Ranking Post-War Prime Ministers | Why Sweden Joined Nato

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
  • What will Theresa May be remembered for as PM? Who are the best and worst prime ministers of the post-war era? What is the significance of Sweden becoming the latest European country to join NATO?
    Rory and Alastair answer all these questions and more in this week's Question Time.
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    00:00 Intro
    00:30 Theresa May steps down
    11:20 Ranking Prime Ministers
    16:40 The function of party whips
    25:00 FGM on the rise

Komentáře • 214

  • @terryhand
    @terryhand Před 2 měsíci +93

    Blair might have been the most successful Labour PM, but unfortunately the war in Iraq overshadows everything he did.

    • @chrispalmer7893
      @chrispalmer7893 Před 2 měsíci +25

      It does, and it should. He knew what he was risking when he took us into Iraq. He fully understood it would define his legacy. It is a shame, because without Iraq he could have been a helpful voice in politics, a wise older statesman.

    • @janeknight3597
      @janeknight3597 Před 2 měsíci +1

      And he bottled out of tackling the issue of Social Care when he messed about with the NHS.

    • @derekspitz9225
      @derekspitz9225 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, like all politicians show themselves to be sooner or later, Blair is a sociopath with an on-the-spectrum-level lack of self awareness.

    • @Joe-og6br
      @Joe-og6br Před 2 měsíci +7

      Up until Iraq he had got it right on foreign policy. Even though Afghanistan failed long term. After 9/11 direct intervention was always going to occur. Unfortunately Iraq shits over everything.

    • @t5kcannon1
      @t5kcannon1 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Well said. Blair seemed to believe that he was divinely ordained to spread his particular version of liberal democracy (a neo-imperalist notion). New Labour had several policy successes, but not in Iraq.

  • @Samuel-gc6js
    @Samuel-gc6js Před 2 měsíci +54

    Attlee 100% how he never got the full 15 years in charge just proves he was such a danger to the establishment. All the newspapers were against him. Even after creating the NHS creating social housing amongst other great policies which helped the great british public enormously. He increased the standard of living. That's what you should strive and be recognised for

    • @grahambuckerfield4640
      @grahambuckerfield4640 Před 2 měsíci +7

      I agree on his place, however he was no massive threat to the establishment, a key member of the wartime coalition, Deputy Prime Minister who had to cover during Churchill on trips aboard, or more quietly during his illnesses.
      He since also after the US breaking of wartime agreements, authorized the development of a UK atomic bomb and led also via his Foreign Secretary, led the effort to persuade the US to do something new in their history, agree to a binding security treaty - NATO. Dimwits like Corbyn think it was forced by the US.
      Domestically the post war consensus they established lasted for over 30 years, which does not looks like a huge threat.
      What undermined it was the effect of economic events, starting with the US withdrawal from Bretton Woods, then worse the 1973 oil crisis.
      There were many in business and some in the Conservative Party who had never reconciled with the post war settlement, now they had their chance.
      Though the rise in strikes and militancy were seen as the drivers for this, or the public face, I wonder if another thing was also a factor, in 1976 social mobility peaked in the UK.

  • @johngriffin9720
    @johngriffin9720 Před 2 měsíci +78

    Windrush wasn't even the worst of her failures. Single-handedly she destroyed British policing, by politicising the oversight, introducing direct entry as a tool to quickly assimilate operational control, and directly interfering in operational matters. The corporate memory has been eviscerated as a direct consequence of her ill informed actions. The blame for the current abject levels of service delivery are directly attributable to her.

    • @DarkFire515
      @DarkFire515 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Agreed. I cannot forgive her for the 'stop crying wolf' speech and all that flowed from that.

    • @EJames359
      @EJames359 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Not to mention the decade of austerity headed by her party. Forces are under funded, under equipped, and understaffed. It pains me that this is often overlooked in debate over her record in office.

  • @Bobertron199494
    @Bobertron199494 Před 2 měsíci +33

    Personally, I can't forgive May for the hostile environment and the impact that had on my life.

    • @MM-ov3ne
      @MM-ov3ne Před 2 měsíci

      Theresa May is the worst PM since Lord North.
      As well as making a hash of the Brexit negotiations, she wrote net zero into law, enshrined the Modern Slavery Act (making it impossible to deport many illegal immigrants) and committed the UK to spending a fixed amount of GDP on international aid.
      I tried to think of a single positive thing she achieved in her premiership. All I can think of is her giving Geoffrey Boycott a knighthood.

  • @georgeholmer8563
    @georgeholmer8563 Před 2 měsíci +9

    As a Swede, I'm impressed with Rory's knowledge of history :-)

  • @nyejackson
    @nyejackson Před 2 měsíci +17

    You should do a special episode where you compare and contrast your own complete rankings of the best and worst prime ministers. I'd happily sit and watch for hours.

  • @ohheyitskevinc
    @ohheyitskevinc Před 2 měsíci +22

    Let’s not forget Macmillan inherited prosperity and left the country in decay. I had to laugh at the list of technology that were commonplace in 1964, but weren’t in 1951. If that’s the standard, the internet, widescreen TVs and iPhones weren’t commonplace in 1997, but were in 2007. So kudos to Blair on those, I guess.

    • @janeknight3597
      @janeknight3597 Před 2 měsíci +1

      McMillan has a lot of back story in regard to the old poor law around the time of the First World War. Churchill and McMillan were really old buffers at the end of the 1950s.

    • @terryhand
      @terryhand Před 2 měsíci +2

      He also dodged a bullet over Suez.

  • @Brokout
    @Brokout Před 2 měsíci +59

    Rory isn’t affected by any of the government’s policies, he’s sorted financially so he’s free to judge people like May based on his friendship with her

    • @oscarwilliams1738
      @oscarwilliams1738 Před 2 měsíci +9

      Yeah. It's not on us to find some deep good in these people.

  • @DanielsPolitics1
    @DanielsPolitics1 Před 2 měsíci +4

    I think when judging May’s legacy, you have to remember that she passed up the opportunity to fire Boris for hurting the UK abroad with that poem. She could have sacked him for a definite bad thing, clear and explainable, which had hurt the UK abroad.
    You have to consider that everything Boris did, she caused, and everyone with any sense would have seen the possibility he might cause that sort of problems if allowed to continue.

  • @jaexiusnem1267
    @jaexiusnem1267 Před 2 měsíci +3

    There’s something incredibly funny about all the terrible things about T May being listed & then Stewart going ‘ok can I stop for a second there’

  • @kalten001
    @kalten001 Před 2 měsíci +10

    You two are a total joy to watch you have differing views but are always respectful. Yeah I can tell Rory is very much on the left wing of the conservative voter so maybe the political void between you both isn’t as large as it can be in general politics but I enjoy watching each and every video you release. I’d have loved to see you on your tour but at £75 a ticket it was a little pricey for me. Keep up the good work.

  • @user-ez8bx6ly8v
    @user-ez8bx6ly8v Před 2 měsíci +17

    She did say one thing that i agree with in 2004 at the conservative party conference she called the conservative party the Nasty Party nothing has changed except for Rory and a few others in conservative party..
    Her miss judgment was appointment of BJ as foreign secretary and Frost...

    • @Jay_Johnson
      @Jay_Johnson Před 2 měsíci +1

      That was a political reality. A concession to the ERG to get them to back the Brexit deal. (It didn't work though did it)

  • @earthball2024
    @earthball2024 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Clement Attlee Was An Amazing Prime Minister Who Helped The British Economy And Britain Recover After WW2. He Passed The National Health Service And Supported The Working Class Of Britain. He Also Began Decolonisation And Decolonized India Pakistan And Burma. (Bangladesh Was East Pakistan At The Time) His Worst Mistake Was The 1951 General Election Which Allowed Churchill To Return To Office. Also Palestine.

  • @MkVenner1975
    @MkVenner1975 Před 2 měsíci +29

    I felt that May put the needs of the Conservative Party before the needs of the Country.

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci +1

      The "beauty" of a two party system and one party long term regime :(

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I think she is rigid minded and sticks to her views in spite of evidence that contradicts them. She ignores evidence.

    • @tombblades
      @tombblades Před 2 měsíci

      It's better to have had her do that than have Corbyn be PM!

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@tombblades Not at all.

    • @jonathandnicholson
      @jonathandnicholson Před 2 měsíci +1

      People join a party because they believe that party is best for the country.

  • @crabapple1974
    @crabapple1974 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Disagreeing is not to shout at eachother. Disagreeing is listening and maybe come away with some understanding. The overalt process and outcome is better for that discussion. That is why polarisation is so damaging. Keep up the good work.

    • @RobBCactive
      @RobBCactive Před 2 měsíci

      You have to call out the fash, my grandad fought for 6 years, was staunch for Churchill and now they cuddled up to the extremists for short term advantage with the results that are plain to see.

  • @andrewharrison7767
    @andrewharrison7767 Před 2 měsíci +3

    There's one huge irony about the criticism of Theresa May's handling of Brexit - Had Alistair & comrades within Labour and the people's vote accepted the result, but campaigned for a softer Brexit; then we'd probably never have ended up with Boris, and a far closer relationship with the EU. Likewise, if they'd campaigned more publicly the result might have been different - something he appeared to concede in interviews
    UKICE: You had a role advising the Britain Stronger In Europe campaign. What was your role?
    AC: To be absolutely honest, I feel a little bit guilty about this, because I did not do that much. I think, like a lot of people, I felt it was not going to be lost. So, I went into their campaign HQ a few times, but I was not involved day to day. I thought Alan Johnson, who I really like and who I really get on with, suffered the whole time with what (Jeremy) Corbyn and acolytes were up to. Alan was leading the Labour side of the campaign, but without really having the backing of the actual Labour leadership.
    Because you did not have Labour organising campaigning from the top and because Corbyn was so indifferent to the whole thing, that also sent a message to a lot of the trade unions, who I think could have done a lot more. They could have been much more active in terms of getting direct messaging to their members, and spelling out the true cost of what was going to happen.
    ukandeu.ac.uk/brexit-witness-archive/alastair-campbell/

  • @tulyar57
    @tulyar57 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I have to agree with them over Johnson (disastrously incompetent) and Truss (dangerously incompetent) as the worst two PMs. I think Truss could have won hands down had she been allowed any more time. However, it amazes me that both still have their passionate advocates.

  • @jeffdingle9677
    @jeffdingle9677 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The Road Fund Licence (Car Tax) was introduced decades ago when motorised transport expanded, in order to raise money for the needed road upgrades, bridges and motorways, but it has since become a way for a government just to raise money by another form of tax.. I remember when John Major was Chancellor, he stated that money raised by the Car Tax isn't necessarily spent just on road infrastructure (if at all) - the Car Tax is just put into the pot with all the other taxes raised - Income Tax, VAT, Excise Duty, Corporation Tax, etc, etc..... and spent how the government of the day wants...

  • @MichaelWallden
    @MichaelWallden Před 2 měsíci +8

    A Swede as I am just love these two talking politics. Makes politic really attractive and lively....thank god for "normal" people talking normally

    • @RobBCactive
      @RobBCactive Před 2 měsíci +1

      Ironical as the Swedes used to be a by word for moderation and rational decisions.

  • @davidrobinson2776
    @davidrobinson2776 Před 2 měsíci +2

    In an alternate universe, Vidal and Buckley would be doing a podcast like this.

  • @out-side-in
    @out-side-in Před 2 měsíci +2

    U 2 r great ❤

  • @heliotropezzz333
    @heliotropezzz333 Před 2 měsíci +14

    Dignity is no good if you are useless. To my mind she was rigid minded and stuck to poor judgements in spite of plenty of evidence proving her judgements were poor. She refused to listen and refused to take notice of evidence of what was happening on the ground and where her policies were not working or making things worse and that was before she was PM (as Secretary of State) as well as after.

    • @nathanielregan289
      @nathanielregan289 Před 5 dny

      I think her way of dealing with brexit was right.
      But windrush was terrible. And her reaction to grenfell was terrible.

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 5 dny

      @@nathanielregan289 Windrush, I think you mean. Yes I agree.

  • @juliangiulio3147
    @juliangiulio3147 Před 2 měsíci

    Alastair -where did you get your jacket from? (Not sure I could afford it)...

  • @WVislandia
    @WVislandia Před 2 měsíci

    Where is the discussion about Sweden joining NATO? I don't see it on the timeline menu.

  • @jbuchan12
    @jbuchan12 Před 2 měsíci +5

    It's difficult as i know Rory has great admiration for May, but we have to remember this was the lady that hated immigrants.
    As home secretary, she used to write in the margins of bills that they were too soft on migrants and the wording should be beefed up to make life worse for them. The vans that circled parts of the country telling migrants to go home, that was her.
    I remember when Ann Soubry defected to change, she said that Theresa May's extreme hatred of immigrants has scared her away. Ann mentioned that she had gone to speak to the PM and she was in the middle of a Xenophobic rant, a day before she defected..
    I know we have had worse since then, but she really wasn't great. If she truelly regrets what she did, thats awesome, we don't need another doubling down Liz truss.

  • @jakerankin7192
    @jakerankin7192 Před 2 měsíci +6

    LORD PALMERSTON

  • @Paulus8765
    @Paulus8765 Před 2 měsíci

    Nice

  • @andreasstavrinides6980
    @andreasstavrinides6980 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Attlee absolutely.

  • @williamcarter3933
    @williamcarter3933 Před 2 měsíci

    CPF in Singapore and Superannuation in Australia works amazingly well compared to NI

  • @iancarr8682
    @iancarr8682 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Why the word 'whip' and how many whips would have been involved in a large party?

  • @jamesfawcett841
    @jamesfawcett841 Před 2 měsíci

    Rory - you have brought together anecdotes about Baldwin and ADH from the same lecture.

  • @heliotropezzz333
    @heliotropezzz333 Před 2 měsíci

    NI does act as a qualifying contribution for certain benefits and you can pay voluntary NI contributions (in certain appropriate circumstances) to protect your state pension entitlement, but you can't pay voluntary tax and you may not be working and paying tax when you pay voluntary NI contributions to protect your state pension entitlement. I don't see how that would work if income tax is the only one that qualifies people for pensions.

  • @janeknight3597
    @janeknight3597 Před 2 měsíci

    Can’t see Sweden in the chapters. Maybe change the headline?

  • @timeandtides8701
    @timeandtides8701 Před 2 měsíci +4

    The hostile environment is unforgivable

  • @Rotj6
    @Rotj6 Před měsícem

    The mountain rescue story is in Rory's book. Alistair hasn't read it!

  • @wfcyellow
    @wfcyellow Před 2 měsíci +6

    Can you guys do a ranking of Leaders of the Opposition next?

    • @georgesterland2010
      @georgesterland2010 Před 2 měsíci +1

      There are many more to choose from than PMs!

    • @edgarallen645
      @edgarallen645 Před 2 měsíci

      Neil Kinnock

    • @jayjones1649
      @jayjones1649 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Keir Starmer might arguably be the most effective LOTO since the war. Most by-election wins, shifting government policy, now on course for a supermajority.

    • @VesiustheBoneCruncher
      @VesiustheBoneCruncher Před 2 měsíci +1

      In my lifetime I’d say John Smith. Can’t go Starmer, he doesn’t have anything like the natural groundswell of support that either Smith or Blair had - he has done an exceptional job of allowing the Tory party to stab themselves in the back though - but the performance remains far more about disgust with the Tory party than support for Labour in my opinion.

    • @stanby2712
      @stanby2712 Před 2 měsíci

      John Smith and Hugh Gaitskell

  • @timelwell7002
    @timelwell7002 Před měsícem +1

    IMO Theresa May prioritized her party over the wellbeing of the nation as a whole. She seemed ONLY to care about preventing the Tory Party from splitting into 2 or more factions. She REFUSED to co-operate with opposition parties over brexit and instead facilitated the hard right within her own party to go for a hard Brexit.
    She seemed MORE than happy for the UK to leave not only the EU but the Single Market and the Customs' Union as well.
    Moreover, she PROTECTED those responsible for the Grenfell Tower disaster. I am honestly BAFFLED by Rory's defence of her clearly piss-poor record.

  • @dreamcrusher112
    @dreamcrusher112 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Murderers often regret their actions, doesn't wipe away their actions. Windrush victims with cancer having treatment refused and made homeless... There are hundreds of MPs with dignity who have not/would not bring in horrendous policies.

  • @rdwaldsaxe-coburg666
    @rdwaldsaxe-coburg666 Před měsícem

    The sinking of plague RMS Carpathia Off the southern coast of Ireland, the ship was struck by three torpedoes from a German U-boat and sank. Which you see on father ted beach is more intresting then a windrush ship

  • @germansnowman
    @germansnowman Před 2 měsíci +1

    Do watch the Channel 4 documentary, it is very good IMO. Boris Johnson is a tragic figure but also has a lot to answer for.

  • @alexanderstefanov6474
    @alexanderstefanov6474 Před 2 měsíci

    Most countries in Europe do have NI, the difference is that its ringfenced and you get a statement of exactly what percentage is for healthcare, pension fund, unemployment benefits etc.

  • @t.p.mckenna
    @t.p.mckenna Před 2 měsíci +2

    Rory seems to want attribute the achievements of McMillan as being from 1951 to 1963 which is a stretch. McMillan was not PM until '57, that very successful house building programme had been the creation of Attlee's tenure, and, oops, oh yes, in the meantime, we had the shocking Eden era.

  • @hakim2546
    @hakim2546 Před 2 měsíci

    Alex Douglas home is vey underrated

  • @scottmcginn2169
    @scottmcginn2169 Před 28 dny

    IN regards to splitting out NI from Income Tax, Rory said very few places do that. I'd argue that Australia do it through the Medicare Levy. I think more transparency about it'#s use and putting it where it belongs would be better. I have no issue with paying NI if it is going towards Penions and the NHS. If it is just going to the general pool then that is misappropriation of funds and a far bigger issue.

  • @jacquelinemahoney621
    @jacquelinemahoney621 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Good dodge on last question Rory ever the politician 😂

  • @daispy101
    @daispy101 Před 2 měsíci

    Asked who was the best Labour Prime Minister the UK never got, Atlee said MacMillan. During the 1930s MacMillan was in conversation with Labour about crossing the floor.

  • @bjrnhjjakobsen2174
    @bjrnhjjakobsen2174 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Disagreeing does not mean that people are screaming and fighting 😂

  • @scooby1992
    @scooby1992 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I think the reason may is seen as a reasonable person is partly because she has done some good work since being PM from the back benches , but also because compared to her three successors she stands head and shoulders above them for being statesman like and that may be due to them being appallingly terrible . Regarding Brexit I think she took the view that the electorate had decided and she had to honour that decision and perhaps she also did a 'Cameron ' by trying to put the divisions on Europe in the Tory Party to bed and ultimately making them much worse and allowing the pro Brexit hardliners to grow in strength .

  • @user-dw3hl4sh2w
    @user-dw3hl4sh2w Před 2 měsíci +1

    Corelli Barnett's book "The Lost Victory" documents the economic disasters of Attlee's government. The country went bankrupt in 1947 and all that nationalization sent the country on the wrong path. Attlee was almost a communist. Both parties were in favour of creating the NHS in 1945. Picking MacMillan illustrates that Rory was always in the wrong party. MacMillan was a Butskellite/social democrat and it was about managed decline. MacMillan met Eisenhower before Suez and didn't tell him what was being planned, Eden thought he had. MacMillan was ruthless and sneaky.

  • @jezlawrence720
    @jezlawrence720 Před 2 měsíci +8

    I disagree that the principled position on NI is merge rather than abolish. I think the principled position is to ring fence it again, and do the same with Road Tax. I'd MUCH rather pay directly for the things everyone *needs* and know that those things will be provided, than have it all hidden in general taxation and politicians be able to spaff it all up the wall on their mates. Granularity is transparency - and *that* is why I think the conservatives favour getting rid of it.
    And perhaps that's an unfair characterisation of the conservative party - but after the last 10 years especially I'd kind of like to hear how.

    • @zo7034
      @zo7034 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Absolutely, I also believe we should have a system they have in Australia here, in which they send a letter every year to everyone showing how much tax they paid and they break down where their money was spent.

    • @drdreel5559
      @drdreel5559 Před 2 měsíci

      Ring fencing doesn't work. If you have a surplus you can't use it. If you have too little you can't get the money from elsewhere. That has always been the problem. Government revenues are NEVER predictable, nor are the precise amounts that will be needed for services like health.

  • @jbaidley
    @jbaidley Před 2 měsíci

    Germany is an interesting comparison when it comes to Whips. German MPs have their right to use their vote according to their own judgement written into the constitution; which provides a nice counterbalance to the power of the whips.

  • @mahadjama1481
    @mahadjama1481 Před 2 měsíci

    @pmmagro I find your description to be like the classic historiography that every Swede can recite by heart, but in my opinion is quite different. I agree with you to the extent that as you write "in reality behind closed doors" but choose to go considerably further and that everyone in decision-making positions knew about it because it happened in practice completely openly and because the Americans acted without any restrictions, which indicated that the officers in the military leadership wanted to be caught in order to then force the politicians on a decision to join NATO already then, which the ruling party Social Democrats understood and as a result constantly ran between the Prime Minister's Office and the Embassy of the Soviet Union to dampen the reactions and blame the right-wing parties for infiltration among the officers without showing a response for the public. This created anger among those in power in Finland at the time who felt that they exposed the immediate area to unnecessary risks, which is glaring today when the two defense commands are very close to each other thanks to the former Minister of Defense Peter Hultqvist as one of the 70,000 Finnish war children who fled to Sweden for protection during the Winter War.

