts this season ? well, i think hosts this season? well, i think we would have preferred that it wasn't that it wasn't there. but i mean, they were never going to change it. it is what it is. and i mean, listen, i've worked in be in sport, so i can't be a hypocrite and stop criticising that. but, you know, we have the goals, we have the football well, we have the boxing . you well, we have the boxing. you know, we have the formula one all come . pete pace won't all come. pete pace won't compete . it's out in those compete. it's out in those countries now. so yes, you know, we can talk about it. yes. we've got to try and use it to see if we can help them change somewhat. and i think they will. but you have to you know, in my room for me, for the amount of money they spent , i room for me, for the amount of money they spent, i mean, 120 billion and absolute at this fabulous state stadiums and hopefully a trouble free world cup particular with the funds. i mean to be able to themselves
9:44 pm
and i'm not just talking about the england fans , i'm talking the england fans, i'm talking about all funds. sam gareth, sorry . gary lineker and also sorry. gary lineker and also gary neville and david beckham have received criticism for going to this tournament and in beckham's case, being the face of qatar . do they deserve the of qatar. do they deserve the criticism that they're receiving . an criticism that they're receiving. an football, it's always criticise more than any other sport . football, it's always criticise more than any other sport. i mean, i pointed out that , you mean, i pointed out that, you know, people like lewis hamilton on go win the formula one and earn 40, 50 million or 60, 70 million, whatever is the tennis players, the golf look at live golf. i think the last last live golf. i think the last last live golf from the winner was a $60 million or something like that. so yes, it's difficult . the so yes, it's difficult. the boxing . but then 80 million each boxing. but then 80 million each and the last boxing match and you know so it is what it is we
9:45 pm
are that set due to move on and continue to try and change it of course. but you know, we have to accept these countries pay a lot of money to get the best sports and of course, the best entertainers in the world in their countries, because they're trying to change. they're trying to they're trying to entice us more go to countries. more to go to these countries. and, course , at the moment, and, of course, at the moment, they're pretty good job they're doing a pretty good job of two more quick ones for of it. two more quick ones for you, golfer, before you go their first world cup game since 1958. how far can wales go ? well, how far can wales go? well, listen , i'm not i want you to do listen, i'm not i want you to do exceptionally well. you know, i wanted to try and, you know, beat beat usa . it's, i wanted to try and, you know, beat beat usa. it's, i think in the first game and that would give them a huge amount coming in. and that memory is on your screen now, we are the absolute key to that. you keeping faith. you keep him top of his game. you keep him on top of his game. you've got to the world cup and let's hope you can go. go let's hope you can go. you go a lot let's hope you can lot farther. let's hope you can try and out those group
9:46 pm
try and get out those group stages. and of course, it's the same with england. it looks easy for but i think for england, but i think no world easy. you've world cup game is easy. you've got come and to make sure got to come and try to make sure you the job, particularly in you do the job, particularly in the group stages. sam, you're one my absolute football and one of my absolute football and sporting a privilege sporting heroes, a privilege to have program, and have you on the program, and i believe you'll joining in believe you'll be joining us in a week's to check in on a week's time to check in on england wales progress. england and wales is progress. thank much . thank you. thank you so much. thank you. thanks for having me. and just one note, i hope those stories sorted out because it absolutely get it on my nerves. by the way , what an absolute shambles . , what an absolute shambles. we'll talk about that next week as well . put we'll talk about that next week as well. put big sam we'll talk about that next week as well . put big sam in we'll talk about that next week as well. put big sam in charge of england. he'll get us up . of england. he'll get us up. thank you, sam. we see you in a week's time right here. and well done to produce a greg for a cracking booking . all the big cracking booking. all the big names speak to mark dolan tonight. coming up next, after ten, my moat meets guest is brexit supporting former labour mp lord john mann who conducted a war against jeremy corbyn and won the next stop with my brilliant panel. all labour
9:47 pm
right to scrap the house of lords. we'll find out why it matters to you .
9:48 pm
9:49 pm
9:50 pm
next welcome back to mount dolan tonight. coming up in my take it ten at the top of the next hour, i'll be responding to the news that donald trump is back on twitter and he's annoying all of the right people. but with me now reacting to the big stories of the day, my fabulous panel of emma webb, uk director of the common sense society. what's not to like? paul mcgurk, an officer and bestselling author. adrian hayes and britain's longest serving political editor nigel nelson . great to have all three nelson. great to have all three of you with me now. the labour leader, keir starmer has announced plans for a new elective chamber to replace the house of lords. this is all part of the party's bid to what they describe as restore trust in
9:51 pm
politics and stop what they call lackeys and donors from becoming peers. but is this the right move on labour rights to scrap the house of lords? nigel no , the house of lords? nigel no, and the problem really is that our constitution is kind of evolved. it's not like france or america or russia where there's a violent revolution . we've done a violent revolution. we've done it through evil . and if you it through evil. and if you start tinkering around with the constitution , there are constitution, there are unintended consequences . there unintended consequences. there was a fantastic report about this, about the idea of reform by john wakim, the former tory cabinet minister, and what he said is that the lords is completely bonkers and on paper, yeah , on the 21st century, the yeah, on the 21st century, the idea you've got 26 clerics who become legislators is as of right, makes us look more like iran than a western nation . iran than a western nation. however, the point he was making was if you start taking these these various breaches of the
9:52 pm
constitution away, so say for instance, you threw the bishops out. would that because that is their link with the state with that and with the church just establishing . and if that establishing. and if that happens , would we not start happens, would we not start thinking about the monarchy? yeah. given that the king is the head of the church, you take a plank of his his basic function away and so wake commit point was not that all these things would happen, but the moment you start fiddling with it, it might happen and we could end up without a monarchy . yes. emma, without a monarchy. yes. emma, do you think the awarding peerages has been abused and is that why the house , the house of that why the house, the house of lords has been brought in to disrepute? well, i think i think part of it was the as you say, in our constitutional, it's evolved over time. i in our constitutional, it's evolved overtime. i agree in our constitutional, it's evolved over time. i agree with everything that you've said. the evolved over time. i agree with everthat|g that you've said. the evolved over time. i agree with everthat we 1at you've said. the evolved over time. i agree with everthat we broughtfe said. the evolved over time. i agree with everthat we brought insaid. the evolved over time. i agree with everthat we brought in this the and that we brought in this system people . and system of appointing people. and so actually the people in the house of lords who are elected
9:53 pm
are the hereditary peers who were elected there by the other peers . and so i think that that peers. and so i think that that thatis peers. and so i think that that that is part of the problem, the choices of who gets appointed of course. but i agree that you shouldn't start meddling with these constitutional things. we keep this that these keep seeing this that these dramatic constitutional changes are getting bandied about by all sorts of people left, right and centre, with no real appreciation for the gradual development of these institutions . and throughout institutions. and throughout constitutional history . and i constitutional history. and i actually think that this is something that i'd imagine that many viewers will feel that this chimes with them, that their institutions like the monarchy, the house of lords, inspire a feel amongst people, a feeling of affection , because they are of affection, because they are our institutions . and that's one our institutions. and that's one of the reasons why i think that people really will not, unless they are radical republican . and they are radical republican. and i don't think there will be many people who want to get on board with this idea of abolishing the house of lords. and of course,
9:54 pm
if you follow the logic of having by appointing having start by appointing people away from people and moving away from hereditary periods, course hereditary periods, of course ends tending the direction ends up tending in the direction of elected house. that of having an elected house. that is a dramatic constitution will change. agree. i think change. and i agree. i think that ends up the that that ends up with the disestablishment of the church and brings the and then that brings the monarchy question, because monarchy into question, because the establishment of the church and monarchy two and the monarchy are two interdependent and aspects of our constitution. the hereditary peers really kept that on the bafis peers really kept that on the basis because the monarchy basis that because the monarchy is hereditary. so you have to keep principle going in the keep that principle going in the house of lords, this is chesterton's fens. if it ain't broke, fix it. but if you broke, don't fix it. but if you don't that fence is don't know why that fence is there, don't move it until there, you don't move it until you know, you so it's a you know, you know. so it's a very delicate constitutional ecosystem shouldn't ecosystem and we shouldn't be messing don't you messing with it. well, don't you think broken? i think the think it is broken? i think the whole honest system an utter whole honest system is an utter embarrassment to this country. the whole period of knighthoods are in cornflakes are given out in the cornflakes , for honours . the , peerages cash for honours. the whole system is as a farce . whole system is as a farce. having said that, i can get your obe there's chance . no, no. obe. there's no chance. no, no. having said that, i do. i do agree with tampering with our
9:55 pm
constitution is a delicate thing. i also i also think just because something's bad doesn't mean the replacement is any better . look at saddam hussein better. look at saddam hussein and iraq . and the third thing is and iraq. and the third thing is that the most important thing on the agenda right now and probably not. but i do think it needs a reform. it's not abolishing. it doesn't need a serious reform . and stop this serious reform. and stop this that ex prime minister's honours and all the things because it's just it's becoming a farce. isn't this a cheap headline grabbing gimmick from keir starmer, given that we're battling a cost of living crisis , what do you do? promise this? i mean, the trouble is every labour leader has a go at this. tony blair did the same thing and never achieved. keir starmer made a promise when he became leader. it would be one of the things he would do. i doubt very much he'll get around it much he'll get around to it ehhen much he'll get around to it either. interesting what either. interesting stuff. what do we still need do you think? do we still need the of lords market ? the house of lords market? gbnews.uk and i'm very excited because in the next hour my mock meets guest is the man that took on jeremy corbyn and one lord
9:56 pm
john man is live in the studio. ex labour mp, of course a big supporter of brexit. i'll ask him how he thinks that is going and he might take it. ten donald trump's return to twitter is annoying. all of the right people. you either believe in free speech or you don't. plus, we've got tomorrow's papers live and uninterrupted . at 1030 with and uninterrupted. at 1030 with and uninterrupted. at 1030 with a full panel reaction . so much a full panel reaction. so much to get through. see you shortly .
9:57 pm
9:58 pm
9:59 pm
are labour right to want to aboush are labour right to want to abolish the house of lords ? abolish the house of lords? that's been a big topic with my panel that's been a big topic with my panel. strong reaction on email market gbnews.uk. john says mark, do we need an elected house of lords? after all, we've got an elected house of commons. and look at their track record
10:00 pm
and this explosive stuff from marion, who says mark on the point of abolishing the house of lords, labour are absolutely right. the young complain about the baby boomers generation getting a small pension rise and how the young are having to do without. if we abolish the house of lords, think of all the millions we would save instead of all these. jeremy hat of paying all these. jeremy hat tncks of paying all these. jeremy hat tricks to sit half comatose in parliament. it's the disgrace that has to stop now. marion, thank you for that. those thank you for that. keep those emails coming. it's exactly 10:00 and this is mark dolan tonight . my mark guest is tonight. my mark meets guest is brexit supporting former labour mp john mann. he's live in the studio. he opposed jeremy corbyn and he's got quite the story to tell as he now sits in the house of lords in the news agenda. with my panel as comedian joe lycett is shredding with my panel as comedian joe lycett is shreddin g £10,000 in lycett is shredding £10,000 in part of an online stunt. is he wrong to do that during a cost of living crisis ? and can you of living crisis? and can you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter is good enough for my
10:01 pm
postman, steve, do you wear shorts in the winter ? let me shorts in the winter? let me know. mark at gbnews.uk. i'm happy to run some photos if you've got any class, we've got tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030, but after this, my take it ten. donald trump is back on twitter and he's annoying all the right people . i'm sorry, the right people. i'm sorry, folks, but free speech is non—negotiable . find out more non—negotiable. find out more after the headlines with rhiannon jones. after the headlines with rhiannon jones . mark, thank you. rhiannon jones. mark, thank you. your top stories from the gb newsroom. england manager gareth southgate has confirmed his players will take the knee before their world cup opener against iran tomorrow. the tournament kicked off today with the hosts qatar beaten to nil by ecuador. the hosts qatar beaten to nil by ecuador . it's the first time the ecuador. it's the first time the event's been held in a muslim country in the middle east and the build up of spain overshadowed by a number of controversies . the football controversies. the football association is trying to get clarification over whether captains will be booked if they
10:02 pm
wear the one love armband. nine countries, including england and wales, had planned to wear it to promote diversity and inclusion . wales join england in kicking off their campaign tomorrow against the usa. it's their first world cup appearance in 64 years. captain gareth bale says he hopes his teams achieve that will inspire a generation . gb will inspire a generation. gb news spoke to welsh fans in qatar about what it means to them. it's crazy . i qatar about what it means to them. it's crazy. i mean, qatar about what it means to them. it's crazy . i mean, 64 them. it's crazy. i mean, 64 years, i believe we finally made it in feel like this is one of our last opportunities is really as this take taking the most out of this generation of players . of this generation of players. so really excited. you ever think you'd see this day? no, no . never felt proud to be welsh to be here. yeah, absolutely . to be here. yeah, absolutely. yeah. yeah. we hope so. that we really do hope that wales do beat england . well, it wasn't beat england. well, it wasn't a great start for some fans ahead of kick off tonight. there were
10:03 pm
