28/01/2018 Sunday Politics Wales


28/01/2018

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LineFromTo

Morning everyone, and welcome

to the Sunday Politics.

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I'm Sarah Smith.

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And this is the programme that

will provide your essential briefing

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on everything that's

moving and shaking in

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the world of politics.

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Can the Conservative Party speak

with one voice on Brexit?

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As Tory splits spill out

in to the open once again this week,

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can the Prime Minister

reassert her authority

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over a divided party?

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We'll be speaking to the former

Conservative Cabinet

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Minister, Theresa Villiers -

hitherto a loyal voice,

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but who says she's now worried

about Brexit being diluted.

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Is Jeremy Corbyn heading for a fight

with Labour councillors?

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As local government chiefs accuse

the party's ruling body of trying

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to intervene in local decisions,

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we'll be speaking to one

of Jeremy Corbyn's key allies.

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Good morning, everyone. Can the

Conservative Party speak with one

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voice on Brexit?

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Later, Alan Davies on the forming

voting in Welsh

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Later, Alan Davies on the forming

throw off their bad reputation and

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prove to be the answer to the

housing crisis in London?

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All that coming up in the programme.

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And to help me to make sense

of all the big stories today, I'm

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joined by Camilla Tominey,

Rafael Behr and Rachel Shabi.

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I'm sure they certainly

won't all speak with one voice.

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The newspaper headlines

make pretty grim reading

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for the Government this morning.

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'Tories in Turmoil',

'Brexit betrayal',

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'PM told to raise her game'.

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Tory Brexit divisions erupted

in public once again this week.

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So, is the Government's

biggest priority now

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becoming its biggest headache?

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becoming its biggest headache?

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Morning, Home Secretary. They

divided cabinet?

A new cabinet since

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that modest reshuffle but still the

same old Brexit split. Foreign

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Secretary Boris Johnson, who spent

so much time on that infamous boss

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promising extra money for the NHS,

went off Brive at the meeting on

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Tuesday, pushing the government to

honour that much maligned pledge.

Do

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you want to be the health secretary?

Philip Hammond was in Brussels from

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where he sent a swift review.

Mr

Johnson is the foreign secretary. I

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gave the Health Secretary an extra

£6 billion at the recent budget.

And

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labour leader Jeremy Corbyn piled in

at Prime Minister 's questions.

Does

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the Prime Minister agree with the

Foreign Secretary that the national

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Health Service needs an extra £5

billion?

I think the right

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honourable gentleman, as I recall

was here for the autumn budget which

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was given by the Chancellor of the

Exchequer, where he announced he

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would be putting £6 billion more

into the National Health Service.

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Meanwhile, Jacob Rees-Mogg took on

the Brexit Secretary David Davis

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over the transition deal.

We are

only actually out at the end of the

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transition. That is a big shift in

government policy and a big move

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away from the vault.

I do not accept

your description.

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your description.

Next day, Theresa

May travelled to the World Economic

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Forum in Davos to heal a different

divide, this time her special

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relationship with Donald Trump.

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relationship with Donald Trump. Her

Chancellor described in modest

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change in Britain's relationship

with the EU. Now he was being

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rebuked by furious colleagues as

well as his boss. David Davies

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insists the Cabinet are united. They

want a good deal.

There is no

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difference between the Chancellor

and myself and indeed the Prime

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Minister, in terms of the fact we

both want a Brexit that serves the

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British economy and the British

people.

The EU will set out their

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bargaining position for a phase two

of the Brexit negotiations tomorrow.

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But can we find an agreed British

response.

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So to discuss the implications of

all of the week's events I've got my

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expert panel. Welcome. Camilla,

these are quite remarkable headlines

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this morning about the party being

in turmoil over Theresa May's

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leadership and the direction of

Brexit policy. Let's start with

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Brexit. How deep are the divide?

I

think they are very deep. The tide

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has turned a bit in the last week.

Normally when you are covering these

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issues in the lobby, there is

underlying hysteria. I think there

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are quite a lot of people on both

sides scratching their heads,

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looking at some of the editorials we

saw in the week about the Tory

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party, particularly when referring

to Theresa May as a Wizard of Oz

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character. A lot in the Tory party

can't disagree with that. They

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regard her as a caretaker Prime

Minister. A lot of them have been

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giving her the benefit of the doubt

particularly on Brexit because she

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has been consistent about what

Brexit means. That did not mean

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leaving the single market and the

Customs Union. -- that it must mean.

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To have Boris Johnson and Philip

Hammond freelancing on the sidelines

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makes her look weak and unable to

keep the Cabinet together. That

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gives the general impression to the

country that they aren't quite in

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charge of things and that she

particularly isn't across her brief.

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The key question at the heart of

this is which of these Cabinet

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ministers are reflecting the Prime

Minister pots opinion on this --'s

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opinion on this. Does she agree with

Philip Hammond, or is she looking

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for a more significant divergence?

This is absolutely critical. We talk

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about Brexit divisions. We are used

to thinking about the division being

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about Remainers and levers. That is

not the division we are talking

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about. There is a group of people in

government who have now focused on

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the practical technical difficulty

of what is required to get Britain

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safely out of the European Union.

And they for the most part, and I

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will include the Prime Minister,

have understood it is a long

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incremental process. You want an

arrangement that looks pretty much

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like the status quo. If there is

going to be divergence from EU

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rules, it will be incremental. We

get the impression the Prime

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Minister has signed off on that

approach because she is a cautious

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person. The problem is the

Chancellor said it out loud. He had

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the temerity to say it. This is the

plan. You have the other group of

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people, the harder, more ideological

Brexiteers are not in government,

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who don't have to focus on the

practical reality, look at that and

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think, that doesn't sound like

emancipation and freedom, that

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sounds a bit boring. When you listen

to what some of the critics of the

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Prime Minister from the hard Brexit

position are saying, it is not

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obvious what they are asking her to

do. What they want from her is a

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sense of clarity, a sense of whether

or not she can have the confidence

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to stand up and say, the Chancellor

is right. They are testing courtesy

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of she can do that and she won't do

that because she doesn't want the

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huge tsunami of betrayal from the

right.

It is also impossible

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Bridgeford Theresa May to try and

cross. How can she reconcile these

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different views of what Brexit is

going to look like at the point

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where we have to start laying out

what Britain's approach will be?

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That is the problem. The divisions

are seemingly irreconcilable in the

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party. That is their own problem. It

has become a national problem

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because they are doing it while in

government. They have a over us

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while they are falling apart. That

is completely irresponsible. In

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terms of where we are going to end

up, we all know. We saw from phase

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one of EU that actually everything

was conceded to the soft Brexit

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model was conceded two in what was

agreed to during the parameters of

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phase one. It seems like, do we

really have to go through this all

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again, this pretend, this bickering,

this biting, when we know in the end

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we are going to end up with a

situation that is a soft Brexit

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because this is where the major

constituency is in Westminster and

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the country.

We have a couple of

guest to make disagree with that. We

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will return to you guys later.

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Well, the Cabinet Minister David

Lidington was talking

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to Andrew Marr this morning,

and was asked about the backlash

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on the Government's Brexit strategy

from Jacob Rees-Mogg and other

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Conservative MPs.

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Jacob, like everybody else, needs to

see how negotiations go. We are

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about to start negotiations. I'm not

going into detail about that

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process. Secondly, the very fact

that we will have left the European

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Union is a big deal indeed. The bill

in front of Parliament extinguishes

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the power of the European Court and

supranational EU law over the UK.

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I'm joined now by the former

Cabinet Minister, Theresa Villiers.

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She has written a piece in today's

Sunday Telegraph telling

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of her growing concern that

Brexit is being diluted.

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Thank you for coming on. What do you

mean by Brexit been diluted?

I have

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consistently argued the case for

compromise and I recognise it is

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necessary. What I was saying in my

article this morning was that if you

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go too far with compromise,

eventually you get to the point

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where we wouldn't generally be

leaving the European Union, we

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wouldn't be respecting the result of

the referendum.

You are concerned

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that is the direction they're

heading in?

I am concerned. We must

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retain the right to divergence Romeu

laws. One of the key points of

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leaving the European Union is to

ensure that we make our own laws in

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our own parliaments and not be

subject to laws made by people we

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don't elect and can't remove.

What

has made you concerned that is the

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direction in which we are heading?

Is it Chancellor talking about

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modest changes or something

happening behind the scenes?

It is a

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combination of things. I think in

part the government faces a

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difficult challenge convincing

people on the Leave side of the

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debate. So many times in the past

there have been Prime Ministers

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who've gone to Brussels and said, it

will be fine, we would bring you

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back a deal, and at the last minute

there has been, territory has been

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given away. We have made

compromises. I accept the need for

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that. There is only so far you can

go before ultimately you find

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yourself in a position where you are

deleting Brexit so much that it

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isn't leaving the European Union in

a real sense.

When you hear Philip

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Hammond say they will only be modest

changes to our relationship with the

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EU, you think he is reflecting

government policy? Downing Street

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tried to refute what he was saying.

Only actually said was, you can't

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call leaving the single market and

Customs union a modest change. You

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are anxious, are you, that right at

the top they are worried about

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keeping fairly close alignment with

the EU?

The Prime Minister set out a

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bold vision for Brexit in her

Lancaster House speech. My article

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is about appealing to the government

to stick to that vision and

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implemented so that once we leave

the European Union we are back in

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control of our laws, money and

borders.

The Prime Minister has set

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this out in Lancaster House and in

Florence. Why do you think she would

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be backsliding? Makes you think

anything has changed?

I don't think

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she wants to backslide. I think what

is happening is that she is under

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huge sustained pressure from a range

of quarters to reverse the result of

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the referendum. So in part, but I am

trying to do is to re-emphasise the

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positive case for Brexit. And we

emphasise that whilst there are

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those who want to soften things up

and frustrate the implementation of

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the referendum, others are

enthusiastic about implementing that

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vision in the Lancaster House

speech.

Were those people who want

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to frustrate her? You must be

worried they are right inside the

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Cabinet for you to write a newspaper

article about this. You must be

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worried if his right at the top of

government?

I don't believe that. I

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think the Cabinet is united in

wanting to do this.

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wanting to do this.

After the

different views we had this week?

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This is an issue that has divided

the country. The key battle now is

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what is going to be the end state we

ask for in the negotiations? We must

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ask for an end state based on the

Lancaster House speech, which means

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retaining control, making our own

laws in our own Parliament. That is

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how we have -- we become genuinely

an independent country again and

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respect the result of the

referendum.

Do you think the

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Chancellor was contravening stated

policy when he talked about modest

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changes. --? Was he out of line?

I

wouldn't make too much of that one

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comment. That has not wanted my

concerns. What I want to do is

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ensure the case for a real Brexit is

made. I fully acknowledge the

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technical scale of the exercise of

withdrawing from the European Union.

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It is very complicated. That is one

of the reasons why I have had a --

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advocated and supported compromise.

There is only so far you can go

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without -- with compromise without

finding yourself selling out on the

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people who voted to leave.

The next

phase will be about the

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implementation period before we get

to the final future relationship

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with the EU. We learned a little bit

more about the government approached

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and that this week. David Davis made

it sound as if there will be no

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changes to free movement of people

whatsoever during the two-year

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transition phase. Does that concern

you? That seems to be a change in

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policy.

For me, the important issue

is what happens at the end of the

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transition period.

You are relaxed

about two years of transition which

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looks most identical to staying in

the EU?

I accept that looks like

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what is current to happen. I think

there is a case for a transition

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period. I think my worry now is if

we go into the transition period

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without the clearest possible

understanding of what the

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arrangements are when we leave, so I

believe that we must have as much

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detail as possible in relation to

our agreement with the European

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Union, that we reach before the

transition period starts. If we go

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into it not knowing the end state,

that would worry me.

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When it comes to the end state, what

are the things you couldn't sign up

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to? What's being described as easy

movement of people in and out of the

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UK, would that lead to a point it

was a Brexit deal you couldn't agree

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to?

The key issues are the end state

must allow the UK to run its own

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trade policy and make its own

decisions on rules and regulations.

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So no involvement from the European

Court of Justice?

The Government has

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agreed a time limited role for that.

I don't see it as a problem but any

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enlargement of that role I would see

as worrying.

Do you think there's

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any possibility you could end up

voting against this in Parliament?

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I'm not going to make predictions on

how I will vote on a deal that

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hasn't been agreed yet. I want to

make sure we work together to try to

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bridge divisions, to come up with an

agreement with the European Union

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which gives us a new partnership

with them, which hopefully a

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majority can be comfortable

whichever way they vote in June 2000

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16.

Thank you.

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Joining me now from

Newcastle is the Brexit

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Minister Lord Callanan.

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Can you offer any reassurance to

Theresa Villiers and any other

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members of your party who are

worried about this that government

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is not going soft on Brexit?

We are

not going soft, there's been no

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backsliding on the Prime Minister's

Lancaster house speech. We will be

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regaining control of our laws, money

and borders. We will be establishing

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an independent trade policy as she

set out in her speech.

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set out in her speech.

Theresa

Villiers is completely wrong when

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she says she's worried Brexit is

being diluted, is she?

Yes, she is

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wrong. It's not being diluted, the

Prime Minister is in charge of the

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negotiations and we will be

negotiating with our European

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partners in good faith, our friends

and allies, but the objectives

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remain as she set out.

So it was the

Chancellor who was wrong when he

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said there would only be modest

changes in our relationship?

No, the

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Chancellor has said he is of the

vision the Prime Minister has set

0:17:520:17:56

out.

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out. We will be negotiating with our

European partners to bring about

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frictionless trading arrangements

but the important part of the

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negotiations is that we have to

regain control of our ability to set

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our own rules and undulations.

Though there may be some areas where

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if there are integrated supply lines

we might want to reflect current EU

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regulations but the important thing

is we decide those matters for

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ourselves.

David Davis presumably

speaks for government when he is

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describing the transition phase, and

he says during this implementation

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period people will of course be able

to travel between the UK and the EU

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to live and work. That sounds like

free movement is continuing as

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before but we were told it would end

as soon as we left the EU in 2019.

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We would introduce a registration

scheme so we knew he was coming to

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the country.

You could do that right

now. This registration idea, this is

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not something that comes about

because we have left the EU, we

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could have introduced that years ago

if we wanted to. Several European

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countries asked the UK citizens to

register.

Let's see what the

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negotiations produced, but what we

want to do is reflect current rules

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and regulations as closely as

possible so that at the end of the

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implementation period, and it's

important that is strictly

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time-limited, we agree with the EU

on that, at the end of that state we

0:19:290:19:33

will introduce a new immigration

policy and take control of our

0:19:330:19:38

rules, regulations and borders. It

sounds

0:19:380:19:45

sounds a lot like a red line that

has gone very pale pink.

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We are about to have the

negotiations. We will sit down in

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good faith with our European

partners, talk about how the

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implementation period will work and

what the end state will be.

But we

0:20:000:20:04

don't have to wait to find out what

the UK Government position is

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because David Davis set it out this

week and pretty much described free

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movement continuing as it is.

As I

said, we are having the

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negotiations, we are about to start

them, let's not give away our

0:20:170:20:21

positions before we do that. We want

to reach an agreement as soon as

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possible so we get certainty that

business knows where we are going at

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the end of the period and we move

towards the new state at the end of

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a strictly time-limited

implementation period.

So would it

0:20:330:20:40

be helpful if the Prime Minister

were to make another speech, where

0:20:400:20:42

she set out clearly what the

Government's position is on the

0:20:420:20:45

future direction of travel on the

transition period and future end

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state so that instead of listening

to Cabinet ministers with diverging

0:20:480:20:52

views on this, we knew from the

Prime Minister what the Government's

0:20:520:20:57

policy was?

The policy remains what

she set out in detail in the

0:20:570:21:03

Lancaster house speech followed up

by the Florence speech where she

0:21:030:21:06

outlined the new end state we want

to end up with and the procedures

0:21:060:21:10

for getting there. She set it out in

great detail, that was very clear

0:21:100:21:16

but we need to have under --

negotiation at the end of the day.

0:21:160:21:25

These are difficult, complicated and

tricky areas but we remain focused

0:21:250:21:28

on the end state which is we will be

leaving the single market and the

0:21:280:21:33

customs union, having independent

trade policy and deciding our own

0:21:330:21:38

rules and regulations.

The EU

Withdrawal Bill will come to the

0:21:380:21:41

Lords this week to your house, are

we going to see government

0:21:410:21:48

compromise?

We will be listening to

the debate. We showed that we were

0:21:480:21:54

prepared to reflect and think about

contributions made, and if people

0:21:540:21:59

have suggestions that we agree with

that we will improve the legislation

0:21:590:22:02

and of course we will do that. The

House of Lords has a very important

0:22:020:22:06

role and we will carry that out

effectively and we will listen to

0:22:060:22:10

what the debate says.

So you are

open to government amendments

0:22:100:22:14

changing the EU Withdrawal Bill? On

issues like Henry VIII powers or

0:22:140:22:23

something like that?

We have already

compromised on those areas in the

0:22:230:22:26

House of Commons so we will listen

to what the debate brings. Peers

0:22:260:22:31

take their role of scrutinising EU

legislation closely and we will

0:22:310:22:35

reflect on that and introduce

changes if we think they are

0:22:350:22:39

warranted.

Thanks for talking to us

this morning.

0:22:390:22:43

And you can find more Brexit

analysis and explanation on the

0:22:430:22:46

BBC website.

0:22:460:22:47

This week Labour's

ruling body, the National

0:22:470:22:49

Executive Committee, or NEC,

stepped in to a bitter row

0:22:490:22:51

about a controversial housing

project in the London

0:22:510:22:53

borough of Haringey.

0:22:530:22:54

It's led to deep divisions

between the NEC and councillors

0:22:540:22:57

across the country, with the Labour

leader of Newcastle City Council

0:22:570:22:59

calling it a "declaration of war".

0:22:590:23:04

calling it a "declaration of war".

0:23:040:23:04

With Jeremy Corbyn supporters

consolidating their grip

0:23:050:23:07

on the ruling body of the party,

Emma Vardy's been looking

0:23:070:23:10

at the new battle lines being drawn.

0:23:100:23:15

You might not think to look at it

but this council estate in north

0:23:150:23:20

London is being seen as a battle

ground for the very soul of the

0:23:200:23:23

Labour Party. Labour run Haringey

plans to redevelop the estate in

0:23:230:23:29

partnership with a private company

but the pro-Corbyn pressure group

0:23:290:23:34

momentum has led a campaign opposing

it.

You do not gift people's houses

0:23:340:23:41

to a private developer and say you

can demolish these...

When Labour's

0:23:410:23:46

ruling body, the NEC, intervened

telling Haringey to force the

0:23:460:23:50

project, some Labour supporters were

outraged.

We have now got the

0:23:500:23:55

National executive committee

effectively telling a Labour council

0:23:550:23:58

what to do and I'm thinking where

does this end?

This, some believe,

0:23:580:24:05

is what they see as the hard left of

the party using the row as an excuse

0:24:050:24:10

to get rid of more moderate Labour

council is ahead of next year 's

0:24:100:24:14

elections. Around a third of the

Haringey Labour group of either been

0:24:140:24:19

deselected or they have stood down.

How is this being seen by other

0:24:190:24:24

How is this being seen by other

Labour council is looking on?

0:24:240:24:26

How is this being seen by other

There's 100 names on an open letter

0:24:260:24:29

How is this being seen by other

to the NEC today saying stay out of

0:24:290:24:31

local council business, and one of

them, the Labour leader of Corby

0:24:310:24:37

Borough Council who can be found up

there, called it a disgrace.

I

0:24:370:24:42

signed the letter because I wanted

to demonstrate solidarity with a

0:24:420:24:47

colleague, also to send a message to

the NEC that we believe it is

0:24:470:24:52

inappropriate to intervene in the

way they did. Labour and local

0:24:520:24:57

government are the people governing

here in this country, we are not in

0:24:570:25:01

Government nationally, we are in

Government locally and we are doing

0:25:010:25:05

a good job locally. We are

protecting our people.

Do you think

0:25:050:25:11

the NEC will listen?

I would hope

so.

The intervention that led to

0:25:110:25:15

this row came for the first time

since Momentum leader was elected as

0:25:150:25:22

one of its members.

The NEC has

expressed a view, it has not

0:25:220:25:28

mandated, not stormed in and taken

over, and I think for every person

0:25:280:25:31

you can find who is upset I can find

tenants who are delighted.

Jeremy

0:25:310:25:36

Corbyn's support base on the NEC has

been strengthened after recent

0:25:360:25:40

elections so could this lead to

sweeping changes on party policy in

0:25:400:25:45

the future?

Where you can see

greater radicalism is on areas of

0:25:450:25:50

economic policy, following Carillion

Labour has been clear they want an

0:25:500:25:54

end to outsourcing completely if

they are elected, that they would

0:25:540:25:57

like to take contracts back

in-house, and at a local of all the

0:25:570:26:01

tensions exist as well.

What is the

risk with upsetting councils?

Is it

0:26:010:26:08

causes local divisions and they want

parties to be focused on governing.

0:26:080:26:12

It also threatens to cause tensions

between MPs. A lot of MPs see Labour

0:26:120:26:19

councillors as proud bastions of the

party and see them as a barrier to

0:26:190:26:23

those who they think are taking too

much of a faction or ideological

0:26:230:26:28

approach.

What would your message

beta Jeremy Corbyn?

That the Labour

0:26:280:26:33

Party are very fortunate to have a

large cohort of very experienced and

0:26:330:26:38

talented councillors up and down the

country. We know what we are doing,

0:26:380:26:43

a us to get on with that.

Local

councils aside, in Parliament Jeremy

0:26:430:26:48

Corbyn has won the

0:26:480:26:54

Corbyn has won the support of many

Labour MPs who now believe he should

0:26:540:26:57

lead them into the next election,

but could it be the relationship

0:26:570:26:59

with the wider party in local

government that becomes the one that

0:26:590:27:02

is more difficult to manage?

0:27:020:27:03

Emma Vardy reporting.

0:27:030:27:04

Jon Trickett is a member

of the Shadow Cabinet, and also sits

0:27:040:27:07

on Labour's National Executive

Committee.

0:27:070:27:08

He joins me now from Yorkshire.

0:27:080:27:12

He joins me now from Yorkshire.

0:27:120:27:13

We have got the leader of Newcastle

City Council, the Labour leader,

0:27:140:27:19

saying this is a declaration of war,

the NEC getting involved in the

0:27:190:27:23

local government decision.

The first

thing to say is Labour is in

0:27:230:27:30

Government throughout this country

in local councils, we are very proud

0:27:300:27:33

of our record in local government

but the NEC took a decision the

0:27:330:27:37

other day, it was unanimous by the

way, nobody voted against it, and

0:27:370:27:41

Nick was in the room. He made a

strong case for the autonomy of

0:27:410:27:45

councils and in general that is what

we think too. In fact we want to

0:27:450:27:49

bring more powers back to local

council...

You cannot reconcile

0:27:490:27:55

giving more power to councils with

the idea there is a top-down diktats

0:27:550:27:59

on what decisions councils must

take.

Let me just finish the point

0:27:590:28:04

because what the NEC did was to ask

for a pause. We did it politely but

0:28:040:28:11

we said before that should happen,

let's have a conversation between

0:28:110:28:14

Haringey and the NEC and that

conversation is now taking place or

0:28:140:28:19

Wilby. I think this is an

exaggerated row and when people look

0:28:190:28:24

at the facts, we have asked for a

pause is not necessarily a change in

0:28:240:28:29

policy, though we think the policy

was wrong and we want a conversation

0:28:290:28:36

with Haringey.

You are having a

conversation between the NEC and

0:28:360:28:40

Haringey. If Haringey Council

refused to change their minds about

0:28:400:28:44

this, they will then be subject to a

diktats from the NEC, will they not?

0:28:440:28:50

I'm not going to go into a

speculative conversation with you

0:28:500:28:53

but let's remember the background to

this. This is effectively a huge

0:28:530:29:01

deal outsourcing huge amounts of

resources and assets in Haringey. It

0:29:010:29:05

is very controversial and remember

this, the NEC received a letter from

0:29:050:29:11

22 Labour councillors on Haringey

Council asking for a pause. We

0:29:110:29:16

reacted to that request from within

Haringey itself and all of this

0:29:160:29:20

takes in the background of problems

at Grenfell and also with the

0:29:200:29:25

collapse of Carillion, both of which

I think our matters we need to be

0:29:250:29:29

thinking about when we are thinking

in local councils about outsourcing

0:29:290:29:33

additional provision. I am

optimistic we will find an amicable

0:29:330:29:37

way forward.

It gets to a

fundamental policy aspect of the

0:29:370:29:41

Labour Party as to who makes

decisions and surely you say some

0:29:410:29:45

Labour councils were concerned about

this, the majority of Labour members

0:29:450:29:54

on the council were in favour of it.

0:29:540:30:00

The ruling body of the Labour Party

is obliged by the Constitution to

0:30:010:30:04

take a view where there is clearly a

dispute within one of our

0:30:040:30:11

constitutional elements. And there

was an absolutely clear position

0:30:110:30:15

that there was a dispute. We were

asked to intervene. We took a view

0:30:150:30:20

and asked the council to think about

it again and agreed to mediation. I

0:30:200:30:24

don't think this is unreasonable.

The Constitution of the party

0:30:240:30:30

requires the NEC from time to time

to make sure that the constitutional

0:30:300:30:33

elements operate within the

policies, programmes and principles

0:30:330:30:36

of the Labour Party. I think it is a

storm in a teacup.

It is about the

0:30:360:30:43

controversial issue of outsourcing.

That is something you are speaking

0:30:430:30:47

out about this week, saying the

Labour government would reverse

0:30:470:30:52

outsourcing, setting out clear rules

for companies you would give

0:30:520:30:56

contracts to, including the idea

that the boss should not be paid

0:30:560:30:58

more than 20 times more than the

lowest paid worker. It would be

0:30:580:31:05

quite difficult to find construction

companies to build, say, HS2 if

0:31:050:31:12

you're going to stick to those

rules?

Well, there are all kinds of

0:31:120:31:17

different contracts which are

outsourced. Some of them can be done

0:31:170:31:20

by the public sector, others can't.

We will be thinking about those

0:31:200:31:25

services which are outsourced. The

facts are if you work for the

0:31:250:31:30

Council or the government, the top

ratio to the average pay is 20 to

0:31:300:31:34

one. In the private sector it is 156

to one. That means in a year's work

0:31:340:31:43

by a chief executive, the average

worker has to work 156 years, almost

0:31:430:31:47

for working like -- lifetimes. We

don't think that is how taxpayers

0:31:470:31:53

want the money spent.

When you say

you won't give government contracts

0:31:530:31:56

to companies who don't have this 20

to one pay ratio you are talking all

0:31:560:32:04

government contracts?

We have said

we want to move towards a ratio of

0:32:040:32:10

20 to one. I don't think people

watching will have any compunction

0:32:100:32:13

to say that is not unreasonable. If

you are a boss you should definitely

0:32:130:32:20

earn more than the average pay. But

156 times? I don't think that is

0:32:200:32:25

reasonable.

Depends how quickly you

would move towards this. If you got

0:32:250:32:32

into government and took over the

management of say HS2, and there are

0:32:320:32:38

£7 billion worth of contracts, most

are companies which don't fit your

0:32:380:32:43

criteria, would you be cancelling

those contracts are maintaining

0:32:430:32:46

contracts with companies that don't

fit your pay rules?

Contracts which

0:32:460:32:53

are already left, you cannot easily

break those contracts, nor should

0:32:530:32:56

you want to. It would be illegal. If

the contract was operating in a way

0:32:560:33:01

which was contrary to the contract,

clearly we would want to look at

0:33:010:33:05

bringing that back in-house. It is

horses for horses -- courses.

0:33:050:33:14

horses for horses -- courses.

So you

would continue with the contracts

0:33:150:33:17

the government signed for the

construction of HS2 even though

0:33:170:33:20

these companies don't meet your

criteria?

In the case of HS2,

0:33:200:33:26

remember, it went to Carillion, and

20 Carillion after government knew

0:33:260:33:30

they were in trouble.

There are ten

more companies involved in this.

But

0:33:300:33:38

Carillion are in trouble. The truth

is the government gave them billions

0:33:380:33:42

of pounds, I think it was £1.4

billion, to a company which was

0:33:420:33:47

clearly going belly up. It is

completely wrong.

0:33:470:33:49

Jon Trickett, thank you. I will talk

to the panel about what we have

0:33:490:33:57

heard on the programme so far. In

Trieste -- interesting ideas from

0:33:570:34:01

Jon Trickett. It would be harder to

impose their rules about outsourcing

0:34:010:34:08

and private companies, wouldn't it?

Not necessarily. The Carillion thing

0:34:080:34:15

as come at an interesting time. It

has exposed in bold the kind of

0:34:150:34:21

suspicion we have had for some time,

which is that these PFIs are really

0:34:210:34:26

just a vehicle for private companies

to take public funding and not

0:34:260:34:33

deliver on the services that they

were supposed to do. It ends up

0:34:330:34:37

costing us more. It is in line with

a shift in public mood we have seen.

0:34:370:34:44

There is overwhelming support for

nationalisation across sectors, from

0:34:440:34:47

utilities to railways and actually

across politics. Conservative voters

0:34:470:34:54

favour nationalisation. It is no

wonder that we have this level of

0:34:540:34:59

discontent when we see something

like Carillion happen. Yes, it might

0:34:590:35:05

be difficult in the short term to

return some of those contracts into

0:35:050:35:08

public hands. But it is going to be

cheaper and more efficient and

0:35:080:35:12

better for everyone in the long

term, that much is clear.

Camilla,

0:35:120:35:17

do you think it is even possible to

impose these kinds of rules, the 20

0:35:170:35:23

to one pay ratio, four any company

with a government contract?

No. And

0:35:230:35:29

as Andrew Gilligan's piece in the

Sunday Times showed, a lot of these

0:35:290:35:33

ideological premises have no basis

in law whatsoever. Momentum has

0:35:330:35:39

suggested to Capp pay at £60,000.

What effect would that have on head

0:35:390:35:45

teachers in Haringey? The people in

Haringey did not vote for a

0:35:450:35:48

Momentum, they voted for Labour.

Haringey is a broad church. It takes

0:35:480:35:51

in top on one hand and Highgate on

the other. Our Momentum's policies

0:35:510:35:58

representative of the constituency

as a whole? No. It is deeply

0:35:580:36:02

worrying people are being deselected

by people with fanatical views. John

0:36:020:36:09

Landis man is hugely controversial

figure. He claims to be a Bastian of

0:36:090:36:14

socialism and socialist policies,

yet at the same time we have

0:36:140:36:19

discovered, and the Sunday Express

have had a lot of in-depth analysis

0:36:190:36:21

of his own finances, he recently

loaned £5,000 to his son's property

0:36:210:36:25

company, which in turn is charged

with franchising McDonald's outlets.

0:36:250:36:34

John Landsman is not here to defend

himself. Move on from that point.

0:36:340:36:41

Let me bring in Raphael first.

Haringey is emblematic of a wider

0:36:410:36:47

thing happening in the Labour Party.

You have got the NEC that met this

0:36:470:36:52

week, the first time since you had

more Momentum members elected.

0:36:520:36:56

Interesting to watch if it changes

the decisions they make. How

0:36:560:36:58

worrying will it be people to see

them getting involved in something

0:36:580:37:03

as local as the decisions in

Haringey?

Momentum is a complex

0:37:030:37:08

institution. It is not an

ideological phalanx or something

0:37:080:37:12

captured by the hard left. What is

very interesting about this is that

0:37:120:37:18

this is a tension within the left

and labour that predates Jeremy

0:37:180:37:21

Corbyn and Momentum. You have a

tension between people who would

0:37:210:37:29

start with a fixed idea of what it

means invincible to be on the left,

0:37:290:37:32

and people who take a slightly more

pragmatic view to get elected.

0:37:320:37:37

Broadly within the Labour Party at

the moment Jeremy Corbyn as won the

0:37:370:37:41

ideological argument. People have

been marginalised. The problem is

0:37:410:37:46

when you had the election last year

and labour did better than a lot of

0:37:460:37:50

people thought, including a lot

better than Jeremy Corbyn and John

0:37:500:37:53

McDonnell thought, something

switched and Labour thought, we can

0:37:530:37:57

do this, we can get into government.

Suddenly the pragmatic tendency

0:37:570:38:01

started to appear within the Corbyn

movement. The tension is not between

0:38:010:38:06

anti-Corbyn and pro Corbyn. It is

about how you sneak up power, not

0:38:060:38:11

alienate too many people. Can you

actually win, beat Theresa May and

0:38:110:38:16

get into government? That tension is

happening inside the head of Jeremy

0:38:160:38:20

Corbyn and John McDonnell. It is

happening inside the head of Jon

0:38:200:38:23

Trickett. We have to leave that now.

0:38:230:38:25

It's coming up to 11.40 -

you're watching the Sunday Politics.

0:38:250:38:28

Coming up on the programme,

the Leader of the Opposition

0:38:280:38:30

and the leader of the free world

have been giving their advice

0:38:300:38:33

to the Prime Minister

on how to conduct Brexit.

0:38:330:38:34

First though, the Sunday

Politics where you are.

0:38:360:38:46

Hello and welcome to Sunday politics

Wales. In a few minutes, why are

0:38:460:38:51

three members of the UK Government

or on a committee which is meant to

0:38:510:38:54

scrutinise ministers and as the Lord

Kittinger Brexit, what is the view

0:38:540:38:58

from Brussels? But first, what plans

does the new secretary for local

0:38:580:39:05

governments have for Welsh councils?

Alan Davies says he wants to make a

0:39:050:39:08

number of changes including allowing

16 and 17-year-olds to vote. What

0:39:080:39:12

about council reform? Merging some

of Wales' 22 bodies, is that of the

0:39:120:39:19

agenda? I met him at the library of

the University of South Wales in

0:39:190:39:24

Newport and at about his plans for

voting we form.

My focus is on

0:39:240:39:30

strengthening our democracy in

Wales. Strengthening it in Cardiff.

0:39:300:39:33

We have new powers in April in some

of the issues around letting our

0:39:330:39:39

national Assembly but across the

whole of Wales. How we run local

0:39:390:39:43

elections in the future. I think

everyone who pays taxes should be

0:39:430:39:46

able to vote and that means people

are 16 and 17 as well. I would like

0:39:460:39:51

to see is moving the franchise to

enabling young people to take part

0:39:510:39:55

in the democratic process. I also

want people who pay council tax but

0:39:550:40:00

may not be UK citizens to be able to

vote and I don't just mean the EU

0:40:000:40:05

but were three from across the world

who live as a resident and pay

0:40:050:40:09

taxes, you should become part of our

democracy. The strength of our

0:40:090:40:14

democracy is modernising it as well.

There is something very special

0:40:140:40:19

about a pencil and a cross on a

piece of paper. Any will do such

0:40:190:40:23

that technological change, there was

a beautiful from the city in using a

0:40:230:40:27

pencil or a piece of paper and

recording our vote. We also know

0:40:270:40:32

some people are not just waiting in

local elections. We now turn out can

0:40:320:40:37

be very low at different times in

different places so we want to

0:40:370:40:40

encourage and enable people to take

part in local elections so we're

0:40:400:40:45

looking at creating new powers to

enable as to run pilot across Wales

0:40:450:40:50

to see how different forms of voting

and counting votes means we can

0:40:500:40:54

drive participation.

Electronic

voting could be one form of doing

0:40:540:40:59

that. There there other concerns you

have about security when it comes to

0:40:590:41:05

making sure those votes are counted

correctly?

Yes, very real concerns

0:41:050:41:09

about security. That is why we got

about pilot and independent

0:41:090:41:13

evaluation through the full

commission about designing pilots.

0:41:130:41:17

We do not just talk about electronic

voting but also electronic counting.

0:41:170:41:24

Wendy's were outlined a year ago,

some changes were suggested about

0:41:240:41:29

how elections were held for

councils. Perhaps introducing an

0:41:290:41:32

element of proportional voting

there. How have those discussions on

0:41:320:41:38

the councils and towel on board our

day do you think?

We look at trends

0:41:380:41:43

and in councils and local democratic

accountability for councils across

0:41:430:41:46

the whole of Wales and that means

council determining themselves how

0:41:460:41:52

they want to be elected. There will

be promise of Paris to introduce the

0:41:520:41:56

single transferable vote into local

governments elections if people in

0:41:560:42:01

parts of Wales vote for that and

want that. We are not imposing that

0:42:010:42:08

on anyone anywhere, we are creating

a powerful councils to use if they

0:42:080:42:13

so wish.

Within three minutes of the

Wales executive committee of the

0:42:130:42:20

Labour Party and CHEERING

Debbie Wilcox, the leader of the

0:42:200:42:23

Welsh local Association, said this

is something they would not support.

0:42:230:42:32

She said the S NP became the largest

party in Scotland overnight. Will

0:42:320:42:36

that happen if you introduce those

powers?

I sat opposite her when she

0:42:360:42:41

said that as we had a conversation.

I suspect the political issues they

0:42:410:42:46

see in Scotland are more fundamental

than the means of electing

0:42:460:42:50

councillors are NSPs.

Labour

councils would be the ones those

0:42:500:42:55

likely to take a hit, when the?

If

you read the report on council

0:42:550:43:02

elections, you would see that their

modelling sees all-party seeing

0:43:020:43:07

changes in representation but none

being targeted. It's a different way

0:43:070:43:10

of ensuring fair representation. For

someone like me, I'm absolutely

0:43:100:43:15

committed to fair representation and

voting.

We have heard so often the

0:43:150:43:22

numbers of councillors in Wales are

too few. Perhaps it should be fewer.

0:43:220:43:28

Whether you come down on that? Is 20

Julie correct number?

We have

0:43:280:43:33

debated this -- is 20 Julie the

correct number? There have to be

0:43:330:43:40

some fundamental decisions around

this. I have said 22 is the right

0:43:400:43:47

number. That is a fair few of most

council leaders I have met and of

0:43:470:43:51

most people across the country. What

we need appropriate levels of

0:43:510:43:54

Government, democratic

accountability and teenage councils

0:43:540:43:59

that are more powerful than they are

today to be able to take decisions

0:43:590:44:02

in the interest of people they

represent and able to shake the

0:44:020:44:08

communities they represent for the

future. For me, that means more

0:44:080:44:13

power for local authorities and not

less. I want to pass more powers to

0:44:130:44:17

local governments and I want local

governments to then say to me what

0:44:170:44:24

the structures are the best reflect

the needs of local governments for

0:44:240:44:28

the future. I suspect that nobody

will come back and argue for 22

0:44:280:44:34

authorities. I also suspect that

they want to create new bureaucratic

0:44:340:44:40

arrangements. I suspect people in

different parts of the country will

0:44:400:44:43

have different views but what I want

to move away from is being a very

0:44:430:44:47

negative debate about structures to

a more positive debate about how we

0:44:470:44:53

ensure local accountability, local

Government and the delivery of

0:44:530:44:59

excellence.

What the Welsh

Government have done in the past

0:44:590:45:03

that have this new bill which

mandates council to work closely

0:45:030:45:05

together. When she appeared on this

programme just before Christmas,

0:45:050:45:09

Debbie Wilcox, said it would be

madness to be forced to work

0:45:090:45:15

together. Really did not want

council to be forced to do that.

0:45:150:45:20

Though you press ahead with forcing

councils to work together or leave

0:45:200:45:24

it to them?

I don't want to compel

or force anything. I want...

That is

0:45:240:45:30

what it entails.

Creates junctures

which will ensure that people can

0:45:300:45:37

work together. Bat create

structures. I thought that they had

0:45:370:45:43

a world-class interview and she

outlined a clear vision of the

0:45:430:45:47

future. She did say that the current

system is unsustainable last year.

0:45:470:45:51

She said they cannot distinguish

structures we have today and I think

0:45:510:45:55

there is broad and widespread

agreement on that. You've been a

0:45:550:45:59

journal for many years, I'm sure

you've not heard people argue over

0:45:590:46:03

it in that time. What we need to do

is find an agreed way forward. I'm

0:46:030:46:07

not interested in going back to the

days when you could interview local

0:46:070:46:12

governments and leaders condemning

Welsh Government and vice versa. I

0:46:120:46:16

don't want to get back to those

days. I don't want to go back to the

0:46:160:46:21

days of rows and arguments. I want

to move forward in an agreed

0:46:210:46:25

fashion, treating a local

governments readers with respect,

0:46:250:46:28

understanding pressures of local

governmental leaders and what they

0:46:280:46:31

are facing and understanding the

need to protect our public service

0:46:310:46:34

workforce and a value our public

service workforce. It means

0:46:340:46:40

understanding the need to deliver

excellent public services to support

0:46:400:46:43

some of the most honourable people

in society that I've been an

0:46:430:46:46

education minister for 18 months and

they understand the pressures on

0:46:460:46:51

front-line service providers and

that means finding an agreed way in

0:46:510:46:57

which we hard-wire democratic

accountability and local

0:46:570:46:59

decision-making into how we deliver

local services and that is a

0:46:590:47:03

conversation I want to have local

governments but I want it based on

0:47:030:47:08

empowering councillors to do more

and not less.

Thank you.

Thank you.

0:47:080:47:15

Now the Welsh affairs select

committee any House of Commons is

0:47:150:47:18

supposed to scrutinise the work of

the UK governments and its impact on

0:47:180:47:23

Wales but our members watchdogs or

poodles? Questions are being raised

0:47:230:47:27

about how the algae governments to

account when three work directly for

0:47:270:47:32

ministers, to at the Wales Office,

the very same one that they are

0:47:320:47:36

supposed to scrutinise. We ask if

the Tories are getting to mark their

0:47:360:47:41

own homework?

MPs have had a

fondness for fast as before George

0:47:410:47:46

Osborne made- is compulsory.

Fact-finding missions are one of the

0:47:460:47:51

perks of committee alive and before

devolution, almost every aspect of

0:47:510:47:57

governments including health,

education and transport. That was

0:47:570:48:00

then, this is now. The committee

shadowing a governor department, the

0:48:000:48:05

Wales Office, with three ministers

to know executive powers of the

0:48:050:48:09

committee that has struggled to

recruit members. So much so that

0:48:090:48:13

three of these members, Glyn Davies,

Simon Davies and Simon Hall, are

0:48:130:48:19

supposed to hold people to account

with a workforce.

Although they are

0:48:190:48:30

underpaid, they are part of the

payroll vote and expected to support

0:48:300:48:34

the governments at all times. Simon

Hall is an age to the Education

0:48:340:48:40

Secretary in England but the

conflict-of-interest food be

0:48:400:48:45

different when Glyn Davies and Chris

Davies both work. They are precisely

0:48:450:48:49

and specifically meant to be

scrutinising the work of the office.

0:48:490:48:59

In a way, we are asking members to

check their own homework. What is

0:48:590:49:03

the point of the Welsh select?

Professor Laura McAllister said

0:49:030:49:07

Brexit and the transfer of powers to

Cardiff have increased its

0:49:070:49:10

relevance.

Was increasing devolution

of power through the various Wales

0:49:100:49:17

and in relation to 2017 so the

Assembly requires greater powers

0:49:170:49:21

over taxation and confidence over

those areas like transport and

0:49:210:49:26

fishery. In response, make the

scrutiny of those areas that are not

0:49:260:49:32

devolved, the reserved areas, even

more important.

They are allowed to

0:49:320:49:37

sit on site committees marked

according to the ministerial code,

0:49:370:49:43

the rule book, there are

restrictions on what they can do.

0:49:430:49:45

One should not perhaps technically

but it is clear that one can. I

0:49:450:49:50

would have to be careful of not

appearing when the Welsh office are

0:49:500:49:56

in front of us to look at

investigation into the Wales Office.

0:49:560:50:00

There was more ministerial code.

They had recommendations critical of

0:50:000:50:06

our embarrassing to the governments

that they should avoid associating

0:50:060:50:11

with.

They cannot sign up to any

recommendations that the committee

0:50:110:50:14

might want to make if they are

critical of the governments. Is it

0:50:140:50:18

an attempt to neuter the Welsh

affairs select committee? Who is to

0:50:180:50:22

say? It does have that effect in

practice.

Myself and Glyn Davies are

0:50:220:50:30

both PPSs to Wales but they have

struggled to find five places on the

0:50:300:50:35

committee said it is left to the

Conservatives to do the hard work on

0:50:350:50:38

that committee. Labour could not

find a Welsh MP to find the last

0:50:380:50:44

vacant seat.

I think we have to be

more out of looking. We have got

0:50:440:50:52

Thelma Walker and she is the MP for:

Valley but the issues we are

0:50:520:50:55

discussing like transport and the

impact of Brexit on agriculture are

0:50:550:51:02

key areas that affect us all in the

United Kingdom.

Labour said the

0:51:020:51:04

Conservatives have a bigger problem

and there PPSs should go.

At this

0:51:040:51:10

point, with no place for them on the

committee.

Why not?

They are in

0:51:100:51:16

Government and it is not proper

scrutiny. If we are going to put on

0:51:160:51:20

ice properly, people want to see us

scrutinise and then surely get the

0:51:200:51:24

right answers for the people of

Wales.

This is a highly unusual

0:51:240:51:28

situation. There is Wales for you,

as one MP put it. We're responsible?

0:51:280:51:35

I have the committee and they

suggest I talk to the Conservative

0:51:350:51:37

Party. -- I ask the committee. They

said not to the Wales Office. They

0:51:370:51:48

pass beyond onto the Cabinet Office.

Bat they pass me on to the Cabinet

0:51:480:51:57

Office. The Cabinet Office sent me

back to the Wales Office. I was left

0:51:570:52:04

on the wiser.

It's absolutely

shameful that the UK governments

0:52:040:52:10

have not afforded the committee but

some respects. It is reasonable to

0:52:100:52:14

ask whether they treat any other

select committee any sane fashion.

0:52:140:52:19

With the ministerial code in mind,

will you criticise your own

0:52:190:52:25

Government?

I have two dates. I have

over the Wales Bill, which is very

0:52:250:52:30

important and I led the opposition

for my party against it so it proved

0:52:300:52:34

my independence there but I am a PPS

and a member of the Conservative

0:52:340:52:38

Party but I am also a member for my

constituency so I will do my job.

0:52:380:52:44

You are on the pay roll now.

Without

any pay.

Put every evidence, three

0:52:440:52:49

of its members will not be able to

sign up to critical reports.

What is

0:52:490:52:56

the role of the site committee? To

offer an effective engine room of

0:52:560:53:01

the scrutiny of the governor

department and what affects Wales.

0:53:010:53:04

The truth is that they will all

affect Wales in some way, shape or

0:53:040:53:08

form. If a member of that committee

is also on the Government payroll, I

0:53:080:53:12

see no way that they cannot become

provide at key moments.

It is a

0:53:120:53:18

whole year this week since the

committee last published a report

0:53:180:53:21

because the general election got in

the way. The row over the membership

0:53:210:53:26

mean its future work may get rather

more scrutiny. With the Lord

0:53:260:53:34

beginning their scrutiny of the EU

withdrawal bill, what is the mood

0:53:340:53:37

over in Brussels over Brexit? I have

Labour MEP Derek Vaughan with me.

0:53:370:53:45

Thank you. For -- and MVP with

Brexit on the horizon, what is life

0:53:450:53:54

like for a British MVP?

For me, it

is as normal. -- as a MEP. I have

0:53:540:54:07

been doing report on EU spending in

Northern Ireland which is very

0:54:070:54:10

topical. If I had still been there

after 2020, unfortunately, I may

0:54:100:54:14

have done the rules and the

structure is so Wales lost a lot of

0:54:140:54:19

influenced by leaving EU.

What about

information after 2021 when the UK

0:54:190:54:29

has efficiently, as they expect,

left the European Union?

I wrote the

0:54:290:54:34

first report in Parliament. Maybe

they gave it to me because they

0:54:340:54:39

thought I might be neutral because I

will not be the after 2020 but they

0:54:390:54:44

still trust me they still want me to

give the major report so that may

0:54:440:54:49

change as we get closer to 2019.

What is their view of Brexit at the

0:54:490:54:55

moment? Is it, as they have been

hearing, despair and not quite

0:54:550:55:00

workmanlike? Had with a view that

you will be leaving in the UK will

0:55:000:55:06

be leaving?

Frustration. They say it

is a very difficult to be a shape as

0:55:060:55:10

someone who we do not know what they

want. We have seen that every last

0:55:100:55:14

few days. In the divorce settlement,

a free element including pain

0:55:140:55:24

financial liabilities. The EU will

agree tomorrow on that transitional

0:55:240:55:32

period and the UK will have to pay

into that, and baby rules, except

0:55:320:55:36

that. There will also be

negotiations on a future trade

0:55:360:55:46

relationship and because the UK

governments cannot make their mind

0:55:460:55:49

up, the best you can expect is a

candidate time deal and that is the

0:55:490:55:53

position the UK will be end, March.

Donald Tusk said it can all be

0:55:530:56:02

revoked and you can come back in if

you want. They certainly do not want

0:56:020:56:06

the UK to leave. Can it be possible

to revoke that article and that he

0:56:060:56:16

would perhaps be able to stay?

The

EU do not want us to leave. They

0:56:160:56:21

want us to stay. It was the EU and

UK chavvy close as possible

0:56:210:56:26

relationship and the UK does not

want that. That is the problem, the

0:56:260:56:31

UK Government has not made up its

mind and it is very difficult to

0:56:310:56:34

make any progress in negotiations.

You say the UK to remain in the

0:56:340:56:40

European Union but they would not

allow them back in on exactly the

0:56:400:56:43

same terms. There would be some...

Something in return.

That would be

0:56:430:56:49

determined by negotiations and I

certainly don't know about that, but

0:56:490:56:56

if we were to revoke Article 50, the

don't know if we would have to do

0:56:560:57:02

the join the Schengen zone, that

would be a matter of negotiation.

0:57:020:57:07

You think the UK Government is in

disarray over its use on Brexit,

0:57:070:57:11

what about the Labour Party? How

close do you think the Labour Party

0:57:110:57:15

is to having a settled view?

I think

my party's position is shifting all

0:57:150:57:22

the time.

That is not ideal, is it?

Ever shifting the public opinion and

0:57:220:57:29

Labour Party members and supporters'

opinions. We know Labour Party

0:57:290:57:34

supporters are members and want to

stay in the single union and --

0:57:340:57:40

single market and trade union. I

would say on this that cheer Starmer

0:57:400:57:45

set out six conditions as to whether

the UK would support the file deal.

0:57:450:57:53

-- Kier Starmer set out. That means

they would need the same benefit as

0:57:530:57:59

now. Identical that it's possible to

the Labour Party will have an

0:57:590:58:03

proportion decisions you make at

that time.

You mentioned the

0:58:030:58:05

majority of Labour members want to

stay in a single market and Customs

0:58:050:58:10

union, and have the second

referendum. This morning, Jeremy

0:58:100:58:13

Corbyn the Andrew Marr programme and

ruled all three of those things out.

0:58:130:58:18

He said you cannot stay in a single

market because it means staying in

0:58:180:58:22

the customs union and ruled out a

second referendum. The membership

0:58:220:58:26

wanted, the leadership won't have

it.

As time goes on, there will be

0:58:260:58:30

further shifts.

Shifts from Jeremy

Corbyn?

The policy will shift. At

0:58:300:58:37

the moment, we say we would stay in

it for the transition period but I

0:58:370:58:40

think we will decide they would stay

in the customs union and single

0:58:400:58:45

market permanently. The next shift I

want to see it is a Brexit is so

0:58:450:58:50

damaging to the UK economy and

public opinion has shifted, we

0:58:500:58:53

should support a vote on the final

deal.

Anybody listening to Jeremy

0:58:530:58:56

Corbyn this morning at an average

using the second referendum would

0:58:560:59:01

say they are probably in denial a

little bit now.

I don't think so. As

0:59:010:59:07

time goes on, people will see the

offer from the EU is much worse than

0:59:070:59:13

they got now and over time, public

opinion will change even more. There

0:59:130:59:17

have been a fewer opinion polls

already sharing that remain is at

0:59:170:59:25

10%, once it is over that, people

will be sitting up and saying, gave

0:59:250:59:32

a vote on the final deal.

One of the

things that was discussed the Jeremy

0:59:320:59:35

Corbyn this morning, we also

discussed that with Stephen Gen X

0:59:350:59:38

and he was here last week, is the

Norway model where you pay to be

0:59:380:59:42

part of the single market and so on.

-- with Stephen Kinnock. That means

0:59:420:59:48

you can come into a job, stay for

six months but you need a job before

0:59:480:59:52

you can come here. Carwyn Jones is

very keen on that. Do you think that

0:59:520:59:55

would be a feasible way forward?

The

best option is to stay in the

0:59:551:00:00

European Union. The second X option

would be to say any single market.

1:00:001:00:05

Second-best option. That is the

second best option because you would

1:00:051:00:10

still have to pay end. We have to

accept everything, like freedom of

1:00:101:00:14

movement, which a lot of people were

voting the because of their fears

1:00:141:00:17

over immigration. But we have

already said that there are current

1:00:171:00:23

EU rules which say if somebody moves

to another country, from another

1:00:231:00:28

country in the EU to the UK, within

three months, they have to show they

1:00:281:00:32

can sustain themselves to having a

job or their own resources. The

1:00:321:00:36

rules are already there but in the

and UK governments are not like

1:00:361:00:40

those rules.

In terms of someone

coming here for a job, that would

1:00:401:00:43

not get to grips with a fair a lot

of people have that EU migration to

1:00:431:00:48

certain sectors were undermining

wages in certain areas, not

1:00:481:00:54

addressing the problem.

Was no

evidence to say that. Academic

1:00:541:00:57

research shows that EU migration

hardly affects wages. We look at the

1:00:571:01:05

overall economy, EU migrants could

far more into the economy than they

1:01:051:01:08

take out. The last figures I saw for

the 2015-16 tax year showed EU

1:01:081:01:14

migrants put into .5 billion pounds

per year more than a true outcome

1:01:141:01:18

money we then spend on the services.

-- 2.5 Elaine pounds.

Thank you for

1:01:181:01:27

coming in. That is it for me at the

by-election next week. Remember that

1:01:271:01:32

will be a special programme from the

constituency at 10:30pm on

1:01:321:01:35

Wednesday.

1:01:351:01:38

And with that it's back to Sarah.

1:01:391:01:41

Welcome back. There have been plenty

of stories this week about Tory

1:01:471:01:53

Brexit angst. What about the Labour

Party? Reports suggest Jeremy Corbyn

1:01:531:01:56

is planning a big awayday to thrash

out Brexit policy.

1:01:561:02:02

Healy was on Andrew Marr this

morning.

The problem with the

1:02:021:02:10

undermining of workers' rights and

conditions has been a serious one.

1:02:101:02:12

What we are saying is there would be

enforcement of the agency agenda

1:02:121:02:18

that the EU has put forward,

preventing wholescale groups of

1:02:181:02:23

workers brought in to undercut and

undermined. There has to be a

1:02:231:02:25

regulated environment.

If you get

that, then you could have easy

1:02:251:02:31

movement?

We did. We have a

recruitment crisis in the NHS now,

1:02:311:02:38

particularly many nurses from Poland

and other countries who have

1:02:381:02:40

traditionally gone to work in this

country.

We are making progress. You

1:02:401:02:46

have agreed to ease of movement...

Our expert panel are still here to

1:02:461:02:52

talk about the Labour approach to

Brexit and some of the other issues.

1:02:521:02:56

That was Jeremy Corbyn being

questioned on the Labour approach to

1:02:561:03:00

free movement of people. When they

go on their big awayday this week,

1:03:001:03:05

will we get clarity on the

fundamental issues? Do Labour want

1:03:051:03:09

us to stay in the single market and

the Customs Union?

The key thing to

1:03:091:03:14

understand about the Labour position

on Brexit is there a competing

1:03:141:03:18

constituencies the Labour membership

as to pay attention to. You have a

1:03:181:03:22

liberal, younger, pro-remain people,

ardent supporters of Jeremy Corbyn

1:03:221:03:28

but also passionate against Brexit.

They see it as a Ukip culture war

1:03:281:03:32

thing they hate. You have a lot of

people living in constituencies who

1:03:321:03:35

have voted Labour who are a little

bit Ukip in some of their cultured

1:03:351:03:41

views of the project. They are

ardently pro-Brexit. You have an

1:03:411:03:47

ideological left faction,

represented in the Labour leader's

1:03:471:03:50

who think the EU is a capitalist

thing and we would be better off out

1:03:501:03:55

of it. It is technically hard for

the Labour leader to reconcile those

1:03:551:03:59

views. On the Customs Union and the

single market, the Labour problem is

1:03:591:04:03

the same as the government problem.

Anybody understands that the UK's

1:04:031:04:11

interests are served by being in

essentially the single market and

1:04:111:04:14

the Customs Union, but also it

happens to be a fact that the UK has

1:04:141:04:19

voted to leave the European Union.

If you stay on the Customs Union and

1:04:191:04:22

the single market, the Norwegian

model, a lot of people will feel

1:04:221:04:26

that is not enough Brexit. They

simply don't have answers to these

1:04:261:04:32

questions. They recognise what

economic reality is telling them to

1:04:321:04:36

do and they haven't found a way of

expressing that economic reality to

1:04:361:04:39

the 52% of people devoted to leave.

Then you enter up with the kind of

1:04:391:04:45

conversation Jeremy Corbyn was

having with Andrew Marr. The policy

1:04:451:04:49

becomes a little bit confused as to

whether they are in favour of free

1:04:491:04:52

movement, easy movement. Free

movement is not a phrase he wants to

1:04:521:04:56

use. He doesn't want to close the

barriers. It all looks a bit

1:04:561:05:00

confused?

Nobody has ever suggested

ending free movement means ending

1:05:001:05:05

immigration completely. One of the

main tranches of the Brexit argument

1:05:051:05:10

was to make it fairer for non-EU

immigrants to come to the country.

1:05:101:05:16

Currently working occupational

shortage lists are used to get

1:05:161:05:20

people to come in. If we need more

doctors, choreographers, dancers,

1:05:201:05:24

then we should put them at the top

of the tree and say, these are the

1:05:241:05:28

people who want to come in. Equally,

we need seasonal workers. There is

1:05:281:05:33

an itinerant against uncontrolled

immigration. That is what the EU

1:05:331:05:36

immigration system is perceived to

be. And controlled immigration. It

1:05:361:05:40

has inevitably led to complaints on

the Remain side of things that we

1:05:401:05:44

will suddenly have no doctors and

nurses. There was a row about that

1:05:441:05:48

recently. The latest ONS figures

suggest there has been a 5.4% rise

1:05:481:05:53

in EU doctors and nurses coming into

Britain. We will see. To be fair to

1:05:531:05:59

Jeremy Corbyn Knipe body gave a

pretty good account of himself today

1:05:591:06:01

and answered questions in a fairly

straight way. He did a better job of

1:06:011:06:08

explaining Labour's Brexit position

than Kier Starmer has been doing for

1:06:081:06:11

weeks.

It has been difficult for a

Labour spokespeople to outline the

1:06:111:06:18

policy on Brexit. There doesn't

appear to be a clear policy. Do you

1:06:181:06:23

think they are moving to a position

where they will have a much more

1:06:231:06:27

defined approach to what they want?

First of all, I think Rafael's

1:06:271:06:35

description was a bit of a

mischaracterisation. The Labour

1:06:351:06:38

position now is we're Remainers that

accept a democratic vote has taken

1:06:381:06:45

place and we need to exit the EU

because that was the result. We need

1:06:451:06:48

to do that in a way that keeps

business and jobs and the economy

1:06:481:06:52

vibrant. In a way that the

Conservatives showed no particular

1:06:521:06:57

sign of caring about. It is not that

they think the EU is a dastardly

1:06:571:07:02

project, it is more like, this is

what people voted for, how do we do

1:07:021:07:06

it? There is no point in the Labour

Party at running the government on

1:07:061:07:14

Brexit. There is no point in the

Labour Party saying, this is exactly

1:07:141:07:19

what we would do, when the

government is the one in the driving

1:07:191:07:21

seat. They are controlling the

negotiations, they get to decide

1:07:211:07:26

what is going on. What Labour can do

in this reality is challenge the

1:07:261:07:31

government when they think they are

wrong, as they have done in fact

1:07:311:07:34

since the negotiations began. We

have got a transition period. We

1:07:341:07:39

have got various things. We have got

a parliamentary vote at the end of

1:07:391:07:43

Brexit. That is because of Labour

putting pressure on government. You

1:07:431:07:51

can take credit. You can put it

where you want to. We're having a

1:07:511:07:58

discussion about what the Labour

Party position on Brexit is. I am

1:07:581:08:02

saying, where is the wisdom of

Labour overrunning the government,

1:08:021:08:06

which is controlling negotiations?

The other thing that is important to

1:08:061:08:10

says the party position is very

responsive and it is changing. As I

1:08:101:08:17

understand that they are very

responsive to all the polling on

1:08:171:08:19

positions around a referendum.

How

unusual for the Labour Party to

1:08:191:08:26

respond to public opinion.

But

that's just democratic, isn't it,

1:08:261:08:32

Rafael? They are responsive to the

conversations they are having with

1:08:321:08:38

their EU sister parties in Europe.

They are listening to all these

1:08:381:08:43

things. And calibrating as things go

on.

Donald Trump had some advice as

1:08:431:08:49

to how we should approach the EU

negotiations. Aimed at the Prime

1:08:491:08:54

Minister not Jeremy Corbyn. This is

how he said he would approach

1:08:541:08:56

negotiations.

Would it be the way I would

1:08:561:09:00

negotiate? No. I have a lot of

respect for your Prime Minister. I

1:09:001:09:07

think they are doing a job. I think

I would've negotiated it

1:09:071:09:11

differently. I would have had a

different attitude.

What would you

1:09:111:09:14

have done?

I would have said the

European Union is not cracked up to

1:09:141:09:20

what it is supposed to be and I

would have taken a tougher stand in

1:09:201:09:23

getting out.

A few in the

Conservative Party would probably

1:09:231:09:27

agree with Donald Trump. Is that

helpful to the Prime Minister?

1:09:271:09:32

Coming after what was a helpful week

from Donald Trump in terms of

1:09:321:09:35

relations with the Prime Minister,

his love of Britain and his promise

1:09:351:09:38

of tremendous trade in Davos,

perhaps it is a bit of a slide.

1:09:381:09:44

Actually this morning we heard Piers

Morgan described Donald Trump, his

1:09:441:09:47

close friend, as a ball china shop.

That would be his approach to

1:09:471:09:52

negotiations. Perhaps David Cameron

should have taken more a bit Donald

1:09:521:09:56

Trump approach when he tried to

reform the EU from the inside, which

1:09:561:10:00

in the end his failure to do so led

to the referendum we are now

1:10:001:10:04

debating.

There are lots in the

Conservative Party, lots of

1:10:041:10:08

backbench Brexiteers, who think that

is what has gone wrong, that the

1:10:081:10:12

government has made too many

concessions to the EU, hasn't been

1:10:121:10:15

hard enough in the divorce period.

Yes, a lot of those people are not

1:10:151:10:23

in government and have not got a

practical -- practical reality of

1:10:231:10:27

what is required to take the UK out

of European Union. Everything Donald

1:10:271:10:30

Trump is said about international

policy, particularly with regard to

1:10:301:10:34

Europe and the European Union,

demonstrated as not have a great

1:10:341:10:37

understanding of what the EU is as a

project or an institution. If I was

1:10:371:10:41

a Tory Brexiteer I would be a bit

concerned about Donald Trump been

1:10:411:10:44

very enthusiastic about the project,

because for a lot of liberal minded,

1:10:441:10:49

moderate people in the broad

mainstream of public life and

1:10:491:10:52

politics, Donald Trump is absolutely

toxic. The idea that Brexit is a

1:10:521:10:57

sibling project -- project is

damaging. Theresa May will want to

1:10:571:11:03

make it distinct from what Donald

Trump is doing.

One other

1:11:031:11:07

intervention today is Grant Schapps

has been out in the papers. He has

1:11:071:11:11

said it is becoming increasingly

clear we cannot continue to muddle

1:11:111:11:15

along like this. Mrs May should name

a date. By that he means a date by

1:11:151:11:21

which she will exit Number 10 and

stopping Prime Minister. He wants a

1:11:211:11:24

timetable. He says if that doesn't

happen there may be a revolt.

1:11:241:11:28

Rachel, it is not what she needs, is

it?

Is not what she needs. It is

1:11:281:11:34

maybe what the country needs. She

has been put on notice. She has been

1:11:341:11:37

told of things don't improve by May,

which is when there are local

1:11:371:11:42

elections, including in major

cities, if the Conservative Party do

1:11:421:11:45

as badly in those as they are

expected to, and predicted two, then

1:11:451:11:50

there may be more moves to get rid

of her. It is not surprising, is it?

1:11:501:11:58

The situation is completely

untenable. We can't model along like

1:11:581:12:02

this, having a Prime Minister or

can't lead.

Graham Bailey, the chair

1:12:021:12:08

of the 19 -- 1922 committee, said he

keeps getting letters from backbench

1:12:081:12:15

MPs who want to trigger a leadership

contest -- contest. They say it is

1:12:151:12:21

getting nearly 40 mark. That sounds

like they are warning MPs, please

1:12:211:12:25

don't send in any more letters

because you may trigger a leadership

1:12:251:12:28

contest. Is that a real threat?

I

think the notion of Graham Brady

1:12:281:12:33

being ashen faced is probably quite

true. There are a lot of stories

1:12:331:12:38

today saying that eight of the new

intake are prepared to give letters

1:12:381:12:41

in. Some of the old schools.

Problems among Remainers and

1:12:411:12:47

Brexiteers. After recent may need to

do is take hold of the situation. --

1:12:471:12:53

what to May needs to do is take hold

of the situation. She needs a third

1:12:531:13:00

keynote speech on Brexit to take

control, to silence the critics.

1:13:001:13:03

Boris Johnson is due to give his own

landmark speech on a so-called

1:13:031:13:08

liberal Brexit, which I'm sure

Rachel will be looking forward to

1:13:081:13:11

hearing. Perhaps Theresa May should

seize the moment, take control and

1:13:111:13:15

put her own new stamp, so people are

not just mentioning Lancaster House

1:13:151:13:20

and Florence but a Newsbeat.

A big

danger for Theresa May is not

1:13:201:13:25

Brexit. There are a lot of Tory MPs

who think Brexit is taking care of

1:13:251:13:30

itself.

They are worried about the NHS. We

1:13:301:13:32

have to leave it there.

1:13:321:13:33

That's all for today.

1:13:331:13:34

Join me again next Sunday

at 11am here on BBC One.

1:13:341:13:36

Until then, bye bye.

1:13:361:13:40

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