  • @freshwaterspaceman7194
    @freshwaterspaceman7194 Před 2 měsíci

    Rory's mental gymnastics in the defence of May is quite entertaining. Like a court jester. Amusing. No way to take it seriously, though.

  • @jimrustle270
    @jimrustle270 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Harold Wilson remains criminally underrated as ever.

    • @RobBCactive
      @RobBCactive Před 2 měsíci +1

      So what did Harold do apart from his honours list?

    • @IB4theAIB
      @IB4theAIB Před měsícem

      Kept us out of Vietnam for one

  • @suhailski
    @suhailski Před 2 měsíci

    And Rory, TM was all that.

  • @Loudeboss
    @Loudeboss Před měsícem

    Alistair's comparison btw the stage of public debate on colonial legacy in UK and FR is off - Public debate is raging rn in Fr, sure, but that's because it's only just been initiated. UK is couple stages down the line. I know the landscape well as lived lifelong in both.

  • @markthomas2577
    @markthomas2577 Před 2 měsíci

    My impression of May and Brexit is that at every crunch point she put Party before Country and refused to take on the hard line Brexiteers because it would split the party

  • @ednorton47
    @ednorton47 Před 2 měsíci +4

    This Rory dude should get a job and try to become a productive citizen.

  • @minimango1
    @minimango1 Před 17 dny

    Windrush, for the person unlawfully bundled on a plane, wasnt on the same par as two ex politico’s thinking about retrospective ‘context’

  • @rzbsto
    @rzbsto Před 2 měsíci

    Interestingly you don't say Margareth Thatcher is the best PM?

  • @sharifsazal
    @sharifsazal Před 2 měsíci +4

    - Best PM? Tony's not far behind Attlee, I mean Northern Ireland alone...
    - Iraq war....
    - I get that but still...
    - Afghanistan, Privatization of NHS, Thatcher-lite
    - Okay, that's enough.
    - ASBOs, Chilcot, Racist remarks, financial crisis.
    - I worked for him, Okay? What am I supposed to say, Rory?!!

  • @chrispalmer7893
    @chrispalmer7893 Před 2 měsíci

    Not sure why “she regrets doing that” is an argument in defence of May on the Go Home vans. It’s not like hindsight is required to understand how horrific that was. Equally, I find it extraordinary to hear people trying pretend May made real efforts towards a soft Brexit. Her choice of personnel in the key positions and her actions, from “Brexit means Brexit” to the insane triggering of Article 50 before any plan was in place forced us down the hard Brexit route. Similarly, Windrush wasn’t forced on her, it was a deliberate choice and the appalling consequences were entirely foreseeable.
    I’ve only ever once been convinced by May expressing sadness, and that was when she cried at being kicked out. I’ve never seen any evidence that she can feel or show compassion for others.

  • @ashnur
    @ashnur Před 2 měsíci

    Lol, these two agreed on disagreeing at the very beginning :D How's that a disagreement. Try disagreeing on agreeing next time!

  • @damian_smith
    @damian_smith Před 2 měsíci

    TM lied to my MP about having further opportunities to vote down brexit proposals in order to get her to support on bills for brexit. "Meaningful votes" and all that.
    An important, but not yet learned, lesson for MPs of all flavours not to grant PM access to the accelerator and steering unless you've got guaranteed control of the brakes.

  • @annaorlova1697
    @annaorlova1697 Před 13 dny

    8:04

  • @solomonsknot
    @solomonsknot Před 2 měsíci

    Love the fact that they immediately agree on the question about them not disagreeing enough.

  • @kkrddr225
    @kkrddr225 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Truss was so bad she doesn't even seriously enter the running. You can at least say Boris was a bad PM. Truss wasn't even 1/2 of THAT.

  • @sluglife9785
    @sluglife9785 Před 2 měsíci

    Torsten Bell is considering standing for the Labour Party? Don't know how I feel about that news.
    I have similar feelings to the guys (particularly Alastair, for once) that although Think Tanks are often deeply ideological, divisive things, there are a handful around at the moment who are doing a good job of building real space in a new middle ground where the parties are otherwise scrambling.They manage to somehow come off as less narrowly ideological and more pragmatic, though in truth I suspect that's a trick of the light, and there's a strong argument that they actually represent the likely outline of the new post neo-liberal settlement. I've found that tapping into the likes of the IFS and Resolution Foundation feels a better way to get a handle on the future of our politics than following the daily Tory / Labour dramas.

  • @edmurth
    @edmurth Před 2 měsíci

    Sunak has attempted to do populism, when he gave that conference on the Rwanda bill and said the lords would be blocking “the will of the people”, a PM with no mandate and their 2019 manifesto made no mention of Rwanda, it was a pathetic attempt at being a populist.

  • @callumallison1662
    @callumallison1662 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Wasn't really a ranking 😂 was more a 'who is the worst, who is the best'

  • @jacquelinemahoney621
    @jacquelinemahoney621 Před 2 měsíci

    It annoys me when people cannot see the difference between having a reasonable debate, conversation verses seeking an argument who would want that!! Great podcast both get views across clear do not agree on everything and as adults able to say that 🙄

  • @PMMagro
    @PMMagro Před 2 měsíci +1

    Sweden has been neutral since 1814. So 1814-2024. We have always been anti-Russian through. When Putin tried to forbid Sweden and Finland who we can co-operate with with a taint of "or else" it was a given we had to do something. Finland is very key to Swedes. We do have a special bond to all Scandinavian countries but Sweden-Finland are the two twin siblings or closest siblings in age of the family for Swedes (Etsonia being the newest/youngest sibling with Latvia next).
    As we have always been anti Russian and co-operated militarily with the US after WW2 (in reality behind closed doors) it is now a more honest position.

    • @mahadjama1481
      @mahadjama1481 Před 2 měsíci

      I find your description to be like the classic historiography that every Swede can recite by heart, but in my opinion is quite different. I agree with you to the extent that as you write "in reality behind closed doors" but choose to go considerably further and that everyone in decision-making positions knew about it because it happened in practice completely openly and because the Americans acted without any restrictions, which indicated that the officers in the military leadership wanted to be caught in order to then force the politicians on a decision to join NATO already then, which the ruling party Social Democrats understood and as a result constantly ran between the Prime Minister's Office and the Embassy of the Soviet Union to dampen the reactions and blame the right-wing parties for infiltration among the officers without showing a response for the public. This created anger among those in power in Finland at the time who felt that they exposed the immediate area to unnecessary risks, which is glaring today when the two defense commands are very close to each other thanks to the former Minister of Defense Peter Hultqvist as one of the 70,000 Finnish war children who fled to Sweden for protection during the Winter War.

  • @khar12d8
    @khar12d8 Před 2 měsíci

    Clement Attlee was not the best PM because even without Attlee much of what Labour did would have happened anyway. I would say Thatcher was clearly the best PM (whatever you think of her policies) because she absolutely dominated as PM and won three elections, and changed a whole bunch of things often through the force of her personality. Not to say everything was down to Maggie but she certainly had a big impact. Attlee was a good chairman of the board but I don't think he was a leader like Thatcher. Best govt and best PM are not the same!

  • @robertstraw9881
    @robertstraw9881 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Atlee by a mile. What he did in one term is more than most Do in two or three terms.

  • @suhailski
    @suhailski Před 2 měsíci

    But I am a citizen of nowhere, I belong to nowhere except with the people I love and those people live on Sesame Street. Do you know what it is like to be from nowhere?

  • @breefolf
    @breefolf Před měsícem

    boris johnson as one of the worst is total recency bias, although i agree for liz truss, the other one would probably be callaghan or blair for easily the worst foreign policy in british history

  • @RicB1976
    @RicB1976 Před 2 měsíci

    Maga's Vs Rino's a good example of popularist bullying in politics today.👍👍

  • @ranganramasamy6820
    @ranganramasamy6820 Před 2 měsíci

    Atlee for NHS and McMillan for improving the standard of living.

    • @normanchristie4524
      @normanchristie4524 Před 2 měsíci

      I visited West Germany aged 18 with my £50 maximum of foreign currencythe week that MacMillan announced 'you've never had it so good'. When I saw the prosperity and lifestyle I realised what a lier!

  • @LivingLifeAfterDeath
    @LivingLifeAfterDeath Před 21 dnem

    Best labour..Clement Attlee…best conservative..John Major..

  • @ricardocima
    @ricardocima Před 2 měsíci +3

    Isn't "People's Vote" populist, Mr. Campbell?

    • @kingeddiam2543
      @kingeddiam2543 Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's an interesting view, can you explain?

  • @gmart225
    @gmart225 Před 2 měsíci

    Shouldn’t Britain have kept a closer relationship with its former colonies (like France with, say, New Caledonia)? Brits could now be retiring to Turks and Caicos and BVI instead of Malaga and Benidorm.

