Part in any more talks. Part in any more talks. What we cannot have is an inflationary pay increase before we break for the recess. We settled all the pay disputes based on the pay review bodies and for example, the teachers accepted the pay review body recommended action as the government did, and are not no longer striking. So i regret very much that the doctors have chosen to strike again. I chosen to strike again. I totally recognise that this has a negative impact on patients experience. Experience. West Yorkshire Police says the autistic girl arrested by police for making an alleged homophobic remark will face no further action. A warning some viewers may find the following footage distressing. Well, shes now been released, but this video circulating on tiktok shows a 16 year old autistic girl being detained by seven officers outside her home in leeds. That prompted a complaint ont its understood she told her mother that one of the Police Officers looked like her grandmother, whos a lesbian. The teenager had been arrested on suspicion of a homophobic pubuc on suspicion of a homophobic public order offence, but the force says it will take on board any lessons to be learned after the footage of the arrest sparked criticism on social media. Surrey police says 3 3 people, detectives want to speak to in connection with the murder of a ten Year Old Girl in woking left the uk on wednesday. The girl was found dead in the early hours of yesterday morning after police were alerted to a concern for safety. A us judge has for safety. A us judge has warned donald trump not to make inflammatory statements about the 2020 election case as the federal judge gave the former us president leeway to publicly share some non sensitive evidence that will be used in his trial on charges of plotting to overturn the 2020 president ial election. But the judge also since made the protective order, warning trumps attorneys argue the scope of the order is too broad and affects his free speech rights as the death toll from wildfires in hawaii have risen to at least 55 as it grapples with the worst Natural Disaster in the states history. With the worst Natural Disaster in the states history. The in the states history. The blazers have reduced much of the resort city of lahaina to smouldering ruins. Its one of three major fires still ravaging the island of maui. Entire the island of maui. Entire neighbourhoods have been burnt to the ground as dry conditions and strong winds complicate efforts to bring the fires under control and finally, the king has reshuffled military appointments for working members of the royal family as an adversary of the late queens death nears. King charles takes death nears. King charles takes over eight of his mothers former honorary posts himself. The reshuffle sees Prince William take command of harrys old army unit as colonel in chief of the army air corps. The princess of wales has been given three new roles. One of which is commodore in chief of the fleet air arm. Thats the title previously held by prince andrew. This is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on Digital Radio and on your Smart Speaker by simply saying play. Gb news. Welcome to the andersons real world. And tonight im joined by Simon Danczuk ex labour mp. Weve also got emma best, who today is our right in the corner. Shes the deputy leader of the conservatives in london and sits on the assembly. Conservatives in london and sits on the assembly. Simon. On the London Assembly. Simon. Good to here. Is this time good to be here. Is this time you back by popular demand. 7 you back by popular demand . Yeah. Rwanda. Yeah i saw recently that youd been got married in rwanda to a lovely young lady out there. Correct. So it begs the question, is rwanda a safe developing , decent country . Absolutely. Its a really absolutely. Its a really decent country. Its one of the safest countries in the world. Ive been there several times. Iona home there. I spent many, many weeks out there. And as many weeks out there. And as i say, its very safe. Its got a good developing economy. So good developing economy. So theres no reason why you couldnt send Illegal Immigrants there. There. So why is it, do you think, simon theres certain sections of our society and politicians say its a cruel and wicked thing to do, to send people who are Asylum Seekers to rwanda . I think the people on the left in politics are being ideological about it. They would ideological about it. They would prefer open borders for the uk, so any reason that they can come up with for not sending people out of this country, they will come up with it. But i have to say, some people on the left are verging on being racist about how they talk about rwanda, because reality is that its because the reality is that its a developed country. People a very developed country. People call it switzerland of call it the switzerland of africa. They already take africa. They already take refugees on behalf of the united nafions refugees on behalf of the United Nations from libya. So theres a good argument for sending people there, no doubt, about it. Emma, youre our first ever right in the corner, so not to leave you out. Rwanda youve heard what simons got to say. Do you think theres any problems or have you got any problems or have you got any problems with sending Illegal Migrants or Asylum Seekers to migrants or or Asylum Seekers to rwanda a fresh start . Migrants or or Asylum Seekers to rw¢well, a fresh start . Migrants or or Asylum Seekers to rw¢well, i a fresh start . Migrants or or Asylum Seekers to rw¢well, i actually start . Migrants or or Asylum Seekers to rw¢well, i actually think well, i actually think simons hit the nail on the head right way some on right there. And the way some on the have talked the left have talked about rwanda disgusting. And i have rwanda is disgusting. And i have noidea rwanda is disgusting. And i have no idea what that must do to people rwanda. Hearing people over in rwanda. Hearing people over in rwanda. Hearing people our country talk about people in our country talk about their country that way. Is their country in that way. Is there some problems with the scheme . Yes, i think perhaps in scheme . Yes, i think perhaps in the way that weve processed the agreement and bill, is it a agreement and the bill, is it a great deal . Is it going to work . Great deal . Is it going to work . Perhaps theres a few things that be ironed and that need to be ironed out. And i thing that i am i will say one thing that i am concerned safety of concerned about is the safety of those are lgbt asylum those that are lgbt Asylum Seekers and making sure that they are definitely respected when theyre when theyre in rwanda. But overall, look, lets look what the what the left look at what the what the left wants to do they want to wants to do. Do they want to stop people crossing, making dangerous risking dangerous crossings, risking their lives . The their lives . Weve seen the devastating consequence of that in couple of days. Do in the last couple of days. Do they actually care about that . Do want see do they actually want to see that because we need that stop because we need a policy that addresses that and saves lives. And i think rwanda goes doing that. Goes some way to doing that. So. Simon, emmas got a few concerns. Not many overall support was idea. How can support was the idea. How can you those concerns . You address those concerns . Well, she mentioned the yeah, well, she mentioned the issue lgbt. There are no issue about lgbt. There are no issues. Theres no legislation in rwanda that says you cant be gay or anything like that. Paul kagame, the president of rwanda , has said, made it quite clear hes not interested as the person leading the country. Hes not bothered about whats going on in the bedroom. This is quite on in the bedroom. This is quite literally what he said. Hes focus is on growing the economy , running strong, stable , running a strong, stable democracy. And so thats what he focuses on. So that allays that fear, people that go out there will have opportunities. Theres no doubt about it. Its a growing economy. But they will have to pull the socks up and get with it. It wont be. And get on with it. It wont be. And what should remember, lee, is what we should remember, lee, is that we arent under an obugafion that we arent under an obligation the uk to send obligation in the uk to send these to somewhere thats these people to somewhere thats these people to somewhere thats the same as the uk. If they are the same as the uk. If they are fleeing violence and war, then rwanda is a safe place to go. All we have to do is provide somewhere safe to go. So emma, im going to come back to you. So youve heard what simons had to say. It sounds like a great country, a go country. So do you go to country. So why do you think these illegal think some of these Illegal Migrants to use the migrants and i refuse to use the term seekers, its term Asylum Seekers, its Illegal Migrants, you know, if they to play asylum they want to play the asylum system, why arent they travelling to places like rwanda instead of making that perilous journey to the uk . Yeah, i think thats the question that everybodys asking, isnt it really about, you know, if youre fleeing from war and youre looking for a safe country, why be so resistant to go to a safe country . And i think thats what comes back to with our own Asylum Seeker system is we need to make sure that were processing claims through a legal route for people that for reasons of perhaps family or something or some other reason, require a settlement in the uk. Require a settlement in the uk. And actually these illegal crossings are making it really difficult for us to do that. And difficult for us to do that. And so i think to going rwanda as a safe country and i think thats the question , isnt it . And i the question, isnt it . And i think it could only be answered by those people as who are saying that they dont want to go to rwanda. Dont think go to rwanda. I dont think thats that we can thats a question that we can answer because we can look at rwanda. Simons just got married there. Knows better than there. So knows better than anyone. A safe and anyone. Its a safe and welcoming country. There you go i so were going to move on slightly now, to simon, the ulez thats in the news over the thats been in the news over the past. Well, its always the past. Well, its always in the news, be now, emma, news, it seems to be now, emma, you the London Assembly , you sit on the London Assembly, so you would have been involved in debate over the past few in this debate over the past few weeks. Is a good thing . Do weeks. Is it a good thing . Do the people of london and the surrounding areas want the expansion and how is it going to affect people in the pocket . Well, they absolutely do not want it. Think that sadiq want it. I think that sadiq khans consultation showed khans own consultation showed 66 people were against it. 66 of people were against it. When you expanded to outer when you expanded that to outer london, youre looking closer to 80. At businesses closer 80. Looking at businesses closer to 80. Theres tradespeople here who are suffering. They have no who are suffering. They have no idea how theyre going to continue a business after this month. And what youre doing month. And what youre doing with youre not tackling with ulez is youre not tackling air pollution. Is the air pollution. This is the fundamental point. The tfl own assessment of ulez said it will have a negligible impact on particulates, particulate is actually the most dangerous form of air pollution that can get into your blood vessels. It will have negligible impact. There have negligible impact. There will be no effect, but what it will be no effect, but what it will do, and this is what the Impact Assessment picked up is it will hit low income londoners. It will hit disabled londoners. It will hit disabled londoners. So simon youre an ex labour . Mp yeah. What would you be saying yeah. What would you be saying to sadiq khan if you still sat in parliament . Well i would be saying it needs to roll saying that it needs to roll back from it. Its a step far. I think its a step too far. I think we should say thank you to the people uxbridge in to the people of uxbridge in that byelection because in many ways referendum on ulez ways it was a referendum on ulez. And the people there said, listen , we might not be very listen, we might not be very happy government, but happy with the government, but were unhappy were certainly very unhappy with. And that means with ulez. And so that means that we need to think again about it. It creates a bit of an issue starmer as well, issue for starmer as well, doesnt keir starmer he has doesnt it . Keir starmer he has a very green agenda with ed miliband sat behind him, pushing all the green issues , but he has all the green issues, but he has at same time , if he wants to at the same time, if he wants to get into government , he to get into government, he has to take with them. And this take people with them. And this is a revenue raising is clearly a revenue raising policy. And thats what its about with with khan. Yeah. Whats that going to do for starmer and khans relationship 7 starmer and khans relationship . I think well have to see. Well, final word to emma. Emma, i go to london on a weekly bafis emma, i go to london on a weekly basis and i would sooner walk it from Saint Pancras to westminster, then get on the underground. Because you underground. Because when you get underground , the get on the underground, the fumes, its toxic. Its horrible, dirty, its horrible, its dirty, its smelly. Why isnt khan tackling that . That . Would you believe it, that he doesnt have interest . So doesnt have any interest . So weve actually scrutinised him on on the London Assembly on this on the London Assembly and he doesnt to talk and he doesnt want to talk about hell talk the about that. Hell talk about the road which actually, road pollution, which actually, if look at measurements if you look at the measurements in vast in outer london, for the vast majority of air quality, its goodin majority of air quality, its good in outer london. What you wont talk to you about is the fact that people are breathing filthy tube that filthy air on our tube and that is something is directly is something that he is directly responsible for. So lo and behold , does he want to talk behold, does he want to talk about it . Absolutely not. I guess hes taking the so i guess hes taking the easy option. Well, taking an option. Well, hes taking an option. Is it easy . I dont know. But i think hes getting a lot think because hes getting a lot of from every single of backlash from every single section of society. But i think and this is a point simon may disagree with, i think this speaks wider issue with speaks to the wider issue with labourisi speaks to the wider issue with labour is i think theyre so ideologically driven and i think theyre so sometimes, so, so set in an ideological way that they will not listen to normal people on the ground. And when normal people have to pay the price for policy decisions, i think people in echelons of labour dont in the echelons of labour dont care. I dont think simons actually disagreeing with you. Mean thats couple of nods. I think. I mean that on a wider point actually, though, i think, i think i mean, when it comes all and actually comes to all policy and actually going rwanda, think going back to rwanda, i think this is same sort of thing this is the same sort of thing as well. Fascinating stuff. Thats fascinating stuff. Thanks, so , thats fascinating stuff. Thanks, 50 , uh, thats fascinating stuff. Thanks, so , uh, now thanks, emma. Thanks so, uh, now were move yes were going to move to the yes no quiz. Where ill be joined by simon the yes simon. Uk and emma best. The yes or this is where my or no quiz this is where my guests chance to answer guests get the chance to answer honestly. Can try it at home honestly. You can try it at home if pen and if you want. Get your pen and paper were going to move paper out. Were going to move straight okay. Its straight to it. Simon okay. Its not rocket science. Its not odd questions, or no . Can questions, yes or no . Can a woman have penis . No. Emma woman have a penis . No. Emma youre not going to like this. Lee look, you say yes no. Lee look, you say yes or no. Yes. A trans woman. No. If yes. If a trans woman. No. If theyre woman. Theyre a biological woman. So thats non answer. So thats a non answer. So thats a non answer. If theyre trans woman. No. If theyre a trans woman. Yes. No all right. Question number two, is for you. Two, emma, this is for you. Remember . It is. Yes no. Okay remember . It is. Yes or no. Okay okay. Should Illegal Migrants refuse first class accommodation in uk . Go back to france . In the uk . Go back to france . Yes sam. Yes is rwanda a safe country . Yes. Country . Yes. I do get it. Itsjust the i do get it. Its just the first you get that . First you get that . Yes, absolutely. Yes, absolutely. Yes, absolutely. Simon, do you support the expansion of ulez . Um , no. Um, no. um, no. Then is it yes or no . Simon well, its a yes or no. Its no. I dont know. Its no. I dont know. Thats quite simple. Thats quite simple. Thats quite simple. Biggest no, i could give you. Yeah. Okay right. Last question. Im right. Last question. Im sure gb news viewers will be happy with this one. Should the bbc be a Subscription Service . I do. I think it should. Ive i do. I think it should. Ive always said that. Yeah i think its a draconian tax on people. Yeah. Yeah yeah. Oh, there you go. That was quite simple, werent it . It werent simple at the beginning was it, emma theres a bit of confusion at the beginning. So confusion at the beginning. So yes quiz. Yes or no. Quiz. No do you know what yeah. No do you know what i think . But theres, theres some questions life are questions in life that are difficult. Right. And i think right particular right now that particular question can woman question around can a woman have a of a penis has a lot of connotations that think is connotations that i think is very divisive our society. Very divisive in our society. And so i think sometime is it isnt a helpful question. Were going to leave that there because the old penis question comes up every week and it confuse some people. It does confuse some people. Well go. That wasnt well there you go. That wasnt too difficult, was it . Five points reckoning. So points each in my reckoning. So they answered all the they both answered all the questions. Yes or no. So simple questions. Yes or no. So simple really, aint it, guys . But really, aint it, guys . But coming up next, weve got steve nallon, whos the voice of the iron lady from spitting image back in the 90s. Do not go away. Oh the temperatures rising. Boxt solar our proud sponsors of weather on. Gb news. Of weather on. Gb news. Hello there. Welcome to your latest news weather forecast. Im Greg Dewhurst and looking at the weekend be summarised by sunshine and scattered showers particularly heavy on saturday and looking at the bigger picture, we can see why this area of low pressure moves for in the weekend, increasing the wind strength , increasing the wind strength, increasing the risk of showers across the north and the west in particular, cooler out there through the rest friday evening. Not rest of friday evening. Not too bad. Therell be some clear bad. Therell be some clear spells before dusk and then overnight see some overnight well see some outbreaks of rain pushing in across parts of northern ireland, western scotland , which ireland, western scotland, which could at times. Could be heavy at times. Temperatures generally a little lower recent nights. So a lower than recent nights. So a little more comfortable for sleeping , little more comfortable for sleeping, but little more comfortable for sleeping , but still 14 little more comfortable for sleeping, but still 14 or 15 for many to start saturday morning. Best to the sunshine first thing across eastern parts of england , scotland. But these , northeast scotland. But these bands rain slowly push their bands of rain slowly push their way eastwards through the day as the pressure pushes the area of low pressure pushes in the atlantic. Some of in from the atlantic. Some of this rain could be heavy, perhaps thundery at times across northern there northern england, but there will be sunny spells in between be some sunny spells in between and temperatures and that will lift temperatures to degrees towards the to around 23 degrees towards the south east. Breezier conditions towards here, 20 towards the northwest here, 20 or 21 as a maximum temperature into sunday. Low pressure still into sunday. Low pressure still in charge. The winds do ease and there will be less showers around. But fairly cloudy. Picture bright or sunny picture some bright or sunny spells, scattering of showers spells, a scattering of showers and temperatures once again reaching the high teens to low 20. The beginning of next 20. Its the beginning of next week. It stays unsettled further rain on but signs of rain on monday, but signs of something drier and brighter by tuesday. Tuesday. The temperatures rising on boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on. Weather on. Radio. Im andrew doyle join me at 7 00 every sunday night for free speech nation. The show i tackle the weeks biggest stories in politics and Current Affairs with the help. Current affairs with the help. So my next guest is a voice youll probably all know well, might not recognise him in the street, but youll certainly recognise some of the impressions it is. Its steve nallon worked spitting nallon who worked for spitting image in the 80s 90s, image back in the 80s and 90s, doing some impressions as doing some Great Impressions as the lady was one where oh the iron lady was one where oh god nurse me how kind of god nurse me how very kind of you to mention. And may i just say how marvellous it is to be able to be here today and talk down to you . Thank you. Thank you, steve. Its like maggies back in the room, so i guess steve similar sort age growing up in the sort of age growing up in the 70s, who did you draw your inspiration from to do these impressions . Impressions . Oh, impressions. That was mike yarwood. Yeah you know, because the thing about mike yarwood was nobody had ever done political impressions before. He was the first one to do it. And of course in those days it would have been Harold Wilson, who many people may remember, and he did a brilliant Harold Wilson , did a brilliant Harold Wilson, and he also did James Callaghan as well, whose late Prime Minister in the late 1970s. And the thing that i loved about mike yarwood was that he could take people who werent funny and make them funny. And thats how i started because on a monday morning we would come to school and wed everybody would have watched mike yarwood the have watched mike yarwood on the friday saturday. And friday or the saturday. And a guy said to me, he said, i can do brian clough. When the whole do brian clough. When the whole minnows. And i said to him , minnows. And i said to him, well, thats interesting because i can do. Brian clough without holding my nose. And they said, holding my nose. And they said, how do you do that . I said, i dont know. And then i sort of realised that, you know, that you just move your voice to your nose and stuff like that, but i could just learn how to do it. So it makes people laugh. He makes people, well, know, makes people, well, you know, he took brian clough took people like brian clough football at derby football manager, was at derby county, leeds united county, and then leeds united and my team, forest and forest. Dont forget forest and european cups and all the rest of it. But he but but mike yarwood took people and made them funny and politicians one of my favourite politicians one of my favourite politicians of that era was denis healey. Now denis healey was a bruiser. He was a tough , a was a bruiser. He was a tough, a tough man, but mike yarwood turned him into this sort of avuncular, caring actor who said, what a silly billy now. And of course what denis healey did was he turned his own character into the lovable, affable uncle that mike yarwood had created for him. But that wasnt real. Yeah. And the other thing you realise, you know, looking back on programs like spitting image, its all about perception. Perception. It is. But dont you think you look at mike yarwood, he did a great larry impression , by the Larry Grayson impression, by the way. Did. But in way. Mike yarwood did. But in the mike yarwood do these the 70s. Mike yarwood do these impressions they were, they were kind. Were send up. But you kind. They were send up. But you fast forward a years to fast forward a few years to spitting theyre a little fast forward a few years to spi nastier, theyre a little fast forward a few years to spi nastier, a theyre a little fast forward a few years to spi nastier, a bittheyre a little fast forward a few years to spi nastier, a bit more,e a little fast forward a few years to spi nastier, a bit more, cuttings bit nastier, a bit more, cutting a more. A bit more. Well heres the thing oh well heres the thing about mike about because i wrote in mike yarwood. Lovely, lovely yarwood. Lovely, lovely, lovely guy and you know he would get a script in and it would be about somebody he knew, you know, oh , somebody he knew, you know, oh, i cant do that. Is my mate. I i cant do that. Is my mate. I play i cant do that. Is my mate. I play golf with him. I cant do a 939 play golf with him. I cant do a gag about him. So he was restricting that with spitting image it was the opposite spitting image came along and the intention of spitting image. What a dreadful program. I do what a dreadful program. I do wish people had not have watched. It was to offend. That was the. It was to offend. That was the whole point. Right. And you whole point. Right. And you know, we forget that the purpose of spitting, you know, we wanted we wanted people to be angry and upset. When youre doing that impression of margaret thatcher, you actually look like her as well. Me. Well. Oh, goodness me. Technically , you have well, technically, you have to change the way you physically sit and move in order. Thats how i got the job, because i met the producer, john lloyd, and i said to him, im not going to do an audition. But i said, ill ill improvise a question and answer. You ask me a question and ill answer it. Answer. You ask me a question and ill answer it. And his eyes and ill answer it. And his eyes lit up as soon as i did. God, thats spooky. Thats spooky. And thats what you you know, you change your face and you have to change your face and you have to change your face and you have to change your face and you have to do that in order to create where the voice comes from. From. So do you find yourself slipping into that sort of voice when youre not . Mrs. Thatcher . No. Im happy to meet mrs. Thatcher. You know, when youre in the house doing something, mowing the lawn, whatever, you slip the lawn, whatever, do you slip into these voices . Occasionally. Not mrs. Occasionally. But not mrs. Thatcher. I think my favourite voice do so. Slightly voice to do so. Slightly forgotten now. But i did do her on spitting image to a degree. The lovely beryl reid, who many people remember beryl reid. People remember beryl reid. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. And beryl. She had the most and beryl. She had the most love voice, very warm and very friendly. And and i remember going up to john lloyd and saying, ive got anidea. John lloyd and saying, ive got an idea. He said, what voices an idea. He said, what voices have you done . I said, ive got have you done . I said, ive got ive got an idea. Beryl reid had a character she did called marlene and the character of marlene and the character of marlene was was sort of from the Black Country and spoke like that. Black country and spoke like that. And so i said, wouldnt it that. And so i said, wouldnt it be a good idea if we had sort of beryl reids Marlene Marlene as as the queen mum on spitting image so thats why you know, the queen mum spoke like that and recently discovered because and recently discovered because a friend of mine is a biographer of beryl reid , she she knew of beryl reid, she she knew about it. Yeah. And she was sort of right on the edge of a damehood and she was worried that the palace might think that she was doing the voice and therefore she wouldnt get. Have you ever deserved damehood . Have you ever tricked anybody on telephone doing on the telephone doing impressions . Yes house of commons, once at the house of commons, once i was the bar. At the house of commons, once iwas the bar. I dont go i was at the bar. I dont go very often, but its years and years ago when mrs. Thatcher was was the minister and the was the Prime Minister and the telephone rang. Is it annies bar . Is it strangers . Strangers but i cant remember which one it was. But. But and everybody knew in the bar knew i was in. They said go on, do it. Yeah so i picked up the phone. The Prime Minister, you. Youre just funny minister, you. Youre just funny noises at the end. And then he disappeared. Disappeared. Wow. Wow. Theyve wow. Theyve got wow. Theyve got some. Wow. Theyve got some. That was quite fun. That was quite fun. That was quite fun. Got some plaudits over that. Got some plaudits over that. We never discovered who it was. Could have been ronald reagan. Could have been. It could have been. Could have guess, know, have been. So i guess, you know, you the characters, the you look at the characters, the politicians the 80s and politicians in in the 80s and 90s, were easier for 90s, it were a bit easier for you to these impressions you to do these impressions because real characters. Because you had real characters. But years, but fast forward 30 odd years, it must be more difficult, surely. Well, back in the 80s we were gifted with like roy gifted with people like like roy hattersley. Called hattersley. I mean it was called spitting image and therefore he was a perfect he was he was the perfect character for spitting image because he was the only character who actually did any spitting. And i met him a few times and he was a great he was a great guy because he said to me, dont you sometimes feel guilty that you are mocking somebody with a speech impediment and i said, no, no, i do not feel guilty because you are a politician and you deserve all you get. And he agreed with me on that. And he he understood that tradition. If youre going to be a politician, an you, youre going to get flak flak, a little of mocking is not too bad. Were going to do some more mocking now because weve got wokeist of week and this is wokeist of the week and this is where pick three woke where we pick three woke organisations or people that have ridiculous have done some really ridiculous throughout week. So wilkie throughout the week. So wilkie one on my list is tate britain and theyve decided to place gender reassignment books in a childrens library. Just hold that thought right, okay. The second one is, um , believable. Second one is, um, believable. Wilkie to a woman has hit out at a mother who refuses to kill her daughters nits because of her vegan lifestyle. Now nits is we used to call them books when i was at school. These are like little head lice, arent they . We used to have the nurse come round and ferret around in your so depending what so depending on what, what whereabouts country. Its whereabouts in the country. Its the so and at school the on its so and at school they used to know a bit ferreting through so and wilkie number three is staff at a leading Surrey University have been encouraged to ditch phrases like black sheep black ball and Indian Summer nana. Mrs. Thatcher, what do you think to them . Them . Oh goodness me, i think im going to leave the choice to the perfect night nurse in the world, okay . And that would be and widdecombe because if youre going to have a night nurse that comes along to a school and makes people line up in a long line, then gets the comb out and goes through there, look, theres a nit there. Theres a nit there. Go stand over there. I think that Ann Widdecombe would be the perfect nick nurse and im going to go for the night. Nurse oh, dear. Dean you go. Ive got a trophy here, steve so the nit lady, if youre looking, you are wilkie of the week. Thanks to steve here hes picked you up. What a brilliant impression that was. Steve i mean, the unwitting one. I think thats probably my fave. Well, she, shes a shes well, she, she shes a shes a shes great i met her a shes a great joy. I met her as yeah. And said i as well. Yeah. And i said and i said, do know that your, said, do you know that your, your voice, youve got two voices. You up. Im voices. You break up. Yes, im aware of that. And i said the only other person who does that is Homer Simpson. Homer simpson. Is Homer Simpson. Homer simpson. Thats having thats a shame. Voice. Having you and down. And she you know, up and down. And she had idea who Homer Simpson was. I wish wed got more than ten minutes on this, steve. Absolutely brilliant but look, absolutely brilliant. But look, dont because next im absolutely brilliant. But look, dont to because next im absolutely brilliant. But look, dont to be because next im absolutely brilliant. But look, dont to be joinedause next im absolutely brilliant. But look, dont to be joined bye next im absolutely brilliant. But look, dont to be joined by the xt im going to be joined by the brilliant gb news presenter, charlie peters. Weve Simon Charlie peters. Weve got simon. Uk. Emma best. Who. Uk. Weve got emma best. Who else weve got coming on . Weve got laura swann, the got laura swann, whos the chairman windsor chairman of the windsor conservatives as radio. People in britain , they love people in britain, they love free speech, but they also love fair play. I dont care if im speaking somebody from a trade union, from the labour party, somebody from the labour party, somebody from the labour party, somebody from the snp, and i think the viewers like to see that. Actually we can challenge one another. But in a positive way. We think we ask the questions that want to ask, and that people want to ask, and often we ask the questions that we wanted to ask in parliament but never got the chance to ask. So join us every saturday, 10 am. Till noon on gb news, a. M. Till noon on gb news, britains news. A. M. Till noon on gb news, britains news. Channel welcome back. And still with welcome back. And still with me is simon danchuk. Welcome back. And still with me is simon danchuk. Weve also me is simon danchuk. Weve also got lars swann of the windsor conservatives. Hes the chairman of windsor conservatives and emma best, who sits on the London Assembly. But ive got this brilliant young man with me today, charlie peters. Works today, charlie peters. He works on gb news. Whats job on on gb news. Whats yourjob title . Charlie im the gb news investigates. Presenter so i run the Investigations Team at the broadcast. Okay, i have watched some okay, so i have watched some of recently. You of your work recently. You really nitty gritty really get to the nitty gritty of things and doing some good work, proper journalism. What have working recently . Work stories that so we work on stories that we think have the most interest in the general are the general public but are underserved by the other broadcasters papers. We broadcasters and papers. So we started off when we started this brand, we looked at firstly, the grooming in the grooming gang scandal in the country at an 18 month country made at an 18 month investigation in investigation film came out in february. We were in rochdale, investigation film came out in febwere. We were in rochdale, investigation film came out in febwere inle were in rochdale, investigation film came out in febwere in rotherham, chdale, investigation film came out in febwere in rotherham, ch were in we were in rotherham, we were in telford, inspired some telford, and it inspired some government action. So we made no qualms about being journalists who are very interested in outcomes. We to outcomes. We want to make a difference, and that means deep diving serious stories that diving into serious stories that really matter people. Really matter to people. So i guess back yeah, so i guess going back to when i was probably your age, a little bit younger, i think that journalists were better. I thought there was more skilled. I thought they had a better social conscience. They more social conscience. They did more of investigation stuff. Of this investigation stuff. They would undercover and they would go undercover and reveal the public. And they would go undercover and rev� had the public. And they would go undercover and rev� had numerous1e public. And they would go undercover and rev� had numerous programmesd they would go undercover and rev� had numerous programmes on at we had numerous programmes on at night where cook report was night time where cook report was was a really good one, you know, but these days, i think some of our journalists are cut but these days, i think some of ourjournalists are cut and our journalists are cut and paste, out to get you paste, theyre out to get you to, to catch you out. The gotcha to, to catch you out. The gotcha journalists, the. Why do you think that is . Well, im also interested in catching i do catching people out, but i do with serious work, not through just not catching the right people. Yeah, well. And well, whos person . Anyone . Whos the right person . Anyone . Theres fear no favour theres no no fear and no favour with gb news investigates. We go with gb news investigates. We go out, after anyone. We out, we go after anyone. We think a legitimate story think theres a legitimate story to recently, weve. To go after. So recently, weve. Weve got rid of a bengali islamist who came over to britain, who we followed very closely. Nobody else wanted to follow this guy. I think often because very nervous because theyre very nervous about stories. Because theyre very nervous about recently. Stories. More recently. Would journalist thats why would a journalist thats worth the salt be be concerned about doing that . Well, accusations well, there are accusations that people make about islamophobia stories. Islamophobia in some stories. And also, know, security and also, you know, security fears. People very, fears. People get very, very nervous putting their head nervous about putting their head above with some above the parapet with some people. But thankfully, gb news is very security conscious broadcaster. And we havent had any far. But i mean, any worries so far. But i mean, going back to what were going back to what you were saying about other journalists and stories, and not covering some stories, i think, back in the think, you know, back in the day, was more in day, there was more money in this there was this game. Yes and there was more form programming more long form programming dedicated to this work. Nowadays often and often with the internet and a lot sensationalist coverage, lot of sensationalist coverage, people are only interested in one opinion here and one line and opinion here and there. Takes a lot of there. And it takes a lot of investment and a lot of hard work to do serious work over a long period so it took long period of time. So it took 18 months to get that first hour out. Guess a lot of it were so i guess a lot of it were all guilty headline grabbing, all guilty of headline grabbing, i look, there was i suppose. Look, if there was clicks media, but clicks on on social media, but surely investigating surely when youre investigating something grooming Something Like the grooming scandal , Something Like the grooming scandal, mean, that Something Like the grooming scandal , mean, that get scandal, i mean, that must get to you sometimes in your head at night. You bed night. You know, you lay in bed at night about some at night thinking about it, some horrible things there to think about. Know, it was quite about. You know, it was quite weird first asked weird for me when i first asked this question, really this question, i hadnt really reflected before, reflected on it before, and i was nervous was slightly nervous that i might a psychopathic and might be a bit psychopathic and id hearing all these id be hearing all these horrible stories , and it wasnt horrible stories, and it wasnt actually that way. But i think when i when i thought about it more seriously, the reason why i think thats been case is any kind been the case is that any kind of bravery that you feel covering these pales in covering these stories pales in comparison whistle comparison to the whistle blowers and the survivors and the ordinary people who come to you these with these you with these with these stories their of their lives stories of their of their lives and theyve endured and you and what theyve endured and you cant really put into perspective how it makes you feel whats actually feel with whats actually happened. So i guess the sense of satisfaction doing satisfaction after doing something of Something Like that sort of outweighs that lay Something Like that sort of outyourhs that lay Something Like that sort of outyour mind that lay Something Like that sort of outyour mind whilst that lay Something Like that sort of outyour mind whilst doing at lay Something Like that sort of outyour mind whilst doing it. Lay on your mind whilst doing it. Also its really and also its really incredible to see people feeling the support from gb news when we run one of these stories to show that their voices matter, that theyre listened that theyre listened to, that theyre listened to, that theyre thats true theyre heard. And thats true not for the grooming gang not just for the grooming gang scandal, but for many other scandal, but for so many other stories covered. Stories that weve covered. Okay, charlie, think okay, charlie, i think what were do is go over were going to do now is go over to panel. Ive got emma who to our panel. Ive got emma who got and got simon. I got laws and weve got simon. I think go to two think were going to go to two laws. Laws. Youve laws. First laws. Youve heard what had say. Im what charlie has had to say. Im a bit cynical about journalists. These days. Mean, bit these days. I mean, im a bit sentimental in sentimental for going back in the day all the time. So what do you day you think to modern day journalism . Theres a lot of um, well, theres a lot of people who think their journalists arent journalists but arent journalists. Lot of journalists. Theres a lot of people have blogs who people on you have blogs who suddenly its local, micro, suddenly its like local, micro, local journalism. They think theyre but not theyre journalists, but not really that good at it. Some some of the newspapers, the quality journalism not quality of journalism is not great. Im a great i was always a great fan of the cook report and i think its you know, by far we should bring that back because that was a great show with charlie, charlie , with charlie, charlie, charlie, maybe new roger maybe charlies the new roger cook. Step elna el. One step at a time. One step at a time. Step at a time. One step at a time. One step at a time. Emma yeah, i think actually what said there about, what charlie said there about, you know, theres so much you know, theres just so much news out there. For people to its so easy for people to think theyve seen the news or they an they think theyve seen an investigative report way investigative report all the way through because they saw a ten second i think second tick tock. So i think theres a lot to be said about bringing journalism back and actually to actually to come back to the point rose raised in the. Point we rose raised in the. Yes, no question in the quiz about should the bbc be a Subscription Service. And one of the reasons i answer yes is because when talk about because when we talk about independent journalism , can independent journalism, um, can you independent you really have independent journalism and Good Journalism . Because journalists should and have views. Journalists should be out there digging data up and looking to uncover whats going on. And looking to uncover whats going on. And so actually, i think if you have a wide variety of views and journalists like charlie going out there and looking into what to people , then what matters to people, then thats. Thats important. Simon, i want to come to you just before come you. Just before we come to you. I would that when you as would imagine that when you as a member of parliament pretty much like a of like me, come under a lot of scrutiny certain scrutiny from certain journalists. And theres been certain about certain stories printed about you and a of stories printed you and a lot of stories printed about me. And when you read them , sometimes you think, my , sometimes you think, well, my goodness, say i goodness, i didnt say that i didnt that. Was not in didnt do that. I was not in that place. Yeah. Simon theres a lot of inaccuracy in some of the reporting that goes on. Theres no doubt about that. And thats always been and i think thats always been the up on the case. Picking up on something charlie said something that charlie said there, there more there, i mean, there was more money the years gone money in the game in years gone by, i think you can still do by, but i think you can still do a lot as gb news do a lot of Investigative Journalism on a fairly limited budget. And then in contrast , youve got the bbc, in contrast, youve got the bbc, like you mentioned , emma and the like you mentioned, emma and the guardian, who have loads of money, and yet they really cumbersome in of the cumbersome in terms of the investigations that they do and dont as much. And yet dont achieve as much. And yet theyve lots more money. So theyve got lots more money. So i newcomers like gb news i think newcomers like gb news are a breath of fresh air in terms doing more terms of doing more investigative stuff. Investigative stuff. Subscription service. I think the World Service should be free at the point of delivery, but i think Everything Else should be subscription. Else should be subscription. Why . Why . Well, service because the World Service, i think, provides a very Good Value Service across the world for british nationals and it would pay for it. Um, the government. Um, the government. You mean. You mean us to pay for it. But we. But but only the World Service. The World Service would be a paid for paid for service by the government. The rest of it would be subscription based. Okay thanks, panel. That was absolutely fascinating. Could talk about that day. And i talk about that all day. And i think, need private think, simon, we need a private conversation of this. Conversation about some of this. These these people these these naughty people in journalism that, you know, print these these stories that are just not true. But look, you know, this is about to know, this show is about to talking real people. And there is a guy comes on this show is a guy that comes on this show called cabbie. Called gary the cabbie. And were him next were going to go to him next because every single week he speaks sense and speaks plain common sense and the viewers. Absolutely the gb news viewers. Absolutely love. So im back on the love him. So im back on the road with gary fisher. Gary the cabbie, he speaks common sense. Hes dripping with common sense. So gary, i guess this week we saw the youths on Regent Street in london thieving , being in london thieving, being arranged through social media. Yeah. Whats going on, gary . Yeah. Whats going on, gary . Like i was up there last night 24 hours before tiktok put it out there for them to go and do it. It out there for them to go and doit. The it out there for them to go and do it. The mayor had 24 hours to deal with this. It happened. The police turned up. He put his police turned up. He put his officers at risk. No riot vans, officers at risk. No riot vans, no dogs , no