'What happened in Ireland is coming to the US!' Steve Bannon issues warning to Americans 'coming at a MUCH bigger scale'

'What happened in Ireland is coming to the US!' Steve Bannon issues warning to Americans 'coming at a MUCH bigger scale'

Steve Bannon issues a warning to Americans

GB NEWS
Ben Chapman

By Ben Chapman


Published: 30/11/2023

- 18:13

Updated: 30/11/2023

- 21:40

The ex-White House Chief Strategist demanded a 'mass deportation'

Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon has issued a dire warning about how migration is affecting the US.

Speaking on GB News, he demanded a “mass deportation” of “illegal invaders” who have entered the country during Biden’s tenure as US President.


He warned what happened in Ireland is “coming to the US at a much bigger scale”.

GB News’s Patrick Christys had asked Donald Trump’s former right hand man about the state of migration, stating the issue hadn’t been properly addressed in Britain despite the public repeatedly voting for action.

Steve Bannon and Dublin riots

Steve Bannon has issued a warning over the Dublin riots

GB NEWS / REUTERS

Bannon said the people of Britain need to “stand up” against “lies” on the matter.

“Not only should we be talking about a cap on migration, we should be taking about a reversal”, he said.

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Dublin riotsRiots broke out in Dublin following the attack PA

“That’s what we’re going to have in the US. We’re not going to tolerate the nine million illegal invaders who have come in under the Biden regime.

“It’s going to be a huge fight. What we saw in Ireland is coming to the US at a much bigger scale.

“The people of Britain need to stand up and say, ‘look, we need to face this. Mistakes were made. We were lied to. The way they count the total cost of doing this is a lie’.

“They’re designating you as the problem. Nigel Farage is the problem. The people who protest are the problem.

“It won’t wash because people know in their hearts they aren’t xenophobes or racist.

“They want their country to survive and go forward for their children and grandchildren.”

It comes after “unprecedented” riots in Ireland which saw millions of euros in damage caused to public infrastructure and shops looted.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has promised a “robust” response after a knife attack on children and a carer outside a school prompted unrest.

He has criticised calls for the justice minister and police commissioner to resign following the violence, saying such a move would only serve to embolden those who carried out the riots.

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