ABSCHRIFTEnglish

Labour MP reveals Downing Street's position on Keir Starmer as Prime Minister - 'RESIGN!'

16m 45s2,920 Wörter438 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

0:00

All right, welcome along everybody.

0:01

Thank you so much to everyone who's come

0:03

here tonight. And this this has been

0:06

Kier Starmmer's week from hell. It began

0:09

with him hauled into parliament so he

0:11

could be laughed at for serving up a

0:13

load of tripe about Mandelen.

0:15

>> I know many members across the house

0:17

will find these facts to be incredible.

0:26

>> And he was called a liar twice. So, does

0:29

a prime minister agree with me? He's

0:31

been lying.

0:32

>> He is gas slicing the nation. So, let's

0:34

call this out for what it is. The prime

0:36

minister is a bare-faced liar.

0:39

>> Yeah. Then he was humiliated by Diane

0:41

Abbert.

0:43

>> It's one thing to say, as he insists on

0:47

saying, "Nobody told me. Nobody told me

0:50

anything. Nobody told me." The question

0:53

is, why didn't the prime minister ask

0:59

And the best he could come up with as a

1:00

response was this.

1:14

It's like the Road Runner, wasn't it?

1:22

It's just ridiculous, isn't it? Then the

1:24

civil servant he sacked got stuck into

1:26

him and revealed that Downing Street did

1:28

try to find another job for another

1:30

Peter Files friend.

1:32

>> I walked into a situation in which um

1:35

there was already a very very strong

1:37

expectation coming from number 10 that

1:40

he needed to be in post and in America

1:43

as quickly as humanly possible.

1:46

>> Then one of his own MPs called for him

1:48

to go. It's got to the point now where I

1:51

genuinely think that, you know, as far

1:53

as the prime minister is concerned, it's

1:54

not a case of if, it's when.

1:57

>> Then another MP called for him to go.

2:00

>> Uh he needs to make plans for him to go

2:03

in as dignified a way as as possible.

2:06

Dignified for the sake of the country,

2:07

for the sake of the Labor Party.

2:10

>> Then he faced allegations that he may

2:12

have misled Parliament by saying this.

2:15

He said, "I can say with certainty it

2:17

was never put to me in that way. No

2:20

pressure existed whatsoever in relation

2:22

to this case."

2:25

>> Yeah. I mean, actually, what Ollie Robin

2:27

said was this

2:28

>> throughout January. Honestly, um my my

2:33

office uh the foreign secretary's office

2:35

were under constant pressure. They are

2:39

clever people. They would have been very

2:41

aware of the pressure. I also have

2:43

complete confidence that their

2:44

recommendations to me and the discussion

2:46

we had and the decision we made was

2:48

rigorously independent of that pressure.

2:52

Constant pressure was the actual word

2:54

there, wasn't it? And now there's talk

2:55

of a cabinet mutiny. Reer and streeting

2:57

are talking of a pact. Andy Burnham

2:59

might emerge as the chosen one. Then it

3:01

emerged his great friend, the man he

3:04

appointed as attorney general, Lord

3:05

Hurmer, is now accused of helping to

3:07

prosecute British war heroes despite

3:09

being told the claims against them were

3:11

probably bogus. And then today, it

3:13

emerged that same Lord Herma reportedly

3:15

charged double his hourly rate to try to

3:18

prosecute our own war heroes. Shocking

3:20

stuff, really, isn't it? And to top it

3:22

all off, you

3:24

>> before your wedding day, everyone says

3:25

it's going to be the best day of your

3:26

life. And yeah, you think, well, I'm not

3:28

sure. What about when Arsenal won the

3:30

double?

3:34

>> Oh gosh, it just makes you feel sick,

3:37

doesn't it? Anyway, now his beloved

3:38

Arsenal are absolutely bottling the

3:40

Premier League again. So fantastic. Hey,

3:44

fantastic. Look, he's discredited. He's

3:46

a lame duck. His time as prime minister

3:48

officially died this week. Nobody backs

3:50

him. He's totally totally isolated. But

3:54

it's a terrible week. Couldn't have

3:56

happened to a nicer bloke, could it?

3:57

Hello, I'm Bev Turner. Now, it can feel

4:00

like the money in our bank accounts at

4:02

the moment does not keep up with the

4:03

cost of living. And maybe there's a

4:06

solution. I'm here today with the CEO of

4:09

Tally Money, uh Cameron Perry. Cameron,

4:13

what is Tally Money?

4:15

>> Well, Bev, with Tally Money, you get a

4:17

current account and a debit card, but

4:19

instead of pounds, you use milligs of

4:21

gold as your everyday money.

4:23

>> So, why gold? Gold traditionally is a

4:27

great store of value. It has on average

4:29

gone up at over 11% peranom for the last

4:32

25 years against the pound. It's tripled

4:35

in value in the last decade and in the

4:37

last 2 years alone it's increased by 50%

4:40

against the pound. Banks savings

4:43

products just can't compete with that

4:45

level of growth.

4:46

>> But this isn't just about gold. This is

4:48

about a currency that you guys have

4:50

created at Tally Money. Explain it to me

4:52

as though I'm an idiot. So look, people

4:55

need to be able to hold their earnings

4:56

and build their savings in a money that

4:59

retains its value and remains in their

5:01

legal control and remains theirs to

5:03

access away from government control.

5:05

>> Great. You had me not exposed to

5:07

government control.

5:08

>> You should feel safe and happy with your

5:10

money. You should have peace of mind the

5:12

more money you see in your bank balance

5:13

and that's the type of thing we're

5:15

trying to deliver and give people choice

5:17

in the type of money they get to use

5:19

every day.

5:20

>> Brilliant. Thank you so much, Cameron.

5:22

Thank you. All

5:32

right, let's get the views of my panel.

5:34

Um, so yes. Well, go on, Adam. I'll

5:37

start with you on this, mate. Uh, how

5:38

much longer do you think he can cling

5:39

on?

5:40

>> He's not got long at all. Now the the

5:42

cabinet's mobilizing against him. He got

5:44

his own MPs coming out against him. He's

5:47

lost the confidence of his party. Look,

5:49

the Labour Party are going to be

5:51

decimated in the May elections in my

5:53

opinion. Um, and he's going to be the

5:55

face of it. And everyone I speak to,

5:58

whether it be in the street, on the p in

6:00

the pub, or online, absolutely despises

6:04

this man. He's almost become the face of

6:06

this country's demise over the last two

6:08

years. And even though I know and

6:11

everyone knows what comes next could be

6:13

worse, we just want to see this man gone

6:16

because, you know, I can't even bear to

6:18

see his face or hear his voice. And I

6:20

think that's that reflects many people's

6:23

um opinions as well uh and experiences

6:25

with the man.

6:26

>> He's here tonight.

6:27

>> Yeah.

6:29

Um do I think he can survive? No. No.

6:31

From from the people I'm speaking to and

6:33

I've got a few Labour sources, they want

6:35

him gone. And so on once that starts,

6:38

the herd starts to move, he's a goner.

6:41

>> Well, well, Barry, tough week for your

6:44

gaffer.

6:45

>> Yeah.

6:47

>> It was it was a tough week for him. Um,

6:49

look, let me just correct some of the

6:52

stuff there. Okay. because at the start

6:55

of the week um Kem Badno and Nigel

6:59

Farage both said he must have known, he

7:04

did know and he's lied to parliament,

7:06

right? And that capital offense. Um

7:11

so they agreed with him that he ought to

7:13

have known and the next day what

7:16

happened was Ollie Robbins went into the

7:18

select committee and said no I didn't

7:19

tell him he didn't know. So actually

7:25

reform and the conservatives agreed with

7:29

the prime minister on the central charge

7:32

that they made against him that he must

7:35

have known which he didn't and they also

7:38

agreed that he ought to have known.

7:40

>> It's about Mandlesson's right.

7:41

>> Yeah.

7:42

>> Yeah.

7:42

>> So in that sense

7:45

Tuesday was a relief for him. Now it

7:48

came out with a whole load of other

7:49

stuff about Matthew Doyle and all the

7:51

rest of it which was unspeakable. Um,

7:56

you asked a question. How long's he got?

7:58

>> Yeah.

7:58

>> Okay. Do you want a a quantitative or a

8:02

qualitative answer? It's not the truth

8:04

really, Barry.

8:08

>> Um,

8:10

look, um,

8:13

Downing Street are now living from day

MEHR FREISCHALTEN

Melden Sie sich kostenlos an, um Premium-Funktionen zu nutzen

INTERAKTIVER VIEWER

Sehen Sie sich das Video mit synchronisierten Untertiteln, anpassbarer Überlagerung und voller Wiedergabesteuerung an.

KOSTENLOS ANMELDEN ZUM FREISCHALTEN

KI-ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Erhalten Sie eine sofortige KI-generierte Zusammenfassung des Videoinhalts, der wichtigsten Punkte und Erkenntnisse.

KOSTENLOS ANMELDEN ZUM FREISCHALTEN

ÜBERSETZEN

Übersetzen Sie das Transkript mit einem Klick in über 100 Sprachen. Download in jedem Format.

KOSTENLOS ANMELDEN ZUM FREISCHALTEN

MIND MAP

Visualisieren Sie das Transkript als interaktive Mind Map. Verstehen Sie die Struktur auf einen Blick.

KOSTENLOS ANMELDEN ZUM FREISCHALTEN

CHAT MIT TRANSKRIPT

Stellen Sie Fragen zum Videoinhalt. Erhalten Sie Antworten von der KI direkt aus dem Transkript.

KOSTENLOS ANMELDEN ZUM FREISCHALTEN

HOLEN SIE MEHR AUS IHREN TRANSKRIPTEN HERAUS

Melden Sie sich kostenlos an und schalten Sie interaktiven Viewer, KI-Zusammenfassungen, Übersetzungen, Mind Maps und mehr frei. Keine Kreditkarte erforderlich.

    Labour MP rev… - Vollständiges Transkript | YouTubeTranscript.dev