Dan Wootton Outspoken - KEIR STARMER CAUGHT LYING ABOUT MARRIAGE ON LIVE TV AS MORGAN MCSWEENEY FINISHES PM'S CAREER
Episode Date: April 28, 2026BREAKING RIGHT NOW: Slippery Starmer caught out in a double lie, as desperate Labour MPs plot to force the least popular Prime Minister in history into a departure after a disastrous day in parliament... for our corrupted leader as his own allies publicly turn. Even an authoritarian three line whip won’t save Two Tier Keir for more than a matter of weeks, as his so-called human shield Morgan McSweeney lied, changed his mind and threw his ex-boss under the bus. The only allies left are the MSM, with the dire Cathy Newman launching her new career at Sly News by comparing a finished Starmer to Hugh Grant in Love Actually – and then she allowed Starmer to lie about his troubled marriage without asking him once about the Ukrainian firebomber court case. We’ll have the analysis you will not get from the MSM today with our husband and wife Superstar Panel: Former Tory Minister and UKIP leader Neil Hamilton, and author and media personality Christine Hamilton. PLUS: Tit Whisperer Zack Polanski exposed for stitching up a dirty deal between the Green Party and a new Labour regime led by Red Angela Rayner the Tax Evader. AND: Donald Trump reveals he wants to move to Buckingham Palace, after it’s revealed he’s actually a distant cousin of King Charles. We’ll have all the latest from the Royal State Visit. THEN IN THE UNCANCELLED AFTERSHOW: Meghan Markle and Prince Harry manage to overshadow the King’s first engagement in Washington DC, as a garden party American guest goes viral with a new photo of the couple’s daughter. We’ll cross to the US for all the latest from Tom Sykes of The Royalist Substack. Sign up to watch live or on demand and totally ad free at https://www.outspoken.live LIKE & SUBSCRIBE for new videos every day: https://youtube.com/@danwoottonoutspoken?si=-2BhmEbBSN1fyESS?sub_confirmation=1 ---------- Find the full audio show wherever you get your podcasts: Apple — https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/dan-wootton-outspoken/id1762436723 Spotify — https://open.spotify.com/show/19Ltoneek2MSPL10CpSA1J?si=8f6d84e2db56448c ---------- Follow Dan on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@outspokendan Follow Dan on Twitter: https://x.com/danwootton Follow Dan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/danwootton/ Follow Dan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/danwootton/?hl=en #DanWootton #DanWoottonOutspoken #news #outspoken #uknews Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome aboard via rail.
Please sit and enjoy.
Please sit and stretch.
Steep.
Flip.
Or that.
And enjoy.
Via rail, love the way.
No spin, no bias, no censorship.
I'm Dan Witten.
This is outspoken episode number 477.
And breaking right now, slippery stammer caught out in a double lie.
And desperate Labour MPs plot to force the least popular prize.
Prime Minister in history into a departure after a disastrous day in Parliament for our corrupted
leader as his own allies publicly turn.
But let me be clear what they are saying if they vote against this motion.
Would they rather be on the side of Peter Mandelson, of convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein,
of Morgan McSweeney and Matthew Doyle?
The fact that MPs like me are being whipped into voting against this motion is in my view wrong, Mr Speaker.
It has cleared into the terrible narrative that there is something to hide and good, decent colleagues will be accused of being complicit in a cover of.
But even that authoritarian three-line whip won't save two-tier care for more than a matter of weeks as his so-called human shield, Morgan McSweeney, lied, changed his mind.
and threw his ex-boss under the bus.
You really wanted Peter Madelson to be the ambassador, didn't you?
I thought he was the right choice after the US presidential election.
He essentially assured you that it was any allegations about him staying at Epstein's house once Epstein was in jail, was all fine.
Again, I don't think I can share the contents of the emails.
And the operator said, Stetney Green Park, okay?
said, yeah, he turned left there.
And it wasn't anywhere near Stephanie.
Unbelievable, the only allies for slippery Stama left are in the MSM,
with the dire Cathy Newman launching her new career at Sly News
by, with a straight face, comparing a finished Stama to Hugh Grant in love, actually.
I took a very clear decision at the outbreak of the conflict in Iran,
that the UK would not be dragged into the conflict.
It was your love actually moment, wasn't it?
Well, I'm the British Prime Minister.
I act in the British national interest.
And then she allowed Stama to lie about his troubled marriage
without even asking him once about the Ukrainian firebomber court case.
I always listen to Vic.
And I think she was the one in the first place
that basically said,
White on earth would you want to go into politics?
Hopefully, we'll find out what is actually going on
in this very peculiar case with Kirstama
and three Ukrainian lads.
Where three Ukrainian bum boys, red boys,
are on trial for Arson alleged
against Kirstarmer's car, his previous home,
and his other properties.
But no one's allowed to talk about it
because there's a media ban.
The analysis you will not get from the MSM today with our husband and wife superstar panel,
formatory minister and UKIP leader Neil Hamilton, and author and media personality, Christine Hamilton.
Also coming up on the show today, Tip Whisper, Isaac Polanski exposed for stitching up a dirty deal between the Green Party
and a new Labour regime led by Red Angela Rainer, the tax evader, and Donald Trump reveals he wants to move to Buckingham
Alice, after it emerges, you're not going to believe this. He's actually a distinct cousin of King Charles.
So we're going to have all the latest from the Royal State visit. We will take you live to the White House,
if anything goes down. Right now, I can tell you that King Charles and Donald Trump are meeting
privately. We'll also show you what Donald Trump had to say at the White House. He made some gags.
It was brilliant. Then in the Royal Uncanceled After Show on substack, Megan Markle and Prince Harry managed to overshadow
the King's first engagement in Washington, D.C.
As a garden party, American guest goes viral with a new photo of the couple's daughter.
So what we're going to do is cross to the US for all the latest from Tom Sikes of the Royalist Substack.
You can watch that at www.outoutspoken.com.
Then we are back live for a second special live episode of Outspoken today at 7.30pm, UK time.
That is 2.30pm Eastern Time.
11.30 a.m. Pacific time for the King's speech to Congress. It's going to be blockbuster.
But before today's show us out, we'll also reveal a brand new gracious Britain and Union Jackass.
The Hamilton's and myself have nominated. Christine has gone for Ed Miliband for having no solar panels on his house.
She describes him as a hypocrite. Lord Herma has been nominated by Neil Hamilton for insulting British war heroes.
and I've gone for Morgan McSweeney for his very unconvincing evidence today.
So get voting, keep your superchats coming in, keep your comments coming in.
Huge newsday, let's go.
Slippery Stummer has now been utterly destroyed by his closest ally,
by the blob who once worked so hard to protect him,
and by his own party who know the game is up.
In less than two weeks, this corrupt Prime Minister will,
be left with a choice he never thought he would have to make, announce he's going or be forced
out in total humiliation. And to be honest, that's already going to happen, and it is the least
that we the British public deserve. Before I get into today's shocking developments,
let's play a quick game of how it started versus how it's going. To remember this holier-than-thou-day-one
address from the Prime Minister who believes that he was so protected that he could ignore
all the rules of morality that he demanded hard of others.
We'll fight every day until you believe again.
From now on, you have a government unburdened by doctrine,
guided only by the determination to serve your interest,
to defy quietly those who have written our country off.
You have given us a clear mandate,
and we will use it to deliver change.
to restore service and respect to politics.
End the era of noisy performance.
Tread more likely on your lives and unite our country.
Fast forward to today.
When even liberal US News Network, CNN,
is fully prepared to burst the bubble.
To take care is actually more unpopular
than any US serving president has ever been.
for Keir Starmer right now.
You think things are bad here in the United States.
Why don't you just go across the pond over to the UK?
Because things are just downright atrocious over there for Keir Starmor.
Just take a look here.
Britain's satisfied with Keir Sturmer.
Overall, 18, 18%.
You can't even drink or smoke anymore when you're 18%.
You're below that line.
That's not good.
How about his own party, the voters who voted him in back in 2024,
Less than 50% of Labor Party voters back in 2024
actually are satisfied with the job that Kirstarmer is doing.
When less than 50% of your own party voters
are satisfied with what is shaken,
you know you're in bad, bad shape.
Wildly unpopular right now.
How does it compare to something in American history?
Okay, so you see this 18% right here,
and I just went to myself,
hmm, I'm not sure I've ever seen a U.S. leader so unpopular.
So I went back through the record books
and I said, okay,
popularity ratings, and I was like, who was the worst ever, the lowest ever?
And that was George W. Bush back in 2008.
He came in in one poll with a 20% approval rating.
Well, I got news for you.
20% is low, but it's higher than 18%.
Kier Stormer is less popular right now than the least popular American president ever.
He is somehow less popular.
And Richard Nixon, of course, was coming in at about 24% just before he resigned office.
so Keir Sturmer is less popular than Richard Nixon was
when he was forced out by Watergate.
Keir Sturmer, a very unpopular man.
A lot of people want to put a lot of things in their tea
when they look at Keir Starrmer over the UK.
This is unsurvivable.
Everyone knows it.
Apart from Stama, who today continued his authoritarian approach
by forcing his deflated and revolting MPs
into a three-line whip to vote against referring him
to the Privileges Committee,
even though he so obviously misled the House.
Now, the vote is going to happen at some point this evening,
and Kemi Badenok made it clear just how morally reprehensible Stama's decision is.
I know it is very difficult for Labour MPs to walk through the lobby with other parties.
But let me be clear what they are saying if they vote against this motion.
Would they rather be on the side of the side of the House?
Peter Mandelson, of convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, of Morgan McSweeney and Matthew Doyle,
on the side of the man who, Chris Wormwood, Saxer, Raleigh-Robbins, Sue Gray.
Is that what they came to Parliament for?
There was even rare agreement between the leader of the opposition
and Liberal Democrat clown Ed Davy.
I'm grateful for the right Honourable Lady giving way.
She will know that I was never a fan of Boris Johnson.
No.
But when there was a similar motion for the House to refer Mr Johnson to the
Pileged Committee that his side was not whipped.
Can she confirm that and can she question why the government is whipping its side on this
honour?
That is an excellent question from the right, honourable gentleman.
I can confirm that this side was not whipped.
I can also confirm that the leader of the head of the privilege
Committee was a former acting leader of the Labour Party. We trusted this House to do the right thing.
Why can they not do the same? Why? Why? The Privileges Committee is made up mostly of Labour MPs.
Are they saying that they do not believe that their own colleagues would give the Prime Minister a fair hearing?
Are they saying that? If this was just a bad decision that he's apologised for, then surely the Privileges Committee will find him,
not guilty. I give way to my rights. So any Labor MP who does not vote to refer Starmat to the
Privileges Committee this evening is finished. Finished morally. There's no coming back from it.
And in fairness, not all Labour MPs could defend the indefensible. MOL. The Labor MP for
Shell Shields since 2013 was utterly damning.
I feel the way that today's vote has been handled by the government smacks once again of being out of touch and disconnected from the public mood.
The fact that MPs like me are being whipped into voting against this motion is in my view wrong, Mr Speaker.
It has played into the terrible narrative that there is something to hide and good, decent colleagues will be accused of being complicit in a cover-up.
in a cover-up. That's from your own side. And there is a cover-up going on. We know it.
Because at the same time, at a select committee, Stama's so-called Human Shield, although he didn't
do a good job of that today, Morgan McSweeney, was failing to protect his old boss in a performance
that I believe was as convincing as his claim that his phone containing crucial Madison
text messages was stolen by a thief. He revealed that he had made it clear to Stama that there
were conned and there were risks of appointing Mandelson.
You really wanted Peter Mandelson to be the ambassador, didn't you?
I thought he was the right choice after the US presidential election.
The reason why I thought he was the right choice is because Britain was exposed,
the UK was exposed after Brexit.
We left the European Union without any US trade deal.
And for me, honest, this was the top priority of the Prime Minister,
was to get a US trade deal with the Americans.
And I thought that based on Mandelson's experience as an EU trade commissioner,
that made him the strongest candidate.
But like everybody else, I make clear to the Prime Minister,
there was pros and cons and there was risks.
I don't think the Prime Minister would have chosen Mandelson
if Camilla Harris had been elected president.
I think he considered about who would be the right fit for the wise.
I mean, it's actually hilarious that Stama was reliant.
on that little dweeb to save the country. And that little dweeb then lied about how much he knew
about his close buddy Mandelson's relationship with Geoffrey Epstein. As Nicholas Gouet put it,
preposterous for McSweeney to claim that in December 2024, he believed Mandelson had only a passing
acquaintance with Epstein when the Financial Times had done its damning reporting on their close
friendship in June 2023. He's either lying or he's spectacularly bad at his job. Well, I'd up.
Like you both watch.
The nature of the relationship that I understood he had with Epstein was not a close friendship.
How I understood it at the time was a passing acquaintance that he regretted having
and that he apologised for what has emerged since then was way, way, way worse than I had
expected at the time.
And it was when I saw the pictures, when I saw the Bloomberg questions in September 2025,
I have to say it was like a knife through my soul.
I did not expect that level of connection that he was talking about there.
Well, he hadn't read the newspapers then, you stupid dweeb.
Then we come to the end game for Stama himself.
As Dan Bloom reported, Morgan McSweeney says he didn't feel he got the full truth back from Mandelson on his Epstein links,
but Kier Stama appointed him anyway, conditional on developed vetting.
Dan Hodges added, this is the bombshell exchange. McSweeney explicitly said he had doubts about Mandelson's responses.
He implies he reported that to Stama, but Stama appointed Mandelson anyway. Watch.
I think it's appropriate when doing due diligence for you as a friend of Peter Mandelson to speak to the Prime Minister and for that and for his responses to be measured by another friend of Peter Madelson, Matthew Doyle.
and for that information to be put before the Prime Minister as a basis upon which they can make a decision.
I agree and I think that when I look back on it I certainly think it would have been much, much better
if I had asked Pett to ask those follow-up questions.
I guess my thinking at the time was I put follow-up questions to him in writing
and that if a senior member staff did that, that he would feel more obligated to give the truth in the full truth,
I didn't feel that I got that back from him
but it wasn't my decision
it was the Prime Minister's decision
and he saw the DV as part of that decision
but he then realised that he had thrown Stama
under the bus so contradicted what he said
as Labour column as for the Daily Mail Hodges explained
McSweeney has just completely changed his story
He's now saying when Mandelson replied to him
he thought he was telling the truth. It's staggering.
Given the importance of the session at the time he's had to get his line straight,
that Morgan McSweeney seemed so unprepared for this session.
Watch.
So does that mean that you advise the Prime Minister
that you didn't think that Mandelson had told you the full truth about Epstein?
No, I didn't say that then.
What did you say, or you say that the Prime Minister thought,
well, if it's a serious problem, the DV will pick it up.
No, I didn't say it was a serious problem, the DV will pick it up.
But, I mean, either, sorry, either you thought that the,
that Bannelsom was lying to you about Epstein,
and presumably you told the Prime Minister that.
Or you thought, well, you know, or the Prime Minister thought,
well, okay, he's lied, but let's make sure,
but the DB will pick it up, so that'll cover us at that point.
No, I thought he had told the truth.
I thought if he had written to me and set it up the way he did, that he'd have told the truth.
That was a mistake.
Right.
So he'd lied before and then he told the truth when he wrote it?
I thought he'd...
No, no, no.
I didn't think he had lied.
I thought he'd told the truth.
And I thought...
And that was the basis of which I thought we were going ahead.
But I also thought, if I was wrong, if he had been lying, I thought he told the truth.
and that's why I thought we should proceed.
But I thought if I was wrong and he had been lying,
that might be picked up at DV.
And whatever he wrote, he essentially assured you
that any allegations about him staying at Epstein's house
once Epstein was in jail was all fine.
Again, I can share the contents of the emails
and the questions and his answers,
but when he wrote back to me,
I assumed wrongly that he was telling me the truth.
In a damning summing up, Dan Hodges added Morgan McSweeney, former chief of staff to the Prime Minister,
has just testified to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.
He believed the man on the left when he told him he was not friends with the man on the right.
The passing of the word pressure is getting ridiculous now.
It doesn't matter what sort of pressure was applied.
Kirstama told the House of Commons no pressure was brought to bear whatsoever.
Ever. So Stama lied and McSweeney lied. And to show just how unconvincing McSweeney was today, I've got to show you his cock and bull story about his fake phone theft. You know, I've been calling out the fake phone theft since it first emerged, given that this device, let's never forget, included damning messages about Mandelson between Mandelson and Stama that are now lost forever.
Now, the Metropolitan Police have released the transcript of the call you made relating to the theft of your mobile phone.
You didn't say, this is the chief of staff to the Prime Minister, my government issue phone has been stolen, which one would imagine would have been taken pretty seriously.
You just said, oh hello, someone just robbed my phone.
why did you not make it clear that this wasn't just an ordinary theft, this was a phone which was likely to contain highly sensitive information?
So the dates are slightly incorrect. My phone wasn't stolen on 20 March. My phone was stolen on the 20th of October.
So it was four months before. I gave up my government phone pretty much as soon as I left within the
days I hand all my kits back to number 10. My phone was stolen on the 20th of October. I was a
victim of crime. Somebody hopped onto the pavement and took my phone from me. The first thing
I did was to try and retrieve it. I tried to chase, which is probably a mistake. The next thing
I did was I phoned number 10 and I would have gone whatever they told me to do.
Now, I thought at the time that they would be able to track the phone and that's what would
happen given, as you say, what's potentially on that phone and that was my assumption.
I then called 999.
If number 10 had told me you need to tell the police or you need to tell the call handler
what your job is, I would have done so.
But otherwise, I didn't do that as a matter of course.
I didn't in any part of my job go around saying,
I'm a very serious and senior person.
If number 10 had asked me to do it, I would have done that.
I also thought wrongly again at the time.
I thought a squad car might come by,
and I could explain a bit more if a squad car had come by,
and then I made further phone calls to number 10,
where I hoped that they could track the phone,
and I could tell the police where that phone was.
And like you, and like everyone else kind of reading about this,
I was quite surprised by how limited the security is around Chief Staff's telephone.
Okay, none of the MPs did. I'm just going to do it.
Bullshit!
Absolute bullshit! I do not believe a word you were saying.
I do not believe your phone was stolen and it got worse.
One of the reasons the squawk car didn't come round, maybe, because you gave the wrong location.
You said you were in Belgrade Street, which the operator interpreted to be in Stepney,
and said, you said, he turned left, there's a park on top of the road,
and the operator said, Stetney Green Park, okay?
And you said, yeah, he turned left there.
That wasn't anywhere near Stepney.
It was in public hell and stuff.
I also said I was in Westminster.
So I said I was in Belgrave Street, Westminster, where I think I was on lower boat.
In Belgrave Road?
No.
I think I might have been on lower Belgrave Street.
So it was some months ago, and I missed the law.
I didn't see it.
I was also...
Missed the operator saying Stephanie Park.
I was also quite adrenalineized.
So what happened was I chased the guy who stole my phone as far as I could.
I was out of breath.
I was completely exhausted.
because I'm 48 years of age, I shouldn't be chasing people on the streets.
Morgan McSweeney was the most powerful man in the country,
and he can't even properly fake a phone theft.
No wonder we are screwed.
Now, earlier in the day, former blob leader, Sir Philip Barson,
was equally damning to Slippery Stama regarding his claims
that due process was followed regarding Mandelson.
Instead, he was simply told to get on with it.
As Lee Harris reported, Philip Barton couldn't be more clear.
This directly contradicts Kirstama.
He lied. Watch.
Had you been, would you have wanted to raise,
or would you have said you had concerns about the reputational risks that he carried?
You know, I think that is a really, genuinely a really hard question to answer,
because hindsight is a fantasticly wonderful thing
and it is hypothetical.
But let me, you know, let me have a go at what I was thinking at the time.
And firstly, you know, it's just worth repeating.
At no point did anyone consult me, ask me.
I was presented with a decision.
There was no space for doubt.
You know that.
Now, I want to show you when he was asked,
if Starmo was right,
in saying that full due process had been followed.
The silence here is damning.
Do you think the Prime Minister's statement
that full due process was followed
is a fair description of what happened in Madison's case?
You know, I'm going to dodge.
I'm really sorry, but I just actually don't think
it's for me to sit here in, yeah,
it's not for me to, it's for others,
you know, including, you know, all of you as members of Parliament.
to come to a view on that.
As Kemi Badernock, who in fairness to her, has been on fire today, put it,
this is no longer just about Peter Mandelson.
It's about whether the Prime Minister tells the truth when Parliament asks,
whether he takes responsibilities for his own decisions,
and whether standards in public life still mean anything at all.
The country is watching.
And Hodges added Stameline to the House, there is now no doubt.
Barton has confirmed the pressure that was placed on civil servants
to appoint Mandelson at pace also extended to the DV process. So it's done. It's done.
Even Stammer's stenographer Patrick Maguire of the Times now concedes cabinet knows that Kare Stama
is done for. He says there's little loyalty owed to a PM who showed so little interest in MPs,
which is why a planned exit looks likely. And even the Guardian, even the Guardian agreeing,
now reporting on plans for how to get rid of the most hated PM ever. They write that Labor
figures from across rival factions have begun circulating informal proposals for an orderly transition
of power away from Kirstama. MPs have shifted discussions from speculating about whether the
Prime Minister could be removed to how, including timelines, potential triggers and the mechanics
of forcing a leadership contest. One Labour MP said there have been conversations about process
when the time comes and if the numbers are there, a process will be found. And that's why it's
even more disgusting. That Cathy Newman
The new Wicked Witch of Sly News launched her new MSM show
after a dire career at Channel 4 News and Times Radio
with a softball interview with Stama
that Goebbels would have been proud of.
She actually asked the PM about Donald Trump's digs
and advocated to stop treating him as an ally,
then she ludicrously compared two-tier care to wait for it,
you grant.
in love actually.
UK relations and Iran, as you've rightly brought up.
I mean, you appointed Lord Mandelsohn to charm Donald Trump,
and now obviously the king this week has got to play nice with him.
Let's just look at some of the things that Trump has said
just in the last six weeks alone.
He's repeatedly slagged you off.
He's dismissed UK aircraft carriers as toys.
He's threatened new tariffs.
He's questioned Britain's sovereignty over the Falklands Islands.
Is it time to stop pretending this man is an ally?
I think it's important just as you went through that list to remind ourselves what that's all about.
I took a very clear decision at the outbreak of the conflict in Iran that the UK would not be dragged into the conflict.
It was your love actually moment, wasn't it?
Well, I'm the British Prime Minister. I act in the British national interest,
and it's not in our national interest to get dragged into that war.
What has happened since there is a huge amount of pressure has been applied to me to change my mind.
but I'm not going to do so
because it's not...
You're proud to have that difference with Trump?
I'm the British Prime Minister
and I act in their national interest of Britain
and it's really important that I make that absolutely clear.
I drew a number of lessons from the Iraq War
those many years ago
and we're not going to get dragged into a war
which is not in our interest.
Just looking at the live check,
Comey Cathy, as Mark Stevens 8899 puts it,
That's a good description because Comey,
Kathy, let me tell you,
he is about as far from a love actually moment
as any politician possibly could be,
as Mike Graham raised.
It's also bloody, cozy, pathetic.
And can we just remember for one moment
who Kathy Newman is?
She is the woman dismantled by Jordan Peterson
in 59 excruciating seconds.
Why should your right to freedom of speech
Trump a trans person's right not to be offended?
Because in order to be able to think you have to risk being offensive.
I mean, look at the conversation we're having right now.
You know, like, you're certainly willing to risk offending me in the pursuit of truth.
Why should you have the right to do that?
It's been rather uncomfortable.
Well, I'm very glad I put you on this spot.
Well, I'm very glad that I have exercised my previous speech.
You get my point.
It's like you're doing what you should do, which is digging a bit to see what the hell's going.
on. And that is what you should do. But you're exercising your freedom of speech to certainly
risk offending me. And that's fine. I think more power to you as far as I'm concerned.
You haven't sat there and I'm just trying to work that out. I mean,
ha, got you. You have got me. You have got me. I'm trying to work that through my head.
Yeah, yeah. It took a while. It took a while. It did. And yet Sly News gave her a job.
and she did this totally cozy interview with Slippery Stama
where he totally dismissed as not even a big deal,
wholesale changes that we might have to all make to our lives
because of his failure as if it's no big deal.
You've repeatedly said it's not our war.
The problem is, as you already mentioned,
it is affecting all of us, isn't it?
And people are desperately worried about that.
So you're chairing this crisis cabinet committee tomorrow
I wonder if you could just level with the British public.
Are you worried about fuel and food shortages?
Is that why you're chair in that committee?
There is going to be an impact on the UK.
There already is.
And I think it's really important I level with the public
that we are doing everything we can to get the straight-of-hormuz open
because obviously that is vital in terms of minimising the impact.
But I don't want anybody to think that once the straight is open,
that that's the end of the damage.
longer than that and that's why we've got almost daily meetings of ministers and
officials looking at how we manage the impact at the moment we're confident about
supply we have reopened the CO2 plant in the Northeast airlines are telling us
that they've got enough jet fuel at the moment but we see at the moment for how
long well we monitor this all of the time and they have told us so far that
they've got the suppliers that they need but summer holidays
could be in jeopardy.
Well, that's why we manage it.
I think we'll see how long the conflict goes on.
I can see that if there's more impact,
people might change their habits where they go on holiday this year,
what they're buying in the supermarket, that sort of thing.
So you are, I mean, really your message to the public is don't panic,
but actually there may be some shortages of food and fuel.
Don't panic, but we chose not to get.
involved in this war. That was the right thing to do, but we must protect the British people from
the impact of it. Both pathetic creatures, as Christian in the trench has put it, sly news
has finally given Cathy Newman her own programme. In the opening episode, she did something truly
revolting. She sat opposite Kirstama and fed him his lines. While Britain burns, highest taxes
in 70 years, energy prices through the roof, pension is freezing, small boats still
arriving in record numbers, Kathy Newman chose to blame Donald Trump. The wars, the tariffs, the
chaos, all Trump's fault, apparently. Stala didn't even have to think. He was answering questions
before she had finished asking them. It was so rehearsed, it was painful to watch. Every time
she tossed him a gentle lob, he was already swinging at it. This wasn't journalism. This was state-sponsored
damage control with a friendly face and a microphone. Kathy Newman, the woman who was publicly dismantled
by Jordan Peterson in 2018, and his last eight years trying to scrub that humiliation from the public
memory has now fully revealed herself. She is no longer a journalist. She is a willing instrument
of power. She gave Stama the softest landing imaginable. She let him hide behind his wife. She let him
blame the world. She never once pressed him on the real questions that matter. The British people
saw it for what it was. A performance, a script, a lie. Kathy Newman's first show was also her last,
because after last night the mask is gone
and so is whatever credibility she had left.
And after today,
the mask and whatever credibility slippery stammer had left is gone too.
Now the superstar panel.
Christine and Neil Hamilton with me.
Neil, where to begin?
I mean, the fact that there is this three-line whip
given the way that slip
priest Starmour was so sanctimonious in terms of Boris Johnson and the privileges committee over
that piece of cake. Any Labour MP that votes for this, I don't think, can come back from it, do you?
Well, Starm is clearly a dead man walking, actually dead man crawling and stumbling, as we know.
He's completely finished, as indeed is the Labour Party, as far as I can see.
The 7th May elections will be an illustration quite far. They've fallen back.
they'll probably lose two-thirds of the councillors that they have before the election.
And if the lead body sticks with Stam, it's entirely up to them, of course,
and who can predict what those idiots will do, then any glimmer of hope that they might
have that in the next three years they could possibly haul back something from the brink,
I simply can't conceive how they'll continue to exist. You know, I was a member of Parliament under John
major and when we were turfed out of the exchange rate mechanism in September
1992 just a few months after we were elected again for the fourth time we then stayed
we fell off a cliff in the opinion polls and never recovered in the next five years and then
Armageddon overtook us all in 1997 you know Labour in exactly that position and whoever
they get in isn't going to be any better of course just look at the choice if you can call it that
or burn them, if they can shoehorn him into a seat some,
which would be a massive gamble as well,
where on earth do they turn?
So, I mean, I do think that this is the end game for Stommer.
So you said a moment ago, where do we begin?
We begin at the end.
Totally.
And Christine Hamilton, I mean, the fact that Morgan McSweeney
was meant to be his human shield today
and put in one of the least convincing performances
as I've ever seen.
I mean, that little dweeb and those lies about his phone.
I mean, seriously, I do not believe it, Christine, for a single second.
He can sue me if I'm wrong.
I don't think he'll dare.
I've never heard the word dweeb before, but it suits him very well.
I've no idea what a dweeb is.
Well, you're looking at him when you see Milgan McSweeney on screen, okay?
Thank you.
It's a wonderful example of that old saying,
what a tangled web we weave when first we practice to deceive with his telephone.
I mean, John Whittingdale got homed in on just the right question about that.
It is inconceivable that he didn't say to the police,
look, I am the Prime Minister's, this phone is really important,
instead of which he, hello, my phone's been stolen, it's just not credible.
And if that really was the way he approached situations,
then no wonder Labour were in such an awful mess.
It was absurd.
And he blithely expected, as far as the phone was concerned,
can you believe it, that a squad car was going to come by?
What?
Does he not know what's happened to policing in the last,
I'm not blaming the Labour government in the last goodness knows, how many.
Well, we can blame Sadiq Khan in London, though.
Well, of course we can.
And he keeps using this phrase, which again, I've never,
I'm learning so much today.
I mean, dweeb is one, adrenalised.
I've never heard of adrenalineized before.
I mean, I don't know.
Is that a word?
I suppose it is now.
And the minister, when he was talking to Cathy Newman,
and he said, I am the British Prime Minister.
That reminds me of somebody who shall be nameless,
but they were elected to the European Parliament,
to their total surprise in 2004, I suppose it was.
And I heard them go up to somebody and say,
Hello, I'm A, B, C. He said, I'm a member of the European Parliament.
I know it doesn't seem possible, but it's true.
She honestly said that.
And that's, it was like something out of Monty Python.
I know.
How did we end up here?
How did we end up here?
Sorry, Christine, I just cut you off.
How could we end up here?
Doesn't matter.
I had no idea that he was even more unpopular than Richard Nixon at the time of his departure.
I mean, just get out of the waist up.
We have had enough of you.
Gobsmacking.
And that was from CNN, which is, of course, a left-wing liberal network.
Now, Cathy Newman of Sly News and this new show, which she's managed to launch, despite
being a complete disaster on Channel 4 News, engaged in the most shocking cover-up with Slippery Stama
last night, in regards to the real state of his marriage.
I reported last week that Lady Victoria Stama deeply unhappy, completely miserable, is no longer residing at number 10 Downing Street.
She has moved out along with the couple's two children.
And Stammer knew that he needed to do some damage control and speak positively about his wife during this interview.
But what you will note, because I'm about to show you, is that never does Cathy Newman follow up,
and say, okay, well, why is she no longer living with you at number 10?
It was pointedly not referred to as to tear care pretended to be a human being in what was a set-up
and a direct attempt to try and discredit my reporting. Watch.
It says, you know, enough's enough. This pressure is intolerable. Would you listen to her?
I always listen to Vic. And I think she was the one in the first place that, basically,
said why on earth would you want to go into politics?
But she is an absolute...
And you're asked to that question now?
She is an absolute rock.
And I confided her all of the time.
And hers is the best advice.
And I'm just thankful that I've got her every day.
And at the moment she's advising you to keep going.
She is, yes.
And we talk everything through.
And it's fantastic.
We've got also two fantastic kids,
a 17-year-old and a 15-year-old.
I can't tell you how much joy
and happiness. They are my pride and joy every single day. Okay, so I post immediately after
that interview broadcast. This is a complete lie. Lady Victoria Stama no longer resides in Downing
Street with the children is more miserable than she's ever been and wants him out of the job
ASAP. I feel sorry for her being used as a political tool based on a fantasy and you know that's
what Stama does when he is in trouble. He will invoke his family, invoke his wife,
invoke his two children when he was in trouble. Do you remember he did it with his son
who he claims he wants to be out of the spotlight when he blamed his son setting his GCSEs for the reason
that he was living in Lord Ali's Mayfair at Penthouse when I believe it was nothing to do with that.
It was to do with these ongoing troubles in the marriage in regards to the real shape of Stama's family.
Then there is the court case this week. The court case which Kathy Newman also asked nothing about.
these three men charged in connection with arson attacks on two properties and a car linked to care Stama
who are facing trial at the old Bailey. The charges relate to three incidents on the 8th of May
2025. A car previously owned by Stammer was found on fire on a street he used to live on in Kentish Town,
North London. On 11th of May, fire was discovered at Flats linked to Stama on Islington.
And on the 12th of May, a fire was discovered at the entrance to Stammer.
Kentish Town Home, which is currently rented out. The three men are Mr. Lavanovich, Ukrainian,
Mr. Kapushi, a Ukrainian, born Romanian, and Mr. Poshinov, a Ukrainian. All pleaded, not guilty.
Now, Katie Hoppkins has pointed out that as we head to the second day of the her words,
Ukrainian rent boy trial tomorrow, where are you BBC News, Daily Mail, GB News, Guardian Channel 4
news, you fucking cowers. Here's what I heard. Watch. So, it's the second day of the Ukrainian
Bumboi trial where three Ukrainian bum boys, red boys, are on trial for Arson, alleged, against
Kirstarmer's car, his previous home and his other properties. But no one's allowed to talk about
it because there's a media ban. The establishment media has.
closed ranks on it because contempt of court is not the same as silence but somehow silence has been
achieved and obviously I wouldn't be reporting because I'm just a little housewifey here doing my
ironing as you'll notice and all I can tell you about is the gossip that I've heard which is not the same
as reporting and is not clearly contempt of court so I heard that the one that burnt his
car, his old car. Keir had said, get me in there because I want to fold you like a pretzel.
The one that burnt his former flat, I heard that Keir had given him the keys to the back door,
if you know what I'm saying. And the other one, evidently, had been shown Keir Svictor,
which is looser than Angela's flange and has been worked hard.
than Phil Schofield on a school field trip.
But obviously, that's just gossip and hearsay and has no bearing on anything at all.
Because I'm just a little housework here.
Do my eye me.
She's naughty, isn't she?
But in terms of the actual report,
nothing from the MSM, so thank goodness we can rely on the independent media.
Like Will Coles Hill of Vox Populi, who was at Korn.
yesterday. Watch his report.
Hello, this is Wilcoziel reporting for Vox Populi.
Three Ukrainian men, Kirstama and Arson.
What do these three things have to do with each other?
Well, we're down here today outside the old Bailey,
where we're covering the trial of three Ukrainian men.
Three men all charged with conspiracy to commit arson
recklessly endangering life.
And Roman Lavrinovich,
who's argued to have caused arson
with intent to harm human life.
The three men, I've mentioned one of them, Roman Levinovich, Petro, Pochnok, and Stanislav, Capriuk.
We are all here today in the old Bailey.
We saw the jury sworn in.
They're sworn in the jurors.
And on Wednesday, we're going to be back to hear the opening prosecution argument.
A lot of people haven't heard very much about this case, but it is now underway.
So we're going to find out what is actually going on.
There's been huge speculation online.
We're not going to repeat it.
But we're down here to find out what the story is going to be.
We've been told there are no reporting restrictions.
So we're going to be back here on Wednesday when the jury is going to be sitting again.
The case is going to resume.
And hopefully we'll find out what is actually going on in this very peculiar case with Kirstama and three Ukrainian lads.
Will Kohlzil reporting for box pop.
And you know we're going to keep across this trial to my superstar panel now, Neil Hamilton and Christine Hamilton.
Look, Christine, the thing is, is surely if Kathy Newman was any sort of journalist,
she could have just said to Slipree Starma during that interview.
So why, you know, why a Lady Victoria and the children no longer living at number 10 Downing Street?
Is that something to do with security or their education?
But she was there as a propagandist, and I felt that was very planned the way that he came out with almost like a stump speech.
in regards to his wife and children.
Sorry, I wasn't sure if you were going to play that clip or not.
No, you come in, please, Christine.
We want to hear from you.
We've had enough of these two.
God.
It was like a sort of party political broadcast for Starver, wasn't it?
It was extraordinary.
I have no idea about the state of their marriage, no idea at all.
And I didn't know that she'd moved out of number 11, apparently, with the children.
I didn't know that.
but then, you know, I don't have my ear to the ground like you do.
But if these rumours are going around, which they obviously are,
she is a journalist.
It's her job to know about these things.
It should have been her job to say what you've just set out.
And I don't know why she didn't do it.
I mean, why on earth would somebody like Cathy,
who is a serious journalist,
who's just landed herself her new own eponymous show on Sky,
why should you want to give the Prime Minister such a power,
The C-Sy interview, in particular, when it's perfectly clear to anybody over the second form,
that he's on his way out. Why does she want to ingratiate herself with him and give him such a softball interview?
I don't see from her point of view what the point was.
It was absolutely unbelievable. And the thing is Neil Hamilton. For me, this is an issue of hypocrisy.
Okay. Starma and the Labour Party and the mainstream media, they made the rules, Neil, during the last government.
And those rules were that every single piece of Boris Johnson's personal life was scrutinized.
Do you remember, all of the details about the rumoured affair with Jennifer Acuri in the most
lurid of detail, all of the information about how he ended up with his current wife, Carrie Johnson,
including the fights that they used to have at the flat that he'd moved into.
All are reported in lurid detail.
Yet when it comes to their guy, Kyr Stama, total blackout.
He's just allowed to sort of talk about his wife and his children when it suits him.
So I'm just playing by the rules that the Labour Party actually began when they were in opposition.
They were the ones that decided, Neil, that a Prime Minister's private life was of public interest.
How can they have one rule for Boris Johnson and now a totally different rule for Slippery Stama?
You're absolutely right, Dan.
And the word hypocrisy goes through them all like on a stick of Blackpool Rock, if that still exists.
And this has always been the case.
All the row about so-called slees in the 80s and 90s under the Tories and the big meal that Labor made about that.
And then we had the Blair government and all the scandals that flowed out of Mandelson and Alistair Campbell and so on in that era.
And then we had Keir Stahman moralising on the steps of number 10 when he first became Prime Minister about everything was going to be very different from now.
He's going to be whiter than white, you know, a white knight to lead the charge for honesty, integrity, and true.
Total bollocks, isn't it?
That's the best way to describe it, I think.
And he's been unmasked now.
And of course he's going to use his wife as a tool, as you put it.
He's the son of a toolmaker, never forget.
No, he was telling us about that again yesterday.
Okay, and then let's just talk about this Ukrainian firebomber trial.
Now, at the very least, Christine, if you just look at this from a news point of view,
the fact that three of the Prime Minister's personal pieces of property were firebombed by three
young Ukrainian men is surely a story of the highest public interest.
they all pleaded guilty yesterday, Christine, and I promise you, this did not make the news on the British
Bashing Corporation, on Wokai TV, on sly news, wasn't reported on GBM news.
Did they not have a natural curiosity about what the hell is going on here?
This is a court case.
And as Katie Hopkins says, they're just not covering it.
I've never seen anything like it.
It is completely extraordinary.
I mean, you wouldn't catch us watching the BBC anyway,
so I have no idea what they're reporting.
Good on you.
Well, occasionally, some great, big, huge national occasion
or something I might.
But basically, I wouldn't,
so I haven't watched it for don't get to docks years.
I am surprised that GB News doesn't cover it.
I mean, they're supposed to pick up the stories
that the rest of the mainstream media won't cover.
So I didn't know anything about it
until I sat down here at the computer and saw your story.
I didn't know it was going on.
Why on earth hasn't it been on the news?
I know there's quite a lot going on today, so there's not a lot of room.
But it's a pretty important story, even if the underlying rumours are completely untrue.
Let's not go any further than that.
Let's assume that all the underlying rumours are not true.
It's still a very important story.
Exactly.
Because if this isn't sexually motivated, Neil Hamilton, then there's a lot of discussion that this could be political.
politically motivated that this could have been some type of underhand force in Ukraine
sending a warning to Stam.
Now, Thav pleaded guilty.
We need to know why they were doing this.
Who was paying them to do this, Neil?
It doesn't make sense that three random Ukrainian men would know where Stama's car was,
where Stammer's properties were, then would firebom them on consecutive days.
This is the most intriguing story in the country at the moment.
And again, the mainstream media sort of say, oh, nothing to see here.
It's bizarre.
Well, three separate incidents in disconnected places where the only connection is that the property concerned has some connection historically with Kea Stama.
It's certainly a curiosity worth reporting, isn't it?
Yeah, and I believe his family was still living, Neil, at the property.
Now, I wouldn't know how to locate Slippery Starmar's car.
You know, in order for them to do that, they had to at least have some degree of inside information.
Now, look, I'm being very careful because, of course, we know that there are contempt of court laws in this country.
But my point is, this should all be coming out in court.
Now, personally, I think there's going to be a cover up anyway.
I don't believe it is going to come out.
But they have pleaded not guilty, Neil, which means surely this information should come out.
Well, presumably it will form part of the examination or cross-examination, or at least it will be referred to in the course of the legal proceedings, if it's relevant as it very obviously should be, because if the connecting link is Kea Stama, then that's going to be part of the prosecution's case, I would have thought, to establish some similar fact, evidence about the separate events, which would point to their guilt in the argument
to the prosecution. So looking at it as a lawyer, that's the way I would see it. So we'll wait
with bated breath to see what comes out of the old baby. I'm fascinated now that I know about
this like Christine, I knew nothing about it until you revealed it. So I'm very grateful to you
for drawing it to our... Well, I'm going to keep across this because there's a brilliant network
of independent journalists now, and I give them such credit, people like Jonathan Wong and
Will Coles Hill, who we saw there, who are going to be at court across this story.
By the way, there was another thing that happened, which the mainstream media have basically avoided,
because I think, especially on the right, there is this view that everything Reform UK does
is just brilliant and turns to gold, whereas there are some signs that as a result of this ongoing
feud with Rupert Lowe and Restore Britain, actually that party's popularity is waning.
And they promised this week to host a massive fuel protest.
And they said that it was going to be the biggest fuel protest in the history of Britain.
But in a mortifying moment for Reform UK, just a handful of people showed up.
And actually most of them were sort of people connected to the party like Richard Tice and Layla Cunningham.
Here's G.B. News, who had been promising their viewers, because even Nick Dixon, you know, Nick Dixon of G.
said this week, G.B. News sort of has to decide, like, is it MUTV for Manchester United,
or is it actually a news channel that reports the truth? Because all morning, they had been saying,
this is going to be massive, it's going to be the biggest fuel protest in British history.
But in fairness to them, they did go on air and admit that nobody had showing up. Watch.
Well, Andrew Miriam, good morning to you. Yeah, that protest finished,
but it never really got started.
We were told there would be tractors, lorries,
even ice cream vans here today
with a message, one common message,
urging the Chancellor to bring about change
when it comes to the rising prices at the petrol pumps.
Well, they didn't show up today.
Reform politicians were here on a bus,
and some protesters, maybe 10 to 15 protesters.
One of them is Kate.
Thanks for joining us on GB News.
You're a little bit disappointed.
More people weren't here?
Yes, I think a few of us.
made the effort, we're a bit disappointed that there weren't more people here. It's such a good cause.
It's so disappointing.
Christine Hamilton is the Reform UK double burst, Dean?
Well, I've no idea. I have to say on that fuel tax thing, rising fuel prices, I am slightly
astonished that there weren't more people. I mean, if I'd been living in London, I might well
have popped along myself. I wasn't going to do a 200-mile round trip for it at my age.
I am surprised and it's actually quite disappointing how British people don't rise up more often and show their feelings.
But who knows whether the bubble has burst?
We're going to discover quite a lot on the 7th of May, of course, although a lot of those votes will be protest votes,
just like the votes for Labour last time were protest votes against the Tories.
I mean, who on earth is not going to want to vote Labour on the 7th of May at whatever level?
So I'm sure they'll do very well.
I mean, it's, politics is lurching towards a pretty complicated situation.
It'll be a brave person who put any bets on the final outcome of the next general election whenever it is,
because we've got so many parties in the mix.
I mean, who would have thought that a party led by Jack, Zach Polanski was going to do as well as that?
I mean, he's the most unlikely charismatic party leader imaginable, but he's going to do very well.
So who knows what's actually going to happen?
I wanted to ask you about that, actually, Neil.
Before you come and let me just show you the interview from Sly News
because Zach Polanski for the first time has said that if Labor gets rid of slippery stammer
and brings in this dreaded combination of Red Rainer the Tax Evader and Andy Burnham,
and apparently that is the sort of deal that's being discussed,
the sort of Blair Brown pact that's being discussed.
Polanski says he will be open to some type of deal between the Greens and Labor.
Watch this.
You've always said that there would be no kind of green labour agreement at an election
if it's Kirstama running the Labour Party.
What if it was, you know, Andy Burnham or Angela Rainer,
would that lead to a different answer to that question?
As you know, I always want to directly answer questions to you, Sophie.
I am going to have to put a caveat there that say it's almost impossible to know
because until we know who that leader is, what their policy platform is,
and how they behave as Prime Minister, and how they treat the Green Party,
and more importantly, the policies we care about, is very difficult to judge.
That being said, I do like to answer a question.
It's no secret that Andy Burnham and Angela Rainer would be much closer to my politics than Keir Star Mara.
I think they're people who do care about tackling the cost of living crisis
and do care about people in this country.
I still have reservations about their policies.
They're still in the Labour Party, and my question would be,
why have they been so quiet
while the Labour Party and the Labour government
have done some pretty egregious things
both in this country and around the world.
But I do think it would be a significant improvement
to remove Stama and make sure that the party
was leaning more towards the left,
more towards a progressive direction
and more towards ending rip-off written.
So Neil, this is very much going to encourage
the leftists within Labour
to hurry up and get rid of Stama.
Absolutely.
And obviously the Greens are,
a due hating Communist Party. So that is going to make a big difference to our lives if they ever
get anywhere near the smell of power, let alone have any hands on the levers of power. But
Labor are desperate, aren't they? They can't move towards reform because that would offend the
Muslim base of their vote on migration and so much is why we have no control of migration over
this country and why we've not supported the Americans in the Middle East either. It's all to do with
with Labour Party internal politics and votes have leached to the Greens to the left
and that they've lost the votes of the white working class many, many years ago. So I can well see
this new alliance of Rainer and Burnham as a last desperate attempt to leach votes away from the
Greens back to their own party and in order to do that, of course they will have to be
more explicitly communistic than Stama would ever dare to
to be. So yeah, I think in some ways I don't I don't think that this is going to benefit the
Labour Party at the end of the day because the British public will not vote for something like
Zach Polanski in my opinion. Hitherto the Greens have been a collection of wacky environmentalists
but they've recently since Polanski been taken over by a far more sinister group of people
who fundamentally want to sovietize this country. They want to tax wealth out of existence.
They want to have everybody on benefits as of right, who's going to pay for it. It's going to be
the few people who are left in work and so on and so forth. It's a complete crackpot party.
So in some ways I say bring it on because worse is better in one sense if it makes them
and the Labour Party even less electable than they might otherwise be.
But who knows?
Three years is a long time till the next election,
assuming, as we must, the Labour Party MPs are not going to vote for early P-45s.
So where anything could happen in the meantime,
but I don't myself see the Labour Party making any substantial recovery
in any possible circumstances.
We now have a broken economy on top of a broken
society in this country entirely as a result of the kind of policies which labor are espousing,
which of course just builds on the inheritance of the hopeless Tories and the
uny party that we've endured ever since Blair took over in 1997.
But there's nothing so bad that the Tories can do which Labour can't make worse.
And you can say the same thing about the Greens. There's nothing that Labor can do that the Greens
can't make worse. So I mean that's the prospect that lies before us and there'd be a stark
choice of the next election between one side or the other in a way which we're not seen properly
in this country since the 1980s when the Labour Party were explicitly committed to
nuclear unilateral nuclear disarmament. They were completely controlled by trade unions.
They were really socialistic in their tax policies. We now have the highest taxes that we've had in
70 years today. So they start from a high level if they're going to make it even worse.
But that's the world that we live in.
This is unquestionably the greatest story of the year so far.
So King Charles gets on a plane to go to the White House and meet Donald Trump and discovers
that the US president is actually his cousin. No, I'm not joking.
keen. This revelation has emerged from Robert Hardman who traced Trump's family tree and found out he's
the king's cousin. Related to this old bloke, I'll just show you the royal relative that links
these two together. And Donald Trump is actually so excited about this that he thinks he now has
a claim to spend a bit of time in London, posting on truth social.
Wow, that's nice. I've always wanted to live in Buckingham Palace. I'll talk to the King and Queen
about this at a few minutes, President D.J.T. Now, if you're wondering how this all works out,
Robert Hardman has done the detailed research. I'll take you through it. Okay, so Trump and the
King have a common ancestor in the form of the third Earl of Lennox, a great grandson of King James
the 2nd of Scotland, which means that Donald Trump and Charles III are 15th cousins. Their shared
forbear met an unfortunate end, however. Lord Lennox was involved in a vicious power struggle
for control over the infant King James the 5th and was eventually defeated in the Battle of Linlithgow Bridge
in 1526. After being taken prisoner, he was murdered by a rival led known as the bastard of Aaron.
His son, the fourth Earl of Lennox, went on to produce Lord Dunley, husband of Mary,
King, Queen of Scots. Their son became King James I of England, from whom the Stuarts,
and eventually the House of Windsor would all descend. Are you keeping up with this?
From this Donald through generations of McCays and then of McLeod's, including another Donald,
the line comes down to Mary Ann McLeod of Lewis, who emigrated to the USA in 1930.
There she married property developer Fred Trump and had five children.
Donald Trump born in 1946 was the fourth.
Now, online genealogists had previously struggled to ascertain a clear line of Mr. Trump's
ancestry due to confusion and gaps in ancient Scottish record keeping.
However, veteran genealogist Robert Barrett, former recent recent.
research editor at the Daily Mail, has studied multiple land records, church records and Scottish
parish documents to piece together this intriguing research. For example, Mr. Trump's descent
from Donald McKay is confused by his daughter's first marriage to a McDonald, after which she
married a clergyman called Hugh Monroe, and the Trump line hails from there. Now, this was a pretty
brilliant piece of news as the king and queen Camilla descended on the White House in the past few
moments watch. And upon hearing that brilliant news that Trump is actually a relative of Charles,
it was his time to take to the microphone. Now, this was a moment of key tension for Buckingham Palace.
Trust me, the courtiers have been very nervous. They know that Trump can go off peace and they were
very worried. Oh gosh, what if he slags off slippery stammer? What if he says something about wanting
to take control of Canada? But no, Trump.
Trump was actually incredibly behaved, although of course he did reveal that his mother, who was born in Scotland, as we know, for the first time he revealed, that she had a crush on King Charles.
You've got to watch King Charles's face. It's a picture.
My mother would be glued to the television and should say, look, Donald, look how beautiful that is.
she really did love the family
but I also remember her saying
very clearly
Charles look
young Charles he's so cute
my mother had a crush
on Charles can you believe it
amazing how
I wonder what she's thinking right now
he's amazing
now Trump then reminded everyone
how important Queen Elizabeth II
was to him and our two nations.
A dozen feet to the left where I stand.
There, her late majesty, Queen Elizabeth, an incredible woman
who I had the privilege of getting to know,
Queen Elizabeth II, very, very special woman
who is very greatly missed on both sides of that mighty Atlantic.
long ago planted a young tree.
It was a very young and beautiful tree, and look at it now.
It's tripled in size and tripled in strength,
very much as our nations have even more than tripled.
Like our nation itself, it was laid with British hands but grew in American soil.
Today it stands tall and proud, reaching ever higher.
And this morning, it reminds us that
that the mightiest of trees, like the greatest of nations, must be anchored by the strongest and deepest of roots.
So he's stuck to the script.
Despite slippery-starved and doing anything possible to weaken the special relationship in recent weeks,
Trump suggested the friendship is still strong.
In the centuries since we won our independence, Americans have had no closer friends than the British.
British, we share that same route, we speak the same language, we hold the same values,
and together our warriors have defended the same extraordinary civilization under twin
banners of red, white and blue.
But there was something a little bit more concerning when Trump first went to the White House
yesterday with a lip reader employed by the Daily Mail revealing the conversation that took place
between the king and the president. Now this is the lip reader, Nicola Hickling. And so Trump started
by saying this shooting, I'd rather not stand about here too long. The king appeared to respond,
I feel I shouldn't be here. Trump asked King Charles if he was okay. I mean, it's not a good thing.
I wasn't prepared but now I am prepared the president offered.
Trump then changed the subject, telling the king he had been in contact with Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
So right now I am talking to Putin, Trump said.
He wants war.
King Charles said they would discuss that topic later.
We will discuss that later.
The king replied.
But Trump continued, I've got a feeling if he did what he said,
he will wipe out the population.
Trump warned.
The monarch tried to switch topics again.
Another time, King Charles said.
Then the conversation moved on to the ballroom that Trump wants to build at the White House.
And he said you can see right through there, right the way through to the ballroom.
Would you like to see?
The monarch can be seen having a light laugh.
I'm sure you shall show us.
The king replied, Trump answered, that's right, you're right.
The king then asked where they were off to, which way do we go? He asked, we're going this way.
Trump said, guiding the group into the White House. So, oh my goodness, to my superstar panel,
Christine and Neil Hamilton. Christine, absolutely as we expected, this is a state visit like none other, right?
So we find out that Trump is related to Charles and he's posting on truth social saying,
I now want to move into Buckingham Palace. Then he gets up and says that his mom had a crush on Charles,
and you can just see Charles as like, what is going on here?
I can't quite cope with this.
But I would argue, Christine, perhaps far more concerning
is this private conversation, which the lip reader picked up on,
with Putin, having said that he wants to wipe out the population.
But goodness, where do you want to start, Christine?
I mean, it's been quite a day already.
It's been the most extraordinary day.
I mean, take either just the King's visit to America
or all the Starma business going on.
side of the Atlantic would be enough, but I mean, to have both of them going on at the same time,
one didn't know where to look. But I mean, good old Trump, all the sort of bad stuff about Trump,
and there is quite a lot, is factored in. He's risen to the occasion. I mean, can you
imagine what he thought when he realized that he was related to the king? I mean, bless him,
he must have been absolutely over the moon. And I loved his comment about, you know, I'd quite
like to move into Buckingham Palace or something. Good for him. And there were all these whispers
people shouldn't forget in the last few days and weeks that the king shouldn't go. He shouldn't go.
All the lefties were saying he shouldn't go. Of course he should have gone. He's got an absolutely
almost irretrievable breakdown in communications to repair. And he's somebody who's going to be
able to do it brilliantly. And they've got off to a wonderful start. And he was quite right just to
brush aside these things about Putin. Honestly, Trump, he's a nightmare. That was,
was not the moment to start talking about Putin wanting to wipe out the world.
In front of the world's cameras.
And the king, the king knew that.
So we was basically saying, shut up, Donald.
Just shut up until we've got inside.
Neil, I just want to show you.
I just loved it.
No, me too.
I just want to show you the latest images we've got Neil in from the White House.
This is Melania Trump and Queen Camilla.
So I've separated off.
And while the Donald and the king are having their bilateral behind closed doors in the Oval Office,
the two ladies are off to witness, it looks like a tennis court of some form at the White House.
So we'll just take in some of these images, Neil, while you come in.
Yeah.
No, well, I listened to Trump.
I thought it was the most fantastic moving speech, actually.
It was really eloquent.
Now, I know he didn't write it. Prime Ministers have speechwriters and presidents have their speechwriters as well.
But I felt that he really meant the words that he was delivering.
And of course, the asides that he inevitably comes up with as well.
He really does have a true emotional attachment to the United Kingdom,
despite all the appalling humiliations of having a Prime Minister like Stama
and all the damage that he's done to the UK,
special relationship. I think Trump is wise enough to be able to see through all that. And
he's quite right to talk about the historical links and the cultural affinities that connect
us, regardless of who happens to be in 10th Earning Street for the time being. And Trump is well
aware that Starram is not likely to survive the next few more than the next few weeks.
So I think the king is absolutely perfect at these kinds of events. And, you know, he's
He's got long experience, not as long experience as his mother had, obviously, but nevertheless, he's grown up in her shadow, and he's absorbed an enormous amount of wisdom about how to handle these delicate situations.
So I've no doubt that he will do as much as anybody possibly could to undo the damage that his ghastly, useless Prime Minister has done in two short years.
By the way, there's a...
Sorry, Christy.
Well, I'm just going to say, can I put in it?
It is not just the king who's over there.
The queen is over there, too.
And she is equally brilliant in her own way.
And didn't she look fabulous?
I thought Melania had another of those rather silly flat hat things on.
She looked like a sort of Spanish bullfighter, to be honest.
Whereas I thought Camilla looked absolutely fabulous.
That's all I wanted to say.
Speaking up for the older lady.
No, good on you.
Good on you.
As for the royal connection with President Trump,
I think the king can build on.
He could make him the Duke of Turnberry in view of his connections.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Oh, just imagine how well that would go down with John Swinney and the SNP too.
I would love that.
I have to say there is another moment that has gone viral this afternoon.
And I'm loving it because we need some light.
We need some frivolity.
Benny Johnson has described it, Christine, as the love tap.
And basically, Trump is going viral because he,
He got a little touchy-feely with Melania's bum.
Can I show you?
Can I show you?
He did that to Theresa May, do you remember as well?
Yes, maybe for very different reasons, though, Neil.
But Christine, you know, you two keep the passion alive, don't you, after all of these decades?
So surely that's not a bad thing.
There's nothing wrong with that at all.
And, I mean, she could hardly be in tighter clothes if she tried, could she?
She's almost been sort of zipped into them.
Well, we're all zipped into our clothes,
that you know what I mean.
And why shouldn't he, for heaven's sake, you know,
in all innocence, he was possibly just saying, you know, down you go.
But it's lovely.
And what's wrong with that?
I mean, it's just a, you know, other world leaders get up to far worse sexual things
and a little tap on the bum of your own wife.
Indeed.
I will leave it at that.
And on the whole, people are saying that so far,
state visit has been a great
success. Shawna Kay posting
there are so many takeaways from the
Royal State visit to the USA so far.
A properly planned, disciplined, diplomatic
tour looks worlds apart
from the odd little junkers and chaotic
side quests we've seen from Harry
and Megan. King Charles
the third's decades of experience
are showing and it's good to see him
finally operating in an arena where
competence matters and he can display his
skills. This visit carries real
weight, reopening channels, cooling
and restoring a balance to a relationship that's been wobbling for years.
Royal soft diplomacy is doing what it does best,
lowering the temperature and proving its value in real time.
A good and positive thing to see.
And I do think, Neil, this shows you what a real royal tour is all about, right?
Because we saw Harry and Megan sort of faking it in Australia,
and it just was so tacky.
And it's like, no, this is the real royalty.
I think that is a fair point to make, don't you, Neil?
Absolutely.
No, the Australian tour was absolutely pathetic.
And we know it was basically a commercial enterprise on Megan's part.
It was nothing to do with Royal Duty.
She has no interest whatsoever in Royal Duty.
That's why she's exiled Harry to California.
He's called the hostage inside Buckingham Palace
because she's kidnapped him and taken him away
and wrecked him psychologically.
So, no, the contrast is absolutely stark.
Here we have the king doing some real diplomacy,
and we have those useless idiots in California
just trying to feather their own nests in different parts of the world,
masquerading under the guise of charity.
Indeed. Well, look, stand by, you two,
because we're about to reveal today's greatest Britain and Union jackets,
but first I want to get to some of your feedback.
A lot coming in about the trouble that slippery star
star with the UK Prime Minister is in,
especially after this disastrous evidence from Morgan McSweeney earlier today.
Emma Coutts 3159 says,
that face of Morgan McSweeney and the body language is a real shifty bloke,
not one I would trust.
Gingerweed, she describes me.
You know I'm describing them as the dweeb.
Philip Jones 9458 says unless evidence is given under oath, there's no point.
D-0-575 says Morgan plugged the phone.
That's why they can't find it.
Martin Scott 1227 says Morgan McSweeney sums up what's wrong with Labour lightweight activists with no proper life experience and Juliet Johnson says McSweeney is a deceitful man lies lies lies and I have nominated Morgan McSweeney as Union Jackass today for that unconvincing evidence but Neil Hamilton went for Lord Herma for insulting British war heroes and Christine Hamilton went to Ed Miliband for having no solar panels on his house.
He is a hypocrite.
Okay, well, this is an unpredictable one today.
And sorry, Christine, you're in third place,
23% of folk going for Ed Miller band.
I can't believe it.
I haven't won.
I'm the runner up.
I thought I was a definite winner with Morgan McSweeney today,
but no, you've taken it.
Neil Hamilton, 47% agreeing with you and backing you
and saying Lord Herma is our union jackass.
Now, you've both chosen the same person
as today's Greatest Britain, haven't you?
Yeah, well, can I just, on the Union Jackass business, I've done it again.
You see, just before we came on air, Neil said, you know, I said, come on, we've got to decide who has which.
And he said, I don't mind you have whichever you like.
And I plumped for Miliband, which was mad.
And he plumped for the winner.
Well, no, Miliband would usually win, but I think there's just this hatred at the moment to anything connected to Stama.
But anyway, we had a little spoiler there.
We saw the greatest person.
So you've gone for King Charles.
And do you want to explain why, though, Christy?
Well, I think we've just amply, oh, goodness, there's the phone.
That's the key. It's the king.
He's delighted. He's on it.
I'm so sorry about that.
You've just amply demonstrated why.
I mean, what he's doing over there in America is absolutely superb.
It's talking about soft power.
I mean, it's just, he's wonderful.
I've always adored Prince Charles.
When I was little, I wanted to marry him, of course, like any girls
who are just a tiny bit younger than him did.
But he's just doing such a wonderful job.
but he's making me feel proud to be British again,
which is something which I haven't felt for a long time
because of this awful, awful, awful, awful ghastly government.
Okay, well, look, very, very well, I'll let you two go,
adore you both, thank you both so much.
We will speak very, very soon.
That is Neil and Christine Hamilton.
A very important reminder, though,
we are back in just over one hour.
So please do just keep on this feed.
this live stream until the end, and then you will be automatically redirect, or actually you can head
there right now and just tap a notification alert, because we have the most important speech in the reign
of King Charles III. It is coming in just over an hour's time. We have a special edition of
Outspoken to bring it all to you, all the action. You don't want to rely on the mainstream media for
this, do you folks? So please stay with us, and we will be back live. I am delighted.
delighted to say that I'm joined by a very special superstar panel. Lauren the insider and the tea
with Lee are joining us. Lauren from the UK, Lee Cohen is in Washington, D.C. for this very special
state visit. So be back with us just over an hour's time, a very special edition of Dan Wooden
outspoken for the King's bombshell live TV speech. And as I say, you can either head there now.
it's on our main feed or you can just hang around on this feed to the end and it will redirect you
all going to plan to that new feed which is starting in just over an hour's time that 7.30pm UK
time which is 2.30pm Eastern time 1130 a.m. Pacific time.
But we are moving over to Substack before then for the Royal Uncanceled Aftershow because can you
believe it, Megan Markle and Prince Harry managed to overshadow the King's first engagement in Washington
in DC as a garden party
American guest goes viral with a new
photo of the couple's daughter. So we'll cross
the US for all the latest from Tom Sikes
of the Royalist Substack. He is in New York.
We're covering it from all
angles for you today.
Sign up at www.
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