chaotic scenes at the fifa fan festival . the venue can hold up festival. the venue can hold up to 40,000 people for at least double try to gain access for and a while organisers were letting in too many people into the holding area. it took place around an hour to get frustrated supporters back out of the venue . an supporters back out of the venue. an year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of two young children in a flat fire in nottingham . in a flat fire in nottingham. fire and rescue were called to an address from close in clifton in the early hours of this morning. the children aged one and three were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation but later died and hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition . and in the critical condition. and in the us, the governor of colorado has described a shooting in a gay nightclub in which five people were killed and 18 injured. a senseless act of evil . police senseless act of evil. police say the suspect, a 22 year old,
10:04 pm
and cindy eldridge, opened fire that several people risked their own lives trying to stop him. his currently in custody and receiving treatment for his injuries. the motive for the attack is not yet known . tv attack is not yet known. tv online on dab+ radio's this is gb news now is back to mark tennis night. my tennis night. my thanks to the brilliant rhiannon jones who returns in an hours rhiannon jones who returns in an hour's time . welcome to mark hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. big stories, big guests and always big opinions in the news agenda with my panel was comedian joe lycett wrong to shred was comedian joe lycett wrong to shre d £10,000 during a cost of shred £10,000 during a cost of living crisis? it was all part of an internet stunt. but is it the wrong look as people are struggling to pay their bills? and can you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter ? wears shorts in the winter? we'll discuss that burning topic
10:05 pm
later. plus, tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030 sharp with a full panel reaction tonight. i'm delighted to welcome emma webb, uk director of the common sense society , britain's longest society, britain's longest serving political editor. nigel nelson , and former gurkha nelson, and former gurkha officer and bestselling author adrian hayes. plus my mark meets guest is brexit supporting former labour mp john mann . lots former labour mp john mann. lots to get through. he's in the studio shortly. but first it's time for my take . a ten the time for my take. a ten the return of donald trump to twitter is annoying. all of the right people as the world's first orange president returns to this social media platform, it's a victory for him, a victory for his supporters. and most important , only a victory most important, only a victory for free speech because you can love donald trump or you can hate him, but free speech is
10:06 pm
non—negotiable . it doesn't come non—negotiable. it doesn't come with terms and conditions. non—negotiable. it doesn't come with terms and conditions . the with terms and conditions. the late, great winston churchill , late, great winston churchill, as always, put it perfectly , he as always, put it perfectly, he said, everyone is in favour of free speech. hardly a day goes by without it being extolled, but some people's idea of free speech is that they are free to say what they like. but if anyone else says anything back , anyone else says anything back, thatis anyone else says anything back, that is an outrage . so true . the that is an outrage. so true. the ridiculous, ridiculous overreach of the tech censors in america who are highly politically motivated is demonstrated by the fact that the russian government , the iranian regime and the taliban , no less, have a twitter taliban, no less, have a twitter accounts. whilst the previous incumbent of the white house, donald trump, a man who has never started a single war. unlike many of his predecessors , lay in digital exile all over the last couple of years. tech censorship has got so bad unelected out of touch, a us based hoodie wearing billionaires have been imposing their politics on the world,
10:07 pm
whether we like it or not. facebook twitter, instagram and others are now the new town square. and we've seen debate stifled as a critical time in human history. take stifled as a critical time in human history . take twitter, for human history. take twitter, for example , permanently suspending example, permanently suspending a journalist called alex berenson . and this was for his berenson. and this was for his tweets about covid lockdowns and the vaccine, which did not fit the vaccine, which did not fit the narrative and which did not make for pretty reading . his make for pretty reading. his tweets about covid measures and the jab were truly shocking and highly controversial . how could highly controversial. how could such dangerous misinformation be allowed on twitter? he was, of course , suspended from the course, suspended from the platform for life. well, alex berenson, like so many heroes of history, knew that he had right on his side . history, knew that he had right on his side. he took history, knew that he had right on his side . he took twitter to on his side. he took twitter to court and demonstrated that all of those controversial, shocking and outrageous tweets were him simply sharing official
10:08 pm
government data . he was quite government data. he was quite simply publishing the facts for which he was cancelled. well, he stood up to the censorious scumbags in silicon valley, and he won . it's not up to woke he won. it's not up to woke billionaires in san francisco or palo alto to frame the parameters of free speech, the ability to express your view, however unfashionable or unpalatable, is sacred to western values and the foundation of our great democracies . anything within the democracies. anything within the law is fair game. knock yourself out. countless brave men and women have fought and died for freedom of speech , which is why freedom of speech, which is why i won't stand by as it gets pickpocketed by a narcissistic twentysomething in california deciding what's acceptable and what isn't so. welcome back, donald. i'm already looking forward to those late night tweets in capital letters. keep doing what you do best, tapping out your opinions on a computer and triggering the world after
10:09 pm
all the keyboard is mightier than the sword . react to that. than the sword. react to that. and at tomorrow's papers live at 1030 is my all star panel. i'm delighted to welcome so many fabulous figures. we've got emma webb. we've also got nigel nelson and adrian hayes. brilliant stuff. let me start with you if i can, emma, because you are very involved in, i think the uk director of the common sense society . but was it common sense society. but was it common sense reinstating donald trump? oh yes. common sense reinstating donald trump? oh yes . and also as as trump? oh yes. and also as as formerly a the deputy research director of the free speech union. i'm very pleased to see what has been a clear pushback against , as what has been a clear pushback against, as you were describing them up , tech censorship, big them up, tech censorship, big tech censorship . and i think you tech censorship. and i think you hit on a really important point there, which is about misinformation . you know, who is misinformation. you know, who is the arbitrator of what counts as
10:10 pm
misinformation ? we saw this misinformation? we saw this dunng misinformation? we saw this during covid with youtube removing videos that counted as misinformation in and a lot of those things turned out in the end to be true. so i think that this is this is fantastic news. a good move from emperor ellen, who actually did this democratically . she did this democratically. she did this with a twitter poll asking whether or not trump should be reinstated . he won. he did reinstated. he won. he did reinstated. he won. he did reinstate him . and i think that reinstate him. and i think that it was absurd that donald trump was was removed from the platform in the first place. i in terms of free speech, i agree with you, mark. i think anything short of incitement , with you, mark. i think anything short of incitement, you with you, mark. i think anything short of incitement , you know, short of incitement, you know, should be should be fair game. and it's important that these platforms are the public square that everybody should be able to share their opinion. and somebody like donald trump is a very important figure in american politics. and it's important that his opinion isn't censored on platforms that have so many users. as twitter . censored on platforms that have so many users. as twitter. nigel nelson it's not about liking
