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tv   Going Underground  RT  November 21, 2018 4:30am-5:01am EST

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for the election as a whole might be influenced by the russian federation there you have it an obama era diplomat who has been caught on tape being against the new democracy and for us back regime change in europe pushing information from a discredited british spy to the f.b.i. but election interference not from washington but moscow this well u.s. i politico dot com alleges evidence of ukrainian government involvement in seeking to this going to donald trump ahead of elections that brought him to power but while the mainstream media here in the u.k. claims that tourism is now escaped her arguable coup she travels to brussels today followed by threats from spain and the northern irish party keeping her in power to destroy the deal for leaving the european union but how many more countries may follow i'm joined now by scottish national party member of parliament and chair of the international trade select committee angus with me oh thanks so much and it's going on just put it all in motion just before we get to break that save the children report thing eighty five thousand dead children in yemen starving should the u.k. be selling weapons to saudi arabia in a word no to the dutch to administer a secret colleague few weeks ago who met
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a point of see another lunch the unit the dutch do not. to saudi arabia for the very reason of their intervention in yemen so the world is no ok well what do you think tourism is doing in brussels today looking for lifeboats life jackets life belts anything at all that can throw a lifeline. in a difficult position a difficult position made of it on red lines earlier on she's good no negotiation that the you have looked at accepted the red lines what burned headlines and is not is not a deal that anybody finds really acceptable bottle to hard code in the party in the extremists in their party or even the moderates of the party are united against the seems to be united against it entirely opposition in the parliament seems to be united against its reason is a very difficult sport should probably try to go to get a concession to a bit of red meat but essentially the negotiations been done they want to. you
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opened that so these amazin a difficult position as we know because it's a deal that nobody loves and the default is a new deal which nobody wants either any concession that you might get on the agreement that would satisfy the scottish national party which says that northern ireland is getting preferential treatment even about when we talk about really the customs union saying the market. relation to europe as changed in particular to the european union when we had the referendum the famous referendum in twenty fourteen we were said vote no to independence to get him to a place in european union clear line eighteen twenty one months later that was shown to be so so fallback was accustomed and single market the deal in the new deal in the me and the here is blood that we have from each other and just who bought the so we won't be supporting either of those we want something far better for people as it is at the moment with the deal yes that does give no that an advantage by being in the single market looting you're always alluding that of a letter you wrote to theresa may just tell me what was in the letter in every other reply reply to the letter the letter was basically moving no reply no reply
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yet it was basically asking me the question because she's been evasive and left the question hanging over a section thirty which is what you need in the one thousand nine hundred scotland act to another referendum in scotland so the question is is she going to agree let's go to and has the right to have a an independence referendum because she had said on the twentieth of july or the united kingdom united kingdom joined european union as she put it as a free nation and must be free to leave. and as it wants to as well so it's good for united kingdom in the european union it's also good for scotland in the united kingdom so i'm looking forward to sure that respect to scotland using a live stick here in ocean of a nation yes she's she's got the she's got the section thirty two must give the section thirty and if we don't have that we don't have a referendum with her agreement we could have another referendum a consultative referendum or else we just go to a general elections i'm asking her what does she want for scotland to be able to exercise its rights within a union with the u.k. exercise its own rights with. a union and she's going to the other it's either
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she's saying yes you can have a referendum or she said it's an election saying no is not an option gibraltar is in it just like northern ireland fabien because of the first minister of gibraltar says may should be back to him without her deal it can be very bad for gibraltar wellington for gibraltar as point of view the thirty thousand that lived in gibraltar the north. the really important thing for them was state in the customs union and effectively. they've got that so they will be happy as huge concern with blacks in gibraltar i think it's ninety eight percent of gibraltarians had the good sense to vote against and to be to vote against blacks of course gibraltarians are very sensible people they're there british but they're not in the u.k. and that's the sort of situation i would like for scotland as well happy to be british but only you can ask of a referendum as far as i know but ironically spain is which has been responsible for the detention of politicians. after a democratic vote catalonia something with theirs and we have been campaigning
