I’ve always been quite fond of Rylan Clark. No, that isn’t quite true – when his terrifyingly toothsome grin appeared for the very first time on TV, as a contestant on The X Factor back in 2012, I did grimace at this apparently air-headed Katie Price-meets-General-Zod wannabe. As often happens with reality TV, despite what its critics say, prolonged time spent in his screen company revealed a quite different person. As he says in his own bio on X, ‘Started as a joke. Still laughing.’

This incident looks trivial. But I think it may be one of the most significant shifts in the Overton window on the illegal immigration issue

Pop music and Rylan were a match definitely not made in heaven, but television and Rylan were made for each other. He is a thoughtful, intelligent man and naturally a

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