10:11 pm
donald trump. that's not the point, is it? no, it's not. but we have to be . and it was we have to be. and it was talking about anything short of incitement . that is exactly what incitement. that is exactly what donald trump was removed from twitter for . that he was accused twitter for. that he was accused of inciting violence. and so the rules that apply to anybody else should actually apply to donald trump. and the idea of actually doing a poll to decide whether he comes back, especially on twitter , seems to be nonsense. twitter, seems to be nonsense. i mean , you know, musk himself mean, you know, musk himself accepts that an awful lot of the voters were actually bots who were just just generating generating traffic. so i'm not too fussed about about donald trump being back on twitter. i do think, though, the rules should apply to him and it was right to actually remove him when he did and certainly free speech is a really important thing to have. but there have but equally the caveats to that in the sense that free speech
10:12 pm
has to be responsible speech, but nigel nelson that he incited the attack on the capitol . it's the attack on the capitol. it's a matter of opinion and it shouldn't certainly shouldn't be the matter of opinion of a 20 something in an office in california . you know, i mean, california. you know, i mean, i agree with that. that is that it was certainly it was twitter's opinion rather than something that that where donald trump had broken the law. but that was the rules that that twitter imposed, that if you don't like the rules that if you don't like the rules that they have , don't go on that they have, don't go on twitter and the point i'm making there is that given that those rules existed , donald trump rules existed, donald trump breached them , somebody else breached them, somebody else would have been thrown off for doing the same thing. and so should he have been. well, adrian hayes , what do you think? adrian hayes, what do you think? you're a former military man and as i mentioned in my monologue, people have fought and died to preserve our freedoms, including freedom of speech . is donald freedom of speech. is donald trump's restoration to twitter an of just that? an example of just that? i always pinch myself every remembrance. sunday they die for our freedoms. and yet we've been
10:13 pm
so willing to give these away in the last few years. look, i think i agree with nigel actually having a twitter poll whether you should reinstate donald not a bit donald trump or not was a bit bizarre. it's about a good representation of society's views as a recent yougov polls, but i must admit i found when trump was banned from twitter, it was banned for life. remember, i felt very uneasy. and this is i'm not cheerleader for donald trump, but i just thought your banning a former president is on the on the very loose connection that he incited violence. so i disagree , nigel, violence. so i disagree, nigel, perhaps on that one. and i think the whole point this is this actually this story is not about donald trump is about as you said in your monologue, marc, it's about big tech corporations being censored of free speech in society . i believe big tech and society. i believe big tech and social media companies are completely out of control. and who they? who they ? who are they? who are they? unelected or unelected officials or unelected? 20 year olds in an office california to decide office in california to decide what should read or not read? what we should read or not read? we're all big boys and girls. we
10:14 pm
can decide ourselves what's can decide for ourselves what's misinformation, disinformation . misinformation, disinformation. and this is where i've got a very big problem. it's a different but different subject, but the online, called online safety online, so called online safety bill, also censorship bill, which is also censorship and in name . but yes. so it's and in name. but yes. so it's not about trump , it's about not about trump, it's about censorship, free speech and about letting all of us choose what we can read and not read anywhere. but nelson and anywhere. but nigel nelson and adrian hayes return at exactly 1030 sharp for tomorrow's papers. looking forward to that. also in the news agenda with my panel was comedian joe lycett wrong to shred £10,000 as part of an online stunt during a cost of an online stunt during a cost of living crisis? and can you trust a man who wears shorts in the winter ? lots to get through, the winter? lots to get through, but fully clothed, including long trousers . my mark means long trousers. my mark means guest next is brexit supporting former labour mp john madden, who's in the house of lords now. he's in the studio. lots of questions. see you .
10:15 pm
10:16 pm
10:17 pm
10:18 pm
in three. big reaction on email to the big talking points of the day. donald trump is back on twitter. is that good news for free speech? that's the theme of my take it ten, which ben from all digital team is currently crafting into a clip. if you missed my big opinion at the start of the show and the suggestion that the tories are trying to reverse brexit, well, that's at all twitter handle at gb news right now. but let's get to your emails market gb news dot uk and dave on donald trump says mark the inciting of violence on the capitol riots. nigel your guest needs to read the precise pension script . dave the precise pension script. dave is pretty much sticking up for donald trump. there chris says hi mark. trump's tweets about january the sixth are available to see and they are all about being peaceful and respecting the boys in blue. how that inches the boys in blue. how that incites violence beats me. and
10:19 pm
well, here's a great one for you for later in the show, you trust a man who wear shorts in the winter. this from sb who says anyone over the age of ten who wears shorts needs help. they go thank you very much for that. to the point , it's thank you very much for that. to the point, it's time thank you very much for that. to the point , it's time now thank you very much for that. to the point, it's time now for this . i could the point, it's time now for this. i could be wearing shorts, couldn't i? under this desk. you'd never know it is time now for marc meets, in which i speak to the biggest names in the world of politics, showbiz, sports, business and beyond. tonight, the most tonight, one of the most respected labour figures respected labour party figures of a man who of recent years, a man who backed brexit but opposed jeremy corbyn and who has since leaving the commons been appointed the government's on government's adviser on antisemitism , a former mp and antisemitism, a former mp and now a member of the house of lords, jon mann . and let's take lords, jon mann. and let's take a look at when lord mann confronted former labour mayor of london, ken livingstone, following allegations of anti—semitism lying, racist rant . why do you should not see a
10:20 pm
politics apologist? i'm apologist. here to discuss the apologist, livingstone . go back apologist, livingstone. go back and check what hitler did. go back and check what hitler did. there's a book called mein kampf. you've obviously uploaded it in britain in 1925. you're mad that. yes, you've never read it and you dare say you dare saying hitler final exam is a giraffe. you've lost it . you giraffe. you've lost it. you didn't have a choice and you need have it . and i'm delighted need have it. and i'm delighted to say lord john mann joins me now . hello, john. good evening now. hello, john. good evening to you, man. you don't pull your punches , especially when it's punches, especially when it's a cause about which you're passionate. well, sometimes you have to say what you think and when have to g arises, you when you have to g arises, you should do so . i must of course should do so. i must of course apologise , guys, for swearing apologise, guys, for swearing and often terrible thing to do . and often terrible thing to do. yes, well, my mother would know . my mother would not have been happy. well, look, i'm swearing in terms time of day, in terms of the time of day, you'll find your post watershed. but do you do you have any regrets about way regrets about the way you conducted yourself in that exchange? whatsoever.
10:21 pm
exchange? none whatsoever. absolutely what absolutely none. i said what i thought needed to be said and, you know, i cameras happened to be there. there this kind of be there. there is this kind of a mythology that you can just whistle and get a camera crew. i wish it was that easy. and i'd organise this not just happen to bump into him . and he said some bump into him. and he said some things. i thought were unacceptable and that was a chance just to put him right. he didn't want to debate . why do didn't want to debate. why do some aspects of the left have such an issue with and semitism? what's going on? what's behind that? it's deep rooted in people's psyche in the in their heads. people's psyche in the in their heads . and they they they buy heads. and they they they buy into some of the conspiracy theories that, you know, things are wrong. someone's to blame him. well the jews and it's serious been going for on a long time and i don't don't forget, you know, some people said, oh, the jews killed jesus . not quite the jews killed jesus. not quite true . rather misses the point of
10:22 pm
true. rather misses the point of who jesus was not the best. but but but that's been around a long time. yeah and it gets in deep. long time. yeah and it gets in deep . and in this country , deep. and in this country, jewish people have been quite successful academically for example, in science, in business , and of general doing well. and that's found it. people on the left for that much easier there for them to uh to separate it out. the jews for abuse and it needs calling out and i would do it if someone abused you or anybody else. and i'll do it if anyone is abusing our jewish anyone is abusing ourjewish community and do you think the mainstream labour party has now been rid of the ghost of anti semitism? yes, it has. i mean, it was going be easy in my it was going to be easy in my view . i it was going to be easy in my view. i always it was going to be easy in my view . i always thought it would view. i always thought it would be easy because most of them ran away out of the labour away back out of the labour party. the people who'd come in, who weren't there before , and who weren't there before, and the hand cut over there before , the hand cut over there before, i mean, they've been broken. and
10:23 pm
for keir starmer, it's, it's very easy to sort out your own party very easy to sort out your own party leaders . the opposition party leaders. the opposition doesn't run the country , doesn't run the country, therefore he can't make the big decisions. it is only oppose what the government does. his his chance to prove himself . and his chance to prove himself. and i'm not the slightest bit surprised he's grabbed that with some glee and said, i consult the labour party out there is a problem and i will sort it out. i'm having these people out and we found it very, very easy to get rid of them. you were no fan of jeremy corbyn. how much damage has he done to the labour party ? well, he virtually party? well, he virtually destroyed the labour party in in the sense that, i mean i warned the sense that, i mean i warned the moment you stood and i told all those against him that this man could win if you're not careful, didn't listen to me. i could see where his popularity came from . simplistic politics, came from. simplistic politics, simple ideas , and not explain simple ideas, and not explain how you're actually going to deliver. it's which is what he
10:24 pm
did has an appeal and they didn't counter the danger of him so he was as much of a populist as the likes of donald trump . as the likes of donald trump. absolutely. absolutely he was another version of trump. different politics, but going for the easy stuff and as trump found trump speaking, problem was he could actually deliver stuff he was good on the rhetoric, good on the big picture. but, you know, where's the wall he was going to build? it's not there. hasn't done it hasn't changed things and that was the corbyn problem. and that's seen him no name and i knew his politics bad for the labour party. catastrophic for the labour party's election chances. the labour party's election chances . and no surprise that chances. and no surprise that labour bounces back when labour moves towards the centre towards normality . trying to take the normality. trying to take the british people with the labour party rather than spitting at
10:25 pm
the labour party and said here's what you should be doing, can keir starmer win an overall majority at the next election ? majority at the next election? will it be difficult statistically , i in a lecture statistically, i in a lecture and in politics, my rule number one learn to count . you go to one learn to count. you go to meet say no votes. you've got to go to guns. an election not difficult. there's be very difficult. there's be very difficult to get a majority . but difficult to get a majority. but the conservatives still up so poll this weekend are 21. i don't think he's ever been that low. the conservative party is imploding . it's been in power imploding. it's been in power for a long time. imploding. it's been in power for a longtime. he's got imploding. it's been in power for a long time . he's got two for a long time. he's got two wings. the pro european wing people like jeremy on the anti european. we go with the majority that wall and that war is not going to go away. and the only way they will solve that work out what they really stand for is by being opposition and some of them privately say it probably be healthy to have a few years in opposition . they few years in opposition. they don't want too many, but that's
10:26 pm
why things like it happen . the why things like it happen. the way things are going. they almost can't help themselves in their civil war. do you think starmer's got the chops to be a great prime minister is he tony blair? 2.0? he be . i mean, blair? 2.0? he could be. i mean, until a bit woke up until september , i thought, well, september, i thought, well, where is it? you know, where is the punch? but i've seen a different person since september, almost literally. he's grown. and i saw that with blair . i he's grown. and i saw that with blair. i remember when blair was bambi , i knew him and the bambi, i knew him and the bumbling thing was the way you kind of the way he moved, the way you held himself and all of a sudden out the blue within about two months, he physically grew. he realised he could be prime minister, get in to see that with starmer now there's still a way to go. but he's acting like a man who could be prime minister and the people will notice that. and so he's much more dangerous to the tory party than he was in the summer. before the summer. you don't
10:27 pm
find him. he's clearly a bright quy- find him. he's clearly a bright guy. but do you not find him pompous and a bit woke, a bit p.c. very virtue signalling . i p.c. very virtue signalling. i found it very london . and if he found it very london. and if he doesn't spend a majority of his time outside london , he won't time outside london, he won't win. so if he's listening in my advice to him, sir keir, is get yourself out of london, get around the country, not just quit visits, but lots of time listening and understand ending. the people who don't live in london, who have a different perspective on life to you, who live differently to you, perhaps even different values in their everyday life, not core values like do they want an nhs? do they want good schools? do you want the economy to do well? no, they don't say yes to that and so would he. but the bits that are harder to get if he goes out there and does that , i think there and does that, i think he's not against boris johnson this time . it was very good at this time. it was very good at that. this time. it was very good at that . he's this time. it was very good at that. he's against rishi sunak ,
10:28 pm
that. he's against rishi sunak, who's unproven in that . and who's unproven in that. and we've got to improve and leaders in how they managed to engage the people . so if i was starmer, the people. so if i was starmer, i would get out of london. most of the time. i think that's good advice because if keir starmer had spent time outside of london post referendum, he might not have crafted a policy as shadow brexit secretary to reverse the decision. you backed brexit. any buyer's regret ? no, no, not at buyer's regret? no, no, not at all. i mean, what we should be doing. i'm a bit perplexed. i saw a fellow lord, lord frost, seems to be attacking what's happened with brexit all the time . look, brexit's done what time. look, brexit's done what we need to do is grab the opportunities that brexit gives. and the biggest opportunity is energy . do we want to rely on energy. do we want to rely on the russians for gas? i've been saying for years. no we don't. or the chinese for coal or the for french nuclear power. do we trust them on suitable say on price , on actually giving us the
10:29 pm
price, on actually giving us the energy ? no. produce our own. energy? no. produce our own. protect those industries , grow protect those industries, grow the new industries, lead the way and no , i have this green agenda and no, i have this green agenda . i'm interested in the economic agenda. . i'm interested in the economic agenda . it comes from that the agenda. it comes from that the electric car is pretty obvious to me that at some stage we'll all be driving electric cars. we should lead the way in making them because we'll get more jobs, we'll profit . yes, that's jobs, we'll profit. yes, that's what we should be do with brexit , rebuilding our industrial base and not having the open competition . the rules of the eu competition. the rules of the eu that made that much harder to rebuild the economic manufacturing base of britain. that's what i voted for and i think most brexit voters and most of the country actually even the remainers , would see even the remainers, would see that as a good thing . we need a that as a good thing. we need a part two when you return. i'll be here. definitely look forward to it. fascinating conversation . lord john mann, thank you so much for joining . lord john mann, thank you so much forjoining us. next up, the papers with full panel
10:30 pm
reaction .
