Tapper to Keir Starmer: How are you going to fix the UK economy?

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  • čas přidán 11. 07. 2024
  • CNN’s Jake Tapper sits down with new British Prime Minister Keir Starmer to discuss Labour's plans to fix the UK economy and political infrastructure.
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    #jaketapper #CNN #news

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @CityOfTinyLines
    @CityOfTinyLines Před 25 dny +2054

    Oh my he's boring.... how BEAUTIFUL that is.

    • @Fresch_K
      @Fresch_K Před 25 dny +354

      Right? Surprisingly refreshing to see a politician who doesn't try to be some kind of grand personality and just focuses on his job.

    • @jamesmmcgill
      @jamesmmcgill Před 25 dny +191

      A dull yet competent politician is more preferable than an outstanding yet incompetent outsider.

    • @jamesrowden303
      @jamesrowden303 Před 25 dny +82

      Boring is good, interesting is Boris.

    • @lighting7508
      @lighting7508 Před 25 dny +12

      @@jamesrowden303that’s a good way to put it 🤣

    • @philbrainy2399
      @philbrainy2399 Před 25 dny +60

      I have never voted Labour. But so far I trust Keir more than probably any PM we’ve had in my lifetime

  • @Kevin_geekgineering
    @Kevin_geekgineering Před 25 dny +1470

    that's funny cnn guy says UK's health care is broken, so what do you call american health care?

    • @barbra7562
      @barbra7562 Před 25 dny +176

      Absent!

    • @MrLucozadeFTW
      @MrLucozadeFTW Před 25 dny +113

      it’s like comparing a rundown city to a nuked city, they’re both bad just one is clearly miles worse

    • @redlightmax
      @redlightmax Před 25 dny +86

      @@barbra7562 Can't call American healthcare system broken, if it doesn't exist.
      [taps head]

    • @lowboyyy
      @lowboyyy Před 25 dny +1

      aren't the wait times sht?

    • @MrLucozadeFTW
      @MrLucozadeFTW Před 25 dny +18

      @@lowboyyy yes they’re awful, 2 months ago i was waiting 7 hours in accident and emergency just to see a doctor and they sent me home because it wasn’t serious enough to be treated, the NHS has been run into the ground

  • @tahiti1
    @tahiti1 Před 25 dny +887

    Even a "broken" UK healthcare service works far better than NO universal healthcare service in the US

    • @brafianblackfyre9220
      @brafianblackfyre9220 Před 24 dny +43

      Our healthcare system barely functions; you wait months for a cancer test, and by then, you're cooked anyway. But it was pretty good 10 years ago.

    • @JB27888
      @JB27888 Před 24 dny +20

      Not true, British healthcare satisfaction is even lower than the USA.

    • @noel7777noel
      @noel7777noel Před 24 dny +3

      Tr**p reversing the insurance mandate (at the same time keeping preexisting conditions covered) is pure ignorance.

    • @evonne_o
      @evonne_o Před 24 dny +11

      You CLEARLY don't live in the UK.

    • @brafianblackfyre9220
      @brafianblackfyre9220 Před 24 dny +1

      @@evonne_o Yeah, my weekly visits to Ealing Hospital are in my dreams, thank god

  • @YeahNoTellTheTruth
    @YeahNoTellTheTruth Před 25 dny +798

    Did an American just say UK health care is broken 🤣

    • @piusx8317
      @piusx8317 Před 25 dny +44

      It is 😂 Unless you know a different NHS than me?

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Před 25 dny +32

      No, the PM says that. The NHS is in a terrible state which as a Brit I'm ashamed to say.

    • @piusx8317
      @piusx8317 Před 25 dny

      @@edger7425 Lucky you.

    • @chickentoucher55
      @chickentoucher55 Před 25 dny +11

      What’s wrong with the American system? They bring all the innovation, all the advancements, if you want high quality life saving healthcare you go to the USA, the problem is you have 340 million people with an average salary of some of the wealthiest countries on earth, that brings a lot of demand and when supply can’t meet that demand, price increases, you just can’t get free universal healthcare in the USA, you will have to tax the middle class and people don’t want that, you can’t tax the wealthy because their already taxed a reasonable amount to keep them innovating in the USA, and even if it were “free” that wait times would make Canada look trivial, you can’t have it all both systems have pros and cons, and for a wealthy country of this size this is really the only option, Americans have the largest disposable incomes on average out of any country, and they want to keep it that way, we live in a world where consumers what brings wealth not resources

    • @chickentoucher55
      @chickentoucher55 Před 25 dny

      @@edger7425you also have the average salary of the poorest state in the Union, Mississippi and far less people, that means less demand for high quality healthcare, people in the states expect state of the art healthcare and the click of a button and their 340 million of them, that’s going to cost

  • @clownkirkpatrick
    @clownkirkpatrick Před 25 dny +547

    Comes off as humble, respectful, composed, actually answered the questions, no mixups or gaffes, and didn't take any chance to badmouth the other party. Man I miss the days when our politicians were like that. Also, the US is the last country that can talk about a broken healthcare system lol

    • @Danxr-k4j
      @Danxr-k4j Před 25 dny +9

      Won’t last. Honeymoon period

    • @carolynwestlake7670
      @carolynwestlake7670 Před 24 dny +33

      @@Danxr-k4jI don’t agree with you. This man is smart and he loves our country

    • @ricofung5371
      @ricofung5371 Před 24 dny +2

      Good thing Tapper is an individual, not an entire country.

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny +5

      He's in unknown territory taking advice from Tony Blair, God help us!

    • @Fredthebountyhunter
      @Fredthebountyhunter Před 24 dny +4

      Look up the word humble.

  • @loosegoose2466
    @loosegoose2466 Před 25 dny +253

    He seems quietly competent. I wish my UK mates all the best, hope it works out.

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny

      Believe me, we're not optimistic. It's even looking like we're going to get a victory over the Spanish to help the absolute broken morale of the citizenry, who feel abandoned and squalid.

    • @Countryfever
      @Countryfever Před 24 dny +17

      Thank you! 🇬🇧 🇺🇸

    • @maneshipocrates2264
      @maneshipocrates2264 Před 24 dny +4

      Hahaha right.

    • @pretentiouscritic6513
      @pretentiouscritic6513 Před 22 dny +10

      I appreciate you being nice to us-but tarmer is actually a borderline sociopath.

    • @zakoohakoo9541
      @zakoohakoo9541 Před 22 dny +3

      ​@@pretentiouscritic6513go on, explain?

  • @paulkirkland3263
    @paulkirkland3263 Před 25 dny +151

    Compare this man to the music hall act that was Boris Johnson. We might actually get five years of competent administration this time.

    • @WH-hi5ew
      @WH-hi5ew Před 25 dny +6

      Certainly an improvement - but unless there is structural change in the country then I fear our decline will continue.

    • @Lisammifsud
      @Lisammifsud Před 22 dny +3

      The Eton Cambridge Oxford Boys club train needs to end. Boris Johnson, James Cameron, Nigel Farage, Moggs...I could go on. Cameron and the Brexit vote was a arrogant under thought wouldn't happen disaster. Boris Johnsons father immediately applied for French citizenship, Moggs moved his company to Ireland and Farage glossed over declaring his EU parliamentary pension or his kids hsving dual citizenship. As for the NHS, yes it needs investment but I'm sorry the US needs to check itself. The insane prices charged in the US for things that are globally distributed. Hey rock on happily paying $650 for two epipens, over $250 for an inhaler, $5K for an ambulance because as you all keep saying the US is the poster child of capitalism and anything resemble socialism is evil.