  • @tonyaustin4472
    @tonyaustin4472 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Regarding Mrs May and her getting hard on immigrants….
    For my sins I was in a Home Office meeting when we were told to use any means to stop issuing Passports to first time applicants on her orders. I had to stand up and tell the person delivering these orders that we were public civil servants, that we worked according to law, not to any Ministers political whim and the request to break that was disgraceful and illegal and I, for one, would have no part in it and neither should anyone else…. very abruptly the meeting ended and I was warmly congratulated on my way out of the room. Never the less I lived in fear of getting punished afterwards! Fortunately nothing came of it; but I can’t regard anything you might say warmly of her bearing in mind my experience.

  • @marblackCanada
    @marblackCanada Před 2 měsíci +1

    Be honest the whip is the party blackmailer.

  • @user-sd3ik9rt6d
    @user-sd3ik9rt6d Před 2 měsíci

    May really messed up a lot of peoples lives with Windrush, people died, British people.

  • @norcatch
    @norcatch Před 2 měsíci

    Ah, Paul Dacre. The Mugabe of fleet street.

  • @DictumMeumPactum
    @DictumMeumPactum Před 26 dny

    People died, human beings were treated worse than animals, her hostile environment was deliberately designed to traumatise a specific group of people because she's evil. She is devoid of any shred of moral fibre.

  • @TM-yr3pc
    @TM-yr3pc Před 2 měsíci

    Rory inadvertently defined himself as a populist 😂

  • @nautilusshell4969
    @nautilusshell4969 Před 2 měsíci

    Ahhh Rory.....on that last question.......bad final answer.

  • @jamesbmcauley
    @jamesbmcauley Před 2 měsíci

    I would have to say. As an American. 1 yankees murders row then 2 cardinals with dizzy Dean and 3 the astros in 2015. But I may have gotten the question wrong. I thought you wanted our favorite cheaters

  • @PaulGappyNorris
    @PaulGappyNorris Před 2 měsíci +1

    Listened to the ‘leading’ on May, she is still an awful PM 🙄

  • @niahays1042
    @niahays1042 Před 2 měsíci

    I've caught this late. However the fobbing off of vehicles saying 'Go Home!' Was horrifying, white chaps...

  • @freddostudios6186
    @freddostudios6186 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Attlee 100%

  • @marionreynolds7080
    @marionreynolds7080 Před 2 měsíci

    For Tessa May it was one compromise too many. The people had voted to leave and they were disrespected and ignored. Simples.

  • @MrBragle
    @MrBragle Před 2 měsíci

    Party whip section. Basically they are saying 'there is no such thing as democracy, its just a dictatorship'

  • @aislingmcdonald6778
    @aislingmcdonald6778 Před 2 měsíci

    It's what you do in government and not on the back bench that shows true character. I am continually disappointed by how 'shocked' you Westminster bubble folk are at how angry we, the voters actually are about how this country has been governed over the past 14 PLUS years! Look at yourselves and learn from YOUR OWN MISTAKES, PLEASE!!!

  • @purplepioneer5644
    @purplepioneer5644 Před měsícem

    Clement Atlee was one of the greats. Not for the NHS, but because of the other N words: nuclear weapons.

  • @sherlockgnomes8971
    @sherlockgnomes8971 Před 2 měsíci

    Does Blair's Good Friday Agreement excuse him for the Iraq war????

  • @BTAG75
    @BTAG75 Před 2 měsíci +8

    I admire Rory, but his glib and easy acceptance and trivialising of the hostile environment and Windrush is really unsettling. Shows that deep he is very privileged and doesn't really get how it feels to be on the wrong end of policies like those.

    • @dreamcrusher112
      @dreamcrusher112 Před 2 měsíci +2

      It is the problem of being mates with them all. I take notice now every time Rory's decisions about someone are prefaced by either some story together or how they were friends. Alistair is very party political but Rory is the classic rich mates club type.

    • @BTAG75
      @BTAG75 Před 2 měsíci

      @@dreamcrusher112 Yeah, absolutely this. And he doesn't even seem to realise it.

  • @rickatatastan2695
    @rickatatastan2695 Před 2 měsíci

    The prosperity that Rory pines for (1951-64) was due to massive taxes on the super-rich.

  • @Big-Campbell
    @Big-Campbell Před 2 měsíci +10

    Scratch Rory’s veneer of reasonableness and concern to reveal the snarling face of privilege, a true tory.