10:31 pm
10:32 pm
10:33 pm
cracking interview with lord john mann. props to producer for another stellar booking . by the another stellar booking. by the way, let me tell you about lockdown lynn's saturday night in every saturday the show is big now it's excel it's 3 hours from eight. the first hour is dedicated to your video calls. so if you'd like to be a star on the show, drop me an email now. market gbnews.uk and we'll put you on the show. that's the people's hour. eight till nine every saturday night, and we'll be it again in six days be doing it again in six days time. let's have a look now at tomorrow's papers . hot off the tomorrow's papers. hot off the press and we'll start with the telegraph . and they have cancer telegraph. and they have cancer toll surges in wake of pandemic . hundreds more than expected
10:34 pm
dying each week after mr. diagnoses during covid. the cost of the pandemic for cancer sufferers is beginning to emerge. experts fear, as figures show , the hundreds more people show, the hundreds more people than expected are now dying each month in england , the disease. month in england, the disease. charities and health experts are calling on the government to take action, warning that misdiagnoses lockdown may misdiagnoses during lockdown may be a factor and that the problem is being compounded by the nhs crisis . since the is being compounded by the nhs crisis. since the beginning of september , there have been september, there have been nearly 900 more deaths in people with cancer than would be expected at this time of year. sunak totally rejects swiss style brexit deal with the. there you go. he's killed the story. rishi sunak has that a swiss style brexit deal with the european union is off the table as he moved to quell a backlash among tory mp number two. number ten. sources reject it as categorically untrue . a categorically untrue. a suggestion by senior government figures that bespoke swiss style trading agree events with the eu could be sought . trading agree events with the eu
10:35 pm
could be sought. how trading agree events with the eu could be sought . how about trading agree events with the eu could be sought. how about this? which is act like a woman to climb the career ladder? professionals looking to get ahead should act like a woman. the president of the girls school association has said. heather hambrick argued that being an empathetic team player was better for business than the alpha male model of leadership . alpha male model of leadership. well, van gogh's my then how about the daily express? come on, england, put a smile on our faces. the heroic england, by the way, is harry kane , the the way, is harry kane, the england captain as well? yes isn't he? and of course, spurs captain . i'm isn't he? and of course, spurs captain. i'm very isn't he? and of course, spurs captain . i'm very aware he's not captain. i'm very aware he's not the spurs kind of spurs captain is the goalkeeper. it's good that i didn't talk about football, isn't it? i'll leave that to producer greg furey at absurd idea to go soft on brexit. senior tories have erupted with anger over claims that government figures are pushing for britain to adopt a softer version of brexit . and softer version of brexit. and he's branded any idea of a switzerland agreement with brussels as completely absurd as it would tie the uk to eu eu laws. ex—ministerjacob
10:36 pm
laws. ex—minister jacob rees—mogg said laws. ex—ministerjacob rees—mogg said it would render trade deals with other countries in effective. jacob rees—mogg by the way, brilliant guest on last sunday's show. unbelievable ratings and a video that went viral, watched by just shy of a million people at the time is now patients to long nhs waits for years. patients face long waits for ambulances and accidents. emergency care for years to come as ministers accept there was little hope of hitting key targets by the next election . millions of fans will election. millions of fans will watch from home when millions tuned into the bbc on a monday lunchtime for england's opening world cup match against in 1998. there is lyneham , with a twinkle there is lyneham, with a twinkle in his eye, asked viewers , in his eye, asked viewers, shouldn't you be at work? well now a survey of 2000 people commissioned by road to victory suggests that 30% will be calling in sick to watch the world cup . absolute disgrace of world cup. absolute disgrace of daily mail now. world cup. absolute disgrace of daily mail now . world cup threat
10:37 pm
daily mail now. world cup threat to england's harry. harry kane, by the way , is the captain of by the way, is the captain of england, but he's not the captain of spurs. that's hugo race. harry kane leads our bid for glory today. race. harry kane leads our bid for glory today . but will he be for glory today. but will he be booked for the rainbow armbands? also don't betray us on brexit. rishi sunak and jeremy hunt were tonight warned against seeking closer ties with the eu . the sun closer ties with the eu. the sun is harry is very much the poster boy for england's campaign . boy for england's campaign. england versus iran . kane vows england versus iran. kane vows to lift the nation card threat over on banned lions of arabia is the headline the guardian now climate deal still leads world on brink of catastrophe. experts also revealed cancelled trains hits record high. is there any good news that we can come up with? some in a minute. the ai newspaper, tory mp warns sunak over swiss deal with the eu and hosts suffer two nil defeat to ecuador as the most controversial world cup final start world cup finals. finally
10:38 pm
kick off qatar kicks off the world cup, a very arresting photo on the front page of the independent's and also no emissions deal. leeds planet on life support this as cop27 reaches its conclusion . how reaches its conclusion. how about the metro now comics world cup protest? what a waste. we discussing this shortly . discussing this shortly. comedian joe lycett sparked a storm by appearing to destroy £10,000 in cash, estimated controversial world cup in history kicked off in qatar. and david beckham ignored his demand to withdraw as its official ambassador . to withdraw as its official ambassador. and last but not least, the daily star. is it a bird? is it a plane? no it's super kane. he's the england captain, but not the captain of spurs. that is hugo lloris. let's hear it for england's. england's world cup campaign kicks off today with all super heroes swap capes for three hons heroes swap capes for three lions shirts. come on, bring it. hug. alison, faye, let's get that camera back to me, because let me just say, come on,
10:39 pm
england and come on, wales. why because i love england . and i because i love england. and i love wales because i love the united kingdom. so frankly, if either prevail. happy days . either prevail. happy days. right. let's get reaction now from my panel of emma webb. nigel nelson and adrian hayes. and look, let's start , shall we, and look, let's start, shall we, with this awful story. adrian on the front page of the telegraph cancer told surges in the wake of the pandemic , many top medics of the pandemic, many top medics warned that we risked this kind of medical backlog with the policy of lockdowns, including the highly regarded oncology ist, the positive prof karol sikora . look, cancer is sikora. look, cancer is a disease. i study a lot. i've been involved cancer charities . been involved cancer charities. the stats are horrendous . one in the stats are horrendous. one in two of us will get cancer in our lifetimes. the disease is out of control now the way it is. that's another subject we won't go into today. but but crap nutrition. well i think we've been poisoned from water air every all the additives chemicals in our food. we live in a very toxic environment. we
10:40 pm
do this is why, you know, i try and organic food as much as i can because because it's very important to me. however going back to when i'm a bit older , i back to when i'm a bit older, i might one of your kidneys. might need one of your kidneys. i've got to say. yeah, i would. i've got to say. yeah, i would. i would go for nigel's. but he's been fleet street for years, been in fleet street for years, so know what's. so i don't know what's. i wouldn't put him but wouldn't have put him on, but yeah, deadly serious. you yeah, it's deadly serious. you say we probably won't go into the why this disease is the weeds of why this disease is on the rise. let's go back to the actual, you know, headline in the telegraph. surprise, in the telegraph. look surprise, surprise, and surprise, choices and consequences. been saying consequences. i've been saying that on the show that that also come on the show that everything we do life, everything we do in life, in politics business and politics and business and anything trade—offs and that anything has trade—offs and that this this simple concept, there's always there's no single solution or everything. when we went the national covid service course, going get course, we're going to get consequences and cancer was the most obvious one. i listen to carol time and he warned carol all the time and he warned it did. and it's a it and we did. and it's a tragedy. and so , so early. tragedy. and it's so, so early. diagnosis essential to it. diagnosis is so essential to it. and yet, of course, we've lost all that. let's hope let's all that. but let's hope let's hope the articles like this
10:41 pm
hope that the articles like this is highlighting the situation and we can sort of get back on top of it. we know about the economic price of the policy of lockdowns, here we lockdowns, and here we discovering price, discovering the health price, too mean, this makes too. yeah, i mean, this makes a if i'm being completely honest, this story makes me feel sick because you at the numbers and this is this disease of people's loved ones , you know, this is loved ones, you know, this is this is the real cost in terms of people's actual lives as a result of our lockdown policies and the reason why this makes me feel so sick is because there were people who warned about this at the time. yeah, we had it's not just about misdiagnoses, but people who were getting pinged and therefore not being able to go and have their cancer treatment, have their chemotherapy . so i am have their chemotherapy. so i am worried that this is actually just the tip of the iceberg and that the state that the nhs is currently in and how how dysfunctional it is that this this is something that's going to continue for many , many years to continue for many, many years and in our panic over the
10:42 pm
pandemic and our desire to try and keep the death toll from, as you said, the covid health service and our desire try and avoid deaths from one disease that we've actually stocked ourselves up all sorts of trouble in the future, not just in relation to cancer , but in in relation to cancer, but in relation to other things as well . and you know, as i say, these these are people, people's loved ones. these are people, people's loved ones . and they were very real ones. and they were very real stories behind. and a good percentage of those who will have lost their lives, will have been younger families and young younger individuals that, you know, not not the sort of the covid focus, which is people involved groups normally on average older . involved groups normally on average older. this could average a bit older. this could be young who didn't be a young mother who didn't have that lump in her breast detected examined . she has to detected or examined. she has to say goodbye to her children now and not being able see your and not being able to see your doctor and the doctor face to face and the amount of time that that unnecessarily went on for. and like you say , you know, this is like you say, you know, this is this is this is not the older generations . this is this is generations. this is this is across the board. the stats he
10:43 pm
was saying this affects all of us and one thing the apologists say worse, we're all say worse, because we're all living know, that's living older, you know, that's why cancer rates have shot through. no, tell that to the through. if no, tell that to the 30 mother. i've got 30 year old mother. i've got friends. all of friends. i'm sure all three of us friends who've died us have got friends who've died of at all ages. it's of cancer at all ages. it's a disease crisis and it's heartbreaking seeing these these casualties unavoidable in many cases well . if you catch cases as well. if you catch these things early and that's these things early and that's the they're not being the thing, they're not being caught because caught early, clearly, because of pandemic. nigel of the of the pandemic. nigel ties the story in the ties in with the story in the times patients to face long nhs waits ambulance and a&e waits years ambulance and a&e targets to be watered down is the nhs and i think we can all agree the staff that work in the nhs are world class. the nurses , porters, the cleaners, the doctors it's quite extraordinary. but a question mark over the middle managers in the bureaucracy. but in the end, do you think now the system is irrevocably broken? can it be i mean, if keir starmer gets into number ten in two years time, which at the moment is likely he will, can we fix this? can anyone this? well, my view anyone fix this? well, my view
10:44 pm
is there on the what you is that there on the what you can't is an nhs that works can't have is an nhs that works on the same principles as the one that was designed in 1948. i don't think the nhs is sustainable as it is at the moment. i don't think the funding out of general taxation is sustainable and what you are going to need is root and branch reform. what i would hope, which is in a sentiment that could get you cancelled in politics, isn't that's the problem. and politicians are not brave enough to say things like that . i've to say things like that. i've had private conversations with lot of them who agree with that and say we can't carry on the way we're going. we must look at a different model for the nhs. still have a national health service? yeah a different model for . but they're terrified for it. but they're terrified because of our sentimentality about the nhs, terrified the voters will turn against them. indeed it will. look, i think it's fantastic to hear a highly respected commentator like you say , in such bold terms. and i say, in such bold terms. and i think that whilst we, as i say, have regard for those have high regard for those working the nhs , i do think
10:45 pm
working in the nhs, i do think the institution needs a serious overhaul, otherwise lives will be lost. but what's your view? market gb news dot uk. i'll get to your opinions shortly. lots more to come from the papers. joe lycett, the comedian, has shredded joe lycett, the comedian, has shredde d £10,000 in an internet shredded £10,000 in an internet stunt . was he wrong to do that stunt. was he wrong to do that dunng stunt. was he wrong to do that during a cost of crisis? during a cost of living crisis? plus a couple of other big stories in the papers . is it stories in the papers. is it wrong call in sick to watch wrong to call in sick to watch the cup? surely your the world cup? surely your supporting country, isn't supporting your country, isn't that ? should the boss that justified? should the boss give off ? if england give you the day off? if england or go all the way and also or wales go all the way and also he trust a man who wear shorts in the winter. see? surely .
10:46 pm
10:47 pm
10:48 pm
welcome back to market poland tonight. lots in the papers reacting to the big stories of the day and the web . nigel the day and the web. nigel nelson and adrian hayes. now, this is a really big story. the
10:49 pm
comedian joe lycett, who's a friend of mine, very talented guy, has fulfilled his promise to shred guy, has fulfilled his promise to shre d £10,000 in cash. if to shred £10,000 in cash. if david beckham does not end his contract as the face of the qatar world cup, here's the footage of leycett putting the money into the shredder. he's wearing a rather fancy and glamorous outfit, which i wouldn't cook in, by the way. certainly not a barbecue , certainly not a barbecue, wouldn't go or treating in wouldn't go trick or treating in that not any that outfit either. not near any roman candles. it does look like the kind of thing you'd use in the kind of thing you'd use in the just to clean your the shower just to clean your underarms. it's a look. he's burning he's shredding burning nice, but he's shredding the money . off goes . so the money. and off he goes. so the money. and off he goes. so the videos gone viral with almost 2 million views as it stands. but was he wrong to destroy that amount of money dunng destroy that amount of money during a cost of living crisis ? during a cost of living crisis? adrian. i'm less bothered about that argument. i just think, look , i've got a bigger picture look, i've got a bigger picture on this. i think the world is suffering an epidemic of people, social media, people driven dnven social media, people driven driven by obsession and seeking
10:50 pm
sympathy, attention , sympathy, attention, recognition, respect, a name and fame. so sorry, joe. this is an attention seeking stunt. i think more than anything else, he's made the point i know he's passionate about, but i just think, you know, without social media, it wouldn't have made such big headlines as it did. nigel, you know about political messaging inside out. he's trying to draw attention to the plight of lgb plus people in qatar, but has this one backfired? no, i think he did. the right thing. i mean , if he'd the right thing. i mean, if he'd given that money to charity , the given that money to charity, the protest doesn't work . the whole protest doesn't work. the whole point was this was a protest against david beckham taking point was this was a protest against david beckham takin g £10 against david beckham taking £10 million and to promote qatar. and if you think about protests, people come down to westminster to protest against they have to spend money on coaches, on trains and things like that. would that money be better spent on on a on a food bank or something like that? should not be protesting. this was a protest. it cos t £10,000. it was
10:51 pm
protest. it cost £10,000. it was his money, i think was the right thing to do. but who is he to tell david beckham and mweb where to make his money and how? well i think when you when you see what the footballers have been doing , taking the knee, all been doing, taking the knee, all of this virtue signalling, constantly publicly polishing their halos and using football as an opportunity to make all of these political messages. where do you think you end up if you start using football as a political instrument? you end up here being called out for hypocrisy when you do when everything. therefore in football becomes political as a result of that, because then simply going and playing in qatar becomes a political act, a hypocritical one for all of these people who have been talking about progressive causes. causes. and qatar , not causes. causes. and qatar, not only on on on homosexuality , but only on on on homosexuality, but also the their treatment of the migrant workers who came to build the stadium for the qatar world cup. so i think the issue here is one of hypocrisy . that's here is one of hypocrisy. that's the reason why i think feel that
10:52 pm
they need to point out to these footballers, particularly someone like like david beckham , who for some reason has become a gay icon. and i think you're right. i think it's his own money can do with what he wants, who we to tell him that he can't and i do actually think whilst it may be what he could have doneis it may be what he could have done is taken that money and given it to a charity. the perhaps promotes progressive perhaps promotes the progressive causes wouldn't been causes. it wouldn't have been racist . but agree with you, racist. but i agree with you, and that's exactly what i'd say. i lived the middle east for 20 odd years. i know it very well. and the cat i was getting a lot of bashing right now there are 80 countries in the world where homeless sexuality is legal and some of them are either good friends of ours and some of them aren't. be aren't. so we have to be a little bit circumspect about who we should be in a world cup with an international be an international audience, be played different played in a country so different different countries should not be to compete the world be able to compete for the world cup. a different issue. cup. that's a different issue. but this a problem but doesn't this raise a problem with way that they're going with the way that they're going about their virtue signalling?
