11/12/2016 Sunday Politics South East


11/12/2016

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 11/12/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

It's Sunday morning and this is the Sunday Politics.

:00:35.:00:39.

A row has broken out between Number Ten and former

:00:40.:00:42.

Cabinet minister Nicky Morgan over Brexit and, believe it or not,

:00:43.:00:45.

the price of Theresa May's leather trousers.

:00:46.:00:50.

I feel as though I'm one of the people that

:00:51.:00:52.

If you do that, you are likely to attract attention,

:00:53.:00:56.

It's not just Nicky Morgan making life difficult

:00:57.:01:07.

for the Prime Minister - we'll be taking a look at the rest

:01:08.:01:10.

Fully paid-up rebel Ken Clarke joins us live.

:01:11.:01:14.

Protestors disrupted a speech by Jeremy Corbyn yesterday,

:01:15.:01:16.

but is his biggest problem Labour's miserable performance

:01:17.:01:18.

And in the South East: and Corbyn critic Chris Leslie

:01:19.:01:46.

think of it as an early Christmas present from us.

:01:47.:01:50.

We guarantee you won't be disappointed.

:01:51.:01:52.

And speaking of guaranteed disappointments - I'm joined

:01:53.:01:54.

by three of the busiest little elves in political journalism.

:01:55.:01:56.

It's Iain Martin, Polly Toynbee and Tom Newton Dunn.

:01:57.:01:58.

So, we knew relations between Theresa May and some

:01:59.:02:05.

of her backbenchers over Europe weren't exactly a bed of roses.

:02:06.:02:11.

But signs of how fractious things are getting come courtesy of this

:02:12.:02:17.

morning's Mail on Sunday which has the details of a series of texts

:02:18.:02:20.

from one of Mrs May's senior advisers to and concerning

:02:21.:02:23.

the former Cabinet minister Nicky Morgan.

:02:24.:02:28.

Mrs Morgan is one of those arguing for a so-called soft Brexit,

:02:29.:02:32.

and has been pressing the PM to reveal more of her negotiation

:02:33.:02:35.

She's also apparently irked Downing Street by questioning

:02:36.:02:42.

Mrs May's decision to purchase and be photographed in a ?995 pair

:02:43.:02:49.

She said she had "never spent that much money on anything apart

:02:50.:02:54.

Mrs Morgan was due to attend a meeting at Number 10 this week

:02:55.:03:04.

But that invitation seems to be off, after a fairly extraordinary

:03:05.:03:08.

argument by text message with Mrs May's joint chief

:03:09.:03:10.

She texted the MP Alistair Burt, another of those arguing

:03:11.:03:20.

for a so-called soft Brexit, cancelling Nicky Morgan's invitation

:03:21.:03:27.

and telling him to not "bring that woman to Number Ten again".

:03:28.:03:31.

The following day Nicky Morgan texted Fiona Hill, saying

:03:32.:03:34.

"If you don't like something I have said or done, please

:03:35.:03:36.

If you don't want my views in future meetings you need to tell them."

:03:37.:03:50.

Shortly afterwards she received the reply "Well, he just did.

:03:51.:03:55.

And according to the Mail, Mrs Morgan, who you'll see

:03:56.:04:00.

in our film shortly, has now been formally banned

:04:01.:04:02.

So, Tom, much ado about nothing or telling you about the underlying

:04:03.:04:18.

tensions over Brexit? Both, if I am allowed to choose both. It says

:04:19.:04:22.

something about British politics today, that this is the most

:04:23.:04:25.

important thing we can find to talk about, because the Government are

:04:26.:04:29.

not giving us anything to talk about cs especially on Brexit because they

:04:30.:04:32.

don't have a plan as we know. There is is a lot of truth that are being

:04:33.:04:37.

spoken from this row, one is that Mrs May comes into Downing Street

:04:38.:04:42.

with a lot of baggage including spectacular fall outs with Cabinet

:04:43.:04:45.

Ministers in the past. Nicky Morgan being one. We heard about the row

:04:46.:04:53.

over banning children from school. She fell out with Boris Johnson, so,

:04:54.:04:57.

she then enters Number Ten with history. When you are in Number Ten

:04:58.:05:04.

you start, you cannot be controversial and my way but the

:05:05.:05:12.

high way, which is why Fiona Hill kept Theresa May in the Home Office.

:05:13.:05:16.

You need to behave differently in the top job. It is surprising Nicky

:05:17.:05:22.

Morgan hats taken such a robust line. She seemed such a gentle soul

:05:23.:05:28.

as a minister. She did, Brexit has done funny things to people.

:05:29.:05:33.

Everything has been shaken up. It reveals really how paranoid they

:05:34.:05:37.

are, I mean you cannot have a situation really in which the, in

:05:38.:05:43.

which you know, Number Ten has got realise if the Prime Minister's

:05:44.:05:49.

entire stick is her authenticity and incredible connection, which is

:05:50.:05:53.

genuine, with voters outside the Metropolitan bubble, when she

:05:54.:05:58.

chooses to wear ?995 leather trousers you have to anticipate that

:05:59.:06:02.

journalists and MPs are going to take the mickey, that is how life

:06:03.:06:06.

works, but I think they are trying to run Number Ten as they ran the

:06:07.:06:11.

Home Office, and you see that in the rows they have had with Mark Carney

:06:12.:06:14.

and Boris Johnson this week, now you might be able to run one Government

:06:15.:06:20.

department in that control freakish way but not Government will hold

:06:21.:06:23.

together for too long, if it is run in that fashion. By try doing the

:06:24.:06:27.

whole Government like one department. This is just the start,

:06:28.:06:32.

Polly, we are still several months away from triggering Article 50. We,

:06:33.:06:39.

The Tory party is split down the middle, the thing that mattered most

:06:40.:06:43.

to the nation since the last war, it is not frivolous. It may look as if

:06:44.:06:48.

it is about trousers, it is about the most serious thing. What was

:06:49.:06:53.

split down the middle? Aren't the Euro-files and the Eurosceptics used

:06:54.:06:58.

to be the outliers, it is now the Europhiles, it is not a split down

:06:59.:07:04.

the middle. They won't vote against Brexit but they will, I think exert

:07:05.:07:07.

the maximum influence they can, to make sure that it is not a Brexit, a

:07:08.:07:12.

self-harming Brexit, to make sure that the country understand, when it

:07:13.:07:15.

comes to that point, that there may be really hard decision to make, do

:07:16.:07:21.

you want a real economic damage to be done to the country, to your own

:07:22.:07:27.

wallet, in, in exchange for being able to stop free movement or is

:07:28.:07:30.

that trade off in the end going to be just too expensive? We have seen

:07:31.:07:34.

polls suggesting people are beginning to move, and not willing,

:07:35.:07:40.

a poll out now saying people wouldn't be willing to sacrifice any

:07:41.:07:44.

money at all, for the sake of stopping immigration. So if itself

:07:45.:07:47.

comes to that trade off, the people are going to need to be confronted

:07:48.:07:55.

with that choice. The Irony is, I think the Tories are in the most

:07:56.:07:59.

exceptionally strong position, I mean what is happening here is that

:08:00.:08:04.

British politics is being realigned and remade along leave and remain

:08:05.:08:09.

lines, if the Prime Minister's luck hold, the Tories are looking at

:08:10.:08:16.

being somewhere 45, 46, 47% of the vote with an opposition split

:08:17.:08:20.

between a far left Labour Party and depleted Liberal Democrats, that

:08:21.:08:23.

sound like a recipe for something similar to what happened in the

:08:24.:08:29.

1980s. You are seeing extraordinary alliances between left and right.

:08:30.:08:33.

The Scottish referendum rebuilt Scottish politics along the lines of

:08:34.:08:38.

pro independence, anti-independence and now Brexit maybe doing the same.

:08:39.:08:43.

So, rows within the Conservative Party over the price

:08:44.:08:45.

of trousers might be new, but over Europe, not so much.

:08:46.:08:48.

And this week's Commons vote on when the Government will fire

:08:49.:08:51.

the starting gun on Brexit, and what it will say

:08:52.:08:53.

about its plans before it does so, confirmed that instead

:08:54.:08:55.

of the eurosceptics being the outsiders,

:08:56.:08:57.

it's now the Remainers who are leading the resistance.

:08:58.:08:59.

While the Prime Minister was schmoozing in the gold-plated

:09:00.:09:08.

Gulf this week, back home the Commons was voting

:09:09.:09:11.

on a Labour motion forcing her to publish a plan for Brexit.

:09:12.:09:14.

Through some parliamentary jiggery-pokery, the Government

:09:15.:09:15.

basically got its way, but it did provide a platform

:09:16.:09:18.

for some mischiefmaking by Tory MPs who voted to remain,

:09:19.:09:23.

We are getting somewhat tired, are we not, of this constant level

:09:24.:09:32.

of abuse, this constant criticism that we are somehow Remoaners

:09:33.:09:35.

that want to thwart the will of the people,

:09:36.:09:38.

go back on it and that we don't accept the result.

:09:39.:09:43.

I don't like the result, and yes, I do believe the people

:09:44.:09:48.

It's not good enough that these things are dragged

:09:49.:09:51.

out of the Government by opposition day motions.

:09:52.:09:53.

I'm pleased that it's happened but I wish the Government was taking

:09:54.:09:56.

Is Nicky Morgan really listening to her constituents

:09:57.:10:01.

I think I'm one of the people who stuck their head

:10:02.:10:09.

above the parapet so if you do that you're likely to attract attention,

:10:10.:10:12.

you're likely to attract abuse, but also actually levels of support.

:10:13.:10:14.

I'm having e-mails from around the country with people saying thank

:10:15.:10:17.

you for what you are doing, party members around

:10:18.:10:19.

the country saying thank you for what you are doing

:10:20.:10:22.

and saying, and I and others will continue to do that.

:10:23.:10:25.

I just think, as a backbench Member of Parliament,

:10:26.:10:28.

you've got to be there, particularly when we have a weak

:10:29.:10:30.

opposition, to ask the question that government needs to be scrutinised

:10:31.:10:33.

on before we embark on such a huge issue.

:10:34.:10:40.

Nobody comes into politics to become a thorn in their party leader's

:10:41.:10:43.

side, but at the end of the day it's such a massive issue that

:10:44.:10:47.

if you don't stand up for what you believe in,

:10:48.:10:49.

I'm not sure what the point is of going into politics.

:10:50.:10:55.

That puts her on a collision course with activists in her local

:10:56.:10:58.

party like Adam Stairs, a committed leader who accuses

:10:59.:11:00.

Nicky has promised me and the rest of our Conservative association

:11:01.:11:05.

she will be voting for Article 50 and she will support

:11:06.:11:08.

the Prime Minister's timetable, and we have just got to trust that

:11:09.:11:11.

and hope that goes ahead, but there's a lot of people

:11:12.:11:13.

who think she's taking sideswipes at the Government

:11:14.:11:15.

The Conservatives are very popular, she wants to be a Conservative MP

:11:16.:11:19.

and we want to see a Conservative government being

:11:20.:11:21.

I have no idea what she's playing at, I think she just needs to get

:11:22.:11:29.

on with her job as an MP, which she does very well,

:11:30.:11:32.

Now let's head to Anna Soubry's constituency nearby to see

:11:33.:11:35.

how her stance is going down with the voters.

:11:36.:11:38.

If Anna Soubry doesn't fully back Brexit, what does

:11:39.:11:40.

Well, she's going to have a little bit of a problem because the voters,

:11:41.:11:45.

especially in this area, they voted to come out of the EU

:11:46.:11:48.

so she will definitely have a little bit of a problem.

:11:49.:11:51.

She should stick for what she believes in,

:11:52.:11:53.

but I guess from a democratic perspective she does...

:11:54.:11:55.

She has admitted the fact over and over again that she wanted

:11:56.:12:12.

to remain, but her views at the moment, even in her e-mails,

:12:13.:12:14.

depicted the fact she's anti-Brexit still.

:12:15.:12:16.

Theresa May will host her most pro-European MPs at Downing Street

:12:17.:12:21.

this week to discuss the countdown to Brexit.

:12:22.:12:23.

Although now we know not everyone is invited.

:12:24.:12:32.

And the MP leading the resistance in the Commons on Wednesday

:12:33.:12:38.

was Ken Clarke, he was the only Conservative MP who voted

:12:39.:12:40.

against the Government's plan to trigger Article 50 by the end

:12:41.:12:43.

of March and he joins us now from Nottingham.

:12:44.:12:46.

Welcome back to the programme Ken Clarke. Now, tell me this when David

:12:47.:12:51.

Cameron resigned after losing the referendum, you had to pick a new

:12:52.:12:57.

leader, which candidate did the Tory Europhiles like you put up to

:12:58.:13:01.

deliver a so-called soft Brexit, or no Brexit at all? Well, I can't

:13:02.:13:07.

speak for the others but I voted for Theresa May, I gave a notorious

:13:08.:13:13.

interview, it wasn't meant to be, I was chatting to Malcolm Rifkind but

:13:14.:13:18.

somebody turned a camera on, I called her a bloody difficult woman

:13:19.:13:21.

which the Tory party probably needs, compared with Margaret Thatcher and

:13:22.:13:25.

said I was going to vote for her, I gave a vote for one of the younger

:13:26.:13:30.

ones first, but I told Teresa I would vote for her, she was the only

:13:31.:13:36.

serious candidate in my view. You voted for somebody you thought was a

:13:37.:13:39.

difficult woman, she is being difficult in ways you don't like,

:13:40.:13:42.

your side of the Tory party, you had your chance to put up somebody more

:13:43.:13:48.

in line with you, instead you shut up, so, why the complaints about it

:13:49.:13:53.

not going in your direction? I am not making complaint, it is not

:13:54.:13:57.

Teresa's fall we are in the dreadful mess, she was on the Remain side,

:13:58.:14:01.

she made a good speech during the campaign on the referendum, setting

:14:02.:14:04.

out the economic case for being in, setting out the security case for

:14:05.:14:07.

being in, which was Home Secretary, she was particularly expert in, it

:14:08.:14:12.

wasn't her fault that not a word it was reported anywhere, in the

:14:13.:14:17.

national media. Now, my views have been the same, I am afraid

:14:18.:14:21.

throughout my adult life, for the 50 years I have been in politics, and

:14:22.:14:25.

my views have been the mainstream policy of the Conservative Party

:14:26.:14:29.

throughout all that time, I don't expect to have a sudden conversion

:14:30.:14:34.

on the 24th June, and I think what I owe to my constituency, and to

:14:35.:14:38.

Parliament, is that I exercise my judgment, I make speeches giving my

:14:39.:14:43.

reasons, I make the best judgment that I can, of what is the national

:14:44.:14:47.

interest. I understand that. I would be a terrible hypocrite if I... Of

:14:48.:14:54.

course that is not what I am asking. How many Conservative MPs do you

:14:55.:14:59.

think you can count on to oppose this so-called hard Brexit? Is it

:15:00.:15:06.

40, 20, 10, 5, 1? I have no idea, because Anna, and Nicky, who you

:15:07.:15:10.

have just seen on the video who are also sticking to their principle,

:15:11.:15:13.

they are only saying what they are been saying ever since they have

:15:14.:15:17.

been in politics, probably may have more idea than me.

:15:18.:15:28.

That is three, how many more? I don't know, we will find out. We are

:15:29.:15:36.

living in a bubble in which the tone of politics is getting nastier and

:15:37.:15:42.

the reporting is getting sillier, so it is all about Theresa May's

:15:43.:15:46.

trousers and whether Boris has made some inappropriate jokes. What we

:15:47.:15:50.

need if we are going to abandon the basis upon which we made ourselves a

:15:51.:15:54.

leading political power in the world for the last 40 years and the basis

:15:55.:15:59.

upon which our economy has prospered because Margaret Thatcher got the

:16:00.:16:02.

others to adopt the single market and we benefited from that more than

:16:03.:16:06.

any other member state, so now we need a serious plan, a strategy.

:16:07.:16:13.

What is our relationship going to be in the modern world? How will our

:16:14.:16:17.

children and grandchildren make the best union they can? We need

:16:18.:16:27.

Parliament's approval of a White Paper and then start years of

:16:28.:16:33.

negotiation. This will run and run. This interview hasn't got time to

:16:34.:16:37.

run and run so let me get another question in. You seem to be quoted

:16:38.:16:40.

in the mail on Sunday this morning as saying if the Prime Minister

:16:41.:16:46.

sides too much with the heart Brexit group, she won't survive, is that

:16:47.:16:51.

your view? Yes because only a minority of the House of Commons

:16:52.:16:55.

think it is frightfully simple and you can just leave. The referendum

:16:56.:16:58.

campaign, the only national media reporting of the issues were

:16:59.:17:03.

completely silly and often quite dishonest arguments on both sides.

:17:04.:17:10.

Let me just check this, explain to me the basis... Know, excuse me, I

:17:11.:17:15.

have to interrupt because you said the Prime Minister won't survive so

:17:16.:17:18.

just explain to our viewers why she won't survive. She will be in a

:17:19.:17:24.

minority she starts adopting the views of John Redwood or Iain Duncan

:17:25.:17:28.

Smith. It's clear majority of the House of Commons doesn't agree with

:17:29.:17:32.

that and it would be pretty catastrophic if that is what we were

:17:33.:17:36.

going to do when we turn up and faced 27 of the nation state, and

:17:37.:17:42.

tell them we are pulling out of the biggest market in the world. How

:17:43.:17:50.

long do you give the Prime Minister then? If you don't think she will

:17:51.:17:57.

survive by going for a heart Brexit? I don't think she will go for a

:17:58.:18:04.

heart Brexit. Really, surrounded by David Davis and Liam Fox? Do you

:18:05.:18:09.

think Liam Fox will determine the policy of the Cabinet? Liam has

:18:10.:18:17.

always been ferociously against the European Union although he served in

:18:18.:18:20.

a government that was pro-European for about two and a half years. Does

:18:21.:18:27.

he not survive either? You're trying to reduce it to my trying to

:18:28.:18:31.

forecast Cabinet reshuffle is which I haven't got a clue whether there

:18:32.:18:35.

will be a Cabinet reshuffle, they may be ministers for the next ten

:18:36.:18:44.

years, I have no idea. Liam and me, but also Liam and the majority of

:18:45.:18:47.

his Cabinet colleagues don't start from the same place. The way forward

:18:48.:18:51.

is for them to produce a White Paper setting out the strategy on which

:18:52.:18:56.

all the Cabinet are agreed. People should stop leaking the Cabinet

:18:57.:19:00.

papers they are getting, they should stop leaking against each other, get

:19:01.:19:08.

down and do the work when they have got the agreed strategy. I'm sorry

:19:09.:19:11.

to interrupt again but we haven't got much time. We saw in our film

:19:12.:19:19.

that a number of constituency members in those areas which are

:19:20.:19:26.

strongly Remain MPs like yourself, in our case in this film it was

:19:27.:19:32.

