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Trump: ‘I Will Not Forget Starmer’s BETRAYAL!’ | Tony Blair BACKS President Over Prime Minister

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00:00All the Americans asked for from us was to use British air bases to refuel their planes.
00:09That's all they wanted, folks.
00:11They wanted to top up their jets with a bit of unleaded or whatever goes into a military aircraft.
00:17And we couldn't even do that.
00:20Sir Keir Starmer refuses Donald Trump the most minimal and trivial of requests.
00:26He wasn't asking for tanks or planes or ammunition or men, just an air base for refueling.
00:34But the answer from Britain, whose very survival depends on US military might, was no.
00:42And this is why I say that Starmer is such a dangerous politician.
00:47Because the preservation of the US-UK special relationship is critical.
00:54It is in the national interest.
00:57And Starmer is therefore, by snubbing Trump, working against the national interest of this country.
01:05And this is not the only realm in which Starmer has betrayed Britain.
01:11He's wrecked the economy with red tape, which has accelerated workers' rights and led to unemployment.
01:18He's delivered policies which have fuelled inflation and killed growth and spiked the cost of government borrowing.
01:26He's responsible for an explosion in the welfare bill.
01:29And he's doubled down on the suicidal madness of net zero, which has delivered the highest energy prices in the
01:36developed world and which has begun the de-industrialisation of our economy.
01:41Under those circumstances, with a shrinking economy and the return of our old enemy unemployment, tell me how we protect
01:50ourselves in an increasingly dangerous world, whilst mightily letting down our best friends.
01:58Now, this isn't even party political anymore, because the former Labour Prime Minister, Tony Blair, has attacked Starmer, declaring that
02:09we must always be there for America in its hour of need.
02:13He says, you've got to show up for your friends.
02:15And Blair is absolutely right.
02:18Once every leap year, I will agree with the man.
02:21And on this one, he is absolutely spot on.
02:26Now, in many ways, Blair was a disastrous Prime Minister.
02:29He created the legal and legislative infrastructure, which has made it so hard for us to deport foreign criminals.
02:35He needlessly opened our borders to the east.
02:39He lied to the British public about the threat of Saddam Hussein via Alastair Campbell's sexed up dossier.
02:46But his government was patriotic.
02:48It was business friendly.
02:50Taxes were low.
02:51There was economic growth.
02:52The word socialism was banned from the New Labour project.
02:56The craziest lefties were kept in their box.
02:59And it was a golden era for Anglo-US relations, as it was under the formidable Margaret Thatcher, who was
03:08so close to Ronald Reagan.
03:10But now, breaking this morning, Donald Trump, US President, leader of the free world, further humiliates the Prime Minister by
03:19rejecting the offer of aircraft carriers, saying,
03:22no thanks, Sir Keir.
03:24We don't need help from a country when we've already won the war.
03:29And Donald Trump, who has the memory of an elephant, has said he will not forget Starmer's betrayal.
03:36Do you know, it honestly sometimes feels like the Prime Minister is trying to destroy Britain.
03:43He's scrapping jury trials that have worked well for 900 years.
03:47He's waging a war on free speech with a sinister proposal for a definition of Islamophobia,
03:54which in reality means you won't be able to call out the Pakistani Muslim grooming gangs or religious extremism without
04:02having your collar felt.
04:04This is a man who has emasculated our energy supply by shuttering oil wells and gas fields.
04:11And if the war in Iran continues, let me tell you that the cost of petrol and heating our homes
04:16is going to go through the roof.
04:18Why? Because we've got oil and we've got gas and we don't drill for it.
04:23Instead, we've got flaky renewables, which is, I've got to tell you, a disaster for the country.
04:31It's not only Donald Trump that feels betrayed by Starmer this morning.
04:36Britain is now a nation betrayed, with a Prime Minister whose every action seems to be working against the best
04:46interests of its people.
04:47I agree with Donald Trump.
04:50With friends like this, who needs enemies?
04:5503444991000 is my phone number.
04:57Georgina is in the capital.
04:59Good morning, Georgina.
05:00Good morning, Mark.
05:01Before I go any further, my darling, my son Henry, it's his birthday today, 17.
05:06He loves your show.
05:09Could you please just shout out a happy birthday to Henry?
05:11Of course I can.
05:13Henry, may I wish you a happy birthday?
05:1517 is a great age.
05:16You've got your life ahead of you.
05:18Take risks.
05:19Have fun.
05:20Be yourself.
05:21And let me tell you that your mother did an amazing job, or we love having her on this radio
05:25station.
05:26In fact, I think that we should give Georgina in London, your mum, a contract, because she talks so much
05:31sense.
05:31Big Henry, happy birthday and have fun.
05:34Do you know what are you doing with Henry?
05:35Are you going to have a little party tonight?
05:37What's going on?
05:38Well, we're going to have a little bit of a party.
05:40We're also going to get him.
05:41He wants a new computer, so that's what he's getting for his birthday, and he deserves it.
05:44He's an absolute angel.
05:46Now, what I rang in to say today, I'm really confused, because I want to know actually how bad or
05:54how useless has this government got to be before they are deemed unfit for purpose, Mark?
05:58And get a vote of no confidence.
06:00We have a prime minister who's trying to eradicate our culture, our history, our very existence, as well as making
06:07us priors on the global stage because of his cowardice in not helping our allies in the Middle Eastern crisis.
06:14A prime minister who holds a deep hatred for our flag, the very flag that was flying whilst my forefathers
06:21fought and died to give him the freedoms that he has the luxury of enjoying today.
06:27How dare he do that?
06:30And then we have a deputy prime minister who's got the IQ of a garden snail.
06:34His recent faux pas, and there's been many of them, being that Cyprus is part of NATO.
06:40These people have shown themselves unfit to govern, and yet they are still in office.
06:45They're neither use nor ornament, Mark.
06:48These people are putting us in a position of vulnerability, in danger, daily by their cowardice, and yet they still
06:54hold their positions.
06:56Where's the accountability?
06:57How are they allowed to get away with this?
06:59The prime minister is getting away with bare-faced lying to us, the British public, on a daily basis, and
07:07no one seems to be pulling him up for his lies.
07:09Yet we all know he's lying, and he's getting away with it.
07:13When did lying to the population become acceptable behaviour?
07:17We have in office now the most despised prime minister in history.
07:22A proven coward, a proven hater of Britain, and a proven liar.
07:26He is public enemy number one, and yet he's still in number ten.
07:31Please, Mark, explain how this can be.
07:34Georgina, Labour supporters might say, what are these lies of which you speak?
07:39This Labour government inherited an economic mess from the Tories, depleted public services, and a broken country.
07:47How many times have we got to listen to the same old pistol?
07:53We know that 14 years of conservative rule did not do this country any good.
07:59We're well aware of that.
08:01Conservatism died when Margaret Thatcher ceased to be the leader of Britain.
08:07It died, Mark.
08:091990.
08:10That was the end.
08:11Yes, exactly.
08:13And we need another strong leader.
08:17Now, I'm not saying by any means it's going to be Conservative.
08:20I'm certainly not saying it's going to be Labour.
08:23I think it's going to be Nigel Farage, because he seems to be the only one now
08:29who has got the testicular fortitude to go forth and fight for our country.
08:34And by God, Mark, this country needs fighting for.
08:38It's a wonderful country, but we need to get it back on its feet.
08:42It's on its knees at the moment, both economically and culturally.
08:47We've forgotten who we are, and we need to get back the fight and the great in Britain.
08:54Now, I've worked alongside Nigel Farage.
08:56I don't have the details of his testicular fortitude.
09:00What I will say, he's had no complaints.
09:02One thing I wanted to ask you, Georgina, I think one of the reasons why you're so passionate,
09:06you care about your country, you love your country,
09:08and you see it disappearing before your very eyes in a project that provably no one voted for.
09:13I wonder whether you're also motivated because you're worried about Henry,
09:18your lad that's turned 17 today.
09:20Well, I have five beautiful children, all grown up.
09:24Henry was the most magnificent surprise, because I was an old girl when I had Henry.
09:30So he was a gift from God.
09:33And I look at the world now, and I look at my children, and I'm not going to live forever.
09:39And I don't want to leave a legacy of the Britain that we have now.
09:44It's terrifying.
09:45You can't even walk out of your own door now without fear of being attacked or raped or mugged.
09:53You know, Mark, this is not the Britain that I remember when I was a child.
10:00This Britain now seems like something from a film.
10:04It's absolutely a different world to how we used to live.
10:10And the Britain now is a dangerous Britain.
10:12It's a Britain that people don't want to come to on holiday,
10:16like they used to do back in the days when I was a girl,
10:19because it is a dangerous Britain.
10:22People are getting mugged on a daily basis.
10:24Young girls are getting raped on a daily basis.
10:27And harassed.
10:28And harassed, yes.
10:30And murdered.
10:31And we seem to have become desensitised by all this that's going on,
10:37because it's happening so often.
10:38This is not normal behaviour.
10:42And until we get a grip on the illegal immigration,
10:47because that is a major problem,
10:49which also escalates into our economic way that we are at the moment.
10:55The economy is on its knees,
10:56because we can't afford to keep paying out for these illegal migrants.
11:01And now they're talking about giving them £40,000
11:04to leave the country within seven days.
11:07My God, that's the biggest incentive for these people to come over that we've ever had.
11:12This is backward reasoning.
11:15This is upside down.
11:17This is not normal brain functioning.
11:21We have got to get a handle on this.
11:23And this government is just digging a deep hole to bury us all in.
11:28And my children, your children, and everybody else's children
11:32is going to suffer because of the ridiculously incompetent way
11:38this government are dealing with the problems of this country.
11:43They need to get a handle on it, and they need to do it quickly.
11:46Otherwise, there's going to be nothing left to salvage, Mark.
11:50An important and brilliant call.
11:52And happy birthday, Henry.
11:54Georgina, thank you for your company, your common sense, your articulacy.
11:58I've got to say, you've had your three-wheat-a-bix this morning.
12:01We'll speak soon, Georgina.
12:03Dixie is an Australia bugger.
12:04Let me tell you that Talk Breakfast is a global show.
12:07Can I, first of all, shout out my executive producer, Dean Spencer,
12:11who spent weeks working on the Pauline Hanson interview.
12:14She's the leader of the One Nation Party in Australia,
12:16often described as the Australian Nigel Farage.
12:18Great booking, Dean.
12:20And Dixie is down under as we speak.
12:23Hi.
12:23I think it's good evening where you are, isn't it, Dixie?
12:26It sure is.
12:27And good morning to you, Mark.
12:29Well, thank you for calling.
12:31Well, look, it's great to have you listening.
12:33You are in Australia, but I understand you were born in the UK.
12:36Is that right?
12:38That's correct.
12:38I was born in the old Kent Road.
12:40Lovely.
12:41And then in my teenage years, I was in Kent, and then I moved back to London,
12:49and it turned into such a mess, I decided to emigrate.
12:56Well, you've got a lovely hybrid accent, Dixie, and we had Pauline Hanson on just in the last hour.
13:03And, Dixie, she said that the Australians feel sorry for the Brits,
13:09and the UK is a warning sign that Australia must not become like Britain.
13:14What did you make of that?
13:15I completely agree with that.
13:18That's why I left in 1989, London.
13:22My husband was a fireman.
13:24I was a professional woman in multiple businesses.
13:28Yeah.
13:28And I said, look, and Martin said the same, this is just, these people are not integrating.
13:37They are not integrating at all.
13:40The crime is going crazy.
13:43I've got all my family still living in the UK, and I now refuse to go back to the UK
13:48because I don't feel safe there.
13:51I do not feel safe there.
13:53And you saw the decline all the way back to the late 80s, early 90s?
13:59That's correct.
14:00And when I came to Australia, I spoke to many politicians when I emigrated.
14:07I was, luckily enough, I got my Australian citizen, and I've been very vocal about this.
14:11Please don't follow the same way that England.
14:16Why I left England, which is a great country, I left England,
14:20and now I'm seeing the destruction of the country that I emigrated to,
14:25and I totally agree with Pauline Hanson on that.
14:28And how do you feel watching your country of birth go down the toilet, Dixie?
14:35Oh, it makes me cry.
14:37My heart breaks.
14:38Every day I listen to talk TV in the morning.
14:42It's your morning, my evening, and I introduce people to it and say,
14:46listen to the truth.
14:48What is going on in the UK?
14:50You haven't even got a prime minister that can stand up to your own people.
14:54It's horrific.
14:56I hate watching it.
14:57It's upsetting, really upsetting.
14:59It's a credit to you, Dixie.
15:01It's a credit to you that you still care because you've left,
15:03and yet it's a tragedy for you watching it play out from overseas.
15:08Of course.
15:09Because my whole family lives there.
15:11Yeah.
15:12All my brothers and sisters, my nieces and nephews,
15:15my great nieces and great nephews live there.
15:17What has happened?
15:20When I went and saw my mother before she died,
15:24my normal Kent front door house is a beautiful house,
15:29I said, what's happened to the front door?
15:31It's got bolts and locks and locks and security cameras and security everywhere.
15:37That's not how we were brought up.
15:40Or what about this, Dixie?
15:42We used to put the key from the letterbox.
15:43Yeah, exactly.
15:44You hide the key in the letterbox or on a latch or under the welcome mat
15:48or even not locking the doors, Dixie.
15:50I remember that back in the day.
15:52What about the idea that in British supermarkets,
15:56shampoo and jars of Nescafe Goldblend are under lock and key
16:02or have an electronic tag on them?
16:04Well, I saw it even worse this morning on the British press.
16:08They've got OXOQ with security tags on it.
16:13That was in the Daily Mail, Australia, from UK.
16:18OXOQ.
16:19It's completely bad.
16:20Yeah, what are these criminals making gravy now?
16:23What is it, bloody Gordon Ramsay shoplifting?
16:25You couldn't make it up.
16:26Dixie, I could talk to you for hours.
16:28Go on, get your last point out.
16:31Well, UK, I read it every day.
16:34I follow the media all the time in the UK
16:37because I'm watching here in disbelief.
16:40Yeah.
16:40And no wonder there's so many people,
16:42your doctors and nurses, come into Australia.
16:45No wonder they're running away.
16:48Who could blame them?
16:50Who could blame them?
16:51Dixie, every word is true.
16:53And may God bless you for still caring and your family here,
16:57who are obviously looking at your situation in Australia enviously.
17:01But a warning from Pauline Hanson,
17:04who is sometimes described as the Australian Nigel Farage,
17:07that actually Britain is something that Australia must not become.
17:11We're a warning to the world, folks.
17:13Make it make sense.
17:14Dixie, go and have a lovely evening.
17:16And it's a real delight that you listen to and watch Talk in the evening there in Australia
17:21when we're on the radio and on telly in the morning.
17:24Talk is a truly global show,
17:25which is why you're able to watch it anywhere on the planet.
17:27If you just go to YouTube and search Talkin' Up, it pops.
17:30It's a TV product as well as radio as well.
17:34Sir Michael Fabricant is next.
17:36I've got this shocking story.
17:38Close to a million social homes in England and Wales
17:41are now occupied by people born overseas.
17:44Who's paying for that?
17:46You and me.
17:46I've got the inside story next.
17:57I've got the inside story next.
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