horses. They run no dogs, no horses. They run right along Regent Street and oxford street. Yeah. Once again, oxford street. Yeah. Once again, hes put his officers at risk. Lee why . Im on here. Can i please issue the mayor a challenge . I want to challenge challenge . I want to challenge the mayor i will pick him up from his home free of charge. I from his home free of charge. I wont even put the hour metre on. I will pick him up after midnight and i will take him round the whole of his london that he is in charge of and show him how it has become a lawless london. The once great city of london. The once great city of london is now lawless. So there you go. Mayor con gary, the cabbie, has got a challenge for you, but weve got last orders next with clare brockett. Tell me, mum and former cabbie driver. Oh well, its time for last orders. And from one cabbie to orders. And from one cabbie to an ex cabbie got clare brockett, also a towie mum. Whats a towie also a towie mum. Whats a towie mum . An ex towie mum as well. So my daughters on telly. I used to do it. If i dont do it no more. The only way is essex. Ive got to honest confession. Never watched it, but ive heard its a show so i wont hold it a great show so i wont hold it against a great show so i wont hold it agaso, clare, an ex so, clare, you was an ex cabbie . Theres a reason cabbie . Yes. Theres a reason youre cabbie. Youre an ex cabbie. Why is that . Why is that . Well, i stopped being a cabbie before lockdown, to cabbie just before lockdown, to be and was basically be honest. And it was basically back we had the issue with back then we had the issue with uber and i just found that london was saturated. I was like london was saturated. I was like driving around london, not only was like just, you know , was there like just, you know, private hire stickers and vehicles everywhere for making it but was noticing it difficult, but i was noticing noticing as well a night and noticing as well of a night and i the issue is still i think the issue is still there. Getting cabbies there. You was getting cabbies coming clearly from other coming down clearly from other cities nottingham, cities like nottingham, leicester , because theyre leicester, because theyre not even if you look at even hiding it. If you look at the or the, the number plates or the, you know, the back, know, the plates on the back, theyre different theyre from different cities. So it was just so to me it was just unsustainable. I couldnt do it. And to be blunt with you, i think i had burnout with cabbie. I just yeah, yeah. So i guess with the uber very handy like me that handy for people like me that work london, just get on your work in london, just get on your phone app it within two minutes. Is there . Were not is it uber there . Yeah were not really for black really bothered. Yeah for black cab living. Cab drivers its their living. Its it i mean its eating into it was i mean look i can understand uber drivers doing you know its drivers doing it you know its easy just an easy you just download an app and gone. And youre gone. Me, im very but for me, im very passionate about london cab drivers that drivers and the process that they go through. You know, its a passage. And, you a rite of passage. And, you know, been its going know, its been its been going on know, a very, very on for, you know, a very, very long time. A british long time. Its a british institution. I think more should be done to support it. Okay. The we so gary, the cabbie, we talked every week on talked to every week on this show, legend own show, hes a legend in his own lunchtime. Ethans a legend. Lunchtime. Ethans is a legend. He legend. He speaks common he is a legend. He speaks common sense. He talks sense. But he tells me he talks to about these the to me about these ltns, the traffic neighbourhoods , which i traffic neighbourhoods, which i knew little about when i first started this job. And also the ulez expansion, because i believe the ulez is actually not just affecting people in london who voted for mayor khan. Its actually affecting people on the outskirts that actually affecting people on the outskiiget that actually affecting people on the outskiiget vote that actually affecting people on the outskiiget vote. That didnt get a vote. I didnt vote for him and i live in essex, his policies live in essex, but his policies are affecting people where i live. I now work in the car trade. I sell cars and yeah, i get people coming in, you know, just for example , one of the just for example, one of the many, many stories that i could tell you of people that its affecting. There was an elderly lady coming to me the other day. She had a 19 year old car, bless her. And she was like, i dont want sell it because it was want to sell it because it was my husbands. There so my late husbands. There were so many memories that vehicle my late husbands. There were so manweremories that vehicle my late husbands. There were so manwe were ies that vehicle my late husbands. There were so manwe were sitting hat vehicle my late husbands. There were so manwe were sitting thereehicle my late husbands. There were so manwe were sitting there trying and we were sitting there trying to work out how could stay to work out how she could stay in this vehicle if she could afford obviously she afford to. And obviously she couldnt. Visits her friends couldnt. She visits her friends twice a week to go swimming and her grandchildren. Just my her grandchildren. And i just my heart her. Like heart broke for her. But like i said, thats just of many said, thats just one of many customers i that situation. So guess when merck answers so i guess when merck answers to this little old with 19 to this little old lady with 19 year mercedes is £2,000, year old mercedes is £2,000, yeah, you can go and buy a brand new tesla at 40 grand. Thats not cutting the price, is it . Well, not really, because its not going to give her back the memories that shes you know, losing. Shes know, that shes losing. Shes actually shes actually selling memories. Shes hoping get rid of that hoping to get rid of that because he thinks that, you know, essex should be know, the air in essex should be cleaner. Apparently and weve got great voluntary sector in country well. Sector in this country as well. People a daily people that volunteer on a daily basis, to whether its basis, they go to whether its citizens bureau, whether citizens advice bureau, whether its , um, homeless hostels, its, um, homeless hostels, whatever it is, they go out and volunteer every single day. They cant now because cant do that now because theyve been charged £12. 50 a day. Exactly theyve been charged £12. 50 a daywe actly lady i couldnt we had a lady i couldnt believe it. And to be honest with you, because it sounds a bit but its like bit bad, but its like i couldnt what was couldnt understand what she was saying, she through. Saying, that she cuts through. I think it was like in think it was like aveley in essex. And like, essex. Yeah. And she was like, i have like 1250 and it have to pay like 1250 and it just baffled me that i never even read that that would be an issue, to be honest, until she said to me. And was only said it to me. And this was only the and was the other day and i was like, i couldnt believe it. She was just through, like you just passing through, like you said. And it was its said. And it was just its affecting. So people, affecting. So many people, so many not just many families, not just businesses. Businesses. So its time for on the poll and the lovely claire is going to pull a pint for us. But first we need our judge. The very able we need ourjudge. The very able steve nolan coming in please steve. So claire the rules are quite simple. Pint pot. Theres quite simple. Pint pot. Theres a pour us pint. Right. No pressure. No pressure. No pressure. No pressure. No pressure. No pressure for years. No pressure for years. One these many characters one of these many characters that steve going to talk that steve does is going to talk us , you know , what