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'This City Is The Rape Capital Of The UK!' | Starmer To Fight Labour Rebels | Alex Phillips

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My creature of today is the one and only

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Mr. Peter Blexley. Hello, creature.

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>> Good morning. I hope I do bring a degree

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of comfort to you this morning.

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>> Oh, you do. You always bring me comfort.

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>> Thank you.

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>> I don't know why people have XL bullets

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when they can have a Blexley.

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>> Well, yes. I'm uh a bit difficult to

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spread around.

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>> Oh, right. So, do you know it's one of

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those days where it's like this again?

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And not just this again, you know, on a

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Sunday you kind of think where's the new

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news? Oh, it's about is Star going to

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stay, is Star going to go. But this

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again, because have we not done this for

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the I don't can't remember a time now

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where we just had a prime minister. It's

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like, well, that's the prime minister

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instead of who's going to replace him.

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Who's plotting? Who's in the running?

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Are they going to do a vote of no

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confidence? This is the fourth one in a

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row. No, hold on. Because Theresa May

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went early, didn't she?

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>> Yeah.

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>> Fifth in a row. Did Cameron go early?

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Cameron went early as well.

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When's the last time we had a prime

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minister who just did a finished a term

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>> or went to a time of their choosing?

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>> Yeah. Well, to be honest, it's not like

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I'm here, you know, pom poms out for

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let's keep star. No.

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>> But I'm not really pom poms out for

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anyone to replace him with either.

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>> No. When you look at the the candidates,

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Burnham, what a snore off this whole

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Burnham thing has been now. And now of

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course apparently he's got the national

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executive on side who are going to allow

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him to stand as an MP despite Starmer's

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objections. And of course he blocked it

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last time, didn't he?

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>> Yeah, I thought he was right to block it

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last time. I must admit I did think this

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play in politics of you know the man

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barely be I don't think are rubbish

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under the Labor government but I thought

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bit rich you being you know the the

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Greater Manchester don't want to do that

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anymore. Want to have a seat instead

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think I'm going to do that and become

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prime minister. Excuse me.

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>> But they're all such rampant egotists,

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these politicians, aren't they? And yet

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they'll all stand up on TV and say, "We

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joined politics to do better for the

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greater good." Yeah, right. They enter

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politics for themselves and that's

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blatantly obvious. Let's take Starmmer

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for a minute and I know it's old news,

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but it's absolutely relevant. How can

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you possibly say you have joined

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politics for the greater good? That at

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the very first opportunity you get, you

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freeloading, scrging piece of garbage,

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you wear suits and glasses bought for

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you by somebody else, by a rich

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benefactor. I mean, are we here today in

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clothes that we've bought for ourselves?

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I think we probably are.

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>> Yeah, I got this in the sale. M&S 10

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quid and all.

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>> There you go. You see why? Why this kind

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of they they just lie to us and they lie

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to us repeatedly about numerous things

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predominantly why I entered politics or

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did you enter politics to backstab to

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try and climb that pole to try and reach

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the pinnacle of politics or did you join

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it for the greater good? I think it's

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the former and not the latter.

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>> I'm going I've never We've never had

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this conversation, right? And I'm like

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oh I want to pick your detective's

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brain. And I've got a little fuzzy

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feeling in my fingers or something that

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might tickle your fancy. So I've got a

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theory on stma and star being PM because

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for a long time the Labour party appears

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to have been run by a bit of a cartel.

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Most political parties are by the way.

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You know the factions and the people in

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power, the men in gray suits. There are

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people in the Conservative party no one

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at home's ever heard of but they're

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basically running the Conservative party

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and they're the ones who anoint whoever

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they want to be the leader. Um and I

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think the Labour Party is probably much

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the same. At least that's what it looks

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like with the appointment of Lord

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Mandlesson. It's like, "Oh, I see. This

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is the way it's going to go, is it?" But

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with Star, there's a little cartel of

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human rights lawyers. You know, you've

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got the Lord Herma thing. The guy is not

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elected appointed because he's the same

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Baris Chambers of Star doing the most

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unholy of work as far as I'm concerned.

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Oh, well, you know, someone's got to

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represent Shamima Beckham and Jerry

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Adams and go after our soldiers. Do

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they? Funny that it's always you. it,

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Richard. Um,

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>> and then they seem to also be mates with

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Philip Sands. He of, oh, I'm going to

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get Maitian citizenship and declare it a

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tax-free island and then work out how we

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can give them the Chaos Islands and lots

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of money so they can be taxfree. And I'm

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like, okay. And I just think there needs

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to be a bit of detector over this

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because I keep saying to people in

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America, for crying out loud, as soon as

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you're less distracted, subpoena for the

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files around Chaos. I think there's a

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something in my waters makes me think

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that this is all interconnected. The the

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all these leftist lawyers, Mandlesson,

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China. Do you know when you just get

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like you're a detective, you know about

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hunches and or am I sort of barking up

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the wrong tree?

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>> It's driven by selfinterest and you

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don't have to have worked an hour as a

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detective to figure that out. It's

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driven completely by self-interest. Look

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at Herma and his representation of uh of

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people who have were wronged by our

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armed service heroes apparently. What

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did he do? Double the hourly rate or

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something to 450 quid an hour when he

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was doing this work. It's selfinterest.

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It's obvious. They lime their pockets.

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They love ministerial positions because

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of the cars that come with it, the

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closer protection that might come with

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it, the additional salary. Let's not

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forget that.

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>> Oh, the opportunities in the real world

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when they say, "I've been a bit of state

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and I have all these because a lot of

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them do these sort of second jobs, don't

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they? A bit of consultancy on the side

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for about, you know, £1,000 and now as

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long as they declare it, that's okay.

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I've always been of the position, pay

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them more and then say no other work,

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nothing. Nada. That's your job." And you

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don't have any outside interest at all

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for as long as you're sitting on those

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green benches. That is all you do. I'm

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going to fundamentally disagree with you

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on that front because there is a Labour

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MP uh a woman whose name I can't

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remember and who I often fundamentally

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disagree with, but she also works as an

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A&E doctor

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>> right

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>> sometimes now. I think that's a great

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opportunity for her to go into a

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hospital, put on her scrubs or whatever

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they're called and work and see what

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it's like on the front line of the NHS.

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I think there is a position for it for

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for for for some

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>> I am willing to have exceptions to my

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rule. Yeah, for some but it's these

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people who also sit on the board of a

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company and this that and the other and

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I'm like come on, you know, anything

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could become a conflict of interest.

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Anything just because you sit this board

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of the company and that is not your

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portfolio and it's not your constituency

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or something or the other. At some point

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those interests are going to collide.

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And plus these days, you know, they moan

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about having to stay late for this vote

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and that and the constituency work and

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the legislation. Why do you have do you

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really have time to go and do your

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consultancy? Do you

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>> I think it should be compulsory for any

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MP who has uh a ministerial position of

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any kind in the home office that they

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should volunteer as special constables

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