Jeremy Clarkson has sided with Carol Decker’s fiery outburst, where the singer criticised the Labour Government heavily in reaction to a GB News clip.
The comments were in reaction to a heated exchange on GB News, where conservative political commentator Matt Goodwin and Former Labour MP Bill Rammell clashed over immigration and border control.
The British singer, who is often critical of the Government on social media, repeatedly described Labour as “c****”.
Justifying her strong language, Ms Decker wrote: “There is no other word to describe them. I am an educated articulate person. I’m a word-smith, I write songs, vocabulary is my trade but the only word I can come up with that describes Labour is c****.”
Mr Clarkson commented under the video: “I did enjoy this.”
The discussion, in which Matt argued that the UK should withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to facilitate deportations and enhance public safety, sparked the online discussion.
Matt accused the Labour Government of “tearing the country apart”.
He argued that the current approach to immigration was “dividing our community” and “putting women and girls in this country like Rhiannon Whyte at risk”.

The comment referred to the recent killing of Rhiannon Whyte, a hotel worker who was stabbed by an asylum seeker as she waited for her train home, which has reignited public anger over the enforcement of immigration laws.
Deng Chol Majek, a Sudanese asylum seeker, followed Ms Whyte after she finished her shift at the hotel where he was staying.
As she stood on the train platform at the Bescot Stadium train station, Majek stabbed her 23 times with a screwdriver.
Ms Whyte sustained multiple injuries to her head and died from a brain stem injury three days after the attack.
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During the murder trial at Wolverhampton Crown Court, CCTV was shown to jurors in which Majek could be seen staring at the victim when she was handing out snacks hours before he would go on to attack her.
In response to the criticism of Labour, Mr Rammell defended the Government’s record, citing a “63 per cent increase in raids on illegal working” and efforts to “dramatically speed up claims and deportations”.
The former Labour MP insisted that cooperation with other countries and adherence to international conventions were essential to tackling the issue effectively, warning that withdrawing from the ECHR “would make it more difficult to remove people from the country.”
However, Matt pushed back fiercely, calling for the UK to “leave the European Convention on Human Rights,” “repeal Tony Blair’s Human Rights Act,” and prioritise “British people first” in welfare and housing policy.

The GB News regular argued that such measures would allow authorities to “detain and deport anybody who arrives illegally” and deliver “meaningful progress” within a year.
Leaving the ECHR is now party policy for both the Tories and Reform UK.
While the Labour Government has no plans to leave the convention, they have pledged to end the use of hotels to house asylum seekers by 2029.
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