Too many people plotting the success of their own ambitions ahead of their country.
@celticlofts8 ай бұрын
She was a better Prime Minister than anyone who came after her. Boris Johnson, who campaigned to get her out, eventually signed the deal she made with the EU.
@briangasser9734 ай бұрын
Boris won a mandate from the people, May lost seats and had a minority govt relying on supply and confidence from the DUP.
@ApoloniaJones19762 ай бұрын
Boris is a lazy loser, though. Of course he would take credit for a woman’s work.
@Galrukh8 ай бұрын
It is scary that Teresa May was the best prime minister of the lot. Watching Reese Mogg and Nadine is just infuriating, still so full of themselves and thinking they did the right thing all along when they plummeted the country into poverty and chaos.
@briangasser9734 ай бұрын
As a person who supported leave, JRM is a politician I support for being clear where he stands.
@davidjames96263 ай бұрын
So was Hitler @@briangasser973
@pauljones13762 ай бұрын
😂😂😂failed in every ministerial role ...how was she good .ol
@Galrukh2 ай бұрын
@@pauljones1376 no one said she was good, only that she was the best of them...
@xxxvvv91722 ай бұрын
die interviewes sind schon 4 Jahre alt.
@martinstent533910 ай бұрын
A lot of people criticizing those in power, politicians and civil servants because there wasn’t a plan. Well, what is apparent, is that the Brexiteers didn’t have a plan. All those questions in the run up to the Brexit vote like what about Northern Ireland, and who will we be trading with and what will we buy and sell, all brushed aside by the Brexiteers as stupid quibbles. But that was the very heart of the matter. They argued for Brexit without having the slightest plan about how it might be done, that was the real crime!!
@1sostatic10 ай бұрын
Camerons' Govt at the time did have a plan ... they put a referendum to the people with two choices on the ballot, knowing full well there are nationalists and Eurosceptics out there. It is true that Cameron had no plan if we voted to stay in, nor any plan if the vote went leave. ... there's your criminal... is the Tower of London still open for business?
@lawsonj3910 ай бұрын
The real crime was committed by the voters who supported those total idiots.
@clarissagafoor52229 ай бұрын
A small majority voted to leave the EU. It was a majority vote - you lot did it to yourselves. It might have worked had there been a plan - the Brits having a plan? what a laugh.
@keddw9 ай бұрын
@@clarissagafoor5222 It was a fair referendum.. The majority from that voted to leave that's how democracy works.
@RobBCactive9 ай бұрын
@@keddwnope, that's how democracy doesn't work, selling undeliverable things based on lies. Ignoring the obvious problems. What became obvious is how ignorant and clueless the people who made a career out of Euro-scepticism were about even the basics.
@Tom_murray893 ай бұрын
May was a much better prime minister than Boris Johnson , Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak. Also Boris didn’t give a shit about anything as long as he got his own way
@stephenreeds363210 ай бұрын
How dare Farridge criticise others for the mess that he brought about. Wish he'd just go away.
@DeeClarke-lg1hp3 ай бұрын
You can't even spell his name mate
@oasisarah2 ай бұрын
@@DeeClarke-lg1hp meh. its french. you can spell it however you want.
@svresh11 ай бұрын
Laura: "Was Theresa May a good Prime Minister?" Nadine: "No" I don't think Terry will be losing sleep over that dumbass thinking she was crap when Nadine publicly bums Boris at every opportunity even now
@PeterJames994 ай бұрын
At the end of the day, an extremely complex issue such as Britain’s leaving the EU, should NEVER have been left up to the public to vote on. The public voted for their government to represent them and to deal with complex issues not hand it back to the public and allow misrepresentation to determine the outcome. In the age of social media where everyone can lie and manipulate, there needs to be extra consideration given to major decisions voted by the public.
@riddlerandsa81616 ай бұрын
As an outsider, but former UK resident, I never understood why anybody was surprised that MPs, much less people, could not agree on a deal. It´s like asking a group of children do you want ice cream? They say yes but you didn´t tell them in advance that they would all have to agree on the same flavor!
