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  • elected on an ulcer blank campus of a manifesto.

  • Could we now be about to find out who the real Boris Johnson is?

  • Right?

  • Well, this is what you're referring to.

  • Drink.

  • Do you want to kick us off?

  • But I think Boris Johnson is.

  • It's a grim situation, I think, in the rest of the UK just, you know, the the Boris Johnson government, I think, is the worst possible thing for UK.

  • I represent Inverness as part of my constituency, and there we found.

  • For the past six years, we've been a pilot area, universal credit being ruled out.

  • It's absolutely hammered.

  • People look, Lee, we've gone from one food bank in Inverness up to four on Dhe.

  • That's being the process and maybe more.

  • Three.

  • The constituency have joined that people have been driven into poverty by that particular policy and as a terrible consequences weather as well, such as the re clause on the six month rule for terminally ill people, which could be done away with but they haven't done.

  • It is a Tory party.

  • What's gonna happen?

  • I think with Boris Johnson's his majority is that's going to get even worse.

  • I think they're going to tighten the screw on the people who are most vulnerable in our communities.

  • The disabled.

  • I think they on dhe, the single parents, those people who just can't afford it.

  • You know, I think this is gonna be a really awful time with a Tory majority in place.

  • And I think we will see more off what we already know about Boris Johnson, which is a pretty grim prospect.

  • Marshall.

  • Is that your view?

  • I'm just wondering whether Drew and his colleagues in the SNP are actually going to start taking responsibility for life in Scotland, that they have been responsible for Theo, that they're responsible for the health service there, which is suffering now in Scotland, much more so than any questions about bar still in there.

  • It's not true.

  • Boris Johnson is a is a phenomenon.

  • He's different from other prime minister's.

  • That's why he's made such a very good leader of the Conservative Party and prime minister and done things achieve things that people three months ago said were impossible.

  • We wouldn't be standing or sitting here now, looking at the prospect of getting on with Brexit if he hadn't been able to do things which people simply said weren't possible.

  • They were possible under hang on, he picked up a deal that Theresa may reject.

  • See, that was always a possibility to screw over the d'you pay.

  • But it was just not done until he thought he could get Europe has your has come back to the negotiating table, Something that was said was impossible to do.

  • Now, Boris and the Conservative Party is at last in a really strong negotiating on what's gonna happen Michael with Because, I mean, if you think about for example, the e.

  • R.

  • G.

  • You've held so much sway until now, what's gonna happen there?

  • I mean, what kind of conservative party we're gonna see?

  • We're going to see a very effective conservative party, because is much more united than it has been for a very long time.

  • It was a plane, but I'm asking transit in terms of the the the MP is not that great in number who were very much to the right of the party.

  • We're pushing Brexit pushing a hard Brexit, Jake Reiss, modesty and others.

  • What's gonna happen to that to those kind of people?

  • Now they now force doesn't don't have to worry about them.

  • You're gonna leave the party different way.

  • What kind of party can we expect to see get a big party that's dealing with the future and the ambitions of the huge?

  • How do we get out of this system, this newly negotiated system that we're going to do with you?

  • How did you get the things that we really want?

  • We're not going to simply sit there as we were doing up until very recently, saying to the Brussels, What are you going to allow us to do?

  • We're actually a position to say This is what we are going to do.

  • We want your cooperation.

  • We are friends.

  • We are partners.

  • We are colleagues.

  • But we are no longer going to be doing the same things as you are because we have a different horizon that we want to get, too.

  • There's nothing evil with that.

  • It's just a different ambition, and the British are actually very good at achieving their ambitions.

  • It's about unleashing the imagination, the devotion that we know that we have.

  • We weren't able to do that with the system that we're just getting out off on at the end off January.

  • We will now be in a new position to do things which two years ago, we were told, were absolutely extraordinary and impossible.

  • We are going to do them.

  • Kevin Theo, Frustrated, frustrated because I think rather like the Tories 2015 slogan was a long term economic plan.

  • I challenge anyone in this room.

  • Remember what the long term economic plan actually waas on.

  • I think we'd get breaks it down.

  • There's a big problem, which is that in we have a year.

  • It is written into the Tory Manifesto that we will be out by the end of the summer next year.

  • That is the that will be the fastest trade deal that anyone has ever done.

  • I mean, if Boris Johnson gonna come, shit, take my hat off to him.

  • But I think he has made a big promise that and he has told people this subject's gonna go away.

  • And I think when the subject doesn't go away, people gonna feel quite cheated.

  • Okay, let's hear a bit more.

  • So the woman at the back there So my concern is that you said Michael, that we need a healthy opposition and I completely agree, but the concern that those people who were originally maybe labor sported that moved to conservatives have an uncertainty that the real Boris Johnson will not follow through on the things he said prior to the elections.

  • So I feel that there's a real concern around how the rial Boris Johnson will he follow through on the promises he's made, for instance, with the Anna jests and other aspects as well and without a healthy opposition.

  • Is there a safeguard in place for that?

  • Okay, And the woman in the gray jacket, You wanted to say something you say when you put your hands up, if you keep them up?

  • Because if you put them down, I lose you.

  • So big conservatives have been in power for 10 years.

  • The housing crisis has got worse and worse.

  • What's gonna happen now?

  • Well, the question is about Are we going to find out who the real Boris Johnson is?

  • It was.

  • It was a little haiku of a manifesto that we saw for this election relative.

  • It's a fully It's a pretty slender document, as you know, for World Ranch chips.

  • So what?

  • What are we going to see?

  • A party?

  • What kind of future you think reality is?

  • What you gonna see?

  • That Boris Johnson is some whose liberal moderates, one nation compassionate, who puts the n hs right at the heart of it on.

  • Let's see now, because with the majority, I think you'll actually get to see it as the questioner suggest.

  • The rial Boris Johnson Much more like the lungs here.

  • Is there much more like the London Met?

  • Who, actually, by the way, very level, very open.

  • Onda Very keen to get on.

  • And I know when I started to mention before he was a prime minister in the last parliament who didn't have a majority, which is unheard off, that actually made it very difficult to be prime minister.

  • I think you'll find with a big majority with 80 million with eight story 8 80 MPs majority, he will be in position to be Oh, I told you my projection was a bit on.

  • Yeah, but I think that's a majority.

  • You'll see the kind One nation conservative Prime Minister.

  • Maybe I do have to say particularly to you, Stephen.

  • The idea, as you've done twice here that you just don't seem to understand that 14 million people have just gone out on voted for him as prime minister.

  • Including, is the question of mentioned up there a lot of first time Labour supporters who voted conservative and you're assuming it's just for Brexit.

  • But the way that you're talking about people that way, except the challenge, what we're saying is we understand you voted because of Brexit, but we're going to really show you how good and how effective a conservative government could be in areas like Darling, too, on Workington on all those other seats that we want.

  • And if your attitude is you were just wrong.

  • Devote conservative you'll find in five years time when we've actually delivered for people in this country on N hs, on health and all the other areas that, actually you'll have a rude awakening.

  • What can we expect to see Boris Johnson has promised?

  • Will you promise Command 30.

  • The first of October That didn't happen.

  • He's promise that we're going to come out off the you completely December 2020 now that he doesn't have the likes off Jacob Reese more get others breathing down his neck.

  • Is that a promise he's going to keep do you think?

  • Yeah, absolutely.

  • I think that way we have a deal or not.

  • To be clear, we don't come out on the 31st box over because, as of mentioned, there was no majority in Parliament.

  • Now there is not quite the 80 million like waiting, but now there's an 80 majority in Parliament.

  • It does mean that we could fill coming out on the 31st of January will get that work started to send the 2020 is concerned with a deal or no easily amount.

  • Absolutely.

  • Because you know what?

  • Although you say it takes years to negotiate trade deals, how many trade deals have ever been negotiated in the world where you already have exact parity on your products, on everything going into this deal ever negotiated, where you're putting up barriers to trade, rather lowering them?

  • But the point about this is when we leave.

  • They're already 50 countries with which we have roll over trade deals.

  • So with in terms of the rest of the world's, there's already a lot in place and in terms of Europe, they sell more stuff to us than we sell to them.

  • So why on earth would they not want a trade deal, and by the way, exactly the same argument there.

  • No one's saying they wouldn't want to trade this when you could do it, but I think I know you already got the same playing field custom.

  • The woman in the yellow sweater.

  • Yes, a question to Grant, Please you say that Boris is going to be a moderate one nation Torrey.

  • Yet how that's that, in my opinion, actions speak louder than words.

  • He lost the majority because he actually checked out of the party.

  • The very moderate nation.

  • Tory's like Dominic Grieve and David Golden.

  • So So how How do you respond to that?

  • Briefly when you stand for any of the parties, you stand for a document like this, which is a manifesto, and you say you're gonna do what's in it?

  • One of the things that was in our last manifesto is that everybody who signed up said we would vote to leave the year.

  • Those people didn't and knew that the consequence of that would be to lose the whip.

  • Half of them got it back, by the way and that kind, you have to have some sort of discipline in a political party, and it's absolutely right to do.

  • And actually, I think the evidence of it is that we now have an 80 majority because we've got MPs now who have all signed up to the manifesto, and that means the public know we're going to do what it says in the manifest in the manifest, a lot of hands up the woman with the glasses.

  • So work.

  • I should basically you say that Boris Johnson is a liberal, a person for the people, right?

  • But when will you actually investigate this?

  • Some five yard that is currently occurring in your country?

  • You don't talk about.

  • But you talk about Jonah common in his anti Semitism in the Labour Party fair.

  • When it's right, it's right.

  • But well, were you actually a justice, I'm afraid, but that's occurring in the courts over to take a few points.

  • And then you know that the woman that blue sweater with the necklace I have to take issue with you on your comment that Boris Johnson is a man of compassion.

  • I have not seen any evidence of compassion in his behavior towards a child on the hospital floor when he stands for a photo shoot in front of a bunch of police cadets on one of them faints in the heat on.

  • Then he just carries on.

  • If where is the compassion in this man?

  • Where is his compassion for the homeless chaps?

  • He was what He was filmed walking by with his aides and with his team.

  • I see no compassion in this man buys.

  • Johnson had been easier run in this campaign against not very effective.

  • Jeremy Corbyn on against Amore competent Labour leader.

  • You need to move back towards the center, right to appeal to the vectors that he borrowed from the Labour Party in this election.

  • Let's hear from the woman here in the car.

  • Um I think, um, labor lost the election because they didn't respect democracy.

  • Democracy means when you vote on, do you have a referendum?

  • Whether you like it or no, that's it.

  • We voted to leave.

  • How dare you!

  • How i'ma lay boat thief may was the primary reason that I walked into the polling booth yesterday for the first time in my life, not knowing which way I was gonna vote Absolutely a warrant that we didn't respect what people said Absolutely abhorrent.

  • Secondly, the rial.

  • Boris Johnson, Boris Johnson.

  • He will swing with the wind, do whatever makes him popular.

  • He wanted to be prime minister.

  • He wanted to be labor mayor of London.

  • Whatever was going to get him that role.

  • He doesn't care.

  • He's not a man of compassion, is not my conviction.

  • And he's not a man of morals or ethics.

  • I feel embarrassed to have him as appointment with this company.

  • But Stephen, also the point made to you about the reference Clearly you wanted you a group of MPs.

  • You've got to get to try and see if you could get some kind of Brexit deal through.

  • The question originally from car is, could we be about to find out who the real Boris Johnson is?

  • Well, I think all of these points are absolutely valid.

  • When the mask slips, this one nation stuff just falls away.

  • He sacked 21 1 nation MPs.

  • He couldn't look at a photograph of a young boy on a hospital trolley.

  • He uses racist rhetoric like letter boxes and bank robbers.

  • He hey wrote two articles for the Daily Telegraph before the referendum, one saying.

  • Advocating remain one advocating leaving The only thing he really calculated.

  • What?

  • Which was best for his career.

  • So there.

  • But Boris Johnson isn't a one nation Torey.

  • He's a one Boris story.

  • They're all members of the order here who actually voted for Boris Johnson.

  • We've heard people saying why they didn't support Jeremy Corbyn.

  • Why didn't support Boris Johnson?

  • Unless you have supported brought Jeremy Corbyn?

  • No one's actually spoken up.

  • Four.

  • Boris Johnson.

  • I know there must be something.

  • So are you one of them?

  • I didn't vote for Boris.

  • I know why.

  • I know why I I sympathize with him in the way that he stood up for Brexit.

  • That's the only reason why out say, Boris Johnson he stood up for Brexit is the only leader who set off Brexit.

  • What about anyone who actually voted Boston because they actually wanted him?

  • Yes, you, sir, In the front.

  • Jeremy Carbon wasn't very good on Boris Johnson.

  • Wasn't perfect either.

  • But by a thumping majority the nation has decided that over the two, Boris Johnson was the best choice on We've got to give him a chance.

  • It's his first day on.

  • We'll see.

  • Her goals will make a decision in five years time.

  • Okay, growing team one on some of the point is at least worth when you start to talk about.

  • He wrote two articles.

  • How many times have you taken a piece of paper when you have a difficult decision?

  • And actually, I think something like whether or not we should vote to leave Europe is a difficult decision to draw a line down the middle, and you put the pros and the cons, and he does that as a writer.

  • There's somebody who writes out, and if you take the time to read both those articles, they actually see his arguments from his perspective for leaving will way stronger.

  • So to keep trotting out, he wrote Two arteries, and therefore this is terrible.

  • By the way, you know this.

  • Oh, it's for his career, as if, like you is a politician, it's not for your career.

  • Politicians, of course, stand on things they believe in for their careers and in many other ways, and many of the other comments compassion.

  • If I take that issue is an example.

  • I worked very closely with him.

  • I happen to be housing minister at the time when he was mayor on.

  • He's very, very, very passionate about the issue of homelessness, to the point where he introduced the policy, which was a first called The No Second Night Out Policy, which meant that anybody is on the street automatically be caught up by the outreach teams have found accommodation on the second night out.

  • Holmes.

  • This is a much more complex issue than most people realize.

  • For example, in this country people who are not British citizens, they don't have also massive rights recourse the public funds, meaning that they don't automatically get house.

  • One of the issues that that ties into, therefore, is the ability of people to come and live here with being in.

  • The people can come and live here, and it means they don't have a if he wants to run, of course.

  • But imagine what you would have found you could imagine.

  • It is possible to imagine think about this for a moment.

  • Let's say that we do say that everybody should have a course.

  • The public funds what will happen next?

  • Answer.

  • More people will come here because it's an automatic way off being out to get house, and so it's much more complex policy in the U.

  • S.

  • We're gonna get way off subject.

  • You're getting off north along times.

  • What I'm making is actually to simply say that somebody has no compassion without looking at the way that that person has worked.

  • In fact, in this case is London Mayor.

  • To try to solve homelessness is really not to look at the full track where I'm gonna move on from this precise element in a moment before we do.

  • I just want you seen since we've got you here, Where doesn't it go now In terms of, you know, Jeremy Corbyn is gonna stand down.

  • He said So other people, Some have called for him to stand out immediately.

  • He's not doing that.

  • Who would you support to take his place yourself?

  • I really don't think we should get into names right now because we've got some big, big question I think should happen very soon.

  • It should be done and dusted by.

  • It should be done and dusted Baster.

  • We need a new leader in place.

  • I have no plans to stand.

  • I think that there is a very strong case for the next leader of the Labour party to be a woman.

  • Is there anyone that you would like to stand?

  • I think we have some brilliant candidates out there.

  • People like Leeson, Andy just Phillips kissed armor.

  • Get your degree.

  • There are many, many good people out there, but I think we need first of all to be clear about the question that has to be answered on.

  • That question is about how do we reconnect with our working class Heartland, those people that deserted us at this election?

  • I think one thing that the prime minister was right about, that I agree about A lot of those people lent their votes to the Conservative Party.

  • This time we've got to get them back, and that requires a credible economic policy.

  • So we're trusted on the economy again, patriotism.

  • We love this country.

  • The Labour Party took the United Kingdom into NATO.

  • That's one of the proudest achievements of this party.

  • Ernest Bevin signed that document in 1948.

  • We are the party off off, defending our country off, standing up for our armed forces, and it's heartbreaking for me to hear what the gentleman there said.

  • I think he's a veteran himself that he couldn't support the party because he doesn't think we believe in national security.

  • On defense, we need to be a patriotic, realistic but radical party with the economic policies that recognize this conservative government has bean destroying this country and its public service is on dividing the economy up s o the rich get richer and the poor get poorer for nine long years.

  • Thank you.

elected on an ulcer blank campus of a manifesto.

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我們現在會發現真正的鮑里斯-約翰遜嗎?| 問題時間 - BBC (Are we going to discover the REAL Boris Johnson now? | Question Time - BBC)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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