On Sunday’s (November 23) TalkTV show, hosted by Alex Phillips, the outspoken commentator didn’t mince her words as she once more slammed Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour Government for what she labelled as having “ridiculous” immigration policies. She fumed: “Foreign nationals are coming into this country, getting free houses, free welfare, and popping out seven kids, and I’m paying for it! It’s an absolute joke!”
Phillips, never one to shy away from controversy, unleashed a blistering attack on what she views as a broken system that rewards asylum seekers at the expense of hardworking Britons, after she claimed to have been in steady employment since the age of 14, while illegal migrants claim financial benefits from the Government. Her fiery outburst came as Labour MP Shabana Mahmood came under fire for comments she made while discussing her party’s proposed overhaul of the asylum system

The Home Secretary claimed the UK is becoming more racist. (Image: Getty)
She claimed that Britain is becoming more racist and even slammed her fellow Labour MPs for their role in fanning the flames of racism in the UK, adding that being called a “f***ing p**i” is nothing new to her.
The Home Secretary told The Times that politicians who were ignoring a problem, including her own colleagues, were partly responsible for the public’s outrage.
Following her outburst in the Commons, the Home Secretary blasted that she has repeatedly taken flak for her sweeping immigration reforms.
She added: “There’s a lot more of it around in recent times than there has been over the course of the rest of my life. And more of my own family have been racially abused in that way recently.
“My family members, my immediate family members, my extended family members, my parents, my siblings, my cousins. There are examples across our family and also the people I represent of more people telling me about being sworn at, told to f*** off home.”
However, Phillips claimed that this stance from Mahmood was preventing people from questioning where their money was going and creating fear about expressing any form of concern for the influx of undocumented migrants coming into the country.