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about could veto the deal yet it's would your role to look to extract concessions over and brought in the city spinners also said in the last day or so that it wouldn't be vetoing scotland's accession to being a member of the european union which i think is as welcome as well but in a while while we welcome one thing we have to not run away from the fact that most of the european union are running away from the fact that there are political prisoners and speed i'm not as good at a bill situation to say the least that people aren't jail in spain for a year or for holding a democratic event but this is an age but isn't the point of the european union's collusion with suppressing that democracy that you just mentioned. that's why a forty percent of people in scotland voted to get out fifty two percent of britain want to get out less polish people english people don't want to be in a in a place that detains their politicians i mean i think that's enough for the imperfection of the european union absolutely and i don't shy away from that a toll but i think we've got a pretty major one of it and i do need it. doesn't really really want to be in jail
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and you know the democratic politicians should not be in jail and given and. all the rest of my father's run away from address and head on to fairly address poland in the cellar that's only because strangely to run away from that would. i think what we were realizing from a three point of view is that lead opinion is absolutely vital it is regularly superpowered it is most of our market and if we keep body years between us and our market that's a differently and we do want to access that market but it's not unconditional access when we see people jailed in and we're in one member state country we have to raise our voices about that and i do respect voices i do think that. if we leave that one and go to one side then we were setting about the precedent here of having people jailed for wanting to x. exercise self-determination and i can't really be cool and it has but the user members club teasing me has been silent a lot i've challenged the liaison committee in the house of commons and she's been
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silent on and it's to a ship meanwhile in the commons the g.o.p. voting down finance bill out of finance bill element of legislation. would you think make of sammy wilson claiming the government has broken its commitment well i think i saw that through the lobby against the government in spite of the fact that given one billion pounds to do exactly the opposite. the classical the great say clearly i'm going. to get them over it's probably staggered over a few years i think the u.p.a. should be realising that i would say one one piece of advice i'll give us forget the history of three hundred years ago the deal while it's very imperfect and. a lot worse than being in the customs in a lot worse than in the european union is better for them than it is for just about any other part of the united kingdom. but to other advantage in scotland don't want that advantage so i mean it puts us all back in the in the gutter if you like that got us i want to get your opinion of one thing while everyone else is talking about
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the end of the resume his political career david davis the former bracks it's actually what do you making of these deals or negotiations or maybe david davis would say preliminary talks. in washington we make of our other deals being done ready for the resumes department first unknown to me and then david david me is a survivor i think a caller to a face gloria gaynor she will survive she kicks the can down the road on she goes on you know every time you think there's a difficulty that's a boat to get to me there's a bit more road phone in the can is kicked on a little bit further teasing me as is the violence like it or not even after has gone inside or up and no after house conference defeat on the agreement presumably i would i would give up. in the beginning i thought i remember seeing her narrative just to keep being prime minister the end of the month and i think basically she does that every month david davis is running a freelance operations david gives his opposition carries no weight of the uki
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state behind it and unless david davis becomes prime minister some bishops to be prime minister. then maybe perhaps could be something new as david davis knows this so why would a video because these negotiations what upsets the suggestion of just giving you that david davis is indeed on us you see maneuvers thank you thank you thank you for the break the president of britain's conservatives for a people's vote claims. or is this man wants to blame for brecht's it find out on this week's broken news with a minister who used to work with theresa may. two are going underground. to break or not to break that is the question teresa mayes plan to exit has been
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roundly criticised from virtually every corner and with a looming deadline the u.k. could face a hard break without an agreement even early elections how did it get to this point . nobody could see coming that false confessions would be that in this population the fall will convert. any interrogations out there what you'll see is threat promise threat promise threat lie a lie a lie the process of interrogation is designed to put people in just that frame of mind make the most comfortable make them want to get out and don't take no for an answer don't accept their denials she said if our words. sound stay there i will be all about that the next day there's a culture on accountability and police officers know that they can engage in misconduct that has nothing to do with all the crime.
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welcome back joining me now to go through some of the week's top stories is former home office minister norman baker thanks for coming back on norman o.e.c.d. it only got a look today forget that u.k. storming ahead thanks to high employment things going very well and we don't need to worry about the d.b. voting down budgets but you've chosen this from the mirror to see just to seem to tally with what the government say well it doesn't tell you what the government says what's a pretend everything is hunky dory but actually we're performing much less well against other european countries and of course we've now got the situation where there's a whole underclass appearing in this country universal credit for just moments of prostitution to make thirty pound the children's food i missed on like a sensational headline but of course it's actually accurate and this is what's
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happening i've been to foot bangs in my own area which is the rich middle class area of louis going to people by the people using food banks some of those are in employment they are not out of work they're actually earning but they don't get enough money to make things work and universal credit is a good concept the audio bring your benefits together to try to make sure people are better off in work that out of work i support those things but the difficulty is people being used to getting a payment every week and there's a delay of one to three months on getting payments through and people are left with no money so what do they do this is what they do it seems you see i'm tempted to use the new the new d.w.p. secretary's words and say what you're saying is inappropriate and frankly you're using extraordinary political the political nature of your language is discrediting yourself because that's what amber and said about the united nations special report to a live stream ball that even the balls to what i'm saying is that there are people who are in this country he claimed one of millionaire destitute whom was his up
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sixty percent since two thousand and ten staggering job over the and fourteen million. fifth as the relation of poverty well i mean there's a question of how you define poverty the villas of poverty which is getting worse because people at the top end they're getting better off and therefore the percentage of earnings at the bottom end is less than that would have been before i don't post i call it poverty what i do call poverty is people got no money for eight weeks four to position people using food banks because they're going to money to feed their children that's poverty well of course it's not the reason why it's resumes being. hated on by her own side that's about bricks. go through this this is the spectator hello this is what stop stop satori plots is plotting well this is a microcosm of society that people now don't get together in huddles in strangers' bar m.p. so it's a plot they use what shop and of course what you do is leave a footprint so if you said something inappropriate somebody catches on on
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a screen shot and before you know who you are it's all over the press so it's very dangerous you know people's obsession with technology is actually quite worried about in society facebook's whatsapp company would bend to say it's a brilliant i should say then you know the minister boy didn't write it joel bennett said juries amazed deal was dead you know what that message just before being appointed to security being dangerous this article a bit more in the fact that there's no people skills. movement but the point i'm making is that go back five ten years that conversation with john penrose would have taken place in strangers' bar over a pint and the be no record of it it's written down and i'll and there's a record of it it's very embarrassing so you know my view is tory m.p.'s are spending too much time on whatsapp and not actually out in the real world are they really even with their own kohli's and the becoming detached from reality well let's go on to find out what really is happening in brussels when to raise a maze there vosh that some european official or other would be saying in the years
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saying in his tweets i think worrying new reports of you bad and cambridge analytic has influence on the brake. rath referendum we did a mobile style investigation in europe and steps to save god out of mockeries by those organizing rights movements ahead of next year's elections russia did it well we know that we do is to balance been. stirring up nationalism and in central europe we know that's been happening you visit and self and we also know there was his fingerprints and cambridge on lipstick as on the bricks that referendum and a couple of facebook ads that you just said these the technological innovations i want that help i will and we know there's lots more we also know nigel farage is being fingered in the mood ring in the us and of course fortune happened in this country as it should be some investigation into anything which perverts the course of democracy you think losing go breaks it i don't know i mean i'm sure he was interested in getting the right result which is from his point of view has thought there is an interest in the stabilising most democracies and on the money of the
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european union why because if because there are certain power blocs in the world as this russia china america and the european union of europe you can be the stabilized the not helps other the other problems it helps trump it helps treating ping it helps future and this is what's happening in the course of three to may was stronger in her position and i feel sorry for russia the way for the moment being attacked by rome party like a pack of wolves if she was stronger through position she would actually have an inquiry into this business into what's happened in terms of the referendum and both an external force it's on the modern democracy so just about that it could be the next general election it could be other elections in this country but of course you can get the sense to do that she's been walking a tight rope from one end to the other i thought it was just about interconnected businesses globally trying to make the world a better place take as this is a very this is a voice a story era b. and b. to remove listings in israel's west bank settlement and the semitism no off absolutely not i mean the united nations has declared that the west bank is
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illegally occupied israel should not be there which that's women's and you know for those of us who want to defend israel as having a right to. just as a country which i absolutely do on a poll of your attacks on them in particular on jews across the world you know the government doesn't make it easier for people like me to defend them when it's what is behaving illegally in the west bank why do you think there's a journalist who has shown us weakness i forty eight i was wearing a press protective vest blue helmet. leg was shot multiple fractures why do you think this is not once talk about it here in britain the maybe by a british sniper rifle who knows well i mean that should be more frankly i mean the sadness is that the israeli government has now got a compliant white house with trump moving the american embassy to jerusalem and it's got the power of military force in the west bank and people just sort of saying well you know we can't do much about this and the israeli government goes and behold into these. right wing elements which coalition control these are the
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guys who would reject. me not doing probably agrees with me frankly but i mean some of these ultra religious parties who are going to appeal to strings of netanyahu i mean they've got a completely wild i'm bishan to recreate today and said mary and all these will just things i'm from little times and there's no use in in hope to them you know would be good thank you. well was the bragg's had voted sham was it really the self-styled bad boys or breaks it with russian interference that still got nationalist movements to convince u.k. voters to leave i'm with the president of britain's conservatives for a people's vote the chair of parliament education select committee neil com michael thanks for coming on the show before we get to the presidency of conservatives for a people's vote tell you about the sustainable learning for life work in changing economy commission. and how it relates maybe to education in this country have to break what's about education it's about education full stop it's not about rex it's
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this is an aspiration i desire i need to make sure that we have the rights. hills for the economy of the future it's about understanding changes in technology it's about understanding that are changes and work patterns for understanding that we're going to go through a period when lifelong learning is necessary and so on so this is something which we need to do with or without talking lignum folks apart from that would you said it will be likely in folks already but i mean as pearson which which backs it said that c.e.o. john allen that the vote must be respected in your campaigning for a second river and well i did respect. i campaigned very hard back in june twenty sixth for remain outcome we didn't get one and i accept that that's what the people wanted to do which is leave now what's changed is that the bricks it will likely to get under the deal it's currently on the table is not really what anyone
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voted for back in twenty sixteen. and it puts our country i think into a position which is largely a rule take it but not rule maker it puts us into a situation where we're not going to house the kind of trade links that we should necessarily have with the european union and so on i think that people voted for bracks it for a number of reasons and i think one of the problems about having a binary choice in areas complex. membership of the european union is is the people vote for different reasons and to vote on different subjects general to go a last referendum back in one nine hundred sixty eight sixty nine not because of the issue but because of the judgment that the french people make in his performance during the may riots of nine hundred sixty eight so in other words referendums once you start them can actually spiral out of sort of the territory in which they're supposed to be about comparing it to the main age sixty eight riots and we know from. research institute figures national research institute figures
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that the people that voted brain. seventy eight percent or less formal education people in social housing seventy percent of the group voted for breaks it only group which would remain were the higher tax payers the rich does way it's a class issue it's also an age issue most of us will vote to stay in the european union it's also an urban issue most urban areas or many stay in the european union it's also a money fracturing industry issue because most people in the first sectors voted in the european union we forget that over sixteen million people actually did vote. in the european union now you make the point that we've got difficulties in terms of social housing social mobility areas of that. poor productivity in the economic front which equals low pay low opportunities you're absolutely right and what we've
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got to do stack all those things but that's a different discussion from the one we're having about bret's it. presumably saying it's because of that that they've they voted breakthrough but you wrote a piece with vince cable leader of the liberal democrats saying now that we know there was russian interference in the twenty sixteen referendum or did you mean by that don't think there's any need to decipher that sentence it's absolutely clear then we knew that there was evidence that had been russian interference in the referendum don't forget president putin likes to disrupt things so to speak that's part of his armory in terms of foreign policy since i wrote that with with vince more evidence. linked in that article just city university study which there's no woman of russia in that guardian piece from august so you literally are saying we know and then link to a city university study that doesn't mention russia imagines twitter and the use of
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twitter for the bricks and referendum well ok. when you're investigating something you don't necessarily know what you're looking for until you stop. finding things and no doubt this is all about improving british society as well as the british economy what do you make of the fact that now the bank of england's brics it impact assessment is going to be released do you expect it to say that we're going to be doomed first for what i make of it's going to be released well i repeat this is going to be released because you know we need to know what the bank of england thinks i want your as it were impact assessments and the. conservatives are people's vote welp because there is a segment of the future you can only get under bridges we think that leaving the world's largest and freest free trade area the single market is not a wise thing to do margaret thatcher was instrumental in creating it we celebrated its start we've been trading freely with the european union for you know over forty
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years and we've also developed an economy which i realize on just in time money fracturing if we find ourselves in a situation where. inspