19/11/2017 Sunday Politics West Midlands


19/11/2017

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Morning everyone, and welcome

to the Sunday Politics.

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I'm Sarah Smith.

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And this is your guide

to all the big stories that

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are shaping politics this weekend,

and a few of the smaller ones too.

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Philip Hammond is getting ready

to deliver his latest Budget

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on Wednesday and he's not short

of advice - to spend more,

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show restraint, even

to stop being an Eyore -

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but can he change the direction

of the country and his government?

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Conservative Party darling

Jacob Rees-Mogg has

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some advice of his own.

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He thinks the Chancellor

is being far too gloomy about Brexit

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- he joins me live to explain why.

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The former Leave campaign leader,

Gisela Stuart, will be here debating

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with pro-EU campaigner

Alastair Campbell, after taking

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a trip to her native Germany

to speak to businesses

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about Brexit.

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And, as we wait to find out what's

on the menu for this week's budget,

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we're in a diner off

the A1 in Peterborough,

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finding out who people most trust

with the economy -

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Philip Hammond or John McDonnell?

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And in the Midlands:

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Yes, there's a Budget coming up.

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The Midland Metro?

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The Police?

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What should be in that famous

briefcase for us here?

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Taxing questions in half an hour.

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All that coming up in the programme.

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And with me for for all of it,

three journalists who've promised

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not to show off like Michael Gove

by using any long economicky words -

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although I'm not sure they really

know that many anyway -

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it's Tom Newton Dunn,

Gaby Hinsliff and Iain Martin.

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Let's take a look at the big

political stories making the news

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this Sunday morning,

and as you might expect there's

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plenty of speculation

about what might or not might be

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in Philip Hammond's Budget.

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The Chancellor is promising a big

investment in new technology,

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including driverless cars -

which could be on the road by 2021.

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He's been interviewed

in the Sunday Times,

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where he talks about plans to reach

the target of building

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300,000 homes every year,

or the equivalent of a city

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the size of Leeds.

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That paper speculates that he's

attempting to turn from "fiscal

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Phil" into "hopeful Hammond"

as he tries to set out

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a vision for the country,

not just a list of numbers.

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The Sunday Telegraph thinks that

Mr Hammond is planning to offer

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a pay rise to nurses as part

of a bid to take on Labour.

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But that hasn't impressed

Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell.

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He's spoken to a number of papers

and is calling for an emergency

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budget to invest in public services

and help struggling households.

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So that's a taste of what you might

hear on Wednesday and Mr Hammond

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and Mr McDonnell have both been

appearing this morning

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on the Andrew Marr Show.

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I think Britain has a very

bright future ahead of it,

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and we have to embrace

the opportunities that

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a post-Brexit world will offer.

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They will be opportunities that

are based on huge change,

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huge technological evolution.

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It's not always going to be easy,

but the British people have shown

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time and time again that we're up

for these challenges.

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For many people out there,

this is a depression.

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We've had people whose wages

have been cut by 10%.

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Nurses, for example.

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We've had people who are now...

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1.25 million food parcels handed out

in the sixth richest

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country in the world.

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That's what I call a recession

for large numbers of people.

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We will be talking about Labour and

their economic policies in a moment,

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but let's start with what we might

expect from the budget. We will talk

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to our panel of political observers.

Philip Hammond is under pressure to

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set out a bold vision and reset the

government's programme. Can we

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expect that?

No, we can't. We have

heard enough from the Chancellor

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across various broadcast and his

article in the Sunday Times. I think

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we will not be getting a bold

budget. His precise words short... A

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short time ago were a balanced

budget. Some Tory hearts will think.

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They desperately want something to

go out and shout about, something to

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capture people's imagination, and do

big and bold things, like how on

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earth are they going to build those

new 300,000 houses a year? There are

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good reasons why he has chosen what

appears to be a pretty staid,

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Conservative budget, and that is

that they are probably unable to get

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anything bold through Parliament.

His capital is so low among Tory

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MPs. If you have a minority

government, it is tricky.

We have

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seen ministers on programmes like

this in the last few weeks putting

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in the bids for what they would like

spending on, whether it be payment

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for nurses or parliament. Would he

struggled to get something radical

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through the Commons?

Big ideas cost

money. That's the problem. Bold

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ideas are controversial. In some

ways, Tory MPs are asking their

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Chancellor to do the impossible.

Government is already doing

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something big and bold, which is

Brexit. That has implications for

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how much money is available, how

many risks you want to take with

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everything else. What is crucial is

that he demonstrates a reputation

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for competence. The reputation that

the Conservative government has for

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economic competence, that many

people prefer them to Labour on the

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issue of economic competence. The

worst thing he could do is come up

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with a big, bold idea that

unravelled quickly. What they

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absolutely don't want is to come up

with an exciting idea that falls

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apart three days after the budget.

He is under pressure from

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Brexiteers, who are suspicious of

him. Does he have to offer them

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something?

Part of his problem is he

has to offer so many different

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people different things. This is

Philip Hammond trying to be and

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dynamic.

It is hard to tell

sometimes.

At least in theoretical

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terms. His longer-term difficulty is

that, if you look at the economic

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cycle, we are getting to a point

where we are probably overdue, if

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you put Brexit to one side, overdue

some kind of correction or downturn,

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if you look what has happened to

asset prices globally. What will be

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worrying for the Treasury is, just

as everyone is saying we should turn

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on the taps and build this or that,

we might be at the top of a cycle,

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and the Treasury will want to lose

something in the armoury in terms of

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probably growing the deficit if

there are economic difficulties in

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the next two years, and then there

is Brexit as well.

It sounds

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impossible.

I think so. Talking to

his friends and colleagues over the

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last few days, he had to make a

call, which was precisely how much

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can I get away with, with my

political capital being as low as it

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is, with the mixed problems he had

at the last budget, and a lot of the

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party disliking his approach to

Brexit. He is damned if he is,

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damned if he doesn't. Universal

Credit, we are expecting a reduction

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in the time it takes to wait,

business rates, affected by high

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inflation... I think we will see a

problem fixing budget which will

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probably do quite a lot of important

spadework in many areas.

We will

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pick up on some of this later in the

programme.

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Let's speak now to the Conservative

MP Jacob Rees-Mogg, this week

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he helpfully launched an alternative

"budget for Brexit" and advised

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the Chancellor to be less gloomy

about the consequences

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of leaving the EU.

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Thank you for joining us. Your

alternative budget is pretty

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radical. Almost half corporation

tax, Cap Stamp duty to help the

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London market. It seems you are

advocating the opposite from what we

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will hear from your Chancellor on

Wednesday.

There are two parts to

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the proposals I suggested. One is

that we should show that after we

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have left the European Union, the UK

is open to the rest of the world. It

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is about opening up to the rest of

the world. Secondly, looking at the

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modelling that has been done by the

Treasury and some other forecasters,

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which has been so comprehensively

wrong. The forecasts made about what

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would happen after Brexit have

turned out to be hopelessly false.

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The team at Cardiff University have

done some modelling based on the

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classical economic principles and

what happens if you move to free

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trade that would be very positive

for the economy.

You are predicting

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a Brexit dividend of £135 billion,

which sounds fantastic. Why are you

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right, and everybody else, including

the Bank of England and the

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Institute for Fiscal Studies, why

are they all wrong?

It depends on

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the type of modelling. The modelling

that have been done by the Treasury

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have been based on gravity models,

which work on the basis of the

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nearness of the market and the size

of the economy you are trading with.

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These have been wrong in the past.

They predicted that if we joined the

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euro, trade would grow by 300%. That

was then revised down to 200%, but

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it is fantasyland. The model I am

working on, by Sir Patrick Minford,

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who has a record of getting these

things right. He was right about the

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exchange rate mechanism, right about

the euro.

Being right in the past

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doesn't mean you are right about the

future. Why do you think the

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Treasury will not pick up the same

numbers, if this is so obvious to

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you?

I think the Treasury was

humiliated by the errors in its

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forecast prior to Brexit, and is

trying to defend its position. The

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short-term economic consequences of

a vote to leave was one of the most

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dishonest documents to come out of

the Treasury, purely a piece of

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political propaganda. They are

wounded by that and sticking to the

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same script, rather than looking at

other forecasts and other experts.

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You think the governor of the Bank

of England is an enemy of Brexit,

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and it sounds like you think the

Treasury is opposed to it. As the

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Chancellor fallen under their spell

as well, and been persuaded to be an

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enemy of Brexit?

I have admiration

the Chancellor, but George Osborne,

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his predecessor, was the architect

of Project Fear. He was too close to

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the Bank of England and lost his

independence. That is what needs to

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change. It is an opportunity in the

budget for Philip Hammond to show he

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is putting aside the Treasury's

mistakes in the past. It is very

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encouraging what he is saying this

morning, about a more positive

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approach to Brexit.

Lord Lawson has

accused Philip Hammond of being very

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close to sabotage on Brexit. He says

we need a can-do man at the Treasury

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and not a prophet of doom.

I think

that Philip Hammond is an

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exceptionally intelligent man, a

very thoughtful man. It is not a bad

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thing to have a Chancellor who is

serious minded and steady, rather

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than one who is a showman and uses

the Exchequer to interfere in

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absolutely everything.

I have a lot

of confidence in the Chancellor.

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When you launched your budget for

Brexit, you said the government has

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to deliver the £350 million for the

NHS that was delivered during the

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referendum, even though you didn't

think that promise should have been

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made. Is that something they now

need to deliver wrong?

It is. This

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only happens once we have left.

Politicians have to recognise that

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voters don't look at the small print

of electoral policies. If you put

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£350 million on the side of a bus

and say it may be available for the

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NHS, it is reasonable for people to

think that is a promise. Brexit was

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won by the Leave campaign, so it it

is important that they deliver on

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that promise. Politicians must keep

faith with voters and deliver on

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implied promises, as well as ones

that are set out in detail.

The

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Cabinet will move on to talk about

the Brexit bill this week, and we

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understand they may need to come up

with more money to satisfy EU

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demands. The more money spent on

that is less money available for

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things like spending on the NHS. Are

you worried about the size of the

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exit bill?

You have your finger on

the important point. The government

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will have to choose whether to give

lots of money to the European Union,

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or whether to spend money on UK

public services, and that will be

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part of the negotiation. On all

these issues, it comes down to

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choice is the government makes. I

would encourage the government to

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choose our own domestic public

services rather than expensive

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schemes in continent or Europe.

Why

are you advocating that the

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government should spend up to £2.5

billion on a no deal scenario?

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It is important that we are ready to

leave in the event of no deal. If we

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left with no deal we would on

current figures still be saving the

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remains of 18 billion so we would be

saving 15 and a half billion against

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paying for the financial framework.

To show we're ready on day one would

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be money well spent and most would

be needed any way. We need to have

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new customs arrangements in place

even if it is not for a no deal

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situation.

There are suggestions

that the Government might back down

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on the idea of putting the time and

date of leaving the EU on the face

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of the bill. Would you be Exxon

certained if that was -- concerned

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if that was remove prd the bill?

It

is in Article 50, unless Article 50

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is extended by the Council of Europe

we leave on 20th March 2019 and it

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makes accepts that should be the

same in -- sense that should be in

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same in domestic law. But that is a

secondary concern from my point of

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view. It is important that we leave

on that date.

Stay there if you

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would.

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We're joined in the studio

by the former minister

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Stephen Hammond.

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He's no relation to the Chancellor,

but he is a member

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of the Treasury Select Committee

and he's one of the Tory MPs named

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as "Brexit mutineers"

by the Daily Telegraph

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this week - lucky him.

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I'm assured you're no relation to

the Chancellor. Let's just pick up

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on what Jacob Rees Mogg was saying.

How important is it to you as a

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rebel that the Government does put

the date on.

I agree with Jacob it

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is in the Article 50 process, the

key reason it is important is the

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negotiations look like they're going

to be tricky and longer than we

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expected and it may well be that we

are still negotiating up until March

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2019. We could have a short couple

of weeks period of extension. Why do

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harm to the economy by falling out

on a precise time? If those

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negotiations need to be extended.

They won't go on for more than a

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couple of weeks, because there will

be elections in Europe in June 2019

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and there is no chance of a new

commission or Parliament dealing

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with this. Giving it flexibility and

with this flexibility the government

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said it wants flexibility in

negotiations, why give all the

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advantage to the other side? Part of

that was evidenced yesterday by

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somebody suggesting they will ask

for the Margaret Thatcher rebate to

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be suspended. That is as a result of

putting the date on the bill.

You

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did not agree with the Brexit

committee and think it is important

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that we set the date and time?

I

think it is perfectly reasonable to

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set the date and time and I think

these negotiations fill the time

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available. The United States and

Australia agreed a free trade deal

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between April 2003 and February

2004. These things don't need to be

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interm Knabl if both sides want to

agree. I think the British

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electorate would be very concerned

if nearly three years after the vote

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to leave, we still hadn't left. I

think most people expected that we

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would have left by now. The

negotiations realistically to get

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through the approval of the European

Parliament and so on need to be

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completed by at the end of next

year, going up to the last minute I

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don't think is real is tick.

To move

on to talk about a trade deal and

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getting that done, the EU need to

agree to move on and we need to

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settle the divorce, cabinet are

going to be talking about the amount

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that needs to be spent on that,

Stephen what manned, are you happy

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for the Government to offer more?

I

hope that the Government will stick

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to the Florence speech in terms of

ensuring that we fulfil our

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liabilities and obligations. I'm not

clear exactly whether that is 20

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billion or 40 billion and I'm not

sure the government is. If part of

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the divorce bill is then some

settlement for getting the trade

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deal, we will need to examine that

carefully.

Jacob Rees Mogg, is this

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that might spark another war in the

party if the cabinet suggest they're

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prepared to pay more?

I think we

need to go back to what you said,

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that the - the EU said they want us

to settle the money first. The

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Government doesn't need to follow

that. They need our money. If we

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don't pay any money for the final 21

months of the framework, the EU has

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about 20 billion pounds gap in its

finances and it has no legal

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requirement to borrow. So it

insolvents or the Germans and the

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others pay more. So our position on

money is very strong and we

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shouldn't fall into the trap of

thinking just because Mr Barnier

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said it it is as if he has received

tablets of stone like Moses, he has

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not.

There is a sense that the

Government feels a mo generous offer

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would set a good tone, the kind of

approach that Jacob Rees Mogg

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suggests would not make for smooth

relations.

It probably wouldn't. But

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we have to be clear what we are

paying for and what we are getting.

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No one is suggesting we should hand

over money without proper scrutiny.

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It may be appropriate to put money

to facilitate international trade to

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secure jobs. We have to be careful

about the analysis about what the

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scale and size of Brexit dividend is

and the size of payments will be.

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You mustn't confuse gross and net

and there is disagreement about some

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of the numbers.

On that, Jacob Rees

Mogg in his budget for Brexit

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suggests in five years time we would

have a 135 billion Brexit bonus. Do

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you think it is real is tick.

He is

using some analysis that has some

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flaws. It is predicting a price drop

in the United Kingdom of 10%. Tariff

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drops will only be 3 or 4%. It is

predicting huge productivity gains,

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the likes of which we have not seen

in 20 years. Thirdly, despite his

0:21:240:21:29

view on modellers there is evidence

that they weren't and if you go into

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the detail of the analysis, some of

the data is 14 years out of date.

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Jacob Rees Mogg, you're being

hopelessly optimistic?

I don't think

0:21:410:21:46

that right. I think the fall in

prices comes because you make the

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economy more competitive and you

take away tariffs which reduces the

0:21:510:21:55

price of food by 20%. That is a big

reduction. Bear in mind that the

0:21:550:22:02

biggest tariffs hit food, clothing

and foot wear that, harm the poorest

0:22:020:22:06

in society the most. The gains from

productivity come from is in

0:22:060:22:13

additional tariffs. Leading to other

saving and further investment I

0:22:130:22:21

think the modelling done by the

professor is as good as modelling

0:22:210:22:25

can be. That doesn't mean it is

infallible. The failure of gravity

0:22:250:22:31

model is well known.

Michael Gove

was accused of auditioning for the

0:22:310:22:38

job of Chancellor by using long

words. Do you know any good long

0:22:380:22:44

economic words?

I don't think that

we want to get into this type of

0:22:440:22:48

business actually. I think all

Conservatives and Steven and I very

0:22:480:22:52

much agree on this, want to show as

united a front as we can manage.

0:22:520:22:58

There are differences on some

aspects of policy, but in terms of

0:22:580:23:02

individuals we want to stand

together and support the best

0:23:020:23:05

interests of the government.

Thank

you.

0:23:050:23:10

Brexit Secretary David Davis

was in Berlin this week trying

0:23:100:23:12

to win the support of business

leaders there for a comprehensive

0:23:120:23:15

free trade deal with the EU.

0:23:150:23:17

He warned them against putting

'politics above prosperity'

0:23:170:23:20

and reportedly got a bit

of a frosty reception.

0:23:200:23:24

Well, the former Labour MP

Gisela Stuart was one of the leaders

0:23:240:23:27

of the Vote Leave referendum

campaign.

0:23:270:23:29

We travelled with Gisela to Germany

to meet the business leaders

0:23:290:23:31

she says will help secure a good

trade deal for the UK.

0:23:310:23:34

Here's her film.

0:23:340:23:38

I was born and brought up

in this part of Germany,

0:23:440:23:47

and although I've lived in the UK

for the past 40 years,

0:23:470:23:51

and represented the constituency

of Birmingham and Edgbaston for 20

0:23:510:23:55

years, my family still live here,

and I've kept many links.

0:23:550:24:00

I was chair of Vote Leave,

and together with only a handful

0:24:020:24:05

of other Labour MPs,

we campaigned to leave

0:24:050:24:08

the European Union because we

thought the country would be

0:24:080:24:10

better off outside.

0:24:100:24:12

It's hard to remember now, but back

in the 1970s, when we joined

0:24:120:24:16

the European Economic Community,

people thought that by joining

0:24:160:24:19

the club we would see the kind

of economic miracle Germany

0:24:190:24:24

experienced in the '70s back home.

0:24:240:24:26

The "Deutsche Wirtschaftswunder"

would come to Britain.

0:24:260:24:28

But, of course, it didn't.

0:24:280:24:33

Within a few short years

of the devastation of World War II,

0:24:350:24:38

Germany had emerged as

the largest economy in Europe.

0:24:380:24:41

Germany's extraordinary

success is down to

0:24:410:24:43

the pragmatism of its business.

0:24:430:24:47

German Mittelstand is family

dominated, forward-thinking,

0:24:470:24:52

long-term thinking, reliability,

are very important values.

0:24:520:24:58

Changing moods on a political

landscape and changing frameworks

0:24:580:25:01

are toxic for our way of doing

business, and we want

0:25:010:25:04

that to go away.

0:25:040:25:11

German business is not given

to making big political statements

0:25:110:25:15

out of step with government policy,

but talk to those in decision-making

0:25:150:25:18

positions, and it is clear

that they want to secure a good deal

0:25:180:25:21

with the United Kingdom.

0:25:210:25:24

BMW employs almost 90,000

people here in Germany,

0:25:240:25:27

and exports just under

1 million cars annually.

0:25:270:25:32

The UK is a vital market.

0:25:320:25:36

What we are really seeking right now

is more clarity, more certainty,

0:25:360:25:40

because in our cycle of investment,

cycle of development,

0:25:400:25:45

it's about a seven-year or so period

that we look at,

0:25:450:25:49

but we are now, of course, starting

to think about what comes next,

0:25:490:25:53

and what we need to see now

is what is going to be

0:25:530:25:56

the trading relationship,

how are the logistics going to look,

0:25:560:25:59

what is going to be

the requirements for people

0:25:590:26:01

moving across the continent?

0:26:010:26:04

Because all of these things

are important to us today.

0:26:040:26:06

And, by the way, they will be just

as important tomorrow.

0:26:060:26:10

Berlin is well aware that

if the European Commission

0:26:100:26:12

is allowed to put up trade barriers

against Britain, it will be

0:26:120:26:16

German business, German consumers

and German employees

0:26:160:26:18

who will suffer.

0:26:180:26:23

TRANSLATION:

I think it's very

important that we complete

0:26:230:26:25

the first phase successfully.

0:26:250:26:27

The first phase of the negotiations,

which looks at the financial

0:26:270:26:30

consequences of Great Britain

leaving the EU.

0:26:300:26:33

And then it's not a question

of punishment payments.

0:26:330:26:36

It's about when you are part

of a multilayer, contractual

0:26:360:26:39

obligation and you want to leave

that, then of course it takes

0:26:390:26:43

a whole lot of obligations

which you have to deal with,

0:26:430:26:45

so both sides are satisfied and can

live with the consequences.

0:26:450:26:55

It isn't everyone's interests

for the UK to part on good terms.

0:26:550:26:59

Of course there was going to be

upset when the UK voted to leave,

0:26:590:27:02

but creating uncertainty over

the terms of UK's exit will simply

0:27:020:27:06

have a disruptive effect

on exports to UK markets.

0:27:060:27:11

Far better to have a sensible,

amicable negotiation that results

0:27:110:27:15

both sides being able to trade

together and work

0:27:150:27:17

together post-Brexit.

0:27:170:27:24

Markus Krall is managing

director of Goetzpartners,

0:27:240:27:25

and heads the Financial

Institution Industry Group.

0:27:250:27:27

Is it true to say that,

if we negotiate Brexit well,

0:27:270:27:32

then a good Brexit can actually

strengthen the United Kingdom,

0:27:320:27:34

the European Union and Germany?

0:27:340:27:36

It's absolutely true.

0:27:360:27:38

I think that this

is about two things.

0:27:380:27:41

One, about proving that

free trade is possible

0:27:410:27:46

between a European Union that is

smaller and a former member country.

0:27:460:27:49

If you don't prove that free

trade is possible there,

0:27:490:27:52

then the question becomes,

what is Europe standing for?

0:27:520:27:56

Number two is, I also

believe the free trade,

0:27:560:28:01

free market and democratic and less

bureaucratic approach that Britain

0:28:010:28:05

has chosen as the path

into the future is a role

0:28:050:28:08

model for Europe.

0:28:080:28:11

The time has come both

for the United Kingdom

0:28:110:28:14

and for the EU to be more clear

about what kind of

0:28:140:28:16

deal we can achieve.

0:28:160:28:19

Both sides need to be bold.

0:28:190:28:21

As long as we remain open to free

trade and sensible co-operation,

0:28:210:28:24

we can arrive at something that

will benefit both sides.

0:28:240:28:30

But one thing's obvious -

if we are an open and free trading

0:28:300:28:33

economy, we've got one big

cheerleader on our side,

0:28:330:28:35

and that is German business.

0:28:350:28:41

That was Gisela Stuart

setting out her case

0:28:410:28:43

and we'll be hearing

from the opposite side

0:28:430:28:45

of the argument in the coming weeks.

0:28:450:28:47

Gisela Stuart joins us in the studio

now, as does Alastair Campbell.

0:28:470:28:50

He used to work for Tony Blair

in Number 10, set up

0:28:500:28:53

the New European Newspaper

to campaign against Brexit,

0:28:530:28:55

and is so pro-European that at this

year's Labour conference

0:28:550:28:57

he was heard playing Ode

to Joy on the bagpipes.

0:28:570:28:59

Welcome both of you.

0:28:590:29:04

We will start with your point in the

film, that you think the German

0:29:040:29:09

business once the EU to offer the UK

a generous deal because it is in

0:29:090:29:14

their interests, yet the president

of the German equivalent of the CBI

0:29:140:29:18

said that defending the single

market must be the priority for the

0:29:180:29:23

EU, and another says that the

cohesion of the remaining member

0:29:230:29:29

states remains the highest priority.

The president of the CBI just after

0:29:290:29:36

the referendum said that it would be

in nobody 's interest to introduce

0:29:360:29:40

tariffs and trade barriers. On the

UK side, I don't think there's a

0:29:400:29:48

full understanding that economic

interests are incredibly important,

0:29:480:29:52

that they are trying to cover

economic interests on the cohesion

0:29:520:29:59

of the 27. I think different

economic interests will raise the

0:29:590:30:03

head of different countries. The

German auto industry is as important

0:30:030:30:11

as the financial sector is here. The

banking crisis is far from over, but

0:30:110:30:17

the big riffs which were going on is

that the E U is losing its second

0:30:170:30:23

biggest net contributor. Countries

like Germany want a deal with the UK

0:30:230:30:27

that is a free open market. There

are other tensions in the EU that

0:30:270:30:34

wants to become more protectionist,

and that is a bad thing.

Looking at

0:30:340:30:38

the film there with the Jacob

Rees-Mogg interview. No matter what

0:30:380:30:46

side of leave you are, it is

delusional and all driven by wishful

0:30:460:30:51

thinking. You could find a

businessman who says Brexit will be

0:30:510:30:55

good for Germany. The vast bulk of

British businesses think this is a

0:30:550:30:59

disaster, as do the vast bulk of

European businesses. One of the

0:30:590:31:04

delusions on which they ran their

campaign is the idea that they need

0:31:040:31:09

us more than we need them. That is

not true.

Be you self about £80

0:31:090:31:15

billion more in goods and services

into the UK than we do to them, and

0:31:150:31:20

Germany has one of the biggest

deficits. It is in their interest.

0:31:200:31:24

Of course it is, but it is a myth

that they need us more than we need

0:31:240:31:30

them. The damage that will be done

to us, even with a good deal. Let's

0:31:300:31:37

be frank, where these negotiations

are, Theresa May is either going to

0:31:370:31:42

end up with a bad deal and dumber or

no Deal. A bad deal is bad, and a no

0:31:420:31:49

deal is a catastrophe.

You are

setting up ideas that which were not

0:31:490:31:56

there to begin with and knocking

them down. Delusional.

35 billion,

0:31:560:32:03

the Brexit bonus.

If we had a

referendum, it was a democratic

0:32:030:32:08

decision. I know you don't like it

and that a lot of business would

0:32:080:32:11

have preferred to stay with the

status quo. We have had the

0:32:110:32:16

referendum. Undermining political

institutions is in no one's

0:32:160:32:21

interests. It is functioning

democracies which lead to economic

0:32:210:32:27

stability.

Theresa May fought an

election Inc on a hard Brexit that

0:32:270:32:34

was rejected.

As we heard from BMW,

there is uncertainty for business.

0:32:340:32:47

There will be elections, European

elections, in 2019. There will be a

0:32:470:32:52

change of the Commission and the

parliament. We have a narrow window

0:32:520:32:57

to implement the mandate for the

referendum which Parliament voted

0:32:570:33:01

for. So rather than you undermining

this country, why don't you work

0:33:010:33:08

together to get the best deal?

Because we totally disagree.

You

0:33:080:33:12

don't want a good deal?

I'm in

favour of a good deal, and I could

0:33:120:33:18

give them some advice as to how they

get a good deal. First, you have a

0:33:180:33:24

cabinet that has an agreed strategy.

18 months in, they don't have that.

0:33:240:33:30

I am not undermining a deal. I am

continuing to pose questions about

0:33:300:33:35

what they are trying to do and how

they are trying to do it. This is

0:33:350:33:41

democracy. Democracy is the ability

for Parliament, which is not doing

0:33:410:33:46

its job properly, and the public, to

keep scrutinising, and if they want

0:33:460:33:50

to change their mind, having the

right to do that.

You were trying to

0:33:500:33:57

encourage the Taoiseach yesterday to

play hardball with the UK.

I am on

0:33:570:34:01

the side of the UK, and I am worried

that if we go down the path that we

0:34:010:34:07

are being taken down, and Theresa

May and Boris Johnson and the rest

0:34:070:34:11

of them, this shambolic path, we are

going to do fundamental, lasting

0:34:110:34:16

damage to the country we love. I

don't care about the Civil Aviation

0:34:160:34:21

Authority. I care about Britain. --

I don't care about the European

0:34:210:34:27

Union. If every lorry going into the

UK today was stopped for just two

0:34:270:34:35

minutes, we would create an instant

17 mile traffic jam. These people

0:34:350:34:41

just don't care...

I am not these

people! Let us not conflate... You

0:34:410:34:51

either decide that you are

implementing a democratic decision

0:34:510:34:55

of a referendum that was called and

over 17 million voted.

You will not

0:34:550:35:01

stop me debating it. Just as Nigel

Farage...

Stop talking about Nigel

0:35:010:35:09

Farrell Raj. Vote Leave was not

Nigel Farage. There is no desire in

0:35:090:35:20

Germany to punish the United

Kingdom.

They are behaving

0:35:200:35:25

reasonably.

There is a battle of

protectionism and free market going

0:35:250:35:29

on. If we implement this properly,

give businesses the kind of

0:35:290:35:35

incentives they want, we can get a

good deal. So you want a bad deal?

0:35:350:35:41

You are driven by wishful thinking.

Gisela Stuart, you are saying that

0:35:410:35:48

business will intervene to prevent

things like tariffs being put in

0:35:480:35:52

place? They are leaving it a bit

late to put pressure on.

You will

0:35:520:35:57

find that business is laying out the

kind of things they need to get

0:35:570:36:00

those deals. I can find as much

fault with the speed of the

0:36:000:36:05

progress, but what I really do

resent is that you are actually

0:36:050:36:09

encouraging other countries to

undermine...

Know I am not! I spoke

0:36:090:36:18

out in support of the Irish

Taoiseach because I spent a lot of

0:36:180:36:21

time with Tony Blair and his team on

the Good Friday Agreement. The

0:36:210:36:25

people who are driving this hard

Brexit without thinking it through,

0:36:250:36:29

still no answer on how you do Brexit

in our island without a hard border.

0:36:290:36:35

I think the Irish Taoiseach is right

to call out the government on the

0:36:350:36:43

incompetence and the fact they have

not thought it through.

You accept

0:36:430:36:47

the result of the referendum and the

fact that we will be leaving the EU?

0:36:470:36:52

I accept the result of the

referendum, but I do not accept that

0:36:520:36:57

the country will definitely leave,

because the country is entitled to

0:36:570:37:02

change its mind. As the chaos and

costs mount, the public is entitled

0:37:020:37:07

to change its mind and will change

its mind.

There is no evidence at

0:37:070:37:12

the moment.

Come out with me!

Allow

me to finish the sentence. There is

0:37:120:37:21

a changing of mind happening, a

crystallisation. Unlike you, I have

0:37:210:37:27

fought five elections and I have won

five elections. I have probably

0:37:270:37:33

spoken to more people like you.

You

may do, I'm just saying, come out on

0:37:330:37:38

the road with me...

40% of the

population in the middle just want

0:37:380:37:44

us to get on with it. What that film

showed is that if you want to make

0:37:440:37:50

it a self-fulfilling prophecy that

it's a disaster, which I don't. I

0:37:500:37:55

want to implement a deal that is

good for British jobs. The rest of

0:37:550:38:01

the world is changing in terms of

technology. Currently, Germany

0:38:010:38:08

hasn't even got a government, and

nobody is laughing about that.

And

0:38:080:38:14

they are stable without a

government!

Let's leave it there.

0:38:140:38:18

It's coming up to 11.40,

you're watching the Sunday Politics.

0:38:180:38:21

Coming up on the programme,

we'll be looking at the latest

0:38:210:38:23

opinion polls and we'll bring

you the results of our moodbox

0:38:230:38:26

asking whether Phllip Hammond

or John McDonnell should be running

0:38:260:38:28

the economy.

0:38:280:38:37

Hello.

0:38:370:38:38

Welcome to the Sunday

Politics in the Midlands.

0:38:380:38:41

You can tell there's

a Budget coming up.

0:38:410:38:43

A steady procession of local MPs,

from opposing parties,

0:38:430:38:45

lining up together to tell

the Chancellor what should

0:38:450:38:48

be in it for us here.

0:38:480:38:51

The Midland Metro.

0:38:510:38:52

The Police.

0:38:520:38:53

There's a lengthening

wish-list of deserving cases.

0:38:530:38:56

But who should pay?

0:38:560:38:57

How?

0:38:570:38:58

And how much?

0:38:580:39:01

That's what I'll be asking

Neena Gill, Labour MEP

0:39:010:39:05

for the West Midlands,

And Nadhim Zahawi, Conservative MP

0:39:050:39:07

for Stratford-on-Avon.

0:39:080:39:16

And I'll also be asking the elected

"Metro Mayor" Andy Street

0:39:160:39:19

if he thinks the Government's

going cool on devolution,

0:39:190:39:21

and on moving Channel 4

Television out of London.

0:39:210:39:26

But we begin with a mutiny -

not exactly on the high seas.

0:39:260:39:30

But this is how the Daily Telegraph

reported the rebellion by 15

0:39:300:39:33

Conservative MPs at the start

of the debate on the

0:39:330:39:35

European Union Withdrawal Bill.

0:39:350:39:38

They're against the Government's

proposal to have the exact moment

0:39:380:39:41

when Britain leaves the EU

written into law.

0:39:410:39:47

Stafford's MP Jeremy Lefroy is one

of the so-called Tory mutineers

0:39:470:39:49

on the receiving end of what some

of them call "bullying tactics".

0:39:490:39:52

Are they putting a marker down for

further confrontations, I wonder?

0:39:520:39:57

On the other side of the Tory

divide, one veteran Eurosceptic,

0:39:570:40:01

for so long a rebel himself,

now finds himself

0:40:010:40:03

supporting the Government.

0:40:030:40:06

We have just had Remembrance Day.

0:40:060:40:08

I just simply want people to reflect

on the fact that, for one moment,

0:40:080:40:12

they might just recall the fact

that those millions of people

0:40:120:40:17

who died in both world

wars died for a reason -

0:40:170:40:21

it was to do with sustaining the

freedom and democracy of this House.

0:40:210:40:28

Indeed, like Bill Cash, Nadhim

Zahawi, you campaign for a leave

0:40:330:40:37

vote in the referendum. Can you

appreciate how people like Jeremy

0:40:370:40:41

Lefroy and the others support this

campaign of bullying?

I campaign for

0:40:410:40:50

Leave and in any negotiations there

is always rhetoric and posturing.

0:40:500:40:54

Your colleagues in the media,

especially the print media, see

0:40:540:40:58

themselves on the decline, they like

the sensationalism. I don't agree

0:40:580:41:01

with those headlines, I've been on

Day on record to say that was unwise

0:41:010:41:05

and wrong to print that headline.

The ministers during that debate

0:41:050:41:10

you've just showed a clip from

actually came out and canned and

0:41:100:41:13

that sort of language of mutiny on

anyone. I was listening very

0:41:130:41:18

carefully to Mike colleagues, Jeremy

Lefroy and others who are very

0:41:180:41:23

serious parliamentarians,

representing their constituents,

0:41:230:41:28

actually scrutinising legislation.

That is the job of Parliament. That

0:41:280:41:30

is not in any way division or trying

to do the wrong thing. You do the

0:41:300:41:35

right thing to scrutinise

legislation, that's what our

0:41:350:41:37

constituents expect from us. We may

take different views but it is

0:41:370:41:40

completely wrong for them to be

bullied in any way or be put off

0:41:400:41:43

from doing their job properly.

Alan

Patterson, a fellow Brexiteer, he

0:41:430:41:51

says, what's the problem? MPs

including labour MPs voted for

0:41:510:41:55

Article 50 to be triggered and it

specifies a clear timetable.

We have

0:41:550:42:01

a parliamentary democracy and we

must actually respect the right of

0:42:010:42:05

their was MPs to be able to question

and to be able to put forward those

0:42:050:42:12

views of either their constituents

or their own. I'm very concerned

0:42:120:42:16

about the way our society now seems

to be closing down on there being

0:42:160:42:20

any kind of dissent or to be able to

say...

There's apparently plenty of

0:42:200:42:27

dissent in your party because we see

on the front pages of the mail on

0:42:270:42:30

Sunday reports of a heated argument

involving the MP for

0:42:300:42:35

Newcastle-under-Lyme, who Labour are

investigating. He denies it but the

0:42:350:42:39

timing at the end of the Brexit

debate on Tuesday night suggests

0:42:390:42:43

that divisions, including in your

Shadow Cabinet.

I would say it

0:42:430:42:48

Labour has a plan and I can't

comment on Paul Farrelly's situation

0:42:480:42:53

because I don't know anything about

it. I understand he's denying it,

0:42:530:42:57

but the party's investigating. Until

that's done, I can't really comment.

0:42:570:43:02

We have a clear line that we will

negotiate, we will have Brexit, but

0:43:020:43:08

we would be much more clear about

what we want. The problem we have

0:43:080:43:13

with Brexit is that we have no

strategy and no recognition that we

0:43:130:43:18

are in a lose lose situation.

We'll

see how it pans out. We have to

0:43:180:43:22

leave this at the moment.

0:43:220:43:24

Coming six months into the first

term in office of the directly

0:43:240:43:27

elected Midlands "Metro Mayor",

Wednesday's Budget is inevitably

0:43:270:43:29

seen as an important test.

0:43:290:43:30

Is the Government in general -

and the Treasury in particular -

0:43:300:43:33

delivering on that "Devolution

Revolution" originally

0:43:330:43:34

promised by George Osborne?

0:43:340:43:37

From the Mayor himself, we've seen

a relentless flurry of activity.

0:43:370:43:46

Our aptly named political reporter,

Rob Mayor, asks how much has

0:43:460:43:49

actually been achieved.

0:43:490:43:50

His report has flash

photography from the start.

0:43:500:43:52

Street, Andy, the Conservative Party

candidate, is duly elected of Mayor

0:43:520:43:56

of the West Midlands Combined

Authority.

0:43:560:44:02

It's been a busy six months

for West Midlands mayor Andy Street

0:44:020:44:05

since that surprise election win

for the Conservatives in May.

0:44:050:44:08

On a visit to Finland earlier this

month, he saw a project which has

0:44:080:44:11

seen homelessness cut by 43%.

0:44:120:44:15

Altogether, I think,

like, 500 apartments.

0:44:150:44:18

And some people, they

need a lot of care.

0:44:180:44:22

He's hoping the cash to deliver it

here will form part of a second

0:44:220:44:25

devolution deal for his region.

0:44:250:44:27

More news on that expected

in the Budget on Wednesday.

0:44:270:44:30

But with the government spending

so much time on Brexit,

0:44:300:44:33

some say promises of extra money

which was supposed to come

0:44:330:44:36

with an elected mayor

have not been kept.

0:44:360:44:40

There is a general feeling

that the appetite for devolution's

0:44:400:44:42

not as strong as it was under

the previous coalition government,

0:44:420:44:47

driven by Osborne -

he handled the purse strings,

0:44:470:44:52

he could drive things

forward financially.

0:44:520:44:54

It's not quite there

with this government,

0:44:540:44:55

so it makes the battle harder,

but we have the determination.

0:44:550:45:01

Top of the devolution Christmas list

is more money for public transport

0:45:060:45:10

and for adult education,

but the West Midlands mayor

0:45:100:45:14

Andy Street says it's extremely

difficult to get any certainty

0:45:140:45:18

on what the next devolution

deal will look like.

0:45:180:45:22

So is this all a sign

that the government's commitment

0:45:220:45:24

to devolution is running

out of steam?

0:45:240:45:28

The government is now spinning more

plates than any government's

0:45:280:45:31

had in living memory,

and one of them is the mighty

0:45:310:45:33

cauldron of Brexit and so it's not

surprising that the government

0:45:330:45:37

itself may be uncertain

about what it's going to do,

0:45:370:45:40

and this project may have just

dropped down the agenda

0:45:400:45:43

a little bit.

0:45:430:45:45

It could all have a big impact

on Mayor Street's manifesto promises

0:45:450:45:48

of 25,000 new homes,

zero youth unemployment,

0:45:480:45:53

and implementing those measures

to tackle homelessness.

0:45:530:45:56

At a summit earlier this month,

England's regional mayors called

0:45:560:46:00

for more control over taxes instead

of relying on government hand-outs.

0:46:000:46:06

But could that be a hard

sell with voters?

0:46:060:46:09

My local councillor's literally

got his own council office

0:46:090:46:12

at Sutton Coldfield and I don't feel

that the money's being spent wisely,

0:46:120:46:15

and that's been devolved.

0:46:150:46:16

As long as it's spent in your area.

0:46:160:46:18

We come from the Black Country,

so it could do with a bit

0:46:180:46:21

of cash spent on it.

0:46:220:46:23

Probably perhaps trust local

politicians more than national ones

0:46:230:46:27

because they should have their ear

to the ground in terms

0:46:270:46:31

of what people want locally.

0:46:310:46:35

I still say I wouldn't

want to pay any more.

0:46:350:46:37

I think I pay enough.

0:46:370:46:38

The Prime Minister has said she's

absolutely committed to devolution.

0:46:380:46:41

We'll get a strong sense of just how

committed on Wednesday.

0:46:410:46:45

Rob Mayor.

0:46:450:46:47

So is the Government going cool

on regional devolution?

0:46:470:46:49

We'll know soon enough.

0:46:490:46:50

For months we've been hearing

confident predictions that

0:46:500:46:52

Wednesday's Budget would deliver

a second "Devo Deal"

0:46:520:46:54

for the Midlands.

0:46:540:46:56

Nadhim Zahawi is one of 30 MPs,

from both main parties,

0:46:560:46:59

who've signed a very pointed letter

to Philip Hammond.

0:46:590:47:03

Extending the Midland Metro

to Brierley Hill, devolving powers

0:47:030:47:07

over skills, supporting automotive

and advanced digital industries,

0:47:070:47:10

and piloting public sector projects

on homelessness and mental health.

0:47:100:47:15

These, they say, are among the key

tests of whether or not

0:47:150:47:18

the Government remains committed.

0:47:180:47:20

When I caught up with Andy Street

at the Skills Show in the NEC,

0:47:200:47:24

I asked him if devolved local

tax-raising powers were

0:47:240:47:26

still on the agenda.

0:47:260:47:28

To be really honest with you,

Patrick, it is slow progress.

0:47:280:47:31

I am expecting some further...

0:47:310:47:33

There's technical points, really,

about the borrowing powers

0:47:330:47:39

of the combined authorities,

things like that, next week.

0:47:390:47:41

But in terms of, is there a real

sea change to anything

0:47:410:47:44

like a local income tax,

local retention of VAT?

0:47:440:47:46

That is just not on the

agenda at the moment.

0:47:460:47:48

So what, then, can we

expect in the Budget?

0:47:480:47:51

We are expecting, I think,

a good amount of good news

0:47:510:47:54

for the West Midlands next week.

0:47:540:47:56

We've been lobbying for that and I'm

waiting to see the outcomes.

0:47:560:47:59

I don't know yet, to

be absolutely clear.

0:47:590:48:01

But we've lobbied very hard

for the extension of the Metro

0:48:010:48:04

through the Black Country.

0:48:040:48:07

That's a substantial sum of money -

many hundreds of millions of pounds.

0:48:070:48:10

People have been talking

about it for 12 years.

0:48:100:48:13

I want us to absolutely get final

confirmation because that would be

0:48:130:48:15

a real opportunity for regeneration

through the Black Country there.

0:48:150:48:18

I'm also looking forward

to investment and support for some

0:48:180:48:20

of our leading industries.

0:48:210:48:23

Autonomous vehicles,

electric vehicle production,

0:48:230:48:25

because we've said those

new frontiers need to be made

0:48:250:48:27

here in the West Midlands.

0:48:270:48:32

Isn't the truth in all this

that the Treasury, which some people

0:48:320:48:40

think are sort of control freaks,

and they're actually

0:48:400:48:42

very reluctant to let go

of the purse strings -

0:48:420:48:44

devolution or not?

0:48:440:48:45

I think what it indicates

is that the commitment

0:48:450:48:48

to devolution is still there,

but it's not perhaps moving as fast

0:48:480:48:50

as we hoped maybe two,

three, four years ago,

0:48:500:48:53

but we are making steady progress

and what we will see next week

0:48:530:48:56

is considerable investment

in the West Midlands,

0:48:560:48:57

or I believe we will see next week.

0:48:570:48:59

And, actually, some of those points

about how we are able to raise

0:48:590:49:03

new cash ourselves in the future.

0:49:030:49:05

It's not going to be tax-raising,

but it'll be other methods

0:49:050:49:08

that we can actually take more

control of our own

0:49:080:49:10

financial futures.

0:49:100:49:12

I am expecting that

still to be there.

0:49:120:49:14

You very much nailed your colours

to the relocation of Channel 4

0:49:140:49:17

Television to the West Midlands,

but I'm hearing suggestions that

0:49:170:49:21

senior ministers have been cooling

off this whole thing and that

0:49:210:49:25

Channel 4 executives

are more confident than ever

0:49:250:49:27

that they won't actually have

to leave London at all.

0:49:270:49:30

There is no new news

on this, Patrick.

0:49:300:49:32

I wish there was, and of course

I would tell you if there was,

0:49:320:49:35

but the situation we've had is we've

done our consultation, we have

0:49:350:49:38

nailed the West Midlands colours

very firmly to a major relocation.

0:49:380:49:41

We've actually been waiting

for the new chief executive

0:49:410:49:43

of Channel 4 to come in and then

the government to start the process.

0:49:430:49:47

I'm absolutely clear, though,

we've put a good bid forward,

0:49:470:49:53

supported by the creative

industries, political support

0:49:530:49:55

across the spectrum,

and I am confident that,

0:49:550:49:57

if not a full relocation,

there will certainly be

0:49:570:49:59

a substantial relocation

out of London.

0:49:590:50:06

It seems to me, Nadhim is the thing

about that letter is he felt the

0:50:060:50:13

need to write it at all. It is a

tacit admission that the government

0:50:130:50:16

will call on devolution. Surely

those contents really, until

0:50:160:50:20

recently, would be seen as a

statement of the obvious.

Let's wait

0:50:200:50:24

and see what is on the Budget on

Wednesday. We have a news over the

0:50:240:50:28

weekend, the Chancellor is in the

region tomorrow trying out an

0:50:280:50:31

autonomous car. He's already talking

about further investment in electric

0:50:310:50:36

infrastructure charging points and

that can only be good for our region

0:50:360:50:38

in terms of manufacturing and the

development required in electric

0:50:380:50:43

cars and autonomous vehicles, as

well, which the Mayo just about. --

0:50:430:50:50

which the Neena talked about. Andy

Street is a really big voice for our

0:50:500:50:54

region and when he asked, we all

signed the letter.

He's having to

0:50:540:51:03

put local tax raising powers on the

back burner. He admitted it.

The

0:51:030:51:07

progress he wants to make is to make

sure the agenda he sets out, making

0:51:070:51:12

sure there is no youth unemployment

scored 25,000 homes, making sure the

0:51:120:51:16

homeless agenda he stood on actually

delivers. That can only be a good

0:51:160:51:20

thing. The more decisions that

brought locally, the people of

0:51:200:51:25

Stratford-upon-Avon, my

constituency, can interact with me.

0:51:250:51:33

There are hints of investment in the

Metro, the Digital economy,

0:51:330:51:36

automotive. Much in the budget for

you to welcome, surely.

I totally

0:51:360:51:43

support the region should get more

powers and we should have more

0:51:430:51:46

funding. Clearly, the region is in

crisis because we've had so many

0:51:460:51:51

cutbacks from this government and

even in your area, Warwickshire,

0:51:510:51:54

there's been real cutbacks in

schools and nursery provisions which

0:51:540:51:57

are impacting our economy in the

long term. I would say about Andy

0:51:570:52:08

Street, he has been talking up a

lot. Where is the action? In six

0:52:080:52:13

months, what has he actually

delivered? One of the things he said

0:52:130:52:16

is that he was going to tackle

homelessness and yet we look at

0:52:160:52:21

homelessness, it has increased.

10,000 people who are homeless in

0:52:210:52:23

Birmingham alone.

A tour of the

studios this morning, talking about

0:52:230:52:29

300,000 houses per year.

I think

Andy Street, rather than going to

0:52:290:52:34

Finland, should go and speak to

Whitehall and try and make sure that

0:52:340:52:38

that money is addressed when we are

facing a cold winter. Let's see what

0:52:380:52:44

comes out.

Andy is talking to

Whitehall. He was very much part of

0:52:440:52:52

the Metro mayors who came down and

met Whitehall. The government is

0:52:520:52:57

listening, it is open-minded about

devolution. Let's wait and see what

0:52:570:53:02

happens. Andy is really delivering

for our region.

I think you're

0:53:020:53:10

allowed to question as to what is

actually being delivered for the

0:53:100:53:15

region. I'm not seeing any evidence.

When I see homeless people now with

0:53:150:53:21

the cold winter outside, 10,000

people sleeping outside should be of

0:53:210:53:25

concern. We can't wait months for

them to find shelter. They need to

0:53:250:53:29

be addressed now. Under Labour's

what we got rid of the homeless...

0:53:290:53:38

It was rejected for billions of

borrowing to go into housing.

He

0:53:380:53:41

committed to 300,000 which was an

emblematic call.

You've not

0:53:410:53:51

delivered the 300,000. You only

delivered 150000 and...

You can't

0:53:510:53:56

have a discussion talking across

people.

You can't throw figures that

0:53:560:54:03

are not being delivered.

We have to

move on.

0:54:030:54:06

Another subject of concern bringing

MPs from opposing parties together

0:54:060:54:08

in common cause is the continuing

squeeze on police budgets.

0:54:080:54:11

Time was when ministers could say

that, even while savings

0:54:110:54:13

were being introduced,

crime was falling.

0:54:130:54:15

Now, though, recorded

crime is rising again,

0:54:150:54:16

and the Government is being pressed

to allow our biggest

0:54:160:54:19

local force an increase

in the money allocated to it,

0:54:190:54:21

over and above the council tax.

0:54:210:54:23

That's according to

a leaked document seen

0:54:230:54:24

by Kathryn Stanczyszyn.

0:54:240:54:28

Police on the streets

of the West Midlands,

0:54:280:54:30

but there's now fewer of them

than at any time in

0:54:300:54:32

the force's history.

0:54:320:54:33

The Police and Crime Commissioner

says they need an extra £22 million

0:54:330:54:36

just to stand still next year,

and the government needs to act.

0:54:360:54:40

There's cross-party accord on this

now and I think the government need

0:54:400:54:47

to recognise that if we don't get

that proper funding in place,

0:54:470:54:49

then we're putting people

seriously at risk.

0:54:490:54:53

What we need is consistent long-term

funding so we can actually pay

0:54:530:54:56

for the police we need to protect

the people in our area.

0:54:560:54:59

Since 2010, West Midlands Police has

cut 2,000 officers -

0:54:590:55:02

that's a 27% reduction.

0:55:020:55:04

It comes as figures show that,

in the last year, sexual

0:55:040:55:08

offences rose by 25%,

child sexual exploitation by 47%

0:55:080:55:12

and gun crime by 15%.

0:55:120:55:15

Last week, a cross-party group

of MPs from the region lobbied

0:55:150:55:18

the police Minister,

Nick Hurd.

0:55:180:55:20

The point we made in the meeting

is that the West Midlands

0:55:200:55:24

is one of five hotspots

in the country for terrorism.

0:55:240:55:27

It needs extra resources to tackle

new types of crime and I felt we had

0:55:270:55:34

a sympathetic hearing.

0:55:340:55:35

With more than 80% of funding

for the forces coming

0:55:350:55:38

from Whitehall, local fundraising

options are limited.

0:55:380:55:43

But a leaked Budget document

suggests that the government may

0:55:430:55:46

allow the portion of council tax

which funds the police to rise

0:55:460:55:49

by up to £10 next year.

0:55:490:55:50

There have also been calls

for West Midlands Police to spend

0:55:500:55:53

some of the £106 million it

currently holds in its reserves.

0:55:530:56:03

Isn't the key point in all this that

the financial pressure that the

0:56:030:56:07

government has applied to the police

service since it came into office

0:56:070:56:09

has delivered a lot of those

partnerships and efficiencies? We

0:56:090:56:14

seemed Warwickshire and West Messier

working closely together, to the

0:56:140:56:16

benefit of the police.

I think it is

of real concern that our police are

0:56:160:56:23

being cut, as David Jamieson has

indicated. It is important that we

0:56:230:56:27

have more police on, especially when

you've got an economy that's

0:56:270:56:31

downward spiralling. You'll always

find that police are needed, crime

0:56:310:56:36

goes up even more so. There doesn't

appear to be any strategy. It's just

0:56:360:56:41

basically freeing everything and we

need to make sure the funding is

0:56:410:56:46

there. We cannot produce police if

the money isn't there. The Tory

0:56:460:56:52

government is in chaos. There is no

strategy on economy or police.

...

0:56:520:56:56

Who's worried about the West

Midlands being a potential terrorist

0:56:560:57:02

hotspot. You're own Chief Constable

is worried about what he says is a

0:57:020:57:07

£20 million additional cut over four

years, not the 13 the government

0:57:070:57:09

talks about in Warwickshire.

I have

represented from our Chief Constable

0:57:090:57:14

and our police and crime commission.

I have made representations to Nick

0:57:140:57:21

Hurd, and Amber Road. It is

important that we make sure we get

0:57:210:57:24

this right and I'm lobbying to make

sure they are listened to. I think

0:57:240:57:29

it is good to examine whether the

preset can be flexed to allow us on

0:57:290:57:34

this. But when Nina is -- where

Neena is wrong, we have to make sure

0:57:340:57:41

we deliver the public services which

people are asking us to do,

0:57:410:57:46

including good policing. It has led

to the cooperation between

0:57:460:57:54

Warwickshire and West Neena.

We have

devalued pound, our economy is

0:57:540:57:59

growing more slowly than anywhere in

the EU and all indication that it's

0:57:590:58:01

going to get worse rather than

better.

If I can bring you back to

0:58:010:58:06

the question of the police.

Because

they're not managing the economy

0:58:060:58:11

well means there isn't enough money

to go around because there are so

0:58:110:58:15

many demands on that money. We've

discussed devolution earlier, the

0:58:150:58:19

housing problem. It is quite clear

that this Brexit issue, where there

0:58:190:58:24

is no strategy, all the statements

that were made that we were going to

0:58:240:58:29

be better off economically... None

of that is coming true so we're

0:58:290:58:34

actually worse off and everything is

being cut. I think it's really

0:58:340:58:38

imported...

Time is tight. Do you

think the Chancellor is listening to

0:58:380:58:41

this argument about the police on

Wednesday?

The Home Secretary is

0:58:410:58:45

listening and I hope the Chancellor

is, as well.

Let's leave it there

0:58:450:58:49

for the moment.

0:58:490:58:52

Let's remind ourselves of some more

of the political developments

0:58:520:58:54

making the news here over

the past few days.

0:58:540:58:56

Our round up in 60 seconds is

brought to us today by Sarah Bishop.

0:58:560:59:00

The families of the Birmingham pub

bombing victims have been refused

0:59:000:59:02

legal aid to challenge a ruling that

suspects shouldn't be

0:59:020:59:05

named at a new inquest.

0:59:050:59:07

The Ministry of Justice said the bid

doesn't meet its criteria.

0:59:070:59:10

The Transport Secretary said

the Midlands can expect investment

0:59:100:59:13

in public transport,

skills and jobs in the Budget.

0:59:130:59:15

Chris Grayling dropped

the hints on a visit

0:59:150:59:18

to the Skills Show at the NEC.

0:59:180:59:21

The so-called "homes for a pound"

scheme has been extended

0:59:210:59:23

by the council in Stoke-on-Trent.

0:59:230:59:24

The scheme allows home buyers

to apply for cost loans

0:59:240:59:27

to improve delapidated houses

in run-down areas.

0:59:270:59:30

You know, at 50-odd,

who wants to take on a mortgage?

0:59:300:59:33

You don't.

0:59:330:59:34

So we've got the pound house

and £298 a month is what we pay back

0:59:340:59:39

for the 30,000 loan.

0:59:390:59:41

Half a million subsidised bus

services in Staffordshire

0:59:410:59:44

are being cut.

0:59:440:59:46

The council says it's

just 3% of all journies.

0:59:460:59:55

The council says it's

just 3% of all journeys.

0:59:550:59:57

And car-tax evasion has tripled

since paper tax discs were scrapped,

0:59:571:00:00

and it's worse in the West Midlands

than anywhere else.

1:00:001:00:07

Forget the Paradise papers, we got

our own story of tax evasion is on

1:00:071:00:11

the streets. Do you think it was a

mistake to get rid of the tax discs?

1:00:111:00:16

The mistake clearly is that you

haven't put in place proper

1:00:161:00:19

mechanisms to monitor it. We managed

to do it with TV licence quite

1:00:191:00:23

effectively. Surely the government

should have put a structure in place

1:00:231:00:26

to make sure that it is managed

properly.

Introducing new technology

1:00:261:00:31

is a good thing. Anyone evading

their car tax, I think, needs to

1:00:311:00:35

think twice because as with any

technology, as it gets better, it

1:00:351:00:40

becomes almost impossible to avoid

paying it. If you're not paying it,

1:00:401:00:44

my advice is go and pay it or you

will be in trouble. Technology is

1:00:441:00:50

good and technology advance is good.

The government has responsibility to

1:00:501:00:53

make sure it when it introduces

things that it is properly managed

1:00:531:00:59

and implemented.

Like the European

Union?

It is very well managed. This

1:00:591:01:05

government, we have the Uighurs

government...

At they carry on the

1:01:051:01:10

discussion...

1:01:101:01:12

on Wednesday, we'll know exactly

what Philip Hammond's briefcase has

1:01:121:01:14

in store for us all here.

1:01:141:01:16

Housing?

1:01:161:01:17

Hospitals?

1:01:171:01:18

Transport?

1:01:181:01:19

All taxing questions of course.

1:01:191:01:20

I'll be reporting, blogging

and tweeting from Westminster

1:01:201:01:22

throughout the day, including

on Midlands Today at 1.30

1:01:221:01:24

and 6.30, here on BBC One.

1:01:241:01:25

This, though, is where

we rejoin Sarah Smith.

1:01:251:01:29

Philip Hammond will deliver his

Budget on Wednesday -

1:01:381:01:40

he's moved it to the Autumn

if you remember - and he'll be

1:01:401:01:43

hoping it can help re-define

the Government in the eyes

1:01:431:01:46

of the public.

1:01:461:01:47

But when it comes to

the economy, do people trust

1:01:471:01:51

the Conservatives, or Labour?

1:01:511:01:52

Here's Ellie Price

with the moodbox.

1:01:521:01:56

MUSIC: The Road to Nowhere

by Talking Heads.

1:01:561:02:04

All eyes will be on the Chancellor

this week as we find out

1:02:041:02:07

what he has been cooking

up in his Budget.

1:02:071:02:10

So we have pulled off the A1

near Peterborough to ask people here

1:02:101:02:13

who they trust with the economy -

is it the Chancellor,

1:02:131:02:16

Philip Hammond, or is it

Labour's John McDonnell?

1:02:161:02:22

No 7.

1:02:221:02:26

Which one's Tory?

1:02:261:02:31

I voted Conservative

for the last two

1:02:371:02:39

elections, don't feel very confident

now, so I'm going to swap.

1:02:391:02:43

If I said to you which

of these characters

1:02:431:02:46

would you trust with the economy,

what would you say?

1:02:461:02:48

The one who's currently

running it, because they

1:02:481:02:50

seem to be bringing

the deficit down.

1:02:501:02:51

Labour.

1:02:511:02:52

Why?

1:02:521:02:54

Because I'm an NHS worker.

1:02:541:02:56

For me, it's just about

spending, public spending.

1:02:561:02:59

Labour always overspend.

1:02:591:03:04

John McDonnell, I think

capitalism as we know it is tanked

1:03:041:03:10

and I think we need

a radical re-think.

1:03:101:03:15

Broken his egg, who do you trust

more on the economy?

1:03:151:03:18

No one.

1:03:181:03:19

Why?

1:03:191:03:21

Because they never come up trumps

with anything that they

1:03:211:03:27

reckon they're going to do.

1:03:271:03:28

If I had to make you

choose one of them?

1:03:281:03:30

The man that's there, Hammond.

1:03:301:03:32

I wouldn't trust

Philip Hammond with a

1:03:321:03:34

bag of marbles or a plastic ball!

1:03:341:03:40

Hello, Bob.

1:03:401:03:41

Oh, hello.

1:03:411:03:42

Who do you trust

more on the economy?

1:03:421:03:43

Oh, the Conservatives.

1:03:431:03:45

Do you?

Why's that?

1:03:451:03:46

I just think they're better

for the small businessman.

1:03:461:03:49

We need a Maggie or

a Winston Churchill,

1:03:491:03:51

somebody in there with

balls to say, right,

1:03:511:03:54

that's the direction

we are

1:03:541:03:55

going in, that's what

we are going to do.

1:03:551:03:57

I've got balls!

1:03:571:04:00

What are you doing?

1:04:001:04:01

Putting balls in holes

by the look of it!

1:04:011:04:08

I suppose the lesser of the two

evils is anything but Tory,

1:04:081:04:11

but I say that without a great

deal of conviction.

1:04:111:04:13

Having grown up in the '70s

with all the rubbish on the

1:04:131:04:16

streets, the strikes, the unions.

1:04:161:04:18

Re-nationalisation and they're

going to spend a lot of money

1:04:181:04:21

and increase taxes and it will pull

the country down.

1:04:211:04:27

I've seen an awful loft of all-day

breakfasts today, but it

1:04:271:04:30

is clearing up time here

at the diner and time

1:04:301:04:34

to reveal the Moodbox.

1:04:341:04:36

Take it away, Tim.

1:04:361:04:38

As you can say it was

a close-run thing, but

1:04:381:04:40

like any fiscally responsible

Chancellor, I've done my maths and

1:04:401:04:43

counted and Philip Hammond got six

more votes than John McDonnell.

1:04:431:04:50

Oh, chip, thank you very much!

1:04:501:04:53

That was Ellie and the entirely

unscientific Moodbox,

1:04:531:04:55

at the Stibbington diner near

Peterborough.

1:04:551:04:58

But for a slightly more scientific

understanding of how the public view

1:04:581:05:01

the parties on this and other

issues, let's have a look

1:05:011:05:03

at some recent polling.

1:05:031:05:05

Here's where the Conservatives

and Labour stood on the economy back

1:05:051:05:08

when the Prime Minister called

the snap election in April,

1:05:081:05:11

when the Conservatives had a big

lead, as they did in many

1:05:111:05:14

other areas.

1:05:141:05:16

The most recent poll by the same

company reckoned Labour had narrowed

1:05:161:05:19

the gap significantly,

as they have in other areas,

1:05:191:05:21

although they're still 10 points

behind the Tories on this issue.

1:05:211:05:26

And there was another survey much

discussed at Westminster this week,

1:05:261:05:30

showing that while the gap

between Theresa May

1:05:301:05:35

and Jeremy Corbyn has narrowed

drastically since that pre-election

1:05:351:05:38

period, Mrs May is,

despite her many problems,

1:05:381:05:39

still pretty much level-pegging

in polling terms or

1:05:391:05:41

even slightly ahead.

1:05:411:05:43

And when it comes to how

people intend to vote

1:05:431:05:45

while the Tories are behind,

there's no sign of a

1:05:451:05:47

big Labour lead yet.

1:05:471:05:49

Tony Blair thinks that,

given the current "mess"

1:05:491:05:51

inside the Government,

Jeremy Corbyn's party should be

1:05:511:05:55

10 or 15 points ahead.

1:05:551:05:58

Well, many in Labour will find it

easy to dismiss both Tony Blair

1:05:581:06:02

and the opinion polls, as they both

called the last election entirely

1:06:021:06:04

wrong, so what if anything do

these polls tell us?

1:06:041:06:11

Let's turn to our expert panel.

Labour are now eight points on the

1:06:111:06:19

economy, according to a poll. Why is

there a gap between Labour and the

1:06:191:06:24

Tories?

There seems to be a

deep-seated reservation in the minds

1:06:241:06:30

of many voters. They look at Jeremy

Corbyn and John McDonnell and

1:06:301:06:33

imagine them in charge of the

country, the finances, national

1:06:331:06:39

security, and think... It is

unfashionable to point out in many

1:06:391:06:42

circles that Labour did not win the

last election, and it didn't win it

1:06:421:06:47

for that kind of reason. Jeremy

Corbyn is very good at attracting

1:06:471:06:53

and inspiring young people and

people who had not voted before. We

1:06:531:06:59

underestimated his capacity to do

that. But he wasn't great at turning

1:06:591:07:05

Tories to Labour, or sealing off

those final reservations. The

1:07:051:07:10

government have had a shambolic few

weeks. We are tripping over

1:07:101:07:14

resigning a cabinet ministers. They

are fighting like ferrets. A lot of

1:07:141:07:18

people are having a really tough

time and looking at the government

1:07:181:07:21

to help them, and are unimpressed

with what they see. But there seems

1:07:211:07:26

to be a final fence that Corbyn does

not seem to be able to get over.

1:07:261:07:33

Isn't Tony Blair right, that Labour

should be 15 or 20 points ahead?

I

1:07:331:07:38

think he's completely wrong, and is

revealing he is out of date. I think

1:07:381:07:43

Labour are in a really good

position. If you look at what they

1:07:431:07:46

have achieved in the last year,

going into Christmas 2016, Corbyn

1:07:461:07:52

had just managed to avoid, had to

re-fight Labour leadership contest.

1:07:521:07:58

They were 20 points behind. Theresa

May was at the top of her game.

1:07:581:08:05

Through the general election and

beyond it, they have continued to

1:08:051:08:10

build their movement. They are very

effective on social media. I think

1:08:101:08:14

they are in a strong position, and

they need about 60 seats to win the

1:08:141:08:20

next general election. They will

probably start with 25 of those. The

1:08:201:08:25

fact that they are closing the gap

on the economy suggests that a lot

1:08:251:08:29

of voters are now giving them a

chance or a hearing, which they

1:08:291:08:33

certainly were not getting a year

ago. I think they have done very

1:08:331:08:37

well.

Can they be confident with a

slim lead against the government?

I

1:08:371:08:43

am slightly more with Tony Blair

than with Iain. This goes back to

1:08:431:08:48

that very general election result. A

huge turnout for Labour for Jeremy

1:08:481:08:55

Corbyn. If you asked that same 40%

of people today, do you want Jeremy

1:08:551:09:03

Corbyn to be Prime Minister? Where

you really voting for Jeremy Corbyn

1:09:031:09:06

to lead the British governmentanswer

is no, because Theresa May still,

1:09:061:09:12

despite the fact she is presiding

over a shambolic cabinet, she has

1:09:121:09:16

the most support for Prime Minister.

The last general election may have

1:09:161:09:23

just been a giant by-election,

because everyone was so short that

1:09:231:09:29

Theresa May would get in.

The

Chancellor Philip Hammond gave

1:09:291:09:33

Labour a bit of a gift, when he

said, there were not any unemployed

1:09:331:09:40

people in Britain. A slip of the

tongue. Was that damaging?

You have

1:09:401:09:46

to look at the context he was saying

it in, which will not be the context

1:09:461:09:51

of the Facebook meme you will get

shortly. He was asked about future

1:09:511:09:58

unemployment, and he was saying that

when technological advances came,

1:09:581:10:09

unemployment didn't materialise.

They would not be able to use that

1:10:091:10:14

against him so easily if it didn't

have something that people think

1:10:141:10:19

about the Conservative government,

which is that they are out of touch,

1:10:191:10:23

they have no idea about some people,

that they refuse to see what they

1:10:231:10:26

have done. People have that idea

about the Conservatives, so to drop

1:10:261:10:31

a bit of a clanger in that regard...

The budget is on Wednesday, and also

1:10:311:10:38

this week, the Brexit committee will

be meeting. What will they be

1:10:381:10:42

talking about and why does it

matter?

What Stephen Hammond said to

1:10:421:10:47

you a few moments ago was

fascinating. Tomorrow is going to be

1:10:471:10:50

the big meeting. It is the

negotiations committee. Nine or so

1:10:501:10:56

ministers have recently been

included in that, like Michael Gove.

1:10:561:11:00

They are going to be talking about

the money, precisely how much they

1:11:001:11:04

offer in two weeks' time to meet

this deadline in the December

1:11:041:11:09

council for phase two. Michael Gove

and Boris Johnson want to add in

1:11:091:11:13

conditions. They want to say, we

will give you this as long as we get

1:11:131:11:18

that. What was fascinating with

Stephen Hammond just now was that he

1:11:181:11:23

revealed that it wasn't just the

Brexiteers in Cabinet who want a

1:11:231:11:26

more precise definition of what we

are going for, it is the remainers

1:11:261:11:36

as well.

In the heart of the

government, David Davis is trying to

1:11:361:11:41

keep the bill as low as possible,

possibly around 30%. The divorce

1:11:411:11:49

Bill and future liabilities. Some in

the civil service have suggested

1:11:491:11:55

that it has to be 40 or above. What

it reveals to me is really, it's

1:11:551:12:02

another function of Britain not

really having a proper Prime

1:12:021:12:06

Minister. In normal circumstances,

of course the Cabinet is divided. A

1:12:061:12:11

strong leader would say, right, this

is what is happening. This is where

1:12:111:12:15

we are going. We will call it 35 or

40 billion. We will save to the

1:12:151:12:21

European Union, there is the check,

but it will not have a signature on

1:12:211:12:25

it until we are satisfied with the

next

1:12:251:12:38

stage. The government is hampered by

the lack of a strong personality who

1:12:441:12:47

could do that, make a political play

with other European leaders that

1:12:471:12:49

might break the deadlock.

Presumably

that is why the full Cabinet have

1:12:491:12:52

not discussed what the future Brexit

deal will be.

That is the

1:12:521:12:54

astonishing thing. There has been no

sort of vision of what Britain is

1:12:541:12:57

going to look like after Brexit. We

have got down in what the

1:12:571:13:01

negotiation position for tomorrow

will be. What does it look like in

1:13:011:13:05

terms of immigration, trade with the

rest of the world, what life will

1:13:051:13:08

look like for ordinarily... Ordinary

people?

There are visions for this,

1:13:081:13:14

but they will not agree on one. Is

there such a thing as a Tory Cabinet

1:13:141:13:20

Minister who could have one single

vision without them all ripping each

1:13:201:13:23

other's heads off? Probably not.

Thank you.

1:13:231:13:28

That's all for today.

1:13:281:13:29

Join me again next Sunday

at 11.00 here on BBC One.

1:13:291:13:32

Until then, bye bye.

1:13:321:13:35

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