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Kemi Badenog and Nigel Farage to the enemies of Great Britain
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Let's play that clip now. Against it, Russia, China, Iran. And surprisingly, the leader of the opposition and Nigel Farage
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are in that column alongside Russia, China and Iran, rather than the column that has the UK and its allies in it
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James Clovey, a lot of people think of that as an astonishingly shabby way
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to attack Kemi Beidnock and Nigel Farage. What do you make of that
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It really is below him. Now, obviously, Kemi is a colleague and friend
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I know Nigel well. We disagree on many things. But to suggest that he somehow
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and that we are on the side of Putin or Beijing, is really quite disgusting
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bearing in mind that the legal precedent that he is claiming that he has to follow
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and he says oh we have to do this because of legal pressure which is nonsense But the judge that gave that opinion the deputy judge that gave that opinion at the International Court of Justice was a Chinese judge
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The Russians have voted at the UN to say the UK should give up sovereignty to Mauritius
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These are the things that we are opposing. So to suggest that Kemi, that my party, that Nigel are somehow siding with our competitors and enemies is really, really deeply inappropriate
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And it seems that Keir Starmer's got a bit of a habit
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Whenever he's under pressure, whenever he's struggling to justify his actions, whether it's stripping winter fuel payments off of pensioners or giving away UK sovereign territory
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He turns into this rather nasty, vindictive character who, whether he was rude to Liz Savile Roberts in the chamber or making these baseless accusations at the press conference, it's a really bad trade
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And he does it when he knows he's on the wrong side of the argument. So your viewers should watch out, because when he behaves like that, it's because he knows he's in the wrong
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OK, James Clabby, thank you very, very much