@xxxvvv91722 ай бұрын
@77bobotheclown Жыл бұрын
As my dear mother would say, “A shower of bastards.”
@anonUK11 ай бұрын
I think they prefer to be called Conservatives.
@patobrien636410 ай бұрын
Incredible journalism Laura 👏 Brexit was an IDEA, with no detail of destination. I sat with 3 British friends in Dublin, their jaws dropped, greatly stunned. A decision to leave, fine , but the detail of what was being asked, unthought of ?? Thank you for your documentary 😘😎
@poco996410 ай бұрын
It was detailed and the destination was to avoid the EU tax incentive that was going to be impossed on the British overseas tax havens. If we had actual independent reporting in the UK, you would have heard about it on the mainstream news. Trouble is they are in bed with the politicians and have as much to gain from Brexit.
@jazzhands77719 ай бұрын
How much were you paid to say that? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Hiram10007 ай бұрын
@dogkicker100 Only somebody with a zero understanding of basic economics and geopolitics would come out with a statement like that! Here in Ireland, our initial reaction to the disaster that is Brexit was smugness. Now, its pity. And you'll never understand what you've done to your own country. That ability is the preserve of the.. .....what's the word I'm looking for?
@xxxvvv91724 ай бұрын
@dogkicker100 sehr interessant.
@xxxvvv91724 ай бұрын
@@Hiram1000 Sie haben wohl nicht verstanden
@staticcentrehalf716611 ай бұрын
Gotta love a political documentary with heavy strings in the background. The only thing missing is Peter Hennessy (that'll date me) saying: "Meanwhile, back in Whitehall..."
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
I hate stupid Hague
@dennisgreene716410 ай бұрын
The issue of Brexit was not necessarily about the result - it was the about way the referendum was conducted. A simple binary question on should we stay or should we go was totally inappropriate for such a major issue. This was effectively a major change to the UK Constitution, even it was not acknowledged as such. If you look at nations such as the US, such a change would require agreement across multiple houses and by substantial margins in both Senate and State legislatures. No change of this magnitude should happen on such a tiny percentile as Brexit. This has not only destroyed the UK economy and prospects, it has also set the bar for future referenda - Scotland would insist, I am sure, on a simple majority for independence now given the Brexit result. So would a vote for Irish Union. No country on earth should ever go down simplistic route to massive economic, constitutional and political change.
@Henry-vu5sg8 ай бұрын
Tosh. You hate democracy I see.
@briangasser9734 ай бұрын
The UK joined the EEC without a referendum. The 1970s referendum was held after the UK joined. You would have to apply the same process to joining also.
@xxxvvv91724 ай бұрын
@@Henry-vu5sg Blödsinn
@johncronin95408 күн бұрын
@@Henry-vu5sg. You should read what Dennis is writing, and learn why the U.S. functions the way it does, and why the founders and framers constructed such a system, though it does have its flaws, and is currently being tested here like it never has before. The fact is that there is no nation which has direct democracy as its form of government. Instead, and in part because governing in the modern world is extremely complex, we don’t submit every bit of legislation to every citizen to vote on. Instead, we elect REPRESENTATIVES to represent us in a deliberative body, a legislature, vested with the power to legislate, to raise revenue, to appropriate funds to implement legislation. The vast majority of people simply do not have the time, between work, raising a family, and every other aspect of everyday life, to carefully study every proposal, and be able to vote intelligently. There are also many “low information” voters (or those who don’t even bother to vote) who have almost no information about anything political, even though the decisions that are made will impact their lives in ways they cannot even begin to imagine. This isn’t ideal, but that’s reality, and it’s precisely why, in most countries and states, something as fundamental as amending a constitution (or fundamental law) requires more than a simple majority. It’s also why, here in the U.S., power is specifically divided among three separate but interdependent branches, in order that they may check and balance each other. We want democracy, but not a tyranny of the majority, and for that majority to use its power to strip away the basic rights of