Nicky Morgan, the constituency party members are unhappy about this.

:19:33.:19:36.

What's your message to them? Don't they deserve an MP that reflects

:19:37.:19:41.

their way of thinking? Leavers are unhappy and Remainers are very

:19:42.:19:48.

grateful. Mine don't go in for abuse... That's probably because

:19:49.:19:56.

you're not on e-mail, Mr Clarke. I get more from Remainers. I'm a great

:19:57.:20:01.

fan of Anna Soubry and Nicky Morgan, I don't agree with them on

:20:02.:20:05.

everything, but the views they are putting forward are the ones they've

:20:06.:20:08.

always held and I think we are doing the Government to favour by saying

:20:09.:20:13.

what it now depends on is your success in agreeing a policy and

:20:14.:20:20.

then explaining to the public what you want to do. I shall be surprised

:20:21.:20:24.

if they manage that by the end of March, I think it is best to get the

:20:25.:20:29.

policy right first but we shall see. Have you been invited then, you say

:20:30.:20:36.

you are being helpful, have you been invited to this meeting in Downing

:20:37.:20:42.

Street on Wednesday for the soft Brexiteers? No, because I haven't

:20:43.:20:46.

been joining any of these groups. It's fair to say most of my

:20:47.:20:49.

colleagues know exactly what my views are. No doubt those that

:20:50.:20:56.

haven't had this kind of discussion with their colleagues before have

:20:57.:21:03.

been invited. I didn't expect to be invited. I get on perfectly well

:21:04.:21:07.

with Theresa May but I haven't been invited, but I don't think there's

:21:08.:21:11.

much significance in that. What do you think of the way Downing Street

:21:12.:21:17.

has handled Nicky Morgan? I feel sorry for women in politics. I'm

:21:18.:21:22.

glad to say men in politics don't have great lead stories about what

:21:23.:21:26.

they are wearing. Apart from my suede shoes, I'm lucky because I'm

:21:27.:21:30.

not a very snappy dresser. It is tedious in these days that we still

:21:31.:21:36.

have a absurd pop newspaper stories about what they are wearing.

:21:37.:21:48.

That commenting on the Prime Minister's trousers, is it really

:21:49.:21:54.

grounds for banishment? No, of course not. Nikki and Teresa will

:21:55.:22:01.

have serious political discussions and if they want to have an argument

:22:02.:22:04.

about what they are wearing, their closest friends will advise them to

:22:05.:22:12.

keep it private. It is absurd. Given that the party appears to be

:22:13.:22:20.

deciding it has been all -- ordered to changes policies about Britain's

:22:21.:22:25.

relationship with the world, it needs to be taken seriously and this

:22:26.:22:30.

Lola. Is filling a vacuum before the serious discussion starts. Thank you

:22:31.:22:34.

for filling our vacuum this morning and of course no one would ever

:22:35.:22:36.

criticise how you dress. Of course. Now, seasoned observers will warn

:22:37.:22:40.

against reading too much into parliamentary by-elections,

:22:41.:22:42.

but they can provide a vital boost for a party leader under pressure,

:22:43.:22:45.

or provide damaging ammunition Following a disappointing result

:22:46.:22:47.

for Labour last week in Richmond, Jeremy Corbyn may have been hoping

:22:48.:22:50.

for an early Christmas present at this week's

:22:51.:22:53.

contest in Lincolnshire. In Sleaford and North Hykeham,

:22:54.:22:55.

a constituency that supported Leave in the EU referendum,

:22:56.:23:03.

there was little Christmas cheer for Labour as it fell from second

:23:04.:23:05.

in 2015 to fourth place. That was at least a better

:23:06.:23:10.

performance than in Remain-supporting Richmond Park,

:23:11.:23:12.

where the party's candiate lost his deposit after attracting

:23:13.:23:16.

fewer voters than the reported number of local

:23:17.:23:18.

Labour Party members. Speaking for the Labour Party this

:23:19.:23:22.

week, MP Vernon Coaker said their policies on other major

:23:23.:23:28.

issues were "lost to an extent Some MPs feel that a lack of clarity

:23:29.:23:32.

is holding the party back. This week three frontbenchers

:23:33.:23:44.

were among the 23 Labour MPs to defy the party line and vote

:23:45.:23:48.

against a motion to begin the process of leaving the EU

:23:49.:23:56.

by the end of March. And a number of Labour MPs we've

:23:57.:23:59.

spoken to since Thursday's vote have said they fear the party now runs

:24:00.:24:02.

the risk of being squeezed by the Lib Dems and UKIP,

:24:03.:24:05.

or in the words of one, "being cannabilised,

:24:06.:24:08.

eaten from both ends". To compound their troubles,

:24:09.:24:12.

a national poll released on Friday put Labour

:24:13.:24:13.

at a seven-year low, trailing 17 It's still a season of joy

:24:14.:24:16.

for many of Mr Corbyn's supporters - they point to a series of victories

:24:17.:24:23.

under his leadership, including a by-election win

:24:24.:24:25.

in Tooting and the London mayoral Though neither candidate was a

:24:26.:24:28.

Corbynite. But there's a distinct lack

:24:29.:24:34.

of goodwill on the party of his critics - although having

:24:35.:24:38.

failed comprehensively to challenge him this summer,

:24:39.:24:40.

what they intend to do This morning Diane Abbott played

:24:41.:24:51.

down the significance of the results. The reports of the Labour

:24:52.:24:56.

Party's demise are exaggerated, we are the largest social Democratic

:24:57.:25:00.

party in Europe and the surging membership is down to the current

:25:01.:25:03.

leadership. We have the right policies on the NHS, investing in

:25:04.:25:08.

the economy, and as you know the Tories are fatally split on Europe.

:25:09.:25:12.

And we're joined now by the former mayor

:25:13.:25:14.

of London Ken Livingstone, and the former Shadow

:25:15.:25:16.

Ken Livingstone, in the most recent by-election Labour collapsed from

:25:17.:25:24.

second to fourth place, the one before that your party lost its

:25:25.:25:29.

deposit. What is the positive gloss on that? There's nothing new in

:25:30.:25:35.

this, where you have got seats which are solidly Tory, often voters

:25:36.:25:44.

switched to Lib Dem to kick other voters out. We have had good swings

:25:45.:25:50.

that indicate a Labour government so don't pay too much attention. It is

:25:51.:25:56.

like Orpington 50 years ago. Labour voters switched just to kick the

:25:57.:26:00.

Tories out. Don't read too much into these results, Labour did win

:26:01.:26:09.

tooting so it is OK. First of all I don't think it was a problem with

:26:10.:26:13.

the candidates in the by-elections, they did a really good job locally,

:26:14.:26:18.

but there is an issue with those residents and their attitudes to the

:26:19.:26:23.

national party, and I just think that when you have warning bells

:26:24.:26:27.

going off like that, we have to listen to what people are saying. I

:26:28.:26:31.

think what they are saying is they want an opposition party to have a

:26:32.:26:36.

plan. So yes we have got to attack the Conservatives where they are

:26:37.:26:40.

going wrong on the NHS, running headlong over the cliff for a hard

:26:41.:26:45.

Brexit, but we also need a plan for what Labour's alternative will be.

:26:46.:26:52.

When do we get that plant? Effectively you have got it already.

:26:53.:26:57.

John McDonnell has gone on relentlessly for the need for a

:26:58.:27:04.

massive public investment. For decades now under Labour and Tory

:27:05.:27:08.

governments we haven't invested in infrastructure, our roads are a

:27:09.:27:14.

disgrace, a broadband is antique. We need to be honest about this, if

:27:15.:27:18.

Theresa May can come back and say I've done a deal, we are leaving the

:27:19.:27:22.

EU, we will control our borders, we won't have to pay 350 million a year

:27:23.:27:28.

and stay in the single market, well... But that won't happen. If we

:27:29.:27:33.

are going to stumble along for two years heading for an economic

:27:34.:27:39.

disaster, that's why only eight MPs voted to leave, because they knew

:27:40.:27:42.

the harm it would do to their voters. If you have got a plan, why

:27:43.:27:46.

are things getting worse for you in the national polls, 17 points

:27:47.:27:52.

behind? If you look back, when I was leader of Chelsea my poll rating

:27:53.:27:57.

went down... But you have not been as bad since 1983 when you lost an

:27:58.:28:02.

election by a landslide. Over the next two years our economy will not

:28:03.:28:07.

grow strongly, it will limp along at best, as we get closer to Brexit it

:28:08.:28:12.

will get worse. All Labour MPs should be focusing on the economic

:28:13.:28:16.

alternative because nobody ever wins an election without a credible

:28:17.:28:22.

economic strategy. So as long as the country goes to hell in a hand

:28:23.:28:27.

basket, Labour will be fine. That's not good enough. You're not a

:28:28.:28:30.

commentator any more, you are part of the leadership of the party. It

:28:31.:28:38.

is to you. I will continue to argue the case for credibility,

:28:39.:28:41.

particularly in our policies, but the leadership cannot just sit back

:28:42.:28:47.

and watch this drift. On the Brexit situation, the Conservative

:28:48.:28:51.

manifesto at the last general election promised it would be yes to

:28:52.:28:55.

the single market, why aren't we holding them to account for the

:28:56.:28:59.

broken promise potentially they are about to do? If I had still been an

:29:00.:29:05.

MP, I would have been voting with you, rebelling, because we are not

:29:06.:29:10.

going to get any good deal to leave. Theresa May will stumble on for a

:29:11.:29:14.

couple of years trying to balance... The party policies were heard from

:29:15.:29:17.

Diane Abbott this morning is to get the best possible deal to leave. And

:29:18.:29:24.

I will believe it when it happens. So you don't believe a central part

:29:25.:29:29.

of Jeremy Corbyn's policy? Jeremy has accepted the fact people voted

:29:30.:29:36.

to leave. He now said we now need to get the best possible deal and you

:29:37.:29:40.

don't think it's achievable. I don't, because why would the other

:29:41.:29:45.

27 members give us a better deal staying outside? You've confused me,

:29:46.:29:52.

why are you such a big supporter of Corbyn with his policy you don't

:29:53.:29:54.

think it's achievable? Everybody knows we are not going to

:29:55.:30:06.

get a soft exit, so we either have the hard Brexit and we lose perhaps

:30:07.:30:10.

millions, certainly hundreds of thousands of jobs, or we have to say

:30:11.:30:15.

we got it wrong. I mean, you, a lot of people have been saying that all

:30:16.:30:20.

Labour's unclear on Brexit, that is why it is going wrong, I would

:30:21.:30:24.

suggest to you, that actually what the concentration on is the Tories

:30:25.:30:28.

are unclear about Brexit, they are in power, that is what matters, a

:30:29.:30:34.

bigger problem for Labour is whether Mr Corbyn's leadership will cut

:30:35.:30:38.

through or not. I think the YouGov poll this weekend not only gave us

:30:39.:30:43.

that double punch of a 17 point lead for the Conservatives but it had a

:30:44.:30:48.

33 point lead, 33 point, for Theresa May over Jeremy Corbyn, so part of

:30:49.:30:53.

the plan, think, has to be to address this leadership issue, to

:30:54.:30:57.

make sure it is also a party that is listening to the wider public and

:30:58.:31:04.

not just the small number of members or the trotsites in Momentum or

:31:05.:31:11.

whoever is the latest Marxist on the... You The thing that is ox

:31:12.:31:20.

fibbing Labour. One MP said Labour has quoted bunkum. We have has 18

:31:21.:31:25.

months of Labour MPs stabbing Jeremy in the back and some in the front.

:31:26.:31:31.

The vast majority of Labour MPs have stopped undermining Jeremy. You

:31:32.:31:34.

weren't doing that well before. Can you imagine a situation in which you

:31:35.:31:37.

have elected a new leader and the first year it is all about getting

:31:38.:31:41.

rid of imand undermining him. I disagree with Tony Blair on lots of

:31:42.:31:46.

policy issue, I didn't run wound saying this man is not fit to

:31:47.:31:50.

govern. That is because you had no support for that at the time. The

:31:51.:31:56.

idea people will take lectures from Ken on divisiveness, that is like

:31:57.:32:00.

takes lectures from Boris Johnson on diplomacy, you have to make sure,

:32:01.:32:05.

yes, that we find some accommodation after the leadership election this

:32:06.:32:10.

summer, but the plan is not there right now, and you and the rest of

:32:11.:32:17.

the leadership has to be held accountable for delivering that, I

:32:18.:32:21.

want to hear what the plan is. It is FDR he told us earlier. If you have

:32:22.:32:28.

got now because as we saw in the Autumn Statement, debt to GDP ratio

:32:29.:32:32.

at 90%, you can't convince the public by saying we will throw more

:32:33.:32:37.

money at the problem, the public want a credible plan, where the sums

:32:38.:32:41.

add up, that you are not making promises that won't be delivered.

:32:42.:32:46.

They want that plan. We need to point out our history, when Labour

:32:47.:32:52.

Waugh the election in 45 Government debt was two times that it was now..

:32:53.:33:00.

Now.. They generated exports and within 50 years we virtually paid

:33:01.:33:04.

off that debt. Austerity is not the way to go. Our economy is a disgrace

:33:05.:33:11.

compared with Germany. I agree. What we have to start saying, there is

:33:12.:33:15.

decent jobs, where are they going to be coming from, can we have a

:33:16.:33:20.

society based on fair play and prosperity for everybody not just

:33:21.:33:23.

the wealthy, that means saying, some time, that people have to

:33:24.:33:26.

contribute, they have to put in, so we have to listen to what the public

:33:27.:33:29.

are saying on issues for instance like immigration, as they said in

:33:30.:33:34.

the Brexit referendum, but make sure we have our approach set out

:33:35.:33:39.

clearly, so people know there is a ability to manage, and control these

:33:40.:33:44.

things, not just ignore them. Those tax dodgers who launder their money

:33:45.:33:53.

through Panamanian banks. If we crackdown on what might be 150

:33:54.:33:59.

billion a year of tax evasion and avoidance. That is a real outlier

:34:00.:34:05.

estimate as you know, way the highest, you cannot build the FDR

:34:06.:34:09.

programme on tax evasion revenues, alone, but let me ask you. You can

:34:10.:34:14.

say to Starbucks, if you are not going to pay tax on your profits we

:34:15.:34:21.

will tax every cup of coffee. Why don't you nationalise it? I was just

:34:22.:34:25.

checking that would be the policy. Let me ask you this. By what time do

:34:26.:34:30.

you get, start to get worrieded if the polls haven't given to turn

:34:31.:34:34.

round? I mean, I think they will turn round. When do you start to get

:34:35.:34:39.

worried? If they haven't? If in a year's time it was as bad as this we

:34:40.:34:42.

would be worried. I don't think it will be. Jeremy and his team will

:34:43.:34:48.

knows can on the economy, and that is wins every election. Bill

:34:49.:34:53.

Clinton, remember it's the economy stupid. People know if you are going

:34:54.:34:56.

to spend money they want to see where it is coming from, otherwise

:34:57.:34:59.

they will think it is their taxes that will go up and the

:35:00.:35:05.

Conservative, Theresa May, will scare the British public over plans

:35:06.:35:10.

that are not properly... What do you do if things haven't got better in

:35:11.:35:16.

12 months? We lost the leadership election in the summer but we will

:35:17.:35:20.

hold our leadership to account. What does that mean? It means asking for

:35:21.:35:26.

the plan, testing what the proposals are, are they properly credible, do

:35:27.:35:32.

they make sure that they meet the test the public... You just have to

:35:33.:35:36.

bite the bottom lip now, you privately, a lot of you think your

:35:37.:35:42.

party is heading for catastrophe. I don't think it is acceptable that we

:35:43.:35:47.

have this level of performance, currently, I am sure Ken agrees the

:35:48.:35:51.

opinion polls, and those by by-election were just not good

:35:52.:35:55.

enough. We have to show leadership, certainly on Brexit, hold the

:35:56.:35:57.

Government to account. Attack them for the crisis in the NHS, yes and

:35:58.:36:03.

on the economy, to deliver credible policy force, example on defending

:36:04.:36:07.

national security and making sure we stand up for humanitarian

:36:08.:36:10.

intervention. Final point, your party has lost Scotland. You are now

:36:11.:36:16.

in third place behind the stories -- Tories. I never thought I would be

:36:17.:36:20.

able to say that in a broadcast, if you lose the north too, you are

:36:21.:36:24.

heading for the smallest Parliamentary Labour Party since the

:36:25.:36:28.

war, aren't you. But that is our weakness, we in the 13 years of the

:36:29.:36:33.

last Labour Government neglected rebuilding our manufacturing in the

:36:34.:36:36.

way the Germans have done. Millions of people used to have good job, we

:36:37.:36:41.

used to have 8 million jobs in manufacturing it is down two. It is

:36:42.:36:45.

in the north, that Jeremy's strategy has the most relevance, of actually

:36:46.:36:48.

getting the investment and rebuilding. All right. We will see.

:36:49.:36:53.

Come back in 12 months if not before and we will check it out.

:36:54.:36:57.

It's just gone 11.35, you're watching the Sunday Politics.

:36:58.:36:59.

We say goodbye to viewers in Scotland, who leave us now

:37:00.:37:02.

Coming up here in 20 minutes, we'll be talking

:37:03.:37:05.

about Boris Johnson's tour of the Middle East after straying

:37:06.:37:07.

off message, again, and the protestors attempting

:37:08.:37:09.

First though, the Sunday Politics where you are.

:37:10.:37:21.

I'm Natalie Graham and this is the Sunday Politics

:37:22.:37:23.

They've got cash from their pensions and they're

:37:24.:37:27.

being targeted by criminals - in some cases, fraud victims

:37:28.:37:30.

The Sussex Police and Crime Commissioner tells us what she wants

:37:31.:37:34.

the Government to do to tackle the problem.

:37:35.:37:36.

Joining me in the studio today are Peter Kyle,

:37:37.:37:39.

the Labour MP for Hove and Portslade and Nus Ghani, the Conservative

:37:40.:37:42.

Now, this is the first time Peter has been in the studio

:37:43.:37:48.

since the local difficulties in the Brighton and

:37:49.:37:50.

You may remember the group elected members of Momentum -

:37:51.:37:55.

supporters of Jeremy Corbyn - to run it, but they were suspended

:37:56.:37:58.

In the meantime there was talk of deselecting Peter,

:37:59.:38:03.

because he didn't represent the grass roots members enough.

:38:04.:38:06.

So how are things now, have they settled down?

:38:07.:38:12.

Things have always actually been fine. My connection and the team's

:38:13.:38:17.

connection with the electorate is fantastic. Through these media

:38:18.:38:22.

discussions through the summer, we never stopped campaigning and

:38:23.:38:26.

listening, we didn't stop being active in the communities that gave

:38:27.:38:29.

me this opportunity to represent them. you talk about the electorate,

:38:30.:38:34.

not the local membership, and that's where the difficulties are. There

:38:35.:38:36.

were difficulties but what I'm keen to tell people is it has never

:38:37.:38:42.

distracted me from my day job. I've been out pretty much every weekend

:38:43.:38:45.

since the summer and I've had a big team around me. Right now, there are

:38:46.:38:50.

teams out in Hove delivering Christmas cards, knocking on doors,

:38:51.:38:53.

listening to people. That continues all the time and I have a great

:38:54.:39:00.

dedicated local membership. We gone from a city party to a constituency

:39:01.:39:04.

party. It was broken up. I think it's a good thing because it's more

:39:05.:39:10.

manageable and personal. We're a focused team in Hove, we always have

:39:11.:39:13.

been and we will continue to be. In the meantime, Jeremy Corbyn was

:39:14.:39:17.

resoundingly be elected as party leader and you were one of 23 MPs

:39:18.:39:20.

who went against party leadership in the vote on Article 50 in the

:39:21.:39:24.

Commons this week so you still appear to be causing trouble for the

:39:25.:39:27.

leadership. Does that suggest it would agree -- you don't agree with

:39:28.:39:34.

the party stands on Brexit? It has nothing to do with Jeremy Corbyn, it

:39:35.:39:37.

is a strong feeling, I don't think we are ready for these negotiations.

:39:38.:39:41.

It is not about stopping or disrespecting the vote. Let's do it

:39:42.:39:47.

when we are ready. The European Union has 600 specialist trade

:39:48.:39:51.

negotiators, we have none, not one, so why do we start the most

:39:52.:39:54.

complicated set of negotiations are country has ever had to face when we

:39:55.:39:59.

are not equipped to do so? I will support Government going into these

:40:00.:40:03.

negotiations when we're ready to do so. You're one of the many

:40:04.:40:08.

Conservative MPs who voted to leave the European Union. What would you

:40:09.:40:11.

like to see the Government publish as its plan before Article 50 is

:40:12.:40:16.

triggered? The Government says they will publish details as and when

:40:17.:40:21.

they can, if they don't they may complicate getting the best deal.

:40:22.:40:26.

How much would you like them to publish? We have to recognise the

:40:27.:40:29.

vote this week showed that is absolutely no appetite in Parliament

:40:30.:40:33.

to delay triggering Article 50. There have now been two years of

:40:34.:40:37.

negotiations, they won't be enough time to negotiate. I represent a

:40:38.:40:44.

city which has 7 million visitors, to universities, ?10 million's what

:40:45.:40:51.

of EU funding. We need certainty about the economy, the destination

:40:52.:40:55.

for the economy outside of the EU. For all of those reasons, before we

:40:56.:40:59.

start these negotiations. Sorry to interrupt. We've got other issues to

:41:00.:41:02.

discuss. It's been another miserable week

:41:03.:41:04.

for Southern commuters and things There will be no services

:41:05.:41:07.

at all on the Brighton mainline for three days next week

:41:08.:41:11.

after Govia Thameslink lost its case at the High Court to stop a series

:41:12.:41:13.

of strikes by the drivers' union Here's a round-up of the political

:41:14.:41:17.

debate over the past few days. This situation is intolerable

:41:18.:41:24.

and the Government can't simply just wash its hands of involvement,

:41:25.:41:26.

so will the minister roll up his sleeves and get stuck

:41:27.:41:28.

in to resolve the crisis? The best thing she can do on behalf

:41:29.:41:31.

of her constituents is to go and speak to her close friends

:41:32.:41:34.

in the RMT and tell them to call off their disproportionate

:41:35.:41:38.

and unreasonable industrial action. The people trying to get to work

:41:39.:41:47.

on the Uckfield line have been This is about the unions,

:41:48.:41:50.

but not just them. The nationalised Network Rail has

:41:51.:41:54.

failed us again and again. While someone is on strike,

:41:55.:41:56.

while someone is messing up the passengers, why should I sit

:41:57.:42:03.

down with them and talk If they want to call off

:42:04.:42:06.

the strikes, we will sit down and work together in the interests

:42:07.:42:10.

of the future of the railway. They haven't spoken to us for months

:42:11.:42:13.

as far as I'm aware, but we won't be stopping the strike

:42:14.:42:22.

because we've got a mandate from our We have been listening to people

:42:23.:42:25.

and trying to find a compromise. One thing we won't do is compromise

:42:26.:42:30.

on our desire to improve the way we operate our service

:42:31.:42:34.

for our customers. What is becoming increasingly clear

:42:35.:42:41.

is that the Government is playing politics and is on the side of

:42:42.:42:46.

Southern, which it has made clear, and not on the side of the union, so

:42:47.:42:50.

there is no way Southern is going to back out if it has the Government on

:42:51.:42:56.

side. The passengers have had an awful service and it has damaged

:42:57.:42:58.

people's lights, they're amazing work, unable to secure further

:42:59.:43:09.

contracts -- lives. The unions have been taken to court to stop further

:43:10.:43:15.

strike action and the unappealing that -- they are appealing that. If

:43:16.:43:19.

they don't win, the Government has to step in to stop a handful of

:43:20.:43:25.

people holding a whole public service to a standstill. if you

:43:26.:43:27.

listen to what Chris Grayling has been saying recently, it's clear he

:43:28.:43:32.

doesn't want to hand a victory to the unions by taking any action

:43:33.:43:36.

against the train operating companies. We know because of leaked

:43:37.:43:39.

letters this week in the press that he is politically motivated when it

:43:40.:43:44.

comes to the rail service. Surely this crisis has gone beyond and he

:43:45.:43:50.

is acting only in political narrow interests. The only political action

:43:51.:43:58.

is the unions. They are saying they want a low drive only trains to take

:43:59.:44:09.

Thameslink are. I don't understand Thameslink are. I don't understand

:44:10.:44:14.

why unions are calling this strike and stopping passengers getting to

:44:15.:44:18.

work. They've got to call these strikes off. if you keep blaming

:44:19.:44:21.

unions, you're not going to get anywhere. Peter, you have called for

:44:22.:44:27.

the Government to intervene. What you haven't done is spell at what

:44:28.:44:30.

you would do if you were Transport Secretary. If I had a magic wand, I

:44:31.:44:35.

would have stripped Thameslink of this franchisee long time ago.

:44:36.:44:38.

Nobody is getting up in the morning and thinking, how do I make

:44:39.:44:44.

passengers lives better today? No one, the unions, the employers, the

:44:45.:44:46.

franchise and particularly Government. We have to recognise

:44:47.:44:50.

that all of the revenue that goes from the Government, they set the

:44:51.:44:56.

timetables, the fares, they are very active, it is not a normal

:44:57.:44:59.

franchise. What the Government does is sit on the sidelines, in the

:45:00.:45:04.

shadows. It needs to roll its sleeves up and get involved. It

:45:05.:45:06.

shouldn't be sitting to one side hurling insults. It should be doing

:45:07.:45:12.

whatever it takes to get them round the table to force them into a

:45:13.:45:18.

decision, which is going to end this nightmare now. we need to take the

:45:19.:45:27.

management team, Network Rail and the union around the table and get

:45:28.:45:30.

them to agree. When the Government constantly criticises the unions and

:45:31.:45:36.

refuses to talk to them and makes it clear they are backing Govia

:45:37.:45:44.

Thameslink. Is it time to resign? This requires all parties to

:45:45.:45:47.

negotiate and make sure the trains are running. I completely understand

:45:48.:45:51.

that when the strikes are happening, services and great. It's called the

:45:52.:45:59.

misery line. Network Rail have been criticised by me for not doing

:46:00.:46:02.

enough to insure the service is run to reflect the timetables that are

:46:03.:46:06.

printed, but at this moment in time, the straights are just causing so

:46:07.:46:11.

much chaos. The only people that can call the strikes off other unions.

:46:12.:46:16.

Government and not exercising any of the power they have. They should be

:46:17.:46:25.

instructing Govia Thameslink because they are actively involved. They

:46:26.:46:28.

should do whatever it takes to get this sorted. Yes, they might have to

:46:29.:46:31.

be tough with the unions but they need to do a deal, they've got to

:46:32.:46:34.

bring this to an end. They seem completely passive while misery is

:46:35.:46:42.

being meted out day in, day out. When you talk to people in your

:46:43.:46:46.

constituency, they are sympathetic to the unions. Do you have any

:46:47.:46:51.

sympathy for the unions? Passengers have just had enough, they do not

:46:52.:46:55.

have sympathy with anybody. They're angry but the understand. -- they

:46:56.:47:06.

understand. I hear from hundreds of people every day, that is no

:47:07.:47:10.

exaggeration, and I'm on the service myself so I speak to passengers.

:47:11.:47:13.

Believe me, when they see me, they're not shy about forward!

:47:14.:47:18.

People have had enough with everyone involved in this service. Any one of

:47:19.:47:23.

the parties could step up to the plate and lead a way through this.

:47:24.:47:27.

What they decided to do, although the parties, is to go to war with

:47:28.:47:31.

each other. We are not all-out war on this service. Every single actor

:47:32.:47:35.

involved in this service is at war with each other. They're not

:47:36.:47:45.

thinking about solving problems. it doesn't feel like the Government is

:47:46.:47:48.

acting in the interests of passengers. We are campaigning

:47:49.:47:54.

incredibly hard and I think at the moment in time, when the strikes are

:47:55.:47:59.

impacting passengers and commuters and constituents, the only people

:48:00.:48:02.

that can call that for the union. They've had 18 months and every

:48:03.:48:06.

month it is worse and worse. At what point either going to stop making

:48:07.:48:09.

promises and pledges and actually do something? -- are they going to

:48:10.:48:13.

stop? A staggering one in five of us

:48:14.:48:15.

falls victim to fraud. And since 2014 when the then

:48:16.:48:17.

Chancellor George Osborne introduced more pension freedoms,

:48:18.:48:20.

there's been a rise in the number of people persuaded by criminals

:48:21.:48:22.

to part with their money. This week the Government began

:48:23.:48:25.

consulting on new measures to crack But in Sussex they've tried out

:48:26.:48:27.

a new scheme to help prevent old people from becoming victims

:48:28.:48:33.

of sophisticated scams. In a moment we'll hear

:48:34.:48:34.

from the county's Police and Crime Commissioner,

:48:35.:48:37.

but first our reporter Briohny Williams has been speaking

:48:38.:48:38.

to one man who fell foul This is the latest video from Sussex

:48:39.:48:41.

Police warning vulnerable older people about the dangers

:48:42.:48:48.

of scams and fraud. It's estimated over half of people

:48:49.:48:53.

aged 65 and above have been targeted by fraudsters,

:48:54.:49:03.

by e-mail, telephone or post, and for those who fall

:49:04.:49:05.

into the trap, the financial loss I had most of my money invested

:49:06.:49:08.

in several online bank accounts, You never know what the future holds

:49:09.:49:15.

these days if something happens to you and you end up unable

:49:16.:49:24.

to look after yourself. 84-year-old Chris lives alone

:49:25.:49:27.

on the West Sussex coast. Over a period of seven years,

:49:28.:49:38.

he's lost nearly ?500,000 after falling victim

:49:39.:49:40.

to telephone scams. Mass-marketing scams from fake

:49:41.:49:41.

companies trying to get I've been taken in by four firms

:49:42.:49:43.

selling wine and three selling investment diamonds

:49:44.:49:52.

and the land investment scam. To ?3000 gems were only worth ?100

:49:53.:49:54.

each and I lost ?42,000. Promise of profits of 30% or so,

:49:55.:50:03.

she would take this ?8,000 diamond but I had to add another ?6,000

:50:04.:50:06.

to it, another ?50,000 so I had been Across the South East

:50:07.:50:11.

there are a number of different In Sussex, people are trying

:50:12.:50:20.

to educate people like Chris to recognise fraud and the Police

:50:21.:50:26.

and Crime Commission wants mass-marketing callers to prove

:50:27.:50:30.

they are legitimate. Also in Kent, the county council

:50:31.:50:32.

is training 200 community Dawn is one of them and says scam

:50:33.:50:35.

offers can seem very lucrative. It is wanting to win something,

:50:36.:50:46.

it is the wording on the letters This is the amount of scam mail that

:50:47.:50:50.

someone like Chris can receive Overwhelmingly, it is older people

:50:51.:50:57.

who are targeted by fraudsters, People will come to risk

:50:58.:51:05.

of social isolation, ill health or bereavement,

:51:06.:51:15.

so what is the solution The Government has a role to knock

:51:16.:51:17.

heads together to get the banks working together with police,

:51:18.:51:22.

local authorities, just to keep People who have been victims

:51:23.:51:25.

of scams in their own home are 2.5 times more likely to go into care,

:51:26.:51:36.

commit suicide or die within the year,

:51:37.:51:38.

so there is a really strong impact. Age UK says only 5%

:51:39.:51:42.

of fraud are supported. Over the past two years, 2,000

:51:43.:51:46.

victims and Kent lost over ?600,000. In Sussex, over a 12 month period,

:51:47.:51:49.

over 500 victims lost a combined The majority comes from abroad

:51:50.:51:52.

so it is very difficult and resource intensive

:51:53.:52:05.

to take action against You can report eight 42 action

:52:06.:52:07.

fraud but for advice go to Citizens Advice Bureau

:52:08.:52:11.

and local police. As long as somebody

:52:12.:52:12.

reported to somebody, that is a positive message,

:52:13.:52:19.

but I think there's work to be done to bring it back together to ensure

:52:20.:52:23.

we have a one-stop In the Autumn Statement,

:52:24.:52:26.

Philip Hammond said the Government would consult on how to tackle

:52:27.:52:29.

pension scams, just one of the many types of fraud

:52:30.:52:31.

affecting older people. I had been taken in because I did

:52:32.:52:33.

not realise fraud on such I'm quite sure I will not be

:52:34.:52:42.

defrauded again in this manner. If I do get caught talking

:52:43.:52:50.

to someone who wants me to invest in something on the telephone,

:52:51.:52:53.

I shall not go along with it. Joining us from Brighton

:52:54.:52:56.

is the Sussex Police A huge amount of money

:52:57.:53:08.

is being taken, stolen As a Conservative,

:53:09.:53:12.

are you getting enough support from the Conservative Government

:53:13.:53:16.

on this issue? I think the Government are taking

:53:17.:53:21.

this very seriously. For me, it is about getting

:53:22.:53:26.

all the agencies to work much more Are they sharing the

:53:27.:53:29.

information on this? Fraud is not being reported,

:53:30.:53:32.

it is underreported, and for me, the worry in Sussex

:53:33.:53:37.

is we have an increasingly older population and they are being

:53:38.:53:41.

deliberately targeted by criminals and groomed online and down

:53:42.:53:45.

the phone to part with their money and this has a huge destructive

:53:46.:53:48.

impact. As we heard from Age UK,

:53:49.:53:53.

they feel the Government should be I'm representing to the Government

:53:54.:53:56.

at the moment because they're looking at how they fund police

:53:57.:54:03.

forces nationally and they are looking at the formula and I'm

:54:04.:54:05.

saying, when you are looking at the different things you take

:54:06.:54:08.

into account on the formula funding, please take into account the fact

:54:09.:54:12.

that our elderly are being As we're all getting older, this

:54:13.:54:16.

is becoming an increasing problem. The Sussex Police have

:54:17.:54:27.

Operation Signature where an officer will actually go out and meet

:54:28.:54:30.

an elderly victim of a vulnerable This is quite intense

:54:31.:54:33.

in terms of resources so it I noticed a lot of the work does

:54:34.:54:38.

centre on the victim, encouraging Why aren't you targeting

:54:39.:54:42.

the criminals who are grooming them? We need to, absolutely,

:54:43.:54:47.

and the questions we need to ask, are the deterrents and

:54:48.:54:54.

sentences tough enough? There are lots of different agencies

:54:55.:54:56.

that deal with fraud, everyone from the information

:54:57.:55:00.

commission office through to trading standards, even Ofcom have

:55:01.:55:03.

regulations around this. One of your, on your VT said

:55:04.:55:09.

we should pull this information It makes a lot of sense and then

:55:10.:55:12.

we would understand the impact and severity of this and the volume

:55:13.:55:17.

of this crime. If Age UK is right and only 5%

:55:18.:55:20.

of these victims are coming forward, then this is just the tip

:55:21.:55:23.

of the iceberg, surely. For me, elder exploitation,

:55:24.:55:28.

because this is what it comes under, is a real worry and I do feel

:55:29.:55:30.

that it is the tip the iceberg and we can clearly show

:55:31.:55:36.

that our elderly, our 75-year-olds and above in Sussex,

:55:37.:55:39.

are being deliberately targeted Is it any wonder that household

:55:40.:55:41.

burglaries nationally, numbers are going down

:55:42.:55:47.

when it is much easier for criminals to reach out down the telephone

:55:48.:55:50.

and take money from us Katy Bourne is clearly doing as much

:55:51.:56:10.

as she can. You can say this is not a priority. I think every MP would

:56:11.:56:13.

listen to that and be heartbroken and appalled about it. We need to

:56:14.:56:20.

look at this internationally, a lot of calls are being made over the

:56:21.:56:23.

Internet so it is difficult to track. We need to start working with

:56:24.:56:28.

foreign governments to make sure we get the root cause and would be

:56:29.:56:34.

catch the person responsible they get the sternest sentence possible.

:56:35.:56:43.

I agree. I work with Katy Bourne on the elders commission to look at how

:56:44.:56:48.

the scams and affecting people including people in my constituency

:56:49.:56:50.

who are too afraid to pick up the phone because they have been

:56:51.:56:54.

scammed. You must let people and your neighbours now. -- know. Would

:56:55.:57:07.

you lobby for more police funding? Yes. I'm trying to push the Home

:57:08.:57:13.

Office on Elder abuse and making sure we get the right amount of

:57:14.:57:18.

resources and debate. Whether it is social services, policing, we want

:57:19.:57:26.

to help with convictions and nail these people and find them. If we

:57:27.:57:30.

bang heads together, it says that we bang heads together, it says that we

:57:31.:57:35.

can solve this. I hope so. I hope so. It is clear the relaxation of

:57:36.:57:41.

the pension regulations in 2014 has coincided with a huge rise in this

:57:42.:57:46.

crime. That was a mistake, though, wasn't it? I don't think it was a

:57:47.:57:50.

mistake. You can't win both these things together. Many people are.

:57:51.:57:55.

They're saying since 2014, people have got the money now. We saw in

:57:56.:58:10.

the clip, people can be scanned a number of times. It is important to

:58:11.:58:13.

shed information to make sure it doesn't happen to you or your family

:58:14.:58:18.

again. Generals are targeting older people and basically playing on

:58:19.:58:22.

their trust, trying to secure friendships. There's no doubt that

:58:23.:58:26.

the Treasury should have realised that with elderly people, this is

:58:27.:58:31.

one of the consequences that could have came from it.

:58:32.:58:32.

And now it's time for some of the other news you may have

:58:33.:58:35.

missed in 60 Seconds with Yetunde Yusuf.

:58:36.:58:40.

A Kent MP says Charlton Athletic Football Club should not be allowed

:58:41.:58:44.

to investigate itself over allegations of historical abuse

:58:45.:58:46.

Chair of the Culture, Media and Sport Dommittee Damian Collins

:58:47.:58:51.

has expressed his concern after the former Charlton youth

:58:52.:58:53.

player Russell Davy alleged he was abused in the 1980s by Eddie

:58:54.:58:56.

There needs to be a full independent investigation commissioned

:58:57.:59:08.

by the Football Association which looks at what went wrong.

:59:09.:59:10.

Villages and small towns across Sussex are struggling

:59:11.:59:12.

to cope with thousands of new homes being built.

:59:13.:59:15.

According to the Council for the Protection of Rural England,

:59:16.:59:19.

it found that residents fear losing their green spaces and feel

:59:20.:59:22.

And residents of the Trench ward in Tonbridge have elected

:59:23.:59:29.

Conservative candidate Georgina Thomas as

:59:30.:59:30.

She won 61% of the vote despite the greener Lib Dem

:59:31.:59:34.

candidate standing aside to support Labour's Fred Long in

:59:35.:59:37.

A final thought about Southern as we look ahead to three days

:59:38.:59:47.

of strikes by the drivers' union Aslef.

:59:48.:59:49.

Where do you think this is going to end?

:59:50.:59:54.

The day we get the industrial action solved there will be a vast

:59:55.:59:58.

improvement in the service. I hope that will be weeks and not months.

:59:59.:00:03.

From that moment on, there will be incremental improvements over the

:00:04.:00:04.

next two years. That's all we've got time

:00:05.:00:05.

for from the South East this week. My thanks to our guests for today,

:00:06.:00:08.

Peter Kyle and Nus Ghani. Julia will be back next week

:00:09.:00:10.

with all the political news still the biggest factor. We are

:00:11.:00:12.

running out of time. Now, Foreign Secretary

:00:13.:00:14.

Boris Johnson was rebuked by Downing Street this week -

:00:15.:00:28.

yes, again - after the Guardian revealed he had accused Saudi Arabia

:00:29.:00:31.

of being among countries engaged in fighting "proxy wars"

:00:32.:00:33.

in the Middle East, breaking the Foreign Office's convention

:00:34.:00:36.

of not criticising a key UK ally in the region and annoying the prime

:00:37.:00:38.

minister who'd just returned The Defence Secretary Michael Fallon

:00:39.:00:41.

was asked about it And let's be very clear about this,

:00:42.:00:48.

the way some of his remarks were reported seemed to imply

:00:49.:00:56.

we didn't support the right of Saudi Arabia to defend itself,

:00:57.:00:58.

and it is being attacked by Houthi terrorists from over

:00:59.:01:01.

the border with Yemen, didn't support what Saudi is doing

:01:02.:01:03.

in leading the campaign to restore Some of the reporting led people

:01:04.:01:06.

to think that, and that is all... This was simply the way

:01:07.:01:13.

it was reported and interpreted. The way it was interpreted left

:01:14.:01:16.

people with the impression that we didn't support Saudi Arabia

:01:17.:01:18.

and we do. Well, Mr Johnson has been

:01:19.:01:27.

in the Saudi capital Riyadh this morning,

:01:28.:01:29.

so how's he been received? Our security correspondent

:01:30.:01:31.

Frank Gardner is in neighbouring Bahrain, where Mr Johnson

:01:32.:01:33.

was earlier in the weekend. It has probably been a long time

:01:34.:01:44.

since there has been such interest in a British Foreign Secretary

:01:45.:01:48.

visiting the gulf region. What are the political elites there making of

:01:49.:01:55.

it all? Well, they think to be honest it is a bit of a storm in a

:01:56.:01:59.

tea cup this is a bit of a Whitehall story, I think a lot of people I

:02:00.:02:04.

have spoken to tend to believe that Number Ten have made such a fuss

:02:05.:02:08.

about this, that it has created a story in itself. That said, though,

:02:09.:02:13.

I think that behind the scenes there was a certain amount of damage

:02:14.:02:17.

limitation taking place between London and Riyadh, a bit of

:02:18.:02:22.

smoothing of feathers and reassuring and the Stade Saudis tell me they

:02:23.:02:26.

are reassured the message they are taking is. Coming from Number Ten

:02:27.:02:31.

and they are not taking Boris Johnson's comments to heart. He is

:02:32.:02:35.

in the dam, he has met the king, I tweet add picture of that just a few

:02:36.:02:40.

minutes ago. He has been meeting Crown Prince, and he is now meeting

:02:41.:02:45.

the Foreign Minister, so the Saudis got an opportunity to brief him

:02:46.:02:49.

according to their vision of the Middle East. They will share their

:02:50.:02:52.

security concern, which is not just what is going on in Yemen, but they

:02:53.:02:57.

are very concerned about what they see as Iranian expansionism, that

:02:58.:03:01.

has been a theme here at this conference in Bahrain that Boris

:03:02.:03:04.

Johnson addressed only a day or two ago. If we put aside Mr Johnson's

:03:05.:03:09.

supposed gaffes or even the Downing Street slapping down of him, we have

:03:10.:03:14.

had the Prime Minister in the region earlier this week, we have got Mr

:03:15.:03:22.

Johnson there now, can we yet divine what the May Government strategy is

:03:23.:03:31.

in the Golf? -- Guff. In three words, in Boris Johnson's words

:03:32.:03:36.

Britain is back. He was very quick to say not in a jingoistic running

:03:37.:03:43.

up flags, new imperial list way, although that is Howley be seen by

:03:44.:03:48.

some. He gave a very forceful speech which seemed to go down well the

:03:49.:03:53.

gulf hosts here on Friday night which said Britain made a strategic

:03:54.:03:59.

mistake in, after 1968 in withdrawing east of Suez and it will

:04:00.:04:04.

reverse that decision, and invest ?3 billion over the next ten years in

:04:05.:04:12.

building up its military not bases exactly but facilities -- facilities

:04:13.:04:14.

that are here in this part of the world. There are currently 15

:04:15.:04:17.

hundred hundred British servicemen and women in this region, seven

:04:18.:04:22.

warships and so on. It isn't entirely true to say Britain

:04:23.:04:26.

withdrew east of Suez because we have had a military presence on and

:04:27.:04:31.

off here, the RAF had a base here in Bahrain during the Gulf War of 91.

:04:32.:04:37.

In 2003, of course, British planes and troops deployed from this area,

:04:38.:04:44.

but he and Theresa May are both saying post-Brexit, Britain's big

:04:45.:04:48.

emphasis or one of the big pushes is going to be to redouble its ties

:04:49.:04:52.

with gulf Arab nations, that isn't going to come as an easy bit of new,

:04:53.:04:59.

I think, to human rights campaigners and anti-arms campaigners because a

:05:00.:05:05.

large part of the ?7 billion of bilateral trade Britain did with

:05:06.:05:07.

Saudi Arabia comes from arms deals and those arms are being used in the

:05:08.:05:13.

conflict in Yemen, in some cases with tragic consequences. Thank you

:05:14.:05:15.

very much for talking to us. Instead of concentrating on Mr

:05:16.:05:25.

Johnson's gaffes, or Downing Street reaction to it. Frank Gardner there

:05:26.:05:31.

has just given us a really important development, or explained what the

:05:32.:05:35.

British are up to there now. They want to be back in the gulf big

:05:36.:05:39.

time. Isn't that something we should be debating and discussing? It is

:05:40.:05:43.

fascinating. It is yet another example post-Brexit I would say this

:05:44.:05:48.

is someone who voted to Brexit, that the world is changing, and Britain's

:05:49.:05:52.

role is going to be transformed post-Brexit. I mean just on the

:05:53.:05:58.

Boris point, I completely agree, I think a lot of it is ridiculous, in

:05:59.:06:02.

a Whitehall belt way stuff, but I think what is really important about

:06:03.:06:07.

it, is that Number Ten feel threatened by him, and the reason

:06:08.:06:11.

that these ridiculous gaffes and many of them are not even gaffes are

:06:12.:06:17.

pounced upon is he is the main rival for the Crown, so it is high level

:06:18.:06:22.

power play politics, and it is May trying to keep him in his place.

:06:23.:06:25.

What do you make though, of Britain is back in the gulf? That is the big

:06:26.:06:32.

story, is it not. Utterly bizarre, post imperial fantasy, the idea we

:06:33.:06:36.

are back east of Suez? We are breaking off from our closest ally,

:06:37.:06:42.

most like us, the rest of Europe, democratic, decent human rights

:06:43.:06:46.

country, and instead we are allying ourself to perilous, dangerous,

:06:47.:06:52.

unpleasant countries... Why should we be back in the gulf? If that is

:06:53.:07:00.

the trade off, these are, you know, these renasty kingdoms, petty

:07:01.:07:05.

unpleasant and unstable countries. Don't we have to keep the straits

:07:06.:07:09.

open otherwise the oil supply collapses and the world economy will

:07:10.:07:13.

go into the worst recession depression ever? Don't we have to be

:07:14.:07:18.

involved in that We do, and I think what happens is if we leave Europe

:07:19.:07:21.

and we need trade everywhere else, we have to travel the world on our

:07:22.:07:26.

knees begging for friends from the most unsavoury people, where ever

:07:27.:07:32.

they are, whether it is... You keep saying we are leaving Europe, that

:07:33.:07:37.

is a geographic impossibility. Britain is part of Europe, we are

:07:38.:07:41.

the... Not what Liam Fox is saying. The key power in Nato, we are

:07:42.:07:45.

leaving the European Union, that is a different Tring from Europe. I am

:07:46.:07:51.

trying to move away from Mr Johnson, or even Downing Street to... You got

:07:52.:07:56.

yourself into a Brexit row. Everything is through the prism of

:07:57.:08:00.

Brexit, even what you have for breakfast, when you mix up the word

:08:01.:08:04.

like I did last week. What do you make of what Frank Gardner told us?

:08:05.:08:10.

I am somewhere between the two. It is a nighs the line say we are back

:08:11.:08:13.

in the Middle East and we will take this part of the world seriously,

:08:14.:08:16.

the truth is our military is almost tiny, it is smaller than it was in

:08:17.:08:21.

the Napoleonic wars, that is not a huge amount more. Of course there S

:08:22.:08:27.

one of the two new aircraft carriers, that will be deployed in

:08:28.:08:32.

the gulf, to help the Americans keep the straits of her muz open, because

:08:33.:08:40.

it is in Europe's interest, not just Britains, Europe's interest that

:08:41.:08:43.

these straits stay open, which is more so than America. That is what

:08:44.:08:50.

FRANK was talking about. That is no change, British foreign policy has

:08:51.:08:55.

been keeping the straits open... Now we have the ability do it. We don't

:08:56.:09:02.

have an aircraft aier at the moment. Nor do we have the fleet of ships it

:09:03.:09:11.

needs. It is a great thing to be trade morgue with the Nice, to be

:09:12.:09:15.

turning -- Middle East, to be turning round more tax revenues and

:09:16.:09:19.

the like. Even selling weapons. I don't know what more can be done.

:09:20.:09:24.

You look at what has happened. BBC has had horrific reports from the

:09:25.:09:27.

Yemen and if you look at what the weapons are being used for, is that

:09:28.:09:31.

the trade we want? Right. Let us move on. Mr Corbyn was giving a

:09:32.:09:37.

speech yesterday but he was inter#ru79ded by Peter Tatchell.

:09:38.:09:39.

Peter, could we leave this to the questions please?

:09:40.:09:52.

Peter, we are trying to make a speech here and then

:09:53.:09:55.

Was Peter Tatchell right do that yesterday? It is a bit of a

:09:56.:10:08.

distraction really. Jeremy Corbyn 17% in the polled is not going to be

:10:09.:10:14.

able to change... You mean his personal rating. If you want to do

:10:15.:10:18.

something about Syria you ought to be addressing the Government rather

:10:19.:10:24.

than a failing Labour leader. Peter Tatchell's line was Labour in

:10:25.:10:27.

general, Mr Corbyn in particular had not been vocal enough in condemning

:10:28.:10:33.

what the Russians and their Assad allies are doing in Aleppo. It was

:10:34.:10:40.

interesting Mr Corbyn had to ask Emily Thornberry if and when had

:10:41.:10:43.

they condemned what the Russians were doing? It was unclear. Other

:10:44.:10:51.

than Mrs Thornbury herself. There is a fascinating fault line in politics

:10:52.:10:56.

which is the Trump administration, the way in which parts of the

:10:57.:11:00.

British left have made themselves useful idiots once again for the

:11:01.:11:06.

Kremlin and it its policies. I think more broadly, you consider all the

:11:07.:11:09.

things we have been discussing, it is a national tragedy what is

:11:10.:11:13.

happening to the Labour Party. You don't know whether to laugh or cry

:11:14.:11:19.

watching that event. Corbyn was at a stop the war rally event only last

:11:20.:11:23.

week, and they of course are very close to the Kremlin, they blame the

:11:24.:11:28.

west, well they blame the west much more... They always blame the west.

:11:29.:11:35.

And not the Russians. I agree Jeremy Corbyn having to check with Emily

:11:36.:11:39.

Thornberry what the Labour Party's policy was on bombing Aleppo... If

:11:40.:11:45.

and when they condemned it. He needs to no better. The fact that we are

:11:46.:11:51.

talking about what was a pretty small scale protest, rather than

:11:52.:11:55.

anything Corbyn said, shows he wasn't saying anything relevant. We

:11:56.:11:59.

will get a huge amount of tweet saying the BBC are anti-Corbyn. I

:12:00.:12:03.

understand that, that shouldn't intimidate us from saying, from

:12:04.:12:06.

analysing what is happening, and here is one yard stick, of course it

:12:07.:12:11.

is fundamentally the Government's choice, but it could be an indicator

:12:12.:12:14.

of whether the Labour Party is relevant or not in only issues, in

:12:15.:12:21.

reason pert Murdoch is making a take over bid for all of Sky and so far

:12:22.:12:25.

you would have to bet, policy, that it is going to get through pretty

:12:26.:12:30.

much unscathed. It is extraordinary. It is connected with Leveson, and

:12:31.:12:34.

the fact that that has disappeared. That the idea of restraining the

:12:35.:12:37.

press in any way at all, and virtual will I the whole of the press is

:12:38.:12:42.

behind that, and it seems to go with allowing what wasn't allowed before.

:12:43.:12:47.

He was judged as unfit before. He is as unfit now, to control that much

:12:48.:12:53.

of the media, and as he was when he made the last bid for Sky. It is

:12:54.:12:57.

time people stood up and said so. You look at the press he runs, the

:12:58.:13:02.

cultural effect he has has on this country which has been appalling,

:13:03.:13:07.

you know about this. Tom, I better let you have a word. I don't agree

:13:08.:13:13.

at all Polly but the lesson for the Labour Party, is if they don't want

:13:14.:13:19.

to have any influence at all, they have to be credible, and stand a

:13:20.:13:23.

reasonable chance of becoming Prime Minister or becoming Government,

:13:24.:13:25.

that is the only way they will get leverage. We need to leave it there.

:13:26.:13:30.

I was going to say we will come back to it. We will see. The Daily

:13:31.:13:36.

Politics will be back at noon tomorrow.

:13:37.:13:39.

and we'll be back here next Sunday for the last show of 2016.

:13:40.:13:42.

Remember - if it's Sunday, it's the Sunday Politics.

:13:43.:14:18.

# We're going to have a party tonight

:14:19.:14:44.

# I'm going to find that boy underneath the mistletoe

:14:45.:14:49.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS