TRANSCRIPCIÓNEnglish

'How will this help BRITISH people?!' | Keir Starmer GRILLED on joining EU £78 billion Ukraine loan

24m 24s4,886 palabras704 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPCIÓN COMPLETA

0:00

Have a look at our top story this

0:01

morning. The government has announced

0:02

that it intends to start talks to join

0:04

the European Union's 90 billion euro

0:07

loan for Ukraine. That's 78 billion

0:10

pounds as it seeks to bolster support

0:12

for Keefe and deepen defense ties with

0:15

the block. While the prime minister is

0:17

in Armenia where he will tell leaders at

0:20

the European gathering that Britain

0:22

wants to work more closely with them.

0:24

Well, let's speak now to broadcaster and

0:25

commentator Christo Fufas who joins us

0:27

in the studio. A morning to you, Kristo.

0:30

>> I'm also not artificial intelligence. In

0:32

fact, there's barely any intelligence

0:33

here.

0:34

>> Not true. Simply not true. You're

0:36

actually you're actually

0:38

>> you're actually going to tell us what

0:40

the prime minister is aiming for with

0:42

this summit today. What's he there for?

0:44

>> Well, yes. This is the the summit that's

0:46

being held, as you said, in Armenia.

0:48

It's the European political community

0:51

summit in uh Armenia where there will be

0:55

discussions about a potential reset with

0:59

the European Union. Now uh what's

1:02

contentious about this is the idea that

1:06

we will have to hand over vast sums of

1:08

money to the EU in order to have access

1:11

to the single market. Now, some people

1:13

are saying it could be up to a billion

1:15

pounds a year because, as you know,

1:18

we've got so much cash to splash around

1:20

at the moment as a condition of further

1:23

access to the single market. The

1:26

European Union want Kyama to make this

1:29

concession in principle and then there

1:32

will be uh more detailed integration

1:35

negotiations along the line. And I can

1:38

give you a quote apparently that the

1:39

times are running this morning from a

1:41

European diplomat diplomat. They said if

1:44

the UK wants further integration, they

1:46

must pay to play.

1:48

>> Yeah, I guess many people at home will

1:51

be seeing this story and of course we're

1:54

talking about close ties with the EU.

1:55

We're talking about money for Ukraine.

1:57

We're talking about so much going away 1

2:00

billion quid if we want to bit be closer

2:02

to the EU. 78 billion pounds is it

2:05

million or billion? I couldn't quite

2:06

remember. uh to Ukraine at a time when

2:09

we can't even

2:09

>> billion 78 billion

2:11

>> billion this is and this is a loan

2:14

scheme because of the fact that

2:15

America's uh support of Ukraine has

2:19

somewhat waned there was this loan

2:21

scheme for scheme for Ukraine that was

2:23

mooted for78 billion pounds now that was

2:25

there was an impass about that because

2:27

Hungary were against it now Victor Orban

2:30

has gone from Hungary it looks like it's

2:31

going ahead now and the UK also wants to

2:34

be a part of that wants to try and make

2:36

some money out of this loan scheme and

2:38

that will be part of the money that they

2:40

need to to hand over as part of this

2:42

billion pounds. But Christa, we haven't

2:44

got any money. We're broke. And this is

2:47

the thing. While we've been told

2:48

constantly time and time again,

2:50

warnings, we had a warning last night

2:51

that Britain hasn't even got enough

2:53

defense to defend itself from ballistic

2:54

missiles. We're handing over cash to to

2:57

to foreign countries. And listen, don't

2:58

get me wrong, I support Ukraine in their

3:00

war against against Russia. Um but at

3:03

the same time we're leaving ourselves

3:05

massively wide open.

3:06

>> Uh what's interesting as well I think if

3:09

anyone said look this we're going to try

3:11

and facilitate because we ended up with

3:12

a terrible Brexit deal like we did. I

3:14

mean we ended up with a Brexit deal that

3:16

Boris Johnson negotiated that made

3:17

absolutely everyone unhappy. If there

3:20

was a mechanism by which British

3:21

businesses I think could more easily

3:23

trade with the EU without us having to

3:26

be integrated in them. I think most

3:28

people would say actually that's okay

3:29

cuz British businesses have got a lot

3:31

more red tape now I think what stick

3:33

will stick in a lot of people's crawl

3:35

going to your point Alex is the fact

3:37

that well hang on why are we having to

3:39

pay so much money for this and this idea

3:42

of closer integration will this mean

3:45

that actually the European Union will

3:47

then start having a say once more even

3:49

further on the standards that we have on

3:51

the laws that we need to actually

3:53

implement around products we might sell

3:55

in which case that then starts to go

3:57

directly against what people will say

3:58

they voted for.