have us through, you know, what have we done . What are we done . What are we done . What are we done . Pear shaped. I worked amte power. That was me know. Oh, dear. Im full of it. Its great. Its great. Thats dire. Blame the great. Thats dire. Blame the barrel. Im blaming the barrel. Barrel. Im blaming the barrel. You cant do that. What is that . Look at that. What is that . Look at that. Keep going. Keep going, keep going. Never give up. Never give going. Never give up. Never give up. Never give up. Its milkshake. Never give up. Priming the pump. And actually this a bad pump. And actually this a bad workman blames at all. No, no, this is actually how we used to do it. Have a look. Have a look. No way. Come claire. No way. Come on, claire. No way. Come on, claire. Come on, love it. No way. Come on, claire. Iome on, love it. No way. Come on, claire. I love on, love it. No way. Come on, claire. I love it. Love it. No way. Come on, claire. I love it. Love. It. No way. Come on, claire. I love it. Love. I. No way. Come on, claire. I love it. Love. I love it. Thats terrible. I used to be thats terrible. I used to be a barmaid. A barmaid. The pint milkshake. The pint milkshake. Oh , god. What you invention , oh, god. What you invention, mrs. Thatcher . That. Oh, goodness me. I think i would have left it to dennis to decide. I think on that one. Decide. I think on that one. Well, weve got to give her a score. Mrs. Tea. What do you think . Out of ten, ten. Number ten. Number ten. Thats what used to live. Thats the number i always remember. Remember. Ten. Thats terrible. It is terrible. Mrs. Tea saying ten in a pub again. Weve got to go ten and im pretty sure for that the previous tom skinner is great weeks contest. This will be weeks contest. This will be pretty, pretty furious with that mean that is without doubt mrs. Tea. Thats the worst one weve seen on the poll. Seen on the poll. Its a shock and the scarf. Its a shock and the scarf. Its a shock and the scarf. The scarf ball doesnt lie. The scarf ball doesnt lie. Its trying it look, its terrible. Terrible. Have you actually got still got throw off. Oh it tastes nice. Oh it tastes nice. Oh it tastes nice. Oh whats the problem. Oh whats the problem. Well look. Absolutely. Well look. Absolutely. Absolutely brilliant guys. So funny, claire, that was. Dont funny, claire, that was. Dont give up your day job. No. Clearly yeah. No. Clearly yeah. Clearly far better at selling cars than pulling pints and steve, its been an absolute pleasure. Got a bit of a drink problem there, but youve actually took the took the head off now arent you . Yeah but thanks guys for joining off now arent you . Yeah but thanks guys forjoining me. It was absolutely brilliant. Thank was absolutely brilliant. Thank you so massive. Thanks for watching. Lea andersons real world this week. A massive thanks to all my brilliant guests. Look, if you want to come just supply us come to your pub, just supply us a and well fill it full of a room and well fill it full of common sense. But you know what . Ill be back at same time ill be back at the same time next friday at p. M, ill be back at the same time next friday at pm, with next week, friday at 7 pm, with some brilliant guests. Including, mrs. Thatcher, including, i believe , mike freer, mp for believe, mike freer, mp for golders green. Steve tarkwa, mp for uxbridge. Sir vince cable , stephen. Sir vince cable, stephen pound, Charlie Mullins and a Live Audience will be joining us. Us. Well be enjoying not me, i wont be there. Tune in next week at 7 pm. On friday on. Gb news. A brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on. Gb news. On. Gb news. Hello there. Welcome to your hello there. Welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast. Im Greg Dewhurst and looking at the weekend be summarised by sunshine and scattered showers particularly heavy on saturday and looking at the bigger picture, we can see why this area of low pressure moves in for the weekend. Increasing the wind strengths, the wind strengths, increasing the risk of showers across the north and west in particular out and the west in particular out there through the rest of friday evening. Not too bad. Therell be some clear spells before dusk and overnight well see and then overnight well see some outbreaks of rain pushing in across parts of northern ireland, western scotland, which could be heavy at times. Temperatures generally a little lower than recent nights. So a little more comfortable for sleeping, but still 14 or 15 for many to start saturday morning. Best for the sunshine first thing across eastern parts of england, north east scotland. But these bands rain slowly but these bands of rain slowly push way eastwards through push their way eastwards through the day as the area low the day as the area of low pressure in from the pressure pushes in from the atlantic. This rain atlantic. Some of this rain could perhaps thundery atlantic. Some of this rain co times perhaps thundery atlantic. Some of this rain co times across perhaps thundery atlantic. Some of this rain co times across northern thundery at times across northern england, but there will be some sunny in between that sunny spells in between and that will temperatures around will lift temperatures to around 23 southeast 23 degrees towards the southeast , a breezier conditions towards the northwest here, 20 or 21 as a maximum temperature into sunday. Low pressure still in charge. The winds do ease and there will be less showers around, but fairly cloudy. Picture bright or sunny picture some bright or sunny spells , a scattering showers spells, a scattering of showers and temperatures once again reaching high teens to low reaching the high teens to low 20s. Its the beginning of next week. It stays unsettled. Week. It stays unsettled. Further monday, but further rain on monday, but signs of something dry and brighter by tuesday. Brighter by tuesday. A brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on. Gb news every sunday from 11 on. Gb news every sunday from 11 join Michael Portillo there will be topical discussion looking at the week before and the week to come. So kick back and relax at 11 am. On sundays on news with me, Michael Portillo, gb news the peoples channel, britains news channel good evening its 8 00 and im dawn neesom and coming up its amazing show for you now the bibby stockholm passengers have disembarked. Thanks to an outbreak of legionella bacteria. So where can we safely put the massive backlog of Asylum Seekers now Suella Braverman is now looking at tents. Is any of this working or even ethical, though . Then jenni, trent hughes and Conor Tomlinson join me on the panel to discuss what the echr ever did for us. The new season of football has kicked off, but dont watch it. This is much more fun and theyre taking the knee again. Should they be, the knee again. Should they be, though . Didnt we do that last season . Did it do anything . And season . Did it do anything . And then wilco has become the latest victim of the high street. Are victim of the high street. Are there any high streets even left anymore with the consumer moving onune . Anymore with the consumer moving online . Im speaking to James Woodhouse about how the high street changing what the street is changing and what the future looks like. And its not a scary as you may think. Thats all coming up after your latest News Headlines with tatiana sanchez. News headlines with tatiana sanchez. Dorna. Sanchez. Dorna. Thank you very much. And good thank you very much. And good evening. This is the latest from the newsroom. The home secretary was warned that Holding Migrants on the bibby stockholm barge was a huge Health Safety risk. A huge health and safety risk. The Fire Brigades Union says it wrote to Suella Braverman more than a week but hasnt than a week ago, but hasnt received response. All 39 received a response. All 39 migrants on the barge were removed this afternoon after legionella bacteria was found in the water where the bacteria can cause a serious type of lung infection known as