10:53 pm
yes, willing to yes, because they're willing to preach home audiences preach at home to audiences about and to suggest that the audience is a bigot at the foot. these football matches, they're willing to do it at home where it's safe. yes, but not in a country where it's not so safe for them to do that. they rather take the qatari money than to actually make a real statement about and i think about it. and i think that's what trying to get what joe louis is trying to get at, that he's willing to take a financial making this financial by making this statement a way that that statement in a way that that these that wouldn't be these that they wouldn't be brave to do in qatar. brave enough to do in qatar. well, got talking. and well, he's got us talking. and i suppose going to theme suppose going back to the theme of at ten, it's all free of my take at ten, it's all free speech, isn't it? so good luck to him. the cryptocurrency for collapsed losing $32 collapsed last week, losing $32 billion worth of value overnight . now the youthful founder , . now the youthful founder, bankman—fried or fried, is regularly seen in shorts even in the winter . alexandra shulman , the winter. alexandra shulman, the winter. alexandra shulman, the ex vogue editor writing in the ex vogue editor writing in the mail on sunday, said , you the mail on sunday, said, you can't trust a man who wear shorts in the winter. well, last week, william, william, last
10:54 pm
week, william, william, last week, jacob rees—mogg was on the show. and here's what he told me about wearing shorts . well, do about wearing shorts. well, do you a dress down ? have you you have a dress down? have you ever worn shorts ? not since i, ever worn shorts? not since i, as a child , i was forced to. as a child, i was forced to. i always hated wearing shorts. a child. i've never worn them in adulthood. and i'm sure you're hiding an excellent pair of pins . i'm sorry . i hiding an excellent pair of pins . i'm sorry. i bet you. i bet you got excellent calf muscles. my you got excellent calf muscles. my thanks to jacob for a brilliant interview last week. well, what do you think? can you trust a man in shorts? do you agree with alex sandra shulman from the daily mail the mail on sunday? i think you can trust them to make good fashion choices. i don't think adult males should wear shorts. just males should wear shorts. i just think sartorial mistake. think it's a sartorial mistake. maybe i mean, if maybe on the beach. i mean, if you're wearing swimming trunks you're wearing a swimming trunks for. that for. generally, i think that it's it's a sartorial. i've it's a it's a sartorial. i've got a a few other sort of got a few a few other sort of celebrity short wears this have a look what we've got here. oh dear my fail in dear that's my shorts fail in mid—winter autumn , i should mid—winter or autumn, i should say. up, we've the say. next up, we've got the brilliant legendary nigel
10:55 pm
farage. shorts and a glass of wine shorts at home. that's different. i'm by the way. what a lunch box i'm talking about the food behind him, of course, i wear shorts and when. oh, look at this. we've got director sebastian and rocking shorts looking attractive looking very attractive there. but is it wrong for the but this is it wrong for the postman wear all winter don't think i've never seen a trump i've never seen a worker not wearing shorts they all seem to be part of the uniform wear throughout winter by way of them. i'm going to take it very personal, so i'm going to make nigel nelson wear shorts for the whole show. now and adrian, we're back on friday at nine. stick around for headliners looking ahead to tomorrow's weather across the uk, icy and foggy towards the north—east with wind and rain in the southwest . let's take a look and southwest. let's take a look and more detail . a few showers for more detail. a few showers for orkney and shetland . otherwise, orkney and shetland. otherwise, a mostly dry start on monday for scotland. cold though with icy patches and some fog too. meanwhile, very wet and windy across much of northern ireland with heavy rain arrive in
10:56 pm
overnight dry across northern england and the north—west temperatures will be a few degrees about freezing. but in the north—east it will be icy and foggy . the north—east it will be icy and foggy. north wales is also looking dry. at first it will be rather cloudy and further south there will be heavy rain and very strong winds which will spread across wales throughout morning whilst the west midlands will get off to a mostly cloudy start for the east midlands, the skies will be clear. it does mean it will be quite chilly though, especially in rural areas . clear though, especially in rural areas. clear and chilly though, especially in rural areas . clear and chilly across areas. clear and chilly across much of east anglia here. temperatures will be around or perhaps a touch below freezing. so some frost and icy patches are possible. the first thing, cloudy for southern parts in south—east will be mostly dry whilst heavy rain and very strong winds will bring difficult driving conditions in the southwest. the wind and rain will continue north eastwards throughout the morning though
10:57 pm
northern parts are set to remain mostly dry and sunny. that's how the weather's shaping up throughout tomorrow morning .
10:58 pm
10:59 pm
11:00 pm
welcome i'm rhiannon jones your top stories from the gb newsroom england manager gareth southgate confirmed his players will take the knee before their world cup opener against iran tomorrow. the tournament kicked off today with the hosts qatar beaten two nil by ecuador. it's the first time the event's been held in a muslim country in the middle east and the build up been overshadowed by a number of controversies. the football association's trying to get clarification action over whether captains will be booked if they wear the last if they wear the one last armband . if they wear the one last armband. nine if they wear the one last armband . nine countries, armband. nine countries, including england and wales, had planned to wear it to promote diversity inclusion . wales
11:01 pm
diversity and inclusion. wales join england in

27 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on