TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Starmer RUNS SCARED As Emergency Debate Unfolds In The Commons!

19m 26s3,101 mots497 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

And hello everybody. Welcome back to the

0:02

channel. Guys, what a busy day in

0:05

Westminster. Earlier on today, we of

0:07

course shared with you what Ollie

0:08

Robbins said uh with regard to his sort

0:11

of giving evidence with regard to what

0:13

Kstar has said as he tries to cover up

0:15

this whole Peter Mandelain thing and

0:17

take no accountability. Now, straight

0:19

after that, there was an emergency

0:20

debate. Um and Kstarma wasn't there.

0:24

However, there was MPs there. Kenny

0:25

Bnock, the leader of the opposition,

0:27

wiping the floor with Karma yet again,

0:31

essentially dragging him through the

0:33

final drags of this failed Labor

0:36

government. Um, and yeah, as I said, as

0:39

you spoke, he wasn't there as he tries

0:42

to again just try and bury this story,

0:45

but it's quite a long one, and I think

0:47

you will want to see what she said. As

0:50

always guys, please hit the like button

0:52

and hit the subscribe button for more.

0:57

Mr. Speaker, I beg to move that this

0:59

House has considered the matter of the

1:02

government's accountability to the House

1:04

in connection to the appointment of

1:06

Peter Mandlesson. And can I thank you,

1:08

Mr. Speaker, for granting this important

1:10

debate.

1:12

>> The Prime Minister personally decided to

1:16

appoint a serious known national

1:19

security risk to our most sensitive

1:21

diplomatic post. Peter Mandlesson was

1:24

not just a man who had already been

1:25

sacked twice from government for lying,

1:28

not just a man who had a public

1:30

relationship with a convicted pedophile,

1:33

but a man with links to the Kremlin and

1:36

China. Links so close that they were

1:39

raised as red flags with the prime

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minister before his appointment.

1:44

>> Yesterday, the prime minister did not

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deny that he knew about these links

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before he appointed Mandlesen. He could

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not deny this because by his own

1:53

admission he had seen the documents that

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proved the links. I cannot overstate how

1:59

serious a matter this is.

2:02

>> The prime minister sent a known security

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risk to Washington to a position where

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he would see our most important allies

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top secret intelligence.

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>> What if he had seen something and leaked

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it to one of our enemies? How much would

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that have damaged our security

2:17

partnership? We cannot even be sure that

2:21

didn't happen. What is most

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extraordinary is the prime minister

2:26

appointed Peter Mandlesson before

2:28

vetting was complete. He did this

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despite a letter from the then cabinet

2:34

secretary Lord Casease clearly

2:36

expressing to the prime minister that

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the process required security vetting to

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be done before the appointment. So how

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can he then have claimed on the floor of

2:46

this house that the process was followed

2:49

when he knew that it had not been?

2:52

>> He mentioned the word process, Mr.

2:55

Speaker, more than a hundred times in

2:57

parliament yesterday, but he was the one

3:00

who didn't follow that process.

3:02

>> Yes.

3:03

>> This morning we have heard the bombshell

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testimony of the former permanent

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secretary of the foreign office, Siri

3:09

Robbins. Sir Ole Robbins had a long and

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distinguished career serving ministers.

3:15

He is not the sort of person to give us

3:17

a frank personal account of how things

3:19

played out last January. So when he told

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us today that Downing Street put the

3:24

foreign office under constant pressure

3:26

to clear Peter Mandlesson, that number

3:29

10 showed a dismissive approach to

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Mandlesson's vetting process. When he

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told us that it would have been very

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difficult indeed to deny clearance and

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that doing so would have damaged US UK

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relationships, we know he is giving us

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the slightest indication of how bad

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things were. that there was actually

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over an overwhelming drive from the

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prime minister's office to ensure Peter

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Mandlesson was installed as ambassador.

3:59

>> He has told us that number 10 showed no

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interest in the vetting, no desire to

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wait and ensure due process was

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followed. In fact, the cabinet office

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even questioned the need for Peter

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Mandlesson to be vetted at all. the same

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cabinet office that had discovered

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Mandlesson's links to Epstein, China,

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and Russia in its due diligence. The

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cabinet office which the minister is in

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charge of right now.

4:25

>> Where's the prime minister?

4:26

>> Instead, Mr. Speaker, according to

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Robbins, the focus was on getting

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Mandlesson out to Washington quickly.

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And before the vetting even started,

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Peter Mandlesson had already been

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granted access to, and I quote, highly

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classified briefing on a case-bycase

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basis. This is what the prime minister

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calls full due process.

4:52

>> Yes. Yes, I will give way. Also in the

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testimony today, did she not find it

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astonishing that uh that the ex leader

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of the of the foreign office said that

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he was made to understand that before

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they had completed their clearances that

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Mandlesson already had strap clearance

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which gives him access to the most

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secure and most dangerous information

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held by government.

5:14

>> Uh can I thank my right honorable friend

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for that intervention? He is absolutely

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right. It is extraordinary. It is

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shocking.

5:22

Now the prime minister might have

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refused to answer my question around his

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knowledge of Mandlesson's links to the

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Russian defense company systemma

5:29

yesterday but that is only because he

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knows we know the answer. It was there

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in the due diligence. his choice of

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ambassador retaining an interest in a

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Russian company linked to Vladimir Putin

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after the invasion of Crimea and the

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prime minister's response to seeing that

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information according to Robin's

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constant pressure on the foreign office

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to get the appointment done.

5:55

>> The prime minister, as my right

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honorable friend uh has just mentioned,

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placed top secret intelligence in the

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hands of a man he knew to be a national

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security risk. He did so before the

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official security vetting, not just

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knowingly but deliberately and to an

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extent that left a senior civil servant

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with a distinguished career under the

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clear and obvious impression that the

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vetting must return only one possible

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outcome that Peter Mandlesson was

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appointed. None of this was following

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full due process by the letter or the

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spirit of that phrase. This is no longer

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just about what the prime minister was

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or wasn't told. This is about what he

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did before the vetting process had even

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started.

6:42

>> Yes.

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>> And we now know that Mandlesson wasn't a

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one-off.

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>> According to Sir Ollie Robbins, number

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10 also asked for the disgraced Matthew

6:53

Doyle, the Prime Minister's then

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director of communications, to be made

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an ambassador.

7:00

Astonishingly, the prime minister's

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office even told Robbins to keep this

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request a secret from the foreign

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secretary.

7:08

>> Outrageous.

7:09

>> The idea that it is number 10 who are

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the victims of others not following due

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process is quite frankly laughable.

7:19

The prime minister told parliament

7:21

yesterday that it was staggering that

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Olly Robbins had not shared the

7:26

recommendations of the UK security

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vetting with the then cabinet secretary

7:32

Chris Warmold.

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But today we learned from Robbins that

7:37

he had never seen the original vetting

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file. So if the prime minister is

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furious that Siri Robbins did not share

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the vetting details with him or the

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former cabinet secretary, why is he not

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furious with the cabinet office for not

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sharing it?

7:54

>> Put simply, why exactly did he sack Oie

7:58

Robbins?

8:00

>> It is no surprise the prime minister is

8:02

not here today. These are difficult

8:04

questions.

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He cannot claim not to have known about

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