ABSCHRIFTEnglish

Former Labour MP sends BOMBSHELL letter calling for PM to be hauled before the Privileges Committee

10m 19s1,821 Wörter269 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

0:00

Now back to domestic politics. Kia

0:02

Starmer's week from hell somehow just

0:04

got worse. The prime minister could face

0:07

a privileges committee inquiry into

0:09

whether he lied to MPs about the

0:11

Mandlesson scandal. The scandals. Well,

0:14

Carl Turner, a suspended Labour Party

0:16

MP, has written to Sir Lindseay Hall,

0:19

the common speaker today, urging him to

0:22

refer the prime minister to that

0:24

committee. I'm delighted now to be

0:26

joined by the man of the moment. It is

0:28

now the independent MP for Kingston upon

0:31

Hist, Carl Turner MP. Carl, welcome to

0:34

the show. It's a pleasure to have your

0:36

company. Thank you very much for joining

0:38

us. May I ask you, what drove you to

0:41

write to the speaker like this in such a

0:43

dramatic manner about Karma?

0:46

>> Good evening, Martin. Well, the first

0:47

thing I ought to say is I've had to

0:48

write to the speaker today to apologize

0:50

for publication of that correspondence

0:53

because it was in breach of the

0:55

conventions of the house. Uh but it was

0:57

an administrative error within my

0:59

office. But I can tell you I've not

1:01

dismissed anybody. I take responsibility

1:04

for what goes on in my office myself. Uh

1:07

what uh urged me to do this is the prime

1:11

minister spoke in prime minister's

1:13

questions on Wednesday. He was he was uh

1:16

questioned by the leader of his

1:18

majesty's loyal opposition and some of

1:21

the things he said was very much

1:22

inconsistent in my view with the

1:24

evidence that Siri Robbins gave to the

1:27

select committee the previous day.

1:29

That's the reason. I don't suggest the

1:32

prime minister has lied deliberately or

1:35

otherwise but I've asked the speaker to

1:37

consider referral to the privileges

1:39

committee to find out what's gone on.

1:43

Cole Turner. Many people will see this

1:45

as an attempt to put the prime minister,

1:48

your former boss, in the crosshairs of

1:51

an inquiry the likes of which a sleas

1:53

probe finished off Boris Johnson. Are

1:56

you trying to bring down the prime

1:57

minister?

1:59

>> Well, people have accused me today of

2:00

being disgruntled because I lost the

2:02

wit. The reality is I don't bear

2:04

grudges, but what I do is bear uh the

2:08

necessity for decency and integrity in

2:11

Parliament. That's what I'm saying about

2:13

it. I'm to believe it's true. It's not

2:16

about grudge. It's about the fact that

2:18

when things are said in parliament, we

2:20

ought to do our very best to make sure

2:23

what we say is true. And if we don't

2:25

know for sure that what we're saying is

2:27

correct, we ought to be there fairly

2:30

swiftly to correct the record. If that

2:32

goes, Martin, it's pointless having the

2:34

thing there. Coler, we've had two Labour

2:38

Party MPs on GB News these past two days

2:41

asking for Shakir Stalmer to stand down.

2:43

Jonathan Brash was first yesterday.

2:46

Graeme Stringer today. Both asking,

2:49

demanding, saying the time is up, Sakir

2:52

Stormer. Carl Turner, would you like to

2:54

be the third?

2:56

>> Martin, I'm not going to be calling for

2:57

the prime minister to resign as the PM.

3:01

I don't think he should at the moment.

3:03

But what I do say is I'm afraid to tell

3:06

him, and I've said it directly via text

3:09

messages, the mood in the parliamentary

3:11

Labor Party is not very good. Uh it

3:14

doesn't matter what wing you are of the

3:16

parliamentary Labor Party, whether it's

3:18

the left or the right of the party.

3:21

There is a great deal of disgruntlement

3:23

amongst colleagues. And we are concerned

3:26

that unfortunately the prime minister

3:29

has got himself, nobody else, himself

3:33

into a situation which cannot continue

3:37

much longer. And the reality is the

3:39

elections are coming in what is it 14

3:42

days from now, a couple of weeks from

3:43

now, uh members of parliament will go

3:46

back, they'll assess what it means for

3:48

their seats. For example, if I was to

3:51

face the country tomorrow, I'm afraid to

3:54

say I would be booted out of my seat in

3:57

Eastall and I would be succeeded by a

4:00

reform candidate. That's the reality.

4:03

And when MPs start to look at the the

4:05

truth of what's happening on the ground,

4:07

they tend to concentrate their attention

4:10

and they start to say it's time to go.

4:14

That's the truth.

4:15

>> Col Turner. Here's what most people

4:18

don't realize. Your personal data isn't

4:20

just floating around. It's being bought

4:23

and sold every single day by data

4:25

brokers. That means employers,

4:27

strangers, scammers, and even criminals

4:30

can access it. And that's how identity

4:32

theft, fraud, and harassment starts.

4:35

Now, sure, you could try removing it

4:37

yourself, but it takes hours of forms

4:40

and emails, and even then, it usually

4:42

pops right back up. That's why this

4:45

video is brought to you by Incogn.

4:47

Incogn contacts data brokers on your

4:50

behalf and demands your information is

4:51

deleted from their databases and they

4:54

keep on doing it to make sure it stays

4:56

gone. And they've just launched an

4:58

unlimited plan with custom removals. So,

5:01

if your info appears on some random

5:03

website, you can paste the link and

5:05

their privacy team will personally work

5:07

to get it taken down. It's simple. Click

5:10

the link in the description, create your

5:12

account, give permission, and they

5:14

handle the rest. Head to

5:16

incogn.com/gbnews.

5:19

And with the code GB news, you can get a

5:22

huge 60% off an annual plan. Click the

5:25

link in the description or scan the QR

5:27

code now. It works out at less than a

5:29

coffee a month. Is also totally

5:32

risk-free for 30 days. Take back control

5:35

of your personal data today within

5:38

Cogni. and a big thanks to them for

5:40

supporting the channel.

5:46

>> Maybe be careful what you wish for. If

5:49

Saki Stormer is ousted as prime

5:51

minister, it could be succeeded by

5:52

somebody to the political left even of

5:54

him, Angela Raina perhaps, Andy Burnham,

5:59

Ed Milliban, you know. Are you are you

6:01

are you sure you want to set these

6:03

wheels in motion? M

6:05

>> well look I'm not concerned about

6:07

whether he's replaced by this person or

6:10

that person. I hope the prime minister

6:12

survives. I'm afraid to say it's looking

6:14

unlikely in my view. I've been around

6:17

politics a long time. I've been doing

6:18

politics since I was a child at school.

6:20

That's the reality. I've been in

6:23

parliament since 2010. I tend to have a

6:26

decent nose for it when the PM's in

6:28

bother. Whether it was Boris Johnson in

6:31

the previous parliament or this truss or

6:33

whether it's my own prime minister in

6:35

this parliament, things are looking

6:37

fairly grim. And I'm afraid to say he's

6:40

got to get a grip really fast or else

6:43

he'll be out.

6:45

>> Cole Turner, I'm joined by our political

6:47

editor Chris Hope. He has a question for

6:48

you, sir.

6:49

>> Thanks Carl and thanks for coming on GB

6:51

News. Just to ask you quickly, when you

6:53

were texting the prime minister, was he

6:55

texting you back saying thanks for the

6:56

advice, Carl? Chris, my relationship

7:00

with K has always been really good. I

7:03

was in his his flat in Downing Street

7:05

not so many weeks ago telling him that

7:07

he needed to get rid of Max Sween

7:09

>> before everybody else was telling him to

7:11

get rid of Max. That's the relationship

7:13

I've had with Kia. I've always

7:14

considered him as a friend. But I tell

7:16

you what, I've been an honest friend to

7:18

Kia and I'm sorry to say he doesn't

7:20

listen very well to advice that people

7:23

are prepared to give him. I think the

7:25

truth is Kia prefers people speaking to

7:28

him and giving advice who he wants to

7:30

hear from on the basis that they're

7:32

going to tell him the stuff that he

7:34

wants to hear. I've never done that with

7:35

Karma. I've always told him the truth.

7:38

This whole thing started, by the way,

7:40

suspension and everything else on the

7:42

basis that I told him that the idea of

7:43

doing away with jury trials was the

7:45

worst idea that any political party

7:48

could ever have in the entirety of

7:50

politics. Even Robert Buckland, the

7:53

former justice secretary under the Tory

7:55

government who had the very best excuse

7:58

to do away with jury trials resisted in

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.

    Former Labour… - Vollständiges Transkript | YouTubeTranscript.dev