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  • good evening.

  • Boris Johnson says tempers need to calm down in Parliament after torrid scenes in the Commons last night, several MP say they've received death threats and partially blame Mr Johnson's words on Brexit for fuelling extremist behavior.

  • The prime minister says he totally deplores any threats to anybody, particularly female MPs, but has refused to apologize for his use of language.

  • Speaker of the Commons John Berko described the culture within the chamber is toxic and said it was the worst atmosphere he had ever witnessed in the House.

  • Our political editor Laura Kuhns Berg's report contained some very strong language.

  • We will not betray the people who said, subject to death threats and abuse.

  • I've never heard such humbug in all my life.

  • This'd the language, is it?

  • Politics has never bean for faint hearts is an idiot.

  • But there was poison in the air last night, right?

  • That is respectable.

  • Whatever your views, your language in the Commons appropriate.

  • Frustrated by a lack of Brexit progress, the prime minister is happy to provoke.

  • I totally deplore any threats to anybody, particularly female MPs and a lot of work is being done to stop that and to give people the security that they need.

  • But I do think it's important that in the House of Commons I should be able to talk about the Surrender Bill Surrender Act in the way that I did.

  • But this fury from Labour MPs that that kind of talk on encounter between a Labour MP in the Prime Minister's advisor Dominic Cummings in parliament was filmed by a member of the MPs team.

  • MP Karl Turner said he'd have death threats last night.

  • Mr Cummings Answer.

  • Get Brexit done.

  • Tell me to get in the Commons itself a sense of disbelief for a moment.

  • The morning after the night before yesterday, the house did itself no credit.

  • Still rage, though, from a friend of the murdered MP Jo Cox.

  • When I hear of my friend's murder on the way that it has made me and my colleagues feel I'm feel scared described as humbug, I actually don't feel anger towards the prime minister.

  • I feel pity for those of you who still have to toe his line.

  • One MP there told me, Everyone's a hypocrite.

  • Every side is guilty.

  • It was yesterday.

  • She was the person I could hear screaming the loudest from her.

  • But most of the iron was reserved for the prime minister to dismiss concerns from members about the death threats they receive on to dismiss concerns that the language used by the prime minister is being repeated in those death threats is reprehensible, Mr Speaker, the prime minister is not fit for office.

  • His behavior is an outrage on his government is treating people disgracefully.

  • Yet the prime minister's backers believe Brexit's opponents will do almost anything to attack him.

  • There is a strategy.

  • The prime minister is the last thing standing between ending the Brexit enterprise entirely.

  • He can expect no quarter.

  • Absolutely everything is gonna be thrown at him.

  • Was he prepared to gather his Cabinet?

  • The prime minister said tempers need to come down.

  • But the chances of him listening to this reprimand from a predecessor in number 10 by slim to none words such a saboteur, traitor, enemies, surrender, betrayal.

  • We should have no place in our party, no place in our political discourse, nor in our politics and nor, for that matter, in our wider society.

  • But whatever the difficulty, whatever the distress, there is no intention in Downing Street's none.

  • It all off, pulling back from their overall tough approach a belief even.

  • This is a pent up conflict that must play out to clear the way for Brexit patting each other on the back.

  • When there's so much frustration in every corner of the country on this political village, the government playing tough appeals to some but could cause other voters to take fright.

  • Lawrenceburg, ABC News West Mr.

  • Well, the tone in parliament was very different today as the impact of last night's exchanges sank in.

  • But what are people outside Westminster think of the language some MPs have been using?

  • Our political correspondent, Alex Forsyth, reports now from the conservative health constituency of Walsall North, which voted to leave the EU.

  • Life on this factory floor feels a far cry from the chaos in Westminster.

  • This firm near Warsaw makes and designs high end door and window fittings and plenty here.

  • Think Parliament needs to get a grip.

  • I've never heard such humbug in all my life.

  • Director Paul is craving an end to Brexit uncertainty that isn't filled with confidence after watching the House of Commons, it is a business.

  • We just couldn't act in that way, we need to keep planning way.

  • Need to keep moving forward on this kind of almost childish behavior is not what you want to see.

  • Peters from Slovakia and has lived in the UK for eight years.

  • He thinks the political discourse is stoking division.

  • You know, using that kind of language in there like trail stuff, because it's probably fueling that.

  • This'll is a conservative constituency, but only by a narrow margin.

  • Most people here voted leave is the kind of place Number 10 hopes its firm, Brexit Message will play well from the start.

  • Boris Johnson has tried to paint himself as the man who will stick up for the Brexit backing Public Person will deliver.

  • For those who voted, leave on a language he's using is all part of that strategy.

  • Trying to put himself on the side of the people versus what he portrays as a parliament trying to hinder Brexit.

  • Critics say it's a deeply divisive tactic, but for some of the coffee and grill it's working.

  • Is writing a good many things, Really, That's what people call in to is convinced one of the language could have used.

  • They've been chased by Paul with one concern.

  • They're hypocrites.

  • Country belted out where the in like it or not the country about Brexit.

  • But his son doesn't trust Boris Johnson or anyone.

  • I felt on my God of article concerned with Maguindanao because I, item or staff to get love now makes you go.

  • For many, the heated arguments are simply a turn off, but they never seem to.

  • I agree with each other dough that it's to flop one long battle all a toy at the local pet shop.

  • There's an even stronger view, the public thinking.

  • This is what we wrote it for.

  • This is our government on its disgraceful.

  • So while Westminster continues to wrangle, the country continues toe watch still divided on increasingly frustrated Alex Forsyth, BBC News.

good evening.

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首相鮑里斯-約翰遜在議會中的語言爭論-BBC News (Prime Minister Boris Johnson in parliament language row- BBC News)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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