minorities. The goal is understanding that no single individual should have too much power, because human nature is such that power can easily corrupt. The goal also is to try to create a system where a demagogue cannot easily obtain power, but as our recent history here in the U.S. should indicate, that’s not always easy to do. I don’t want to get too involved in U.S. issues, as that is not the topic of this video. But the fact is that the campaign favoring Brexit LIED to the people, obvious lies, plastered all over a bus, yet enough people swallowed those lies to vote leave by a very narrow majority, and one that exposed a danger to the future of the UK. The way the vote broke down, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Wales, and metropolitan London voted to remain, the rest of England voted to leave. So don’t be surprised if the economy continues to sour, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Wales decide they would rather rejoin the EU, and leave England. To many in those countries, their votes and voice is as ignored in Westminster as in Brussels, because the vast majority of the UK’s population happens to be English. In Parliament, rarely do the major parties have to consider the wishes of the other countries (Scotland, N.I., and Wales). So, no. Disagreement with you, or with the results of an election, or a government’s policy does NOT mean that we hate democracy. We just have different understandings of how democracy should be implemented, and how it should function.
@mango20058 ай бұрын
The principle of Brexit was on the ballot in 2016, but not the exact form it would take. Different Brexiteers disagreed on whether to stay in the Single Market or not, whether to continue freedom of movement or not. Its not surpriising that when it became time to legislate on this and negotiate a Brexit deal, that these divisions - which were not only along Leave-Remain lines but also within the Leave side, would become more important.
@JohnHillRSNStudios2 ай бұрын
Teresa May was not a great prime minister, but was the best of those five. One wonders what would have happened if she had opted to seek a second referendum to confirm leaving the EU or to change course and remain in instead of going for a general election. Had she put her plan before the people in a referendum and the people opted to change their mind, then she would have stayed in and managed to stay in power.
@biprajeetdas23611 ай бұрын
This deserves more viewership
@tris_tube Жыл бұрын
Hats off to Gavin Williamson for somehow being the most unpleasant person in this doc. Truly an achievement.
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
He did get the right name for spider it sounded like Corona virus!
@tarquinbullocks170311 ай бұрын
The competition is tough. Reese Mogg? I suppose Dorries escapes with rank stupidity over unpleasantness. I can barely look at Amber Rudd without being put off my dinner. She and May were the Home Office operators who victimised Windrush immigrants and demonised and persecuted immigrants in general. Rudd's position as a minister eventually became untenable due to being a serial liar regarding her denial of various of her departmental decisions and misleading the House. May should always be remembered for the "Go Home Or Face Arrest," vans - which even Farage found distasteful - among her many other repugnant policies. Essentially a shower of shits, regardless.
@aaronjohnson691611 ай бұрын
I'll see your Gavin Williamson and raise you..with Matt Hancock.
@someenglishguy11 ай бұрын
I think Jacob Rees Mogg takes that honour, in my eyes. Absolutely loathsome snake
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
@@someenglishguy he should be against ticket office closures and online shopping
@DP-tf7qb2 ай бұрын
Nadine Dorries is just something else - how did she get to be an MP?!
@JupiterThunder2 ай бұрын
She got more votes than the other guy.
@DP-tf7qb2 ай бұрын
@@JupiterThunder They voted for the party, not for her!
@bill879111 ай бұрын
I still want to know what JRM actually did when he was minister for brexit opportunities. It appears he couldn't find any.
@kumstuke10 ай бұрын
He found opportunities but just for himself 😂
@MrThom893 ай бұрын
Something about more powerful vacuum cleaners. That’s literally about it.
@DonJuanMarco199410 ай бұрын
It is one amazing documentary.
@lancechinnian404311 ай бұрын
May was actually one of the good guys! Decent, hard working and honourable. But surrounded by a bunch of back stabbers 😢
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
No she wasn't..dreadful leader.
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
Talks like Rachel Reeves likes shoes like Rayner..May didn't sort out domestic taxation
@JohnHillRSNStudios11 ай бұрын
I don’t think she was either good or bad. I think she was in over her head and just made too many mistakes.
@daithipol11 ай бұрын
@JohnHillRSNStudios and their next idea was Johnson then Truss... hilarious!! I have no idea on Sunak
@smellslikethinice110711 ай бұрын
@@JohnHillRSNStudios What... like all of them...floating around, waiting for a miracle, while also raiding the whole countries silver.
@uyd Жыл бұрын
Oh please...Nigel Farage has never taken public transport anwhere in his life
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
He did the train to boarding school
@BossySwan11 ай бұрын
Farage in the bus garage
@anaitali825611 ай бұрын
For those politicians who campaigned for Brexit…realised the saying, ‘Be careful what you wish for, because that wish might come true’ and it did!
@BigBadJohn535811 ай бұрын
I was one of the 17.41 million people in the country who voted to leave and I don't think we've got our wish, we should've left the whole thing including the ECHR and ECJ and as we've stayed in those things we are still being controlled from Europe and were forced to put a trade barrier between Northern Ireland and mainland UK, effectively Northern Ireland were thrown under the Brexit bus.
@kumstuke10 ай бұрын
@@BigBadJohn5358😂😂😂 Pls stop reading Daily Mail Unless you were sarcastic then I can get behind on what you said
@MaximusOwen110 ай бұрын
I’m ashamed to say I fell for the Leave nonsense and voted out. Really not sure why, I wasn’t exactly young (mid 20’s) and really ought to have known better, I think it was because I watched Farage on Question Time when I was at university and thought he was a good orator. I knew I and the rest of the country had made a huge howler literally the morning after when I saw the pound value plummet and Boris Johnson’s glum face on the TV. Safe to say I won’t be making that mistake again and I’m far more cynical now, suspect we will quietly rejoin the single market again maybe in the Parliament after next, but I don’t think we’ll ever rejoin the political institutions for decades.
@watermelon79982 ай бұрын
I think you might still be a bit mixed up. I'm European: why do you want to join the single market but not the "political institutions"? you don't want to sit at the tables , committees, councils and parliament where they make the decisions about the rules? the rules that you will have to keep? or do you think you can be part of the single market without keeping its rules and standards?
@MaximusOwen12 ай бұрын
@@watermelon7998 I didn’t say I personally didn’t want to rejoin the political institutions - it’s just that the issue is still far too politically toxic for anyone to consider re-joining them for at least a decade. I’m personally not fussed about being a rule taker inside the single market/customs union, most of the rules we were perfectly happy with for decades and were very profitable for us as a country.
@watermelon79982 ай бұрын
@@MaximusOwen1 Oh OK, I understand. Would people be happy with the free movement of labour, you think?
@fasttrack7011 ай бұрын
Shame laura actually didn't hold them all to account when she was interviewing them and then parrot tory propaganda lines on twitter defending them
@RobBCactive9 ай бұрын
Yeah, the political control forcing the BBC to try to polish the turd was too evident. Brexit ideas don't like scrutiny and Laura isn't exactly well equipped to scrutinise in depth.
@system19126 ай бұрын
Her biased towards the Conservatives was laughable really.
@johnnywhite5811 ай бұрын
NICK AND FEE - WHY DO YOU THINK YOU WERE BADLY TREATED? YOUR FAULT !
@pjb46511 ай бұрын
Makes you realise how rubbish the UK's political system is.
@aaropajari705811 ай бұрын
It is not. It is populated by light-weights that's all.
@y975nbh10 ай бұрын
No mention of the referendum being non-binding, which was a major reason there was no plan.
@scaramouche8539 ай бұрын
“The government will implement what you decide” Everyone went into this thing knowing full well that it would be implemented. This is just a pathetic remoaner loophole they tried to wriggle out of because they lost. If you do not believe me, watch the entirety of the BBC’s referendum nights coverage.. it’s on here. All the politicians and political pundits all talking about its implementation. Not one of them makes reference to ‘advisory only’ or ‘non binding’ if it was non binding why did the ‘stronger in’ crowd go him crying like the bed wetters they are?
@Mr---mr4ll Жыл бұрын
Saw all three episodes on iPlayer. It was really well made. And crazy to relive the nightmare we found ourselves in and will continue to be in for a decade to come
@marksandsmith6778 Жыл бұрын
Millions of us driven mad m8.
@castlelord8995 Жыл бұрын
Watched them all also. Surprised how much I enjoyed them
@oldmanc28 ай бұрын
Add an "s" on the end of "decade"
@slavomirolsovsky69783 ай бұрын
It's still shocking to see such a wonderful nation end up in such a mess.
@benedictdesilva667711 ай бұрын
39:27 _...Referenda tend to embolden and empower the extremes of debate..._ 39:43 _...Referendums drive a very deep wedge into the political psyche..._ *"What on earth are these guys talking about?"* asks a Swiss voter, who participates in 4-5 elections every year on multitudes of referenda. In fact there have been over 700 decisions by referendum in the last 175 years *at federal level alone* - during which *every* decision of any import is/has been subject to public vote.
@Conorguill10 ай бұрын
The effect of referendums are very different in the UK political system than in the Swiss (or even on other Euro countries such as Ireland). The former is traditionally first-past-the-post, winner takes all and the latter much more about finding consensus.
@benedictdesilva667710 ай бұрын
@@Conorguill The FPTP system in the UK is used in a limited aspect of democracy: namely *representation,* i.e., electing MPs to the House of Commons. At the national level there are as many *posts-to-get-past* as there are parliamentary constituencies-however the individual voter usually has one-shot in years to determine the unitary outcome in a single constituency, i.e., the MP for *one-and-only-one* of a total of 650. Though it is true that the Swiss system of electing MPs every four years is proportional, a referendum is an expression of the *direct participatory* aspect of democracy, and not of the difference-posited by you-between FPTP and proportional systems of the electing representatives. National referendums are extremely rare-usually occurring far less frequently than parliamentary elections do-except in the Swiss system where they take place 4-5 times every year, indeed 15-20 times more frequently than parliamentary elections do. One thing that does not apply to referendum elections is the question of *FPTP or proportional,* your explanation does not hold for direct participatory democracy.
@sinOsiris10 ай бұрын
good video presentation
@blocklit5 ай бұрын
Checks and balances are absolutely important to a country whose politicians are rotten and with a government running round like a headless chicken.
@razabadass3 ай бұрын
Thank you :)
@johnnywhite5811 ай бұрын
anyone watching this during the covid enquiry?
@LouieSapcote-vy5xl5 ай бұрын
If May had followed her beliefs instead of caving in to Truss and idiots .she may still be PM.(no guts)
@pjb46511 ай бұрын
Starts in 2016 after the BBC had collaborated in the calamity.
@ZSTOREY10 ай бұрын
How self absorbed are these people? It is all about them.
@thucydidescallas52510 ай бұрын
Right! They should be ashamed of themselves. I am so disgusted.
@wilverbal10 ай бұрын
38:10 Absolutely guarantee that Farage was saying he's gotten death threats galore for years and that the BBC cut that part out.
@jeromefitzroy9 ай бұрын
He’s the biggest villain. He campaigned for Brexit then disappeared when the hard work came
@mikeharper34598 ай бұрын
@@jeromefitzroyFarage has always been a snaggle toothed gadfly - he’s a dishonest populist clown (aren’t they all???)
@MrThom893 ай бұрын
Actual elected officials get them all the time. Others have been murdered. Farages crocodile tears
@ewen6669 ай бұрын
for all her faults. I have absolutely no doubt that Theresa May loves her country and wants the best for its people.
@y3puGnxg Жыл бұрын
Laura left Corbyn the main opposition leader deliberately. The whole media is a waste of time and money.
@annenunney990711 ай бұрын
I agree she has not been holding these tories to account
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
?
@Celtic2Realms2 ай бұрын
Michael Gove was correct that Boris would not be a good Prime Minister
@folasadegiwa630511 ай бұрын
THANKS SO MUCH MISS FOLASADE GIWA SAFIYAT GOOD BLESSiNG YOU TODARY AM ,?
@jinny46768 ай бұрын
Wow!! Cool. Thanks!!
@folasadegiwa630511 ай бұрын
THANKS SO MUCH MISS FOLASADE GIWA SAFIYAT GOOD BLESSING YOU TODARY AM ,?
@barbaraleonard7911 ай бұрын
Complete irony: her relentless spouting of the lies told by the irresponsible, helped lead to the chaos. No plan. No integrity.
@nicolaburch787811 ай бұрын
Crazy since she’s always voted Tory, she’s only telling the people how vile and narcissistic the Tories are
@PedroStephano9 ай бұрын
Years too late Laura. The time to ask these questions was then not now. You believed the smoke and mirrors. Brexit was and is idiotic, and our government was idiotic. The challenges from the press were non existant. Years too late Laura.
@LP6_yt9 ай бұрын
Quite.
@YABBAHEY19 ай бұрын
Welp, there's your problem right there. 59 minutes of politicians (so far) thinly disguised mirth or contempt for their fellow's plight or success in holding the best toy in the sandbox. While simultaneously failing to mention their constituents once.
@JacintasChromebook3 ай бұрын
if Britain was a normal country, civil servants voting to remain in the economic union you've been in for decades would be seen as a neutral thing to do. the fact that everyone is acting like its so shocking and political is why the Brits need to stay out of the EU? and: the way all remainers care about is how terrible Brexit has been for Britain. such a stupid selfish mindset, I think in their own selfish childish way Remainers are as Brexitty as Brexiters: all they care about is Britain's interests
@angied891911 ай бұрын
I love the portraits of Sir Robert Walpole and Pitt the Elder seen as the doors are flung open
@paulwild433011 ай бұрын
When politicians become stars on the stage they are not politicians anymore.
@KatyYoder-cq1kc8 ай бұрын
Amen
@system19126 ай бұрын
Theresa May was a non-Prime Minister. The country stood still the whole time. 😂😂
@nuergang72783 ай бұрын
"who's fault is this?" asks a woman whoes fault it was
@slightlyconfused87611 ай бұрын
Ironic that Laura Kuenssberg's amongst others, unwillingness to do her job properly and interview Tory politicians robustly rather than let then talk shit and get away with it, helped to produce this state of chaos. A disgrace to her profession.
@denbrown367611 ай бұрын
Laura revising her part again 😂 she seemed so chummy whenever she was with Boris and never adequately challenged him
@monklast97523 ай бұрын
It ain't over yet.
@cush68279 ай бұрын
Jacob Rees-Mogg needs to be in prison.
@briangasser9734 ай бұрын
He has a clear position on Brexit, rather than the Labour party. Maybe you want to look at the Speaker who was far from impartial about a dereliction of duty.
@cush68274 ай бұрын
@@briangasser973 What position?
@briangasser9734 ай бұрын
@@cush6827 He has been clear that he is for a hard Brexit before the referendum and after.
@cush68274 ай бұрын
@@briangasser973 all for his personal business gain
@JamietheroadrunnerАй бұрын
But how will he survive without his nanny?
@michaelgardner25818 ай бұрын
Every conservative MP's should have resigned there is no excuses for these people.
@simoncolombo66409 ай бұрын
I really don't understand why both sides in the UK keep thinking that the national interests of 27 countries was dependent on the composition of the UK Parliament.
@aaropajari705811 ай бұрын
39:15 certainly mastered the blank empty expression here.
@1951timbo9 ай бұрын
Teresa May got rid of 20000 police. Shame on the women.
@replicas109 ай бұрын
You're not entirely right about that, it was Cameron who started cutting expenditure on the police, May just continued his work.
@Abraham-uk4xy5 ай бұрын
Its impossible to be ready is a cop out answer. If Maggie Thatcher was the PM that would be an unacceptable answer.
@mygoodlord29609 ай бұрын
Who in their right mind votes for Alchi Doris?!
@hcsanli11 ай бұрын
That Nadine Dorris remark ‘ The PM has a right and has to shut down the parliament to set out his agenda!’ Wow
@chriswhite141711 ай бұрын
No mention of DUP deal?
@daithipol11 ай бұрын
No point ever dealing with DUP they don't know what's best for them or their part of Ireland. They also voted for Johnsons deal but are still campaigning against it while staying out of power. They are handing us a UI on a plate and the English are hoping they get it.
@joshualifetree53982 ай бұрын
She (May) delayed Brexit and when Boris took over COVID came over!
@kahhowong34179 ай бұрын
To make an Omelette you have to Break Eggs, but the odds are that you will get Scrambled Establishment Eggs,
@markashdown131410 ай бұрын
Great piece.
@Abraham-uk4xy11 ай бұрын
May was a good PM and a very decent person. A milder version of Maggie Thatcher. I would remember her walking up to number 10 in a yellow and blue skirt which looked super elegant.
@nickfreeman20938 ай бұрын
🤣
@Peter-ov6xh Жыл бұрын
Britain's problem is the lack of set political terms. Politicians and journalists are constantly stoking the turmoil which is not possible in the US where you have two-, four- and six-year intervals between the elections for House members, the President and Senators respectively.
@kerngezond6953 Жыл бұрын
But both share the same problem of a political system severely handicapped by its first past the post voting system. Setting political terms is a step forward but hardly Britains biggest issue.
@tarquinbullocks170311 ай бұрын
Journalists don't stoke political turmoil in the United States? You've never heard of Fox News, then.
@matthijslenaerts942311 ай бұрын
You have constant election seasons, incumbency rarely gets overturned by the opposing party but more likely by a more extreme primary opponent and you're home to fox news. Sit down. The US is a political hellhole.
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
He's been on trains don't lie
@vanCaldenborgh11 ай бұрын
@@kerngezond6953 Yes, both the US as UK have are flawed democracies with their election systems. A "popular vote" would immediately make different countries out of them.
@nigelbriggs688010 ай бұрын
Are you guys crazy? It was and is an economic disaster
@TrevorEden11 ай бұрын
It never been good but now there no vision.
@1002l2 ай бұрын
laura keunssberg is no andrew marr has to be said
@careydepass13010 ай бұрын
Canada's federal government had the same situation in 1995. When the Quebec sepratists nearly won the Quebec independence referendum, the Chretien administration from the first minister, elected government ministers to top federal government mandarins, provincial first ministers and thier bureacracies, they were clueless as to how they would facillitate Quebec leaving the federation. There was no plan. Luckily, the Quebec sepratists lost!
@BillyBombastic3 ай бұрын
Where is Victoria Derbyshire?
@hrishiraj8911 ай бұрын
Well look at the state of the UK. Is it not clear that the British people got it wrong.
@wilverbal11 ай бұрын
56:33 "and even Churchill's grandson!" So? It was Churchill's grandson, not Churchill.
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
Former Mid Sussex MP Sir Nicholas Soames.
@wilverbal11 ай бұрын
@@veggie42 I know who he is. The question is: So? It was Churchill's grandson, not Churchill. Who cares about someone just because he's Churchill's grandson? He's not a hero. He's not a national monument. He's just a descendant of a hero. I doubt anyone gave a damn when his uncle, Churchill's *son* Randolph, was voted out of Parliament. Being a descendant of a great and important man doesn't make you a great or important man.
@kopeducati10 ай бұрын
TM should have embraced the WTO/no deal option. Dragging ERG in the mayhem that would have come off it. And , while the country would have ground to a halt, evoke emergency powers and have a second vote....
@xlmailtop15855 ай бұрын
Oh . Come on . . Do not. . Say . ! Chaos . .WE on thé continent , WE do not have that feeling about YOU . ..
@shamkantaria11 ай бұрын
All political parties are the same
@ronanhaughey11966 ай бұрын
38:17 That lean forward and line was some machiavellian villain shit. Christ
@tomlevick2935Ай бұрын
Dorries is horrid. She's only spewing venom and throwing her toys out the pram. because she didn't get a peerage.
@tomharrison184911 ай бұрын
The prorogation was entirely legal. The SC judgment against it was unconstitutional. If it's the Queen's perogative, then it's the Queen's perogative.
@RobBCactive9 ай бұрын
Utter rot!! Remember when Brexit was about sovereignty of parliament? You had a mendacious liar, attempting to destroy our representative democracy, going against the will of parliament.
@donalmurphy290010 ай бұрын
Laura has the political acumen of a sausage roll really guys!!
@mzo.733311 ай бұрын
So tories that campaigned for it dragged to country into it not fulling believing it for what?... political points?
@DavidMyers-h7y10 ай бұрын
Lets use people power and vote in an election. What a joke, only two parties who choose our MPS for us. Whos only concern is how powerful they personally become. And how they can abuse there postion for present and future wealth.
@annenunney990711 ай бұрын
And she has been such a fan of the tories
@Conorguill10 ай бұрын
I think the die was cast early on May’s term. She tried to be more leave than the leavers and ended the possibility of a consensus approach
@ibrahimduran8239 ай бұрын
WHO WAS BREXIT USED TO CREATE A FIGHT WITHIN BRITAIN???. HOW WAS BREXIT USED TO DEVIDE AND CONQUER???
@hackneyslim Жыл бұрын
LK is as guilty as the rest of them for creating and profiting from the current situation.
@paulatB2B3 ай бұрын
Was May a good PM? Was Kuenssberg a good journalist? No and no.
@system19126 ай бұрын
The way the civil service behaved was shocking if they were that appalled and devastated then they should have resigned!
@liamb864411 ай бұрын
Ironic that most of those being interviewed were the more competent ones in the government
@tomharrison184911 ай бұрын
A very one-sided view of events.
@kennyryan62511 ай бұрын
Ahh Nadine Dorries, the Chief Ar5e-Licker to the Cabinet Office
@kumstuke10 ай бұрын
Her seat was wet each time when bojo spoke...
@Albert-Arthur-Wison22510 ай бұрын
Britain being broken.
@MWcrazyhorse11 ай бұрын
Superficial nonsense. As ofton with documentaries that are granted all access. That is why they are granted all access. To produce meaningless fluff.
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
Philip Hammond drew the kegislation of the referendum why was it only two sides? remain? and not reform the eu relationship at all. Johnson had to finally deal with what he did. Johnson a J corbyn
@mzo.733311 ай бұрын
May's Chief of Staff messed everything basically because of personal ambition
@Sam-lw6mx Жыл бұрын
Brexit, what a success 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
Cameron treated it like a toss of a coin at Eton . It wasn't it was supposed to be 2 sides. Elected. He went for a wasted deal instead of refusing or not going but going for Treaty change
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
Hague isn't very nice is stupid Hammond drew the Referendum Act with two questions. What's the remain? what's the leave?
@veggie4211 ай бұрын
The man would "fix" Brexit didn't. He made it worse and the man who gave Brexit without a middle question. The irony she wore red of Labour and Republicans. I wonder why Tory women resign in red.
@grahamariss211111 ай бұрын
Queen should never have authorised the proroguing of Parliament, she failed in her duty to protect Parliamentry system.
@FlabbaRoads11 ай бұрын
6:00 Helen also provided the karaoke machine for the lockdown parties