    • @hanumaniam
      @hanumaniam Před 22 dny +2

      I'd take James Cameron!​@@Lisammifsud

    • @khaltsharivist365
      @khaltsharivist365 Před 22 dny

      @@WH-hi5ewstructural changes like what?

    • @WH-hi5ew
      @WH-hi5ew Před 21 dnem

      @@khaltsharivist365 whatever will turn around the economy, water companies, damage from Brexit, NHS, schools, care system etc. Anybody middle age or older has seen a decline in the country over the last 20-30 years. It's a difficult predicament.

  • @Guardian__Angel
    @Guardian__Angel Před 24 dny +67

    I'm not sure he can do it all but he doesn't seem to overpromise, either. It's obvious that he's playing the long game here.

  • @doug3691
    @doug3691 Před 24 dny +247

    "Country first, Party second." Exactly. If only America's Parties could manage that discipline.

    • @bcent5758
      @bcent5758 Před 24 dny +11

      As opposed to Trump’s mentality - Trump first

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny +2

      They do, they just won't commit as to what that country actually is...

    • @duddin91
      @duddin91 Před 23 dny +1

      Except he doesn't follow this at all.
      Anywhere there is a local government who isn't his party, they sling sh*t & try to cause distrust.
      Google teesside & find out the meltdown starmer, the labour party & their minions have caused

    • @B1GLANDD
      @B1GLANDD Před 22 dny

      It’s bullshit!

    • @shellovski
      @shellovski Před 22 dny

      The problem is that he is a compulsive liar! Nobody believes him in the UK.

  • @penpaperpower
    @penpaperpower Před 24 dny +877

    Critics pan Starmer for being boring, but damn is that man intelligent and articulate. He actually answers questions openly, while developing an argument that is convincing.

    • @HellBot-gi5si
      @HellBot-gi5si Před 24 dny

      You have to understand all the tabloid British newspapers are all run by crazy right wing billionaires.

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny +26

      Talk is cheap, let's see what happens.

    • @YwY-ct5yq
      @YwY-ct5yq Před 24 dny +53

      We actually need boring Polticians... Not the grand display and drama that just wastes time and plays with peoples hopes and feelings...

    • @YwY-ct5yq
      @YwY-ct5yq Před 24 dny +32

      ​@@sirrobinofloxley7156 So far they have alreDy started to enact the policies and plans they have stated in their manifesto... So long as they keep doing that, thats a very good sign

    • @sargfowler9603
      @sargfowler9603 Před 24 dny +5

      Damn, Starmer is a liar

  • @amymantravadi5057
    @amymantravadi5057 Před 25 dny +179

    Compare these answers to how either major U.S. candidate does in an interview. 😳

    • @Joe-ij6of
      @Joe-ij6of Před 24 dny +26

      In that context Starmer might as well be a Nobel Laureate rocket scientist

    • @demaciasolos
      @demaciasolos Před 24 dny

      @@Joe-ij6ofYour American masters live rent free in your head 24/7 and it is entertaining.

    • @infinitysynthesis
      @infinitysynthesis Před 24 dny +12

      Well he used to be Attorney General. The man knows how to put his point across.

    • @SimonFrack
      @SimonFrack Před 24 dny +6

      In the pre-election one question put to both Starmer and (then PM) Sunak was a sarcastic “Are you two really the choice we have?” which is laughable compared to what American is (unfortunately) going through.

  • @TileBitan
    @TileBitan Před 24 dny +281

    You finally elected a normal, intellectually interesting, human being instead of the usual clowns. CONGRATS GB!!

    • @Censorshift
      @Censorshift Před 23 dny +19

      I voted Reform, Starmer has 5 years to prove his worth

    • @ehnowthen
      @ehnowthen Před 23 dny +1

      This man has CIA links.

    • @ckingli
      @ckingli Před 23 dny

      No one voted this globalist in. The uk just wanted the useless tory government out, so he won by default

    • @satoshikamiya4636
      @satoshikamiya4636 Před 23 dny +20

      thanks bruv, hes exactly what the country needs right now. not a populist, just a normal guy who knows how government works and can win the trust of both businesses and working people.

    • @tomboss9940
      @tomboss9940 Před 23 dny

      @@Censorshift Fascism is never good for the people.

  • @brianevans1837
    @brianevans1837 Před 25 dny +150

    Why can't the U.S. find a leader who can string 2 sentences together?

    • @jamesbyrne9312
      @jamesbyrne9312 Před 24 dny +9

      He's got a speech impediment, still a great leader

    • @smunro1983
      @smunro1983 Před 23 dny +1

      It's the same in the UK, why can't we find good political parties that care for the people and want to build a strong economy? Politics is a dirty game and honest people don't last long in it or quickly get vilified.
      The other problem is also a class issue. You'll never get a prime minister that was brought up in a council house and build himself/herself up to be someone. We (Scotland) had a Muslim first minister. He could have easily worked to improve Scotland and set an example. Instead, he had his notorious anti-white speech, his pro Islam initiatives like the hate crime bill and branded everyone that disagreed with him as "right-wing". Not a stellar example of a leader.
      I bet you if you took your average hard working Muslim off the street and made him Scotland's first minster. He/she would go a much better job than a self entitled man that's never done an honest days work in his life.
      So given this is a problem across the world, I can only assume that smart people stay the hell away from politics.
      If I gave you the option to surrender a signification portion of your life to vote on bills/laws getting passed and making the average citizen in charge, while reducing the number of MPs we have, would you do it?
      Most people try to skip court duty when it comes up, so don't have much faith that concept could be extended to agreeing on day to day politics.
      Bottom line is that people are lazy and value their own independence and would rather delegate that responsibility to an external party, but moan when that party doesn't do what they want.

    • @HenriHattar
      @HenriHattar Před 21 dnem

      Well spotted, makes you wonder whose pulling the strings huh.

    • @donaldgraham6414
      @donaldgraham6414 Před 21 dnem +3

      You’ve never heard of Donald Trump??

    • @HenriHattar
      @HenriHattar Před 21 dnem

      @@donaldgraham6414 I am CERAIN he is one of the reasons this guy made his very good , correct and astute observation, however that is being generous to D. T. a real dislectic, inarticulate , incompetent , neurological wasteoland if ever one had two legs and walked.

  • @edmurth
    @edmurth Před 25 dny +65

    One of his first appointments was to run the prison service a businessman who is a conservative but has dedicated a huge amount of time to rehabilitating ex offenders and employing them. It feels good to have a serious government again but time will tell. As for the NHS it is broken but everything is relative, you’ll struggle to find anyone in the general public here who doesn’t cherish the NHS. I don’t think we can grasp what it’s like to live with US healthcare and vice versa but from what I’ve seen from Americans who’ve moved here it’s mind blowing and that’s not about what the hospitals look like or how you’re treated but the fact that you never have to think about it, if you’re sick you go to the doctor, if you need an ambulance you call an ambulance, there are never any other considerations.

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny

      There's no way this lot are impervious to the corruption that is left of what was UK politics. As soon as there's a sniff of equity to be had he'll be getting told how things will be going. How to have national politics in globalism?

  • @TheWaveGoodbye-Music
    @TheWaveGoodbye-Music Před 25 dny +40

    Our healthcare broken?
    Perhaps it isnt the best especially when the tories were in power.
    But when i was hit by a car i was in a hospital within 5 minutes and home that same night.
    Costed me £0. No worries, no debts.
    Plus, id rather someone treated me because they care about caring.
    Not some quack who'll say anything just to get another paying patient in quicker

    • @Bingpot_Cowabunga
      @Bingpot_Cowabunga Před 23 dny +1

      Did you get hit by an ambulance?

    • @TheWaveGoodbye-Music
      @TheWaveGoodbye-Music Před 23 dny +1

      @@Bingpot_Cowabunga I said what I was hit by... 🤣

    • @johnsometimeswrong8742
      @johnsometimeswrong8742 Před 22 dny +3

      NHS is a grest service...people take for granted what is a huge undertaking to run an organisation that size with 60 million customers.

    • @327legoman
      @327legoman Před 22 dny

      I do prefer Japan's. Whenever I've needed the NHS in the UK they've been unreliable. My mother was in pain for months, doctor just kept saying she was fat. After pushing for a new doctor, it was revealed to be galfstones which needed removing. My grandfather who tripped died before his time in an NHS hospital bed because the nurses forgot to administer his diabetes shots.
      For me personally every trip to the hospital has usually been a 8 hour wait of pain, just for a doctor to dismiss me and tell me to take paracetamol. Any scan or Xray takes months of being on a waiting list.
      In Japan I fractured my ankle. I went to the doctor and was recieivng a CT scan and Xray within 30 minutes of entering the building. I was given a cast and crutches and medicine and was out the door in an hour, all for the cost of £30.

  • @MrUTube-mv2jg
    @MrUTube-mv2jg Před 24 dny +16

    I’m a conservative but I like Starmer as a person. Good guy as far as I’m concerned. Wishing him the best in his term but I hope he is sensible about immigration and doesn’t raise taxes too much

    • @yehoshuamoleman
      @yehoshuamoleman Před 22 dny

      He’s pledged not to raise taxes on the main forms of tax. We’ll see if he keeps to that. With immigration I hope he can have a strong position, hopefully a more respectful and positive relationship with France can allow us to have processing centres there as we did over a decade ago when illegal migration was lower.

  • @eargh
    @eargh Před 23 dny +15

    Oh wow the UK actually elected someone considered and well spoken

    • @lr5777
      @lr5777 Před 22 dny +3

      We can't quite believe it ourselves! It's been many years since we last had a grown-up in charge. Long may it continue!

  • @sickpup820
    @sickpup820 Před 25 dny +133

    Jake, you're not going to trip up Starmer as he is brutally efficient when it comes to detail and detailed answers.

    • @aarons2319
      @aarons2319 Před 25 dny +20

      Jake isn't a trumper. Just tells it straight. By the way, love Starmer and Rayner.

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 25 dny +7

      Unless you ask him why he wont rejoin the EU

    • @wanderingfool6312
      @wanderingfool6312 Před 25 dny +11

      @@sunseeker9581He’s already started, but he’ll not say it on those terms, the Tory press would crucify him.

    • @user-bd9br4fe6s
      @user-bd9br4fe6s Před 25 dny

      starmer is an empty joke ,his father made tools.....

    • @wanderingfool6312
      @wanderingfool6312 Před 25 dny +13

      @@user-bd9br4fe6s Trumps name means fart, what’s your point?

  • @paulanders102
    @paulanders102 Před 24 dny +252

    How delightfully, perfectly British is Keir Starmer. He looks like he should be Prime Minister.

    • @YwY-ct5yq
      @YwY-ct5yq Před 24 dny +25

      He is boring, and thats a GOOD thing... No spectacle just work and delivery...

    • @nobreshit.9694
      @nobreshit.9694 Před 24 dny +4

      @YwY-ct5yq he hasn't done anything yet, and promised to continue the same stupid brexit path...

    • @lestrem11
      @lestrem11 Před 24 dny +2

      He sounds like Boris, so maybe he should.😉

    • @nobreshit.9694
      @nobreshit.9694 Před 24 dny +1

      @lestrem11 as in he sounds terribly stupid?

    • @lestrem11
      @lestrem11 Před 24 dny +2

      @@nobreshit.9694 He never explains HOW he is going to do anything. 🤔

  • @yedis1750
    @yedis1750 Před 21 dnem +10

    My mum is having first rate cancer care by heroic doctors and nurses. The care has been incredible. The system may be broken but the staff are still providing first class care for those who need it despite all the damage the tories have done. For the first time in 14 years we have a serious, sincere, decent leader at the helm who really does seem to care for the people of the UK over party politics. Europe is going to need a stable UK more than anytime since the second world war, especially as we wont be able to depend on the US for support if Trump and his right hand man get into the whitehouse.

  • @user-ob4wo9po2y
    @user-ob4wo9po2y Před 25 dny +213

    Keir will make a very good PM

    • @leyubar1
      @leyubar1 Před 25 dny +15

      Sir Keir!

    • @piusx8317
      @piusx8317 Před 25 dny +4

      ​@@leyubar1Mr Starmer

    • @ianHolmes-up2oc
      @ianHolmes-up2oc Před 25 dny +6

      he is a proper leader

    • @Jamie-uk2zh
      @Jamie-uk2zh Před 25 dny +6

      @@leyubar1Jimmy was also a sir

    • @leyubar1
      @leyubar1 Před 25 dny +5

      @@Jamie-uk2zh I don’t know what that has to do with anything

  • @targpatience
    @targpatience Před 23 dny +16

    I think the reason he is continually compared to Blair is that it's the first time since Blair that the UK has had an ethical, intelligent, articulate and dedicated Prime Minister. I was no fan of Blair's policy choices, nor his centrist populist approach to governance, but the man was a brilliant politician who understood cultures, governmental processes and diplomacy. I am so relieved to see the UK elect someone worthy of the role, and only hope the US does the same in November.

    • @aziza000
      @aziza000 Před 22 dny

      Blair the war criminal? The one who is the cause of mass immigration?

    • @fitzstv8506
      @fitzstv8506 Před 19 dny +1

      Gordan Brown was also an ethical, highly intelligent and dedicated PM and only for his economic ideas and suggestions the global economic catastrophe of 2008 would have been much worse. It is a pity that Gordon Brown is not recognised and often forgotten for his contributions and even more of a pity that he was not reelected in 2010 because if he was the UK today would be a much better place and still in the EU where it belongs.

  • @knockshinnoch1950
    @knockshinnoch1950 Před 25 dny +186

    An American criticising the NHS, describing it as being "broken"...

    • @lancergbp
      @lancergbp Před 25 dny +1

      LOL

    • @echochamber1234
      @echochamber1234 Před 25 dny +6

      It's you guys who call it broken. We're just repeating it.

    • @jaxcoss5790
      @jaxcoss5790 Před 25 dny +7

      The Tories called it broken, not the average UK citizen. Get it straight.

    • @aleph8888
      @aleph8888 Před 25 dny +1

      60 weeks to see a consultant. But it’s “free”.

    • @George-be4vn
      @George-be4vn Před 24 dny

      @@echochamber1234No, it’s the conservatives that tried to break it and privatise it. They only managed to worse in.

  • @Blacksmith811
    @Blacksmith811 Před 24 dny +21

    Glad he saw UK inward looking is a backward move. I agree with that.

  • @behrouzfarahani9637
    @behrouzfarahani9637 Před 25 dny +71

    Long live The UK 🇬🇧 ❤

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před 25 dny +40

    It must be tough to be a politician because no one ever leaves you alone.

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 25 dny +1

      The salary softens the blow

    • @sandponics
      @sandponics Před 25 dny

      Only crazy people who want to get rich, and can't get a proper job go into politics.

    • @Blorp_
      @Blorp_ Před 24 dny +1

      @@sunseeker9581Keir starmer was a very successful lawyer before going into politics

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny

      80% of the electorate left him alone, and 20% is called a majority in UK, go figure.

    • @Countryfever
      @Countryfever Před 24 dny

      @@sunseeker9581But his salary before becoming PM was very similar. So he didn’t get in the job for the money

  • @ronakio
    @ronakio Před 25 dny +164

    At its worst, the UK healthcare system is amongst the best in the world.

    • @GotoHere
      @GotoHere Před 25 dny +11

      Why does it take six months to get poor cancer treatment?

    • @somemistakes6091
      @somemistakes6091 Před 25 dny +34

      @@GotoHerebecause of how under funded it was by The Tories for the last 14 years, trust me I know, I work in the NHS

    • @sluglife9785
      @sluglife9785 Před 25 dny +5

      Living here, I wouldn't go that far at this point. It's still far, far from the worst. But it's a total mess right now. Thanks Austerity.

    • @riceboiii2937
      @riceboiii2937 Před 25 dny +7

      well no matter how bad the nhs gets i doubt many in the uk would rather not have it

    • @davidread7492
      @davidread7492 Před 25 dny

      Rubbish. The NHS is a woke bottomless pit. Too many chiefs mate. It's a disgrace and you know it.

  • @cinziam457
    @cinziam457 Před 25 dny +162

    It's too bad Jake Tapper's the interviewer. Love Keir Starmer -- UK is finally on the right track with this serious politician unlike the buffoon Boris Johnson.

    • @Strafuzz
      @Strafuzz Před 25 dny +14

      Boris is an insult to Buffons

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 25 dny +11

      Starmer has been terrible. He only won because tories didnt vote

    • @barbra7562
      @barbra7562 Před 25 dny +29

      @@sunseeker9581 How is he terrible when he’s only been in power a week?

    • @Hardboiledeggandtoast
      @Hardboiledeggandtoast Před 25 dny

      Starmer is a WEF puppet lol 😊​@@barbra7562

    • @Altolin
      @Altolin Před 25 dny +1

      ​@@barbra7562 Talk about a self-fulfilling prophesy 😂

  • @Chillednfunked
    @Chillednfunked Před 25 dny +96

    He’s Sir Keir Starmer

    • @piusx8317
      @piusx8317 Před 25 dny +6

      Mr Keir Starmer actually

    • @martinjenkins6467
      @martinjenkins6467 Před 25 dny +2

      Yeah funny a Sir incharge of the labour party.

    • @scubajean
      @scubajean Před 25 dny +10

      He literally said "call me Keir" in his first press conference as PM. Or, for those working in civil service, "Prime Minister", and he explained why that's important.

    • @ehnowthen
      @ehnowthen Před 25 dny +2

      Sir Beer Korma

    • @maxgregor3201
      @maxgregor3201 Před 25 dny +27

      Sir isn't a inherited title in my country it's an honour given to people for outstanding contribution to society. He got the title for being the chief prosecutor in the country and for being a human rights lawyer. Its got nothing to do with class

  • @Pathofplenty
    @Pathofplenty Před 25 dny +22

    Competent and boring = stability, thought out decisions and a wall of investment

  • @MarkEliasGrant
    @MarkEliasGrant Před 24 dny +68

    An American calling their healthcare system broken is hilarious.

    • @fgcpeak9591
      @fgcpeak9591 Před 23 dny +1

      They're aware of the irony of that statement, trust me

    • @Vostok7789
      @Vostok7789 Před 22 dny

      Their hospitals are doing pretty poorly right now.

    • @zacharyamaris
      @zacharyamaris Před 22 dny

      its working as intended the britsh system is not

    • @MarkEliasGrant
      @MarkEliasGrant Před 21 dnem

      @@zacharyamaris As intended? You mean worse outcomes, and spending more? You realize you're a laughing stock: the French and Swiss and Dutch and Swedish and Germans have stellar healthcare and spend less than the US. The US can't even vaccinate all children from diseases, diseases long gone from Europe are sprouting up in the US again. Absurd.

    • @navebushes5717
      @navebushes5717 Před 21 dnem

      Our healthcare system is broken, waiting lists and efficiency are at all time worst rates, but it is just a better system in general for the average person compared to the American system. Honestly though if you want anything non life threatening things medically dealt with quickly here private healthcare is the way to go

  • @allanbahati1942
    @allanbahati1942 Před 21 dnem +5

    Beautiful. Go Sir Keir, we’re rooting for you. I’m delighted at how he is approaching his premiership. You can see maturity and leadership in him.

  • @andrepotgieter7083
    @andrepotgieter7083 Před 24 dny +18

    Pity that America has 2 such Ancient people as presidential Candidates !!! Just look at how this Honorable young Leader is representing the United Kingdom! Compared to what you all have to deal with he is streets ahead and it is so clear to see!

    • @hydra66
      @hydra66 Před 24 dny +6

      Starmer isn't young. But the presidential candidates are ancient

    • @danielbliss1988
      @danielbliss1988 Před 22 dny +4

      Ironically enough, Starmer, at 61, is the oldest person to become Prime Minister since Jim Callaghan did so at age 64 in 1976 when the Labour caucus in the House of Commons elected him to replace Harold Wilson, who had retired at 60. And the last person to be newly installed into the office by way of a general election at an age older than Starmer was Winston Churchill in 1951 for his second stint as PM aged 77; the last person to be installed by way of a general election first time to the office older than Starmer was Clement Attlee in 1945, at age 62. So by UK standards Starmer's an old hand, and so is his cabinet by the standards of newly installed British governments, with Starmer and eight others having previously held government (i.e. executive branch) office.

    • @Farzlepot
      @Farzlepot Před 22 dny +2

      "Young" is doing some heavy lifting there.

    • @andrewtucker94
      @andrewtucker94 Před 19 dny +1

      He's one of our oldest PMs to take office, but still two decades younger than Biden!

    • @thesedreamsarefree
      @thesedreamsarefree Před 18 dny +2

      @@danielbliss1988 Clem Attlee was one of our greatest Prime Ministers.

  • @williamjktkd
    @williamjktkd Před 24 dny +45

    Keir Starmer has A LOT of work to do. To reverse what the torries did is going to take a long time.

    • @Censorshift
      @Censorshift Před 23 dny

      He also has A Lot of work undoing what the Blair administration did also along with a few people before Blair that also royally screwed the country

    • @johnsometimeswrong8742
      @johnsometimeswrong8742 Před 22 dny

      Yes but at the nxt election if he has not pulled of a miricle of historic proportions the Tories and Farrage will brand him a failure

  • @Vocela
    @Vocela Před 25 dny +33

    Great interview. Tapper asks important questions but he does it respectfully, and gives Keir Starmer the opportunity to reply in depth. Which he does exceptionally well. No sniping, no undermining from Tapper. UK journalists could learn from it.

  • @jakey4683
    @jakey4683 Před 24 dny +9

    An american calling the UK health care system broken is ironic - the UK surgeons are better trained, more humble, more educated, and FREE. Taxes and healthcare payments are within 1% of the uk's tax bracket for anyone under 200k

    • @jonnydavison9222
      @jonnydavison9222 Před 20 dny +1

      The UK surgeons and Doctors are also leaving in their drives for better pay deals in Europe. The NHS was sooooo much better before the cuts, we need to bring it back to that level

  • @PoliticalViews-d8f
    @PoliticalViews-d8f Před 25 dny +26

    Wow what a change. So glad to have this guy representing my country! Hard to believe he is a Labour politician. Congratulations and make us all proud and fix our country

  • @WaltSmith007
    @WaltSmith007 Před 23 dny +7

    can he run for potus?

  • @archie7218
    @archie7218 Před 25 dny +11

    As much as i have optimism for Starmer and quite like him, it is just words at the moment. I hope he does deliver results

    • @jaxcoss5790
      @jaxcoss5790 Před 25 dny +8

      Blimey, give the bloke a chance. He's only been PM for just over a week!

    • @archie7218
      @archie7218 Před 24 dny +1

      @@jaxcoss5790 True 😂. Its just I can see a situation where he doesn’t improve things much and it goes downhill for Labour. I hope im wrong

    • @dominickirby2568
      @dominickirby2568 Před 24 dny +2

      Amen to this! Although I am feeling hopeful

    • @jackwright517
      @jackwright517 Před 23 dny +3

      If it helps within his first week he's actioned a lot of progressive and positive moves that lead to an improving UK. We're just not seeing the fruits of those results yet. Scrappage of the Rwanda scheme, appointment of more competent ministers, negotiations with NHS trusts to get things moving faster, ring fenced spending legislation for water companies, prison reform just getting started, ministers specific to improving EU relationship and communication etc. etc.

  • @anthonyjones2228
    @anthonyjones2228 Před 25 dny +43

    Very lucky to have Starmer as Prime Minister he’s a good 1👍

    • @andrewtucker94
      @andrewtucker94 Před 19 dny +1

      Friend of a friend used to play squash with him. Decent, intelligent man I'm told.

  • @SliceOfDog
    @SliceOfDog Před 23 dny +6

    Worth pointing out when he says that Labour went too far left and lost votes, he got a landslide this election with fewer votes than Labour won in 2017 or 2019 under a leftist leader.
    I don't say this to criticise the idea of representing the centre, and I don't mean he's inherently bad. I just don't like this spin that there was some rousing rejection of left-wing politics in Britain. Starmer's centrists won fewer votes and more seats. Worth bearing in mind.

    • @alana8863
      @alana8863 Před 18 dny

      But you can't compare them. In this election far fewer people voted, so to get the same number of votes would have been impressive. In addition, the share of votes going to smaller parties was so much bigger. In addition, there were far more votes being used tactically, and this was why the Libs did so incredibly well - Labour voters, desperate to get the Tories out, voted Lib wherever it made sense.
      Apples and oranges.

    • @SliceOfDog
      @SliceOfDog Před 18 dny

      @@alana8863 I agree that no two elections are directly comparable, and you give a good set of reasons why.
      However, first of all, if elections aren't to be compared, when will Starmer stop comparing his 'landslide' to Corbyn's 'disaster'? If we accept that there are different factors at play each time, why can we compare them favourably to previous elections but not unfavourably?
      Secondly, if you're talking vote share as the more reliable metric, Starmer beat Corbyn's worst and lost to Corbyn's best. In 2017 Labour got 40%, compared to 2024's 34% and 2019's 32.2%.
      Thirdly, you mention a lot of Labour voters voting tactically. What about Libs/Greens/Ind/nationalist parties voting Labour tactically? I personally know people who don't care for Starmer who voted Labour this time around to boot out the Tories. Do you have any statistical evidence that Labour lost more votes to tactical voting than they gained?
      Finally, the quality of candidates and belief in the electoral system are both massive drivers of turnout. If more people turned out to vote for Corbyn and Boris, but fewer turned out to vote for Starmer and Sunak, that tells us people didn't think much of either candidate. That matters. We can't just brush over that. "He didn't get as many votes because fewer people voted." Well WHY did fewer people vote? And if we're going to blame voter turnout and tactical voting, we have to address First Past the Post, the leading cause of tactical voting. And what's Starmer's stance on FPTP? Of course, he wants to keep it.
      So with all of that in mind, are you telling me, a committed leftist who has voted many times for Labour in the past, that I should sit silently and nod my head when people boast of this landslide victory that was based on a smaller share of fewer voters?

  • @Here4Democracy
    @Here4Democracy Před 25 dny +11

    No one cares what you have to say anymore JT. You have a daughter. You’re being dg walked by DT at this point. Willingly. How will you tell your daughter you did his bidding? At the expense of her freedom and rights?

  • @gk2811
    @gk2811 Před 24 dny +12

    If the super-wealthy paid the same proportion of income tax as most working-class, the UK economy would be fixed within a year.

    • @Robc--jd6yh
      @Robc--jd6yh Před 24 dny +2

      They pay 45% tax v 20%. What are you talking about?

    • @gk2811
      @gk2811 Před 24 dny +4

      @@Robc--jd6yh
      Not on ‘all their income, they don't.

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 24 dny +3

      @@Robc--jd6yh you seriously believe that? Ever heard of tax evasion?

    • @Dellboy56
      @Dellboy56 Před 24 dny +1

      ⁠​⁠@@ab-ym3bfOn top of tax evasion, they have the legal loophole of tax avoidance.

    • @Robc--jd6yh
      @Robc--jd6yh Před 24 dny

      @@gk2811 40% from 37k and 45% after 150k. Why should they suddenly pay too tax on all their income? Doesn’t make any sense. The brackets are in place.

  • @Ejacks86
    @Ejacks86 Před 24 dny +8

    We are very lucky to have the NHS it mite be struggling a bit but it’s still the best health care around

    • @fitzstv8506
      @fitzstv8506 Před 19 dny +1

      No it is not the best health care system around! this myth must be challenged, there are many better health systems globally particularly in Europe but in saying that the NHS remains a good system.

  • @hoagie911
    @hoagie911 Před 22 dny +6

    He's a very intelligent man. Perhaps the most intelligent prime minister we've had in a long time.

    • @tomw4322
      @tomw4322 Před 18 dny +1

      Rishi had a Fulbright scholarship at Stanford

    • @hoagie911
      @hoagie911 Před 18 dny +1

      @@tomw4322 yeah but he managed to screw everything up. Also he wasn't the head of the CPS for years

    • @tomw4322
      @tomw4322 Před 18 dny +1

      @@hoagie911 Don't think getting inflation back to normal and growing the economy faster than any country in the G7 counts as screwing everything up. Quite the opposite in fact

    • @hoagie911
      @hoagie911 Před 18 dny +1

      @@tomw4322 agree to disagree

    • @tomw4322
      @tomw4322 Před 17 dny

      @user-rq5sd1sq8o Seems like you're happy to give Rishi zero credit for turning around Truss' mess. I expect you think furlough and cheaper energy bills should be brushed under the carpet too

  • @ds9quark
    @ds9quark Před 25 dny +7

    Great Sir Keir !

  • @swayp5715
    @swayp5715 Před 21 dnem +2

    What a wonderful interview and I think he's the right man for the job and he is wishing the UK the very best❤

  • @williamjoyce3042
    @williamjoyce3042 Před 25 dny +14

    I think Starmer can be ruthless to be honest,,, he ll sort this sh** out.

    • @lr5777
      @lr5777 Před 22 dny +2

      Agreed. I get the impression that he's not afraid to make difficult decisions. Definitely the PM we need right now.

  • @lukeluke7082
    @lukeluke7082 Před 22 dny +3

    The outlook for the UK economy is very positive already.

  • @iraemelan4229
    @iraemelan4229 Před 23 dny +5

    British people understand that the NHS, needs support, good decisions making hella funding, which it has had from the Conservatives. But it's laughable to hear broken from an American. I've had two c-sections on the NHS at a reputable maternity hospital, and had to stay 4 5 days both times. The upfront cost was £0. The most money I spent at the hospital was from getting snacks from the vending machine. Say what you will but no healthcare should charge you to have a baby.

    • @chrisholland7367
      @chrisholland7367 Před 19 dny

      It's a great system it's not perfect there is room for vast improvement. The previous government wanted to dismantle the entire system from top to bottom, forcing people into a US style health care service.
      The National Health Service was established after ww2 and is held in high regard. But unfortunately it's going to take a while before it's anything like it used to be.
      I'm glad that your experience was positive

  • @higgsboson2280
    @higgsboson2280 Před 25 dny +26

    Great move to visit US so early.

  • @ciarand2823
    @ciarand2823 Před 24 dny +6

    Where are labour going to find the money? Well they won't have to fund michelle Mones lifestyle, so that'll help

  • @mrandquist2653
    @mrandquist2653 Před 24 dny +8

    I think Britain should vote again on Brexit. I suspect many have had buyer's remorse on leaving.

    • @sickpup820
      @sickpup820 Před 24 dny +8

      You can't keep having referendums until you get the result you want. Starmer has billed himself on bringing stability back, another EU Ref would go against that.

    • @Youalleatmuffins
      @Youalleatmuffins Před 24 dny

      💯

    • @ab-ym3bf
      @ab-ym3bf Před 24 dny +4

      yes, they can have one everyday of the week if they want. Doesn´t change much though, since one can vote themselves out of an organization, but not into it.

    • @khaeugriefshade6456
      @khaeugriefshade6456 Před 22 dny

      Honestly, at some point, things become so much of a political gaffe that there isn't anything to build upon. Brexit is one of those things. The UK basically put up a middle finger to the EU and then awkwardly walked to the door with no idea how to open it for a few years before finally leaving. It was embarrassing.

    • @mrandquist2653
      @mrandquist2653 Před 22 dny +1

      @@ab-ym3bf I felt that they should have had another vote prior to formally leaving because it seemed even then that a lot of people felt they had been misled. Had the second vote been to remain than things would have been different.

  • @redcomet0079
    @redcomet0079 Před 25 dny +60

    Hey Jake, “good job” failing at fact checking Don the con

    • @Doc_Holiday
      @Doc_Holiday Před 25 dny

      CNN cares more about surviving than continuing to lie and dupe you .The gig is up ,figure it out

    • @helpAmerica1
      @helpAmerica1 Před 25 dny +4

      Can't even manage a debate. Does not even follow up.

    • @rasco1521
      @rasco1521 Před 25 dny +7

      The rules of the debate, agreed to by both campaigns included a rule of no fact checking by the hosts. I would also just remind you that Biden is the one who challenged Trump to the debate and then lost it.

    • @redcomet0079
      @redcomet0079 Před 25 dny +4

      @@rasco1521 false. Get a new brain

    • @helpAmerica1
      @helpAmerica1 Před 25 dny +2

      @@redcomet0079 It was not a debate, had nothing to do with fact checking post the show Tapper flopped.

  • @jamesrowden303
    @jamesrowden303 Před 25 dny +5

    I think Tapper's glasshouse is more fragile than Keir's at this stage. Perhaps the answer to the question posed in the headline should be "How are you going to fix your own broken country?"

  • @BlagoP
    @BlagoP Před 19 dny +2

    I thought Brexit was going to fix the British Healthcare system.

    • @barrysteven5964
      @barrysteven5964 Před 18 dny

      I regret to say you were lied to.

    • @BlagoP
      @BlagoP Před 18 dny

      @@barrysteven5964 LOL The irony escaped you.

  • @andrewrobinson2565
    @andrewrobinson2565 Před 24 dny +7

    The British Labour Party has a YOU in it. 😊

  • @dm-31024
    @dm-31024 Před 24 dny +16

    No drama Stahmer 🇬🇧. Good for him. 7:46 Reliable. Respectful. Trustworthy partners on the international stage. USA needs this very much.

    • @johnsometimeswrong8742
      @johnsometimeswrong8742 Před 22 dny +2

      Remindes me of John Major a very good PM and person in my opinion

    • @emilydavison2053
      @emilydavison2053 Před 22 dny +1

      Stable, serious, hard working and not corrupt. Simple, obvious requirements in a politician. Plenty of better choices for entertainment.

    • @fitzstv8506
      @fitzstv8506 Před 19 dny

      Starmer would be no friend of a Trump Presidency! and for that matter all European leaders with the exception of Orban would also be the same.

  • @stillbrian9448
    @stillbrian9448 Před 13 dny +1

    They say they are aware of the issues, people voted for these people to fix them, yet they never do

  • @thisismetoday
    @thisismetoday Před 20 dny +2

    3:09 That is not true, and he knows it. Labour actually got MORE votes under Corbyn’s leadership in the 2019 election (he is basically our Bernie Sanders). The difference was, that this time around the remaining votes were much more spread out over all other parties (and the Conservatives lost significantly), so that Labour ended up being the strongest party by a mile. But they did get less votes than they got in 2019…

  • @andyw246
    @andyw246 Před 22 dny +3

    Labour received a little over 9m votes in 2024. About the same as they got in 2019. Difference being a low turnout and Tory votes deserting to Reform. They just won the right seats. They played the FPTP system. They didn't win the public opinion.

    • @Jalex0021
      @Jalex0021 Před 21 dnem

      The people voting tactically knew what they were doing.

  • @dmitriydmitriy7270
    @dmitriydmitriy7270 Před 24 dny +3

    I have never cared for British politics. Well, I might begin.

  • @marythorpe928
    @marythorpe928 Před 20 dny +1

    The UK have a Labour Government , How good is that... Brilliant..

  • @presence5426
    @presence5426 Před 25 dny +9

    One fix for healthcare systems is prevention & health promotion. But that takes effort from both the system and the people. It saves money though.

    • @Nannyirene
      @Nannyirene Před 24 dny

      And that is built into the reforms that will save us billions, that and stopping the private sector cashing in on big dividends while they give feeble service to us. Goodbye Privatisation, we have solutions and cost-effective buying power without you, why should we be charged 8 times as much for the cheapest option. No more Tory get rich quick schemes that offload our taxes I to your offshore bank accounts when you have billions of our money from selling all our much needed utilities to foreign investment companies that cream off not just profits but money needed to Maintain and upgrade our water, has, electric transport, social care of the elderly and disabled. Gone for good, you and your rich elderly supporter's, your Tufton st con artists that make up your lies and spread fear. Gone and good riddance.

    • @alicianpig
      @alicianpig Před 23 dny

      Thankfully the new health minister Wes Streeting is very into preventative healthcare

    • @emilydavison2053
      @emilydavison2053 Před 22 dny +1

      Maybe 3 years ago ? Uk introduced a sugar tax which made fizzy drinks more expensive. A recent report has found that children's sugar consumption has gone right down and their teeth are improved. Now looking at applying it to cereals, ready meals and lots of other foods.

    • @wiretom
      @wiretom Před 20 dny

      Eduction! It all starts there

    • @presence5426
      @presence5426 Před 19 dny

      @@wiretom The right education. They used to teach us to eat loads of refined carbs. That was in college nutrition class...

  • @giriprasadpoudel5369
    @giriprasadpoudel5369 Před 25 dny +7

    World number one pm

  • @Kenny-jf9tq
    @Kenny-jf9tq Před 25 dny +18

    In Keir Starmer we have, at last, got a decent guy at the helm. Similar to Gareth Southgate our soccer/football manager. Two decent fellows who get things done too

    • @matthewprince9705
      @matthewprince9705 Před 24 dny +1

      Gareth Southgate? Who led an England team to the final of Euro 2024, through the LUCK of superior teams getting knocked out in early rounds plus scraping through matches in goals and penalties in extra time? Don't make me laugh!

    • @astrotravellin
      @astrotravellin Před 22 dny

      bot

    • @cupcakefairy87
      @cupcakefairy87 Před 21 dnem

      They lost the final to Spain.

  • @HanoiViaBangkok
    @HanoiViaBangkok Před 25 dny +2

    “Incredible results” I enjoy that phrase here

  • @christyritter1828
    @christyritter1828 Před 25 dny +10

    UK👍 Jake👎

  • @giocanni3590
    @giocanni3590 Před 23 dny +4

    so... where is the money coming from? He never answered the question.

    • @cmmgray
      @cmmgray Před 22 dny +1

      Tax tax tax

    • @giocanni3590
      @giocanni3590 Před 22 dny +1

      @@cmmgray the middle class will have to pick up the bits...

    • @jean-lucpicard5510
      @jean-lucpicard5510 Před 20 dny +1

      Never asked the Torys that question I bet.

    • @giocanni3590
      @giocanni3590 Před 20 dny +1

      @@jean-lucpicard5510 I don't know about that, but I think it's a quite obvious question to ask when presented with ideas which are going to cost money. "Fixing" the NHS (whatever that means) and buildings homes is presumably going to cost money, so as a tax payer I am interested to know where is that money going to come from.

  • @VA-lo4ul
    @VA-lo4ul Před 25 dny +28

    We’re going to fix the economy “with economic growth”. It’s a tautology, isn’t it? Rebuilding the economy means having economic growth. The question was: HOW are you going to achieve that, but Tapper didn't challenge him on this (or anything else, for that matter).

    • @arthurbiggins
      @arthurbiggins Před 25 dny +17

      Very easy, re-engage with Eurooe and recover a healthy chunk of the lost economy due to Brexit. There is opportunity in Science, Finance and Entertajnment there. The Tories were philosophically unable to do this.

    • @HmmInteresting478
      @HmmInteresting478 Před 25 dny +1

      @@arthurbiggins can you point to any tangible policy moves that would enable that?

    • @arthurbiggins
      @arthurbiggins Před 25 dny +11

      @@HmmInteresting478 Sure, reintroducing freedom of movement would be best, but failing that, a reciprocal deal to travel and work for artists and performers and those connected with the film industry (UK's film and music industry was booming pre-Brexit, dead now), including allowances for festivals. Introduce EU-level financial regulation in order to allow London to still operate as a European money hub (not taking anything away from it's global role) - may be too late for this now, but worth a try. Re-sign up to European science initiatives, I suspect the door is open on this, the Tories wouldn't do it out of arrogance "Britain is best we don't need them", of course this is bollocks and we would be much better leveraging scale along with our European partners. This is all possible now.

    • @aleph8888
      @aleph8888 Před 25 dny +5

      Starmer said in the interview that Brexit won’t be reversed, and the EU says no cherry picking from the outside. Only way to really improve UK economic growth is increasing productivity which happened under Blair.

    • @MrArchie800
      @MrArchie800 Před 24 dny +4

      He has answered that question many times elsewhere. There are many levers that can encourage economic growth purely from a policy and ideological standpoint e.g. around planning laws, around regulatory and bureaucratic limitations, policy around which large infrastructure projects should and should NOT be sold off to foreign investors, when to privatise vs taking back into public ownership, closer alignment with EU (meaning cheaper goods, more exports and better logistics). All of which creates jobs and growth driven entirely by government policy The list goes on. And even though I'm not a traditional Labour supporter I am optimistic that, after a disastrous period, we now seem to have normal adults back in the room that are making pragmatic and adult decisions rather than playing to the populists. All of these things are now openly within the government's plans - I hope they are good as their word (and to be fair their first week in office is very encouraging).

  • @dominicjohn8954
    @dominicjohn8954 Před 19 dny +1

    The NHS is 'broken' but if I should fall ill or have an accident, an ambulance will be despatched in short order, I will see the right medical specialists according to my needs and I will be well looked after by incredible nursing staff for as long as takes and it wont cost me a penny more than what I already pay in income tax. No payment at point of use, no co-payment and no health insurance.

  • @cherylblocker-cappelletti5397

    Jake why?

  • @lighting7508
    @lighting7508 Před 25 dny +8

    Holy fuck we lucked out so randomly with this guy ☠️ he seemed like a muppet on the campaign trail but now that he can speak more naturally he really seems like someone I align with. Finally a quiet 5 years.

    • @lr5777
      @lr5777 Před 22 dny +1

      Agreed. About time the UK had a bit of luck! I'm feeling optimistic for the first time in years.

  • @ReviewBoard-uy5nv
    @ReviewBoard-uy5nv Před 24 dny +2

    Finally, when the rich in the UK actually pay their fair share of taxes, the NHS can get funded.

    • @Robc--jd6yh
      @Robc--jd6yh Před 24 dny +2

      Silly broad statement. Vast majority of wealthy do pay their taxes and 45%. Without them there would be no NHS. Try to be more mature in your arguments and express exactly who you mean rather than bracketing “the rich” as one.

  • @jason3248
    @jason3248 Před 16 dny

    What a breath of fresh air. And I'm a UK conservative.

  • @philipdoty8497
    @philipdoty8497 Před 25 dny +15

    Why didn’t he ever ask Biden this question?

    • @da90sReAlvloc
      @da90sReAlvloc Před 25 dny +1

      Or trump covfefe. Man woman. Person. Camera TV , Obama is going to lead us in to ww2

  • @jamesstevenson1296
    @jamesstevenson1296 Před 25 dny +23

    The main problem with the NHS is that the Tory government over the last 14 years have failed to fund it in accordance with rising costs and inflation. Add to that the growing population through immigration and not a corresponding rise in national insurance has left it stuttering but still servicing.

    • @NeilOB9
      @NeilOB9 Před 24 dny +6

      No it isn’t, the NHS’s main probably is efficiency and organisation. It needs internal reforms so that money isn’t wasted, it doesn’t necessarily need a massive increase in funding or privatisation.

    • @DanteNeverWaits
      @DanteNeverWaits Před 24 dny +1

      Lol a rise in NI? You think I want to pay more for a system that is completely failing? The NHS has had more investment year by year, funds aren't the problem.

    • @sirrobinofloxley7156
      @sirrobinofloxley7156 Před 24 dny +1

      They funded it perfectly well, with nothing that needed funding, and what needed funding they ignored. Classic parliamentary business.

    • @PassiveAgressive319
      @PassiveAgressive319 Před 24 dny

      This notion that immigration has impacted the NHS is laughable. In fact, it is legal immigration workforce that are propping it up

    • @Farzlepot
      @Farzlepot Před 22 dny

      ​@@NeilOB9The NHS is one of the most efficient organisations on the planet (seriously, compare its funding levels versus what it delivers to any other healthcare organisation on the planet - it's phenomenal), because weird rich people keep barking "it doesn't need more money, it needs to be more efficient!"
      What it needs *is* more funding, a profound increase in pay for its workers, and a considerable amount of investment in training systems.

  • @moezmedia98
    @moezmedia98 Před 23 dny +1

    Labour got more votes under Corbyn, its just that the tories collapsed to the reform party, that is why he won, we need more radical politics that works for the working and middle class, my hope is that the greens grow

  • @mango2005
    @mango2005 Před 24 dny +2

    If Reform UK had not stood aside in 2019. Corbyn would have been PM

  • @roadend78
    @roadend78 Před 23 dny +3

    Starmer another neoliberalist war cheerleader .

  • @naratipmath
    @naratipmath Před 24 dny +4

    American will be more surprised to know that private schools in UK is "charity"; hence no VAT. And Labour will get this straight and get them to pay VAT.

  • @Ronariverah
    @Ronariverah Před 25 dny +1

    Did Rishi do the US press rounds?

  • @chumleyk
    @chumleyk Před 20 dny +1

    He's 61. Really??

  • @willienelsongonzalez4609
    @willienelsongonzalez4609 Před 24 dny +5

    Sir Keir Starmer hails from a working class background; his father was a tool maker and his mother was a nurse. Sadly, Sir Keir Starmer’s mother developed Still’s disease and was generally quite debilitated during her later years. He attended university to study law and after graduating he specialised in human rights and became a barrister. Overall, unlike the former PM Rishi Sunak and the previous Labour PM Tony Blair, Sir Keir Starmer was not born into wealth or affluence and has worked hard to achieve his goals. Of his other three siblings, he was the only one to have attended university. There are many criticisms of Sir Keir Starmer, I for one am glad that he’s the new PM and that the torrid, terrible and utterly feckless tories have been booted out of the government. Fourteen years of incompetent and corrupt tory rule had done much harm to the UK and I hope that Labour under the leadership of Sir Keir Starmer can help build the UK and undo the damage.

  • @ryanodoherty3730
    @ryanodoherty3730 Před 23 dny +9

    Man looks like a Kingsman - return of the British gentleman under no drama Starmer

  • @Chykemartins
    @Chykemartins Před 19 dny

    Tapper doing his best to earn back his reputation, good one👍🏽

  • @a.cameron207
    @a.cameron207 Před 22 dny +1

    I am not sure I agree with Starmers point about bringing UK politics back to the centre. All three centrist parties lost votes compared to the last election, its just that the Tories lost so many more that Labour picked up the seats. Labour had more votes under the more radical left wing leader of the last two elections, and the Tories lost votes not from the centre but the right because they didn't address the concerns of social conservatives in the UK. It would be hard to give a simple answer as to what UK voters actually want at the moment, but more of the status-quo neoliberal centrism (which is what this man appears to be, but words are cheap and his deeds may in time may speak otherwise) of the last quarter of a century isn't it.

  • @loriwest7887
    @loriwest7887 Před 25 dny +14

    Not sure why anyone would take to Jake or cnn any more

    • @tophat593
      @tophat593 Před 25 dny +3

      Then why are you on CNN commenting? You're either not watching it and don't know or you are and you disprove your own point.

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 25 dny

      Ratings

    • @ThomasFromTN
      @ThomasFromTN Před 25 dny +1

      @@tophat593 How can someone credibly critique something or someone...if they don't research and observe it, first hand? It's your comment that reflects nonsense.

    • @tophat593
      @tophat593 Před 25 dny

      @@ThomasFromTN A credible criticism is based on some underlying point. The OP's comment did nothing but express incredulity that anyone would watch which fairly opens him up to the point I made.

    • @yolibart
      @yolibart Před 25 dny

      That’s because you don’t realize or accept that points of view other than your own exist.

  • @hadiaBasharmal
    @hadiaBasharmal Před 24 dny +5

    Good luck prime minister ❤😊

  • @sidstewart7399
    @sidstewart7399 Před 21 dnem +1

    Economy was already on the way up.

  • @schalkerleiden
    @schalkerleiden Před 19 dny

    I really like Tapper‘s interviewing style

  • @user-lk9lp3br3g
    @user-lk9lp3br3g Před 25 dny +6

    I hate it, when the say...Mr Prime Minister..its Prime Minister; full Stopp

    • @WH-hi5ew
      @WH-hi5ew Před 25 dny

      Americans think Mr. President.

    • @user-lk9lp3br3g
      @user-lk9lp3br3g Před 25 dny +1

      @@WH-hi5ew i under stand...in germany Prime Minister is Ministerpräsident and they say Herr Ministerpräsident....but in England its just Prime Minister

    • @WH-hi5ew
      @WH-hi5ew Před 24 dny

      @@user-lk9lp3br3g Agreed.

  • @bicyclemanNL
    @bicyclemanNL Před 23 dny +3

    1/3 of the people voted Labour, who won 2/3 of the seats - while 21% voted Green Party and reform party get 1% of th seats. The UK needs PR not a two party first past the post

  • @steveallen3434
    @steveallen3434 Před 24 dny +2

    He is saying all the right words but let us see if he can back them up

    • @alana8863
      @alana8863 Před 18 dny +2

      He's already doing this!

  • @joshhiggins5509
    @joshhiggins5509 Před 23 dny +1

    Interviewer clearly did no research beforehand

  • @margomargao2004
    @margomargao2004 Před 25 dny +4

    Jake flopped at the debate.
    Now an angry man😀

  • @bathesheba111
    @bathesheba111 Před 25 dny +8

    Perhaps Keir Starmer for president! He’s a lot more sensible than many American politicians!

  • @jakey4683
    @jakey4683 Před 24 dny +2

    You have to figure out free trade and free movement with the uk again. Maybe that's not a formal rejoin of the EU, but need something.

  • @VK.x
    @VK.x Před 22 dny +2

    People want Reform even more now & no their not all R’s. I have to tick British Indian on the list. My great grandparents were Hindu & my dad was adopted as a orphan by my grandparents. I have slightly tanned skin but, still want reform. Stop clinging on to that label which everyone apart from some are fed up with!

  • @trevorD1156
    @trevorD1156 Před 25 dny +13

    Rejoin the EU, brexit was a disaster

    • @Just-Ignore-It_88
      @Just-Ignore-It_88 Před 25 dny +2

      It's not that simple... It will take decades to get back into the eu.

    • @paulkirkland3263
      @paulkirkland3263 Před 25 dny +4

      There is no appetite within the EU to have Britain rejoin.

    • @TheVesko95
      @TheVesko95 Před 25 dny

      It was but it's done. I am not a brexit supporter BUT with all reason and facts the UK needs a similar deal to Norway/Switzerland than actually being a full member of the EU. Also look at all the european countries, I know it may not seem like it to you but I travel across Europe on a monthy basis and work with a ton of european companies (I am EU myself) and I can confidently tell you that the UK is overtaking most of the european countries and not only that but I actually think there is a backwards movement in europe. Again this is just an observation and an opinion based on my experience but given that the UK is out, the best thing to do is stay out but actually make the country more competitive than the EU, then the real money will start flowing in (and this process has alreasy begun, it'll just take awhile for the people to feel)

    • @teddypicker8799
      @teddypicker8799 Před 23 dny +1

      ​@paulkirkland3263 I voted remain and still want to rejoin but the eurozone has struggled without britain tbh. They would love us back 😅

    • @paulkirkland3263
      @paulkirkland3263 Před 23 dny

      @@teddypicker8799 Britain was never in the Eurozone. I too would love to rejoin the EU, but according to EU politicians and political commentators interviewed by the BBC's World at One on Radio 4, Britain rejoining is a peripheral issue, with no great desire or sense of urgency attached to it.