ABSCHRIFTEnglish

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves DESTROYED in BRUTAL PMQs clash on ’skyrocketing’ welfare bill

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VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

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It's the end of the session and what a

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contrast with the beginning. Mr.

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Speaker, back in July 2024, those

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benches were full of sickopantic

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questions from adoring new MPs.

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Yesterday, the prime minister was

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reduced to begging those same MPs to

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save his own skin.

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>> Mr. Speaker, he's broken his promise to

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grow the economy. The only thing that's

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grown is the welfare bill. The only

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thing that's grown is the welfare bill.

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So, can the prime minister tell us? Can

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the prime minister tell us how many more

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people are out of work and claiming

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universal credit since he took office?

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>> Minister, Mr. Speaker, uh she talks

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about what we've done uh in ter raising

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people out of work. We have the youth

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guarantee that we put in place for young

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people. We've raised the national

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minimum wage thanks to our chancellor.

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We've helped young people into work by

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cutting NHS waiting list thanks to the

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work of the health secretary. We put

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more police on the streets thanks to the

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work of the home secretary. And we've

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cut energy bills for young people thanks

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to the work of the energy. I am very

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proud what this Labor government has

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delivered in the first session of this

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parliament.

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>> Mr. Speaker, the prime minister doesn't

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want to say how many people how many

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more people in fact are out of work and

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claiming universal credit since he took

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office. Perhaps he doesn't know. So let

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me tell him the number is 1.5 million.

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>> That is the entire population of Leeds,

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Cardiff, and Edinburgh put together.

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Hardworking people are being taxed more

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and more to pay for a ballooning

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benefits bill. So, can the prime

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minister tell us why on his watch for

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the first time ever, we are now spending

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more on welfare than we earn in income

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tax?

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>> Prime Minister.

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>> Mr. Speaker, the welfare system she

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complains of the one they put in place,

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Mr. Speaker. And Mr. Speaker, we are

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reforming it to improve it. And what did

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they do when we put that forward? They

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voted to keep the same broken welfare

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system.

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>> Mr. Speaker, that answer was as honest

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as his reason for sacking Ollie Robbins.

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Perhaps he'd like to apologize for that

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right now. Let me tell him let me tell

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him why we're we're spending more on

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welfare than we're earning in tax. It's

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because of him and his terrible

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policies. This is all under him. We are

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spending so much on welfare. We cannot

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afford to defend the country. And if he

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won't listen to me, Mr. Speaker, perhaps

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he'll listen to the former Labor Defense

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Secretary, Lord Robertson, who is

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saying, and I quote, "We cannot defend

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Britain with an everexpanding

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welfare budget." I agree with Lord

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Robertson. Why doesn't he?

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>> Prime Minister Speaker, this is the

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Labor government that increased defense

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spending, the highest sustained spend

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since the Cold War. What did they do,

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Mr. Speaker, when they came into power,

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defense spending was 2.5%. And when they

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left power, it was 2.3%.

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And even their own secretary of state

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admitted they hollowed out our armed

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forces. So, we'll take no lectures from

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them on defense.

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>> Mr. Speaker, talking about more defense

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spending is not the same as giving more

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money for defense. He has been in office

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for nearly two years. Mr. Speaker, what

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he does have, he's got a welfare plan

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until 2031, but he's not produced a

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defense investment plan. We have gone

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backwards on defense under him because

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we are borrowing. We are borrowing to

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pay for welfare. Yesterday, we learned

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that the cost of government borrowing is

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now the highest in two decades. That's

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under him. Instead of getting a grip on

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the economy, the chancellor is briefing

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out rent controls to curry favor. Curry

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favor with left-wing backbentures. This

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is not a serious way to run the economy.

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It is time the prime minister gives her

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an easier job. So, will he listen to

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businesses, listen to the country, and

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reshuffle the chancellor?

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>> Mr. Speaker, at the spring statement,

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the chanc were very proud to say

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inflation was down to 3% and falling.

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Six interest rates in a cut. We've seen

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the growth figures for the early part of

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this year. And she says, well, the cost

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of boring's gone up. Yes, because

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there's a conflict in Iran. And what did

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she want to do? What did she want to do

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when when I said we wouldn't be dragged

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into that war? because I thought through

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the consequences including the economic

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consequences. What did she do? She said

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we should jump in with both feet without

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regard to the consequences. She can't

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complain now about the implications.

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>> Mr. Speaker, I didn't hear him say he's

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not reshuffling the chancellor.

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>> It sounds like she's toast. Meanwhile,

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the former deputy prime minister is on

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maneuvers. This government is like a bad

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episode of Game of Thrones. His own

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people have turned against him and all

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the while the prime minister is holed up

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in his castle wetting himself about a

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visit from the king in the north.

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Yesterday, Mr. Speaker, yesterday one

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Labor MP actually said that his days are

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numbered. That's one of them. I wonder

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who it was cuz they're all looking

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guilty as hell. Is it the real reason,

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Mr. Speaker? Isn't the real reason, Mr.

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Speaker?

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Mr. Speaker, isn't the real reason the

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prime minister can't cut welfare that he

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squandered all his political capital,

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saving his own skin?

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>> Mr. Speaker, she talks about political

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games. That's what she was doing

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yesterday.

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>> This house considered our motion,

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rejected it decisively because everyone

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saw it for what it was, a desperate,

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baseless political stunt ahead of the

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May elections. And Mr. Speaker, whilst

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she and they were playing games here, I

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was chairing a meeting in Cobra, going

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through the contingencies and managing

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our war in the Middle East.

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>> Mr. Speaker, they think little game here

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is more important than managing the

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implications of the war in the Middle

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East, which will affect every single one

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of their constituents. And none of them

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ask any questions about it. None of them

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want to debate it. They just want to

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debate silly political stunts

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>> because, Mr. Speaker, even though we

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didn't join the war, no thanks to her,

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my duty is to protect the British public

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from the consequences, and nothing is

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going to distract me from what matters

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to the British public.

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>> Mr. Speaker, I think the whole country

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is sick of this man's tonedeaf, pompous

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moralizing.

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>> Last week, last week, last week,

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Last week, we all saw him punch the

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speaker's chair. This is not a man who

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is in control.

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>> Since the last king speech, it's been

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one disaster after another. Cronyism,

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jobs for friends of convicted

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pedophiles, perigages for other friends

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of convicted pedophiles, broken promises

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on taxes, U-turn after U-turn after

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U-turn. He's lost a deputy prime

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minister, two chiefs of staff, two

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cabinet secretaries, the support of his

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backbenches, and all his credibility.

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Yes. Yes. They can, Mr. Speaker. They

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can jer as much as they like. They're

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going to have to go to their

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constituencies and explain to all those

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people why they did what they did last

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night. The fact is the prime minister

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was reduced to whipping his MPs to save

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him and pleading with a tax dodger to

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rejoin his cabinet. How much longer do

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we all have to put up with his shambles?

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>> Mr. Speaker, I changed my party and I

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won a general election.

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>> She's changed her party, Mr. Speaker,

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because when I became leader of my

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party, their party was three times the

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size it is now. She's changed it. It's

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