Has Trump lost the battle for Minneapolis? - podcast episode cover

Has Trump lost the battle for Minneapolis?

Jan 27, 202633 min
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Summary

The episode delves into Donald Trump's surprising shift from aggressive tactics to conciliation regarding ICE operations in Minneapolis, including the removal of commander Greg Bovino and the appointment of Tom Homan. This change appears to be a tactical retreat, influenced by overwhelming public opinion, Republican discontent, and the undeniable camera evidence contradicting the administration's narrative. Later, the discussion moves to the UK, examining how social media algorithms contribute to rising extremism and radicalization, highlighting the challenges for law enforcement and the accountability of tech companies.

Episode description

Donald Trump's tone on Minneapolis has changed in the last 24 hours. He’s now having conciliatory meetings and phone calls with State Governor Tim Walz and the city's Mayor Jacob Frey.

And it looks like he’s removed his Border Commander Gregory Bovino and put him out to pasture in California. What's behind the change of heart? Was it the polls? The murder of American citizens? Or the fact that his administration’s account of the killings has been flatly caught out by camera evidence. Is his ICE policy in meltdown? Or just on hold?

Later - how extremism is climbing in the UK pushed by social media algorithms - Andy Hughes from The Crime Agents joins us.

The News Agents is brought to you by HSBC UK - https://www.hsbc.co.uk/

Transcript

Intro / Opening

This is a Global Player Original Podcast. Mr. Bovino is a wonderful man and he's a great professional. He is going to very much continue to lead customs and border patrol throughout and across the country. Mr. Holman will be the main point of contact on the ground in Minneapolis. is all smiles and accolades, but if you listen to her words, she's actually firing Greg Bovino, Trump's border in Minneapolis.

Trump wanted a battle with Blue State, Minnesota. He sent his troops in to fight this fight. Yet in the last twenty-four hours, it looks like Trump has blinked. Has Minnesota won after all. Welcome to the news agents.

Trump's Retreat and ICE Personnel Changes

The news agents. It's Emily. It's Lewis. And we said on the show yesterday that it felt as if Trump might be about to make at least a tactical retreat. So obvious was the American public's distaste for all of the events and the killings that we've seen. in Minnesota. And indeed since we recorded that yesterday, that appears to be, for now at least, exactly what has happened. All comes from the fallout, of course, from the fatal shooting of the thirty seven year old ICU nurse.

Alex Pretti by ICE Agents. There's been intense nationwide protests. bipartisan political repression from including, as I say in the Republican Party. And then we discovered last night that Trump had a call with the Minnesota governor, Tim Waltz, someone that he has been decrying for the past

Month or so, someone who his government has been literally suing for the last week or so. Suddenly Trump says that he and Walt Are on the same page on the And the Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino is set to leave the state as part of that drawdown. And Trump has signalled a willingness to cooperate more closely with local officials rather than escalate the standoff, and indeed he is sending his so called border czar, Tom Homan, to oversee the situation, which again is being interpreted

as Donald Trump basically saying that for the first time he wants to cool things down rather than ratchet the pressure up. Yeah, it may or may not have been coincidence that Fox News suggested that this is what needed to happen. Roughly an hour and a half before Trump made the executive decision that Bovino needed to be brought down and Homan needed to be promoted. And perhaps we can offer you a little bit of background on each of those men because

They're sort of names that have become center stage in the tragedy of Minneapolis right now. But to sort of put it in context, Breg Bravino was known as the sort of commander at large uh in his role as border patrol and the sense among Some in the Trump administration was that he went a little bit off piste. He enjoyed himself a little bit too much. He took matters into his own hands. And the first sense that we had, the first sense maybe even that he had.

that things were not going well was when his social media accounts were locked. He was locked out of them. In other words, they didn't like the stuff he was saying. He appeared on the morning shows, on Sunday we played you a clip yesterday and one of the lines he put out was that the victims in the shooting, the murder of Alex Pritty were actually the ICE agents themselves. He was trying to

justify what he called the brandishing of a weapon. He was trying to justify what the Trump administration had called a mass escalation of violence. In other words, he was on the front line basically trying to advocate for impunity for the ICE officers on the streets of Minneapolis who were killing innocent US citizens, some of who were just trying to protect the community. So he is now being put out to pasture. He's being sent to California.

maybe even retired, let's wait and see, and in his place, or sort of given a bigger role now as Tom Homan. Now Tom Homan is quite a central character to the whole ICE project. He actually worked for Obama in 2014. He was Obama's head then of immigrations and customs and he won honors but you know, Obama famously actually deported

more illegal immigrants than any other recent US American presence, sort of north of of three million. And Tom Homan also found himself in the news in September of twenty twenty four when he had reportedly accepted a bag containing fifty thousand dollars in cash from undercover FBI agents posing as business executives.

who were investigating allegations that Homan was accepting bribes from border security companies, i.e. on the southern border, in exchange for government contracts. Sounds like an ideal border czar. Well, what happened two months after those allegations?

Came to the forefront, Trump wins the election, and mysteriously the investigation gets shut down because there isn't enough evidence. But I think to understand the complexity of that That change of personnel was You have to really understand that Homan

has been doing this stuff for decades and he is called the father of the child separation policy. In other words, the intellectual father of the guy who first came in and said, wouldn't it be a great idea if we put kids in cages and sent their parents home? this goes quite deep. And yet he is the man that people Or in the Trump administration now see as the grown up in the room, the person to get this sorted out. Yeah, or the nicer version. The soft touch, the nicer version of Greg Bovino.

Republican Backlash and Public Morality

It's probably true. I mean that's true. I mean that's the that's the that's the weird thing, the disturbing thing about where we are. I think that clearly we were talking on the show yesterday about What if anything could make it? Trump change course. And look, there has been and it's been pretty unusual in this second Trump term, there has been discontent from within the Republican Party.

at what they've seen. Now I don't think for reasons I think we could get into that that has been the determining factor, but it has nonetheless been notable. For example, just listen to this this is Chris Maydle. So he was the Republican candidate for the gubernatorial, the governor election in Minnesota to replace Tim Waltz, who has already uh said that he's uh stepping down.

He's a Republican and he said yesterday expla he put this video out yesterday explaining why he was withdrawing from that race. I have two primary reasons for this decision. Number one, I cannot support the National Republican stated retribution on the citizens of our state, nor can I count myself a member of a party that would do so.

I support the originally stated goals of immigration and customs enforcement's Operation Metro Surge in locating and deporting the worst of the worst from our state. And I've seen many examples of ICE arresting non-U.S. citizens in Minnesota convicted of serious crimes, including murder, rape, and child sexual assault. No reasonable person should want these people here, and I am glad that they are gone.

But Operation MetroSurge has expanded far beyond its stated focus on true public safety threats. United States citizens, particularly those of color, live in fear. United States citizens are carrying papers to prove their citizenship. That's wrong. ISIS authorized its agents to raid homes using a civil warrant that need only be signed by a border patrol agent. That's unconstitutional and it's wrong.

Weaponizing criminal investigations against political opponents is unconstitutional, regardless of who is in power. Republicans and Democrats alike have engaged in this misconduct. And both must be held to the same standard. Extraordinary statement there from oh it would be extraordinary enough given that he was the Republican candidate for the governor's race. Even more extraordinary to consider that, you know, this isn't some sort of woolly-eyed liberal we're talking about here.

Maidle is actually the lawyer for Jonathan Ross not that Jonathan Ross, Jonathan Ross, who of course was the ICE officer who killed Rennie Good. So as far as we know, he is still doing that. But even for him He believes that the tactics that are being used

the justification that's being put forward by the federal government and what we're seeing from the Trump administration is so unconstitutional and beyond the boundaries of acceptability that he cannot in good conscience continue to represent the Republican Party in the state. That tells you something about Republican Party opinion even in you know, even in the Trump era against what we've seen. Yeah. And at the end of that video message from Chris Madle, he actually

says that he's done it for his daughters. He wants to be able to look his daughters in the eye and tell them that he did the right thing. And it's interesting how many people are sort of turning to their young on this whole question of Public morality. Martha Stewart You know, the lifestyle expert, former jailbird, of course, has told her three million or so followers on Instagram that things have got to change. And this is the first time she's come out and said a statement about ice.

Prompted again by a granddaughter who s turned to her apparently and said, Why aren't you talking about this, Granny? I'm not sure whether she gets called granny or not, but you know, you've got a platform, you should be speaking out.

Public Opinion Shifts Trump's Stance

And she's another voice who sort of added hers to the fray. I think all this is is, as you say, part of the public pressure on Trump. And we've also heard from Greg Abbott, Texas governor, as red a state as you will find. And a proper ally of Trump as well. And an ally who has Gone as close to he can as as suggesting that maybe this isn't working out quite the way it should. Well uh you you point out a concern in in that as this we we from in general we need to have respect for

law enforcement officers uh in the country. I s they are law enforcement officers. And so w the they being the White House need to recalibrate on what needs to be done. uh to make sure that uh that respect is going to be reinstilled. Uh and that's that's not an easy task, especially under the the current circumstances, but I I know that they're working on a game plan. Uh to to make sure that they are going to

So let's say uh recalibrate and maybe work from a different direction uh to ensure that they get back to what they wanted to do. I think that the pressure from the Republican Party may have influenced things, but in a way I think that that is responding to something else, which is about

Public opinion. The Republicans are worried and Republicans you know to midterm year now, they are very worried about the prospect, exactly as we were saying yesterday, that what Trump is doing in overplaying his hand in this way is taking what should be a real positive campaigning issue for the Republicans which is immigration and turning it into a negative, something that the Democrats can successfully run against. So they're worried about that. I think that the most

Heartening is the wrong word because it's taken so much to get to this point. But I said yesterday that I thought that what happened next. would be a massive test for the overall health of American democracy because I think this has basically been a test to what extent the Trump administration and Trump himself still cares about public opinion, which is a key element of any democracy, right? I didn't think it was clear that Trump does not care

I mean the two things that clearly Trump cares about, the only U turns he's done so far are kind of this and tariffs, at least to some extent. And those I think are motivated by the two things that Trump cares most about, which is the market. And ultimately, if there is such a groundswell of public opinion against him that it forces him to move. I mean it goes back to that

old Lincoln quote about American politics, which is public and he s he was saying this in the nineteenth century, and I think it's so true even now. Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiments nothing can fail. Without it nothing can succeed. So I think what we are seeing here is that there is still

Well there's certainly two things. There is still some life in the American democratic process, something we've been worried about that it might not be the case. But also as well, that speaks I think to the something maybe we don't talk about enough, which is that, you know, America is not Trump. America is not Trump. There is still a fundamental decency across the American public. Yes, the Republican Party has been colonized by and occupied by an extreme cult.

frankly, at its top, epitomized by someone like Stephen Miller, who is a radical ideologue and as close to a modern day fascist I think as it is possible to get. But even they do have to respond. The elastic can only be bent so far. Now unfortunately it has taken the murder of two American citizens, innocent American citizens, to get that far. So it is a terrible price to pay. But I think it does show us still that there are limits even to Trump's power.

Media Scrutiny and Post-Truth Era

Yeah, and I think that that turn of public opinion is I mean, to go back to the old Orwell quote that the party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. People have their eyes and ears via so many mobile phones, so many clips of the footage now, which is making it impossible for the administration to lie in the way that they have been used to doing.

You can lie about things that are happening millions of miles away from people's homes, but when people are standing there on their own streets and filming every single frame. a shooting, of a murder, of an attack then you can't carry on lying so convincingly. And I think this is actually an admission that the people have won because they're calling out the lies. Now just one thing to add to that, when Renee Good was murdered in her car, the thirty seven year old mother about t twenty days ago.

They said there wouldn't be an investigation. They immediately called her a domestic terrorist, and the only investigation they decided to do was into her widow, who they called a an activist, an anti-ICE activist. This time round, after the killing of Alex Prettick, They've ordered an investigation. But there's been some really interesting reporting from CNN in the last few minutes, and they've looked into what kind of investigation this means.

There is no criminal investigation being opened. There is no judicial investigation being opened. So there is nothing that goes to the DOJ that says an investigation is underway. So what is this investigation? Is it just an administrative investigation? Or is it no investigation at all? It's merely a way of words. It's a way of telling people, Oh, don't worry, we're on to this, we'll check it out, it's all fine. Again, it's this sort of

Soft peddling of a nation's fear with lies and with cover up and with dissemination by sort of trying to look as if you are taking action when you're not. And I think Frankly, that's what people have just said.

had enough of. They've used up their credits, their line credits now. I think what you're saying there, Emily, is is really interesting because what it's sort of like is framed around in a way is what Trump's politics has been anchored around for ten years, right? Which has been what we've called the post-truth era, right? And

Most of the time that can work. And as you say, the exception is is when basically everybody's filming it all of the time. And that is obviously on one level heartening. It's also extremely disheartening, right? Because the truth is, is that At this moment about this story, about which there was such intensity, such massive media attention.

it became impossible to live in that post truth world and to lie. But that's one thing. Yeah. That's one thing. And your thing just there about the investigation sums it up perfectly because as soon as the phones go away, as soon as we're looking elsewhere, which will happen All of that post truth world returns. Because by definition you can't be filming what is happening in the inside of the federal government in investigation once the attention and that hyper pitch of scrutiny is taken away.

Then they can go back to their old tricks and this is what I would wa think about as well, about what happens next in terms of the immigration question as well. Look, I think it's likely that they do make a tactical retreat. But you know absolutely that there will be voices within the administration, at least people like Stephen Miller, who will be arguing for a resumption in short order. Now maybe they spread their activity around the country a bit.

Maybe it's a bit more diffuse, maybe it's just a little bit quieter than it was before. Maybe it isn't quite as theatrical as it was in Minnesota. But do I believe that this is the end of the sort of ice taxi? that we've seen in Minnesota and elsewhere. No, I don't think that. I just think they're gonna probably try and do it more quietly, away from prying eyes, and most germanially of all

away from the glare of the lenses of our phones. Yeah. And actually just on that question of the phones, what's really Critical still is what they do with Alex Pretti's phone, which has all the footage from his own point of view, clearly he was holding the phone. They have taken that phone, they haven't released it.

I think he was wearing body cam. They haven't released that. There are answers as to exactly the sequence in which everything happened that he has filmed that that will tell us the whole story, which we may never see. And I it sort of dawned on me that all these ideas were oh we thought he was holding a weapon. He was holding a weapon. The weapon was never the gun. It was always the phone. In other words,

The phone that sheds light on truth on what is happening minute by minute is actually far more powerful right now than a gun and a holster. That's why they attacked him. And we as we were exactly on the s saying on the show yesterday, the reason that they are filming as they are, is precisely To ensure that That the federal government, the Trump administration, do not get away with what the trick they try to get away with, which is to besmirch

and to outrageously slander people that they themselves have killed. Because if not just Alex Pretti but others hadn't been there, if there wasn't that quite extraordinary kind of information network that we were reporting on last week which says, gets an address and it pings up on the phone, get there right now and before you know where you are, four or five or six people are observing. If that footage did not exist

Where would we be right now? The Trump administration would not have retreated. They would still be trying to claim that Pretzi was a domestic terrorist. They would still be trying to slander him. They would still be trying to insult his family. And possibly use, who knows, other instruments of the law to go after his family, as they did with the family of of Rennie Good. So let us not pretend in any way that the Trump administration has retreated from this.

out of the goodness of their hearts or because they've suddenly had a sudden conversion to a different way of doing things.

Trump's Failed Strategy and Minneapolis's Trauma

They are doing what they're doing because they have been forced to do so by the very people they so dislike who are the people who come and observe them every single day. Yeah, I mean if you want to get darkly comic about this, you could say it's because President Trump has found that those around him just aren't As tactical or as gifted at lying as he is. So he had this two-hour meeting with Christy Noham last night in the Oval Office.

Everyone is now looking at whether Christine Ome, who's the Homeland Security Secretary, will still be in her job, Cory Lewandowski, her top aide, who's been part of the sort of Trump gang. was on the Trump campaign in twenty fifteen, twenty sixteen, next to will they still be in their jobs. And it's almost like if you watch Trump in these sort of press conferences

He comes, as we've often said, very close to saying the thing that you think you've heard, but he hasn't actually said it, so he doesn't need to retract it. Christy Noham says it. She goes out and she tells a blatant lie. So it may just be that this whole meeting now and I think, you know, what we're hearing is that she requested to see him, but obviously rumours are whether she will still have her job this time tomorrow.

Lewandowski will have his job this time tomorrow. It may just be that they are trying to figure out a way to keep doing what they're doing and not actually head to the media so quickly with a narrative that is so demonstrably false.

of this whole thing is if Trump is one thing we know he's been the s social media president and that his rise would have been impossible without social media and without ex formerly Twitter in particular. This is an example I think of of one of those moments when he's actually failed to understand the changes in the media.

Uh because without again, his rise would have been impossible but his retreat in this case would have been impossible without it. So this is something, as you say, you get the feeling that rather than a retreat this is something that is gonna be is it is a complete strategic withdrawal or is it a tactical retreat? And I have a horrible feeling that it's gonna be a tactical retreat rather than the other. Yeah, I mean to your to your first question, your opening question, which was has Minnesota

one. I mean the answer is categorically no. It's lost at least two U US citizens. I to Ice Murder it's been traumatized. we have seen monitored at least two thousand people deported in the first what twenty six, twenty seven days of January alone. So Minnesota hasn't won.

it has been traumatized, it has been wrecked. The communities are stronger as a result of it. I think they have come together. But actually it seems that all they're waiting is for Trump to turn his attention to somewhere else, turn his ICE agents to somewhere else. And I mean we're not gonna be talking about Iran today, hopefully later in the week, but it does seem extraordinary that ten days ago Trump messaged help is on the way.

We know that Iran is slaughtering its own citizens right now, in the possibly the tens of thousands. This is somewhere legitimately that the world would welcome Trump's intervention, I think. And yet help was on the way ten days ago. Nothing's happened there, and people are getting murdered on the streets of Minneapolis, a blue state that he didn't win.

UK Extremism Fueled by Algorithms

The news agents. Right, we talked on the first story about how phones have in the case of Minnesota in a way ended up being the saving grace. We also know of course and talked a lot last year about how radicalizing, particularly social media algorithms could be, particularly when they're in the hands of certain people like Elon Musk. And it seems that

Perhaps I think for the first time, very senior police officer in the UK has come out and said what a big problem it is proving to be for policing as well. In an exclusive interview with LBC and the Crime Agents podcast and one of the crime agents cohosts, Andy Hughes,

has hopped over the water to talk to us. Andy tell us about who you've been speaking to and what they've said. Yeah so so this all started when I got the invitation into the Counterterrorism Operations Centre. This is the center that was built. after the wave of terror attacks in the UK in twenty seventeen and it was built to draw all the different agencies together.

So I was invited in the first journalist ever to see their operations room and this is where they monitor all their extremists. In the at the moment there are more than a thousand people on their radar that they are constantly monitoring. That number is up. And the reason for that is that radicalisation is up massively. PREVENT, which is the government's deradicalisation programme, they have seen a twenty seven percent increase in the last year, which is huge.

yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r yw'r And he blames a few things for that. One of the reasons, he says, is that ISIS, the terror group, they are now reforming and they are pumping out rhetoric online to their followers all across the world.

But really he is pointing his finger fairly heavily. at the social media companies because he says that the majority of people who are being radicalized now are pretty much the vast majority all online. It's not it's not done through the dark web or anything, it's done through very popular social media networks, including Meta, which is run by Mark Zuckerberg, and of course X, which is run by Elon Musk. So I asked him

about that. And this is what he said. Should we now be getting to a point where tech bosses, talking Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, should they be uh subject to counter terrorism laws and charges. So they've definitely got a responsibility in this space. Do you think they're doing enough?

Uh no, not even close to enough. Um so I've talked about the algorithms that pump this stuff to you. Yeah. So if you know an algorithm is pumping stuff to you, it ought to be relatively easy to identify where it's coming from and take it down.

The challenge comes back to the point I made around what's lawful and what isn't. If it is lawful, what is the motivation for a tech company to put a load of resource into taking stuff down that that isn't isn't a a a sort of in an illegal post or something like that.

So it comes down to, you know, what's their sort of moral perspective, how are they running their business. Um, I would put huge pressure on the bosses to manage this more effectively. So I guess the fact he raises the question of whether it's lawful or not. takes uh out of the hands of social media, doesn't it, and into the hands of legislators. I mean is he saying it isn't illegal or it should be illegal or they should be taking this stuff down

Anyway, because it's clearly doing so much damage. Yeah, i he's he's saying that the social media companies should know where these algorithms are coming from and that they should be identifying them much earlier. while it is still legal because these things then progress to illegality and that is when they are allowed to go after. But by that point it's too late. The horse has already bolted. Who are the thousand

people on the extremist watch list here. Are they British citizens or are they people who shouldn't be here? No, no, they're home grown. Seventy five percent will be Islamist extremism. Around twenty to twenty five percent will be far right, and then there's a small growing number of hard far left. And to be clear, what what the assistant commissioner is saying, which I think is sort of remarkable in a way that it isn't dealt with, he's basically saying that what develops are

Terror related algorithms. Yeah. So I did an interview with someone who works for him about six months ago and he works in his far right unit. And he showed me we couldn't broadcast any of the stuff of course, but he showed me some of the stuff being targeted to young people. And it was, you know, stuff about Hitler and then trying to invoke

anger amongst the young people. And they were using at that time, because asylum hotels was dominating the news at that time, they were using that issue to target young working class boys. And now one in five terror arrests is a young teenager. Of course what's so sort of disturbing about that is that the reason, presumably, that these companies don't want to do anything about it or at least are reluctant is the same reason that they're always reluctant.

to interfere too much algorithmically or to moderate their content because they consist consistently insist that they're, you know, not publishers, is because

Frankly they just want people to stay on their phones. Yeah. And these people spend loads of time on their phones and eyeballs. Well then that has a commercial value. Totally. And the way assistant commissioner Taylor spoke about is If you go online and and we've all seen it, if you go on to buy a pair of trainers and then you return, you go on your phone, you go on Instagram or whatever platform it may be, more trainers.

It's exactly the same with extremism. So if you look at a a little bit of extremism, then it will then be pumped to you on these platforms. to actually go this strong. It's clear. and counterterrorism in the security service are just sick of this because they're just seeing a wave of people coming through the door. Who are being radicalized.

Some political pressure. They are. And he hinted that he wants the law changed as well. So to allow him to go after these people. I mean what's interesting, Andy, is that we've been here before with Meta, when it was Facebook, with Mot Zuckerberg, who had to admit the failings that the whole company had over the Rohingya massacre. I mean it's a different thing but it's It's entirely the same, which is that you're

not monitoring, you're not removing things, the platform gets used by bad actors, genocidal actors in that particular case. And it's amplified by Facebook. So I mean does he feel, did you get the sense

on or off camera that he thinks that we're letting them get away with whatever they want. Yeah, i yeah he was fairly strong on the record, but just reading between the lines and what he was saying, you could say he really felt strongly about this. He was saying stuff like Mae'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n. Doing their work.

Uh not much. We approached them yesterday. Really? But they're normally so approachable and transparent. I couldn't find a way to make it a little bit more than a little bit. So what did they say? Will you tell us if they do get back to you? And break the habit of a lifetime. And I should say the full interview with Assistant Commissioner Taylor is uh in a special episode of The Crime Agents, which is in your feeds now. Andy, thanks.

Melania Trump's Plea and Film

The news agents. So before we go, we have heard a very rare intervention actually while we've been recording from the first lady Melania Trump, pretty much the only Trump from whom it is ever a rare intervention. She perhaps not surprising, the reason we've heard from her is she has been promoting her forty million dollar film.

Melania, which is premiering on Amazon, in case you're interested, but she was asked about what has been going on in Minnesota. This is what the first lady said. We need to unify. I'm calling for unity. I know my husband, the president, had a great call yesterday with the governor and the mayor, and they're working together to make it peaceful and without riots.

I'm against the violence, so if please if we pro protest, protest in peace. I love that. So you think she's gonna have this massive political intervention which is like stop Donald Think of the children. Think of the children. Stop separating kids from their parents. Stop sending back people like me who may sound like me, who might have had an illegal status in this country once, but have now become part of the fabric of America.

But no, she says stop protesting violently, stop writing violently to the people on the streets of Minneapolis who want ice out of their state. We should just add that the Melania film, as you say, bought at great expense by one Jeff Bezos. When he was weird that Yeah. When he was finding his feet just before the last election. Ticket sales we hear, according to The Guardian, according to Tim Richards, who is the chief executive of Vue in the UK here, are soft.

Just one ticket has been sold for the first three ten PM screening on Friday. It's the night is young, as it were. Oh in the Islington Black. Why did you pick that one? That's my view. Maybe go out to Hillingdon, somewhere like that. Various conspiracy theories have gained traction online in recent years that the film is hoping to nullify Including the head scratchingly far fetched that she had died and was replaced by a body dump.

Which is what we did with John Sopel years ago. And now he's surfing on Bondi Beach. Exactly. Check out those abs. Yeah. See you then. Bye bye. Bye. This has been a Global Player original production.

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