3:59

>> And that's what scares people, isn't it?

4:01

That's what frightens people when they

4:02

see stories such as this. But we have

4:04

got this European diplomat, he's a a

4:06

source on the front page of the Times

4:07

this morning saying that actually um

4:09

this would work more like a Swiss style

4:12

deal. So we would contribute to annual

4:14

EU budgets uh to reduce economic,

4:17

social, and territorial disparities

4:18

across the block. So it makes things

4:20

smoother.

4:21

>> But I don't understand that. You're

4:23

right.

4:23

>> He does go further to say we were not

4:24

able to cherrypick. The Swiss pay €375

4:28

million euros a year in order to access

4:32

the single market. But again, free

4:35

freedom movement of goods and I know the

4:37

single market is a little different to

4:38

this, but that starts to get into the

4:40

realms of free movement of people. So

4:42

again, will that end up being a part of

4:44

it? Because a lot of the people that are

4:45

outside the countries that are outside

4:47

of the EU still have free movement of

4:50

people even though they're not part of

4:51

the whole of the European Union. Uh but

4:54

but secondly as well why I thought the

4:57

whole point of us leaving was that we'd

4:58

have a trade deal meaning that we

5:00

wouldn't need to do any of this stuff.

5:01

So I think again a lot of people will be

5:02

saying well hang on why are we paying

5:04

it's almost like a subscription service.

5:06

Well if we offer the best deal for a

5:08

certain product isn't that enough for us

5:10

to be able just to sell that product. So

5:12

true, Christo. And you know what this

5:13

reminds me of? People forget about this

5:15

now because it's been so long since we

5:17

of course had the referendum, but David

5:19

Cameron went on a tour of European Union

5:21

countries before we had the referendum

5:23

to get a new deal for us, which would

5:25

have basically put us where we're at

5:27

today, which is half in, half out. And

5:30

everyone said this is the worst possible

5:33

solution for Britain. We're either going

5:35

to be in it or we're going to be out of

5:36

it. And it seems to me what we're doing

5:38

is dragging ourselves closer back to the

5:40

EU again, but without the powers that we

5:43

had previously. We might as well have

5:45

stayed in at this point if the prime

5:46

minister is going to drag us back in

5:47

without a vote.

5:48

>> And look, I voted remain from a business

5:50

perspective. But I absolutely thought

5:52

that when if we did leave, great. We're

5:54

going to end up remember Singapore on

5:56

temps. We're going to have really low

5:57

taxes. We're going to have people drive

5:59

can't wait to do business with Britain

6:01

because at least without being tied into

6:03

EU laws, we can set those. We can

6:05

subsidize companies and industries that

6:07

need them. We can do startups. We can we

6:09

can we can sell trains to to British

6:12

firms that are going to be made by

6:13

British companies, which we weren't able

6:15

to do before. All of that stuff. None of

6:17

that happened. And what we've ended up

6:20

with is this, as you say, this weird

6:22

half in half out. We're not even shaking

6:24

it about. So, I think that that that a

6:27

lot of people will be quite perplexed by

6:29

this. But the the the different the

6:30

balance that has to be set here. I think

6:32

if I were Kama would be well actually my

6:34

own policies have caused economic

6:36

stagnation in the country I'm in. Um

6:39

America the ties with them aren't great

6:40

at the moment because I've alienated

6:42

them. What on earth do I do to try and

6:44

drive the British economy a bit more

6:46

forward?

6:47

>> It is yeah it kind of ties into what the

6:49

prime minister was writing in the Sunday

DESBLOQUEAR MÁS

Regístrate gratis para acceder a funciones premium

VISOR INTERACTIVO

Mira el video con subtítulos sincronizados, superposición ajustable y control total de la reproducción.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

RESUMEN DE IA

Obtén un resumen instantáneo generado por IA del contenido del video, los puntos clave y las conclusiones.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

TRADUCIR

Traduce la transcripción a más de 100 idiomas con un solo clic. Descarga en cualquier formato.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

MAPA MENTAL

Visualiza la transcripción como un mapa mental interactivo. Comprende la estructura de un vistazo.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

CHATEA CON LA TRANSCRIPCIÓN

Haz preguntas sobre el contenido del video. Obtén respuestas impulsadas por IA directamente desde la transcripción.

REGÍSTRATE GRATIS PARA DESBLOQUEAR

SACA MÁS PARTIDO A TUS TRANSCRIPCIONES

Regístrate gratis y desbloquea el visor interactivo, los resúmenes de IA, las traducciones, los mapas mentales y mucho más. No se requiere tarjeta de crédito.

    'How will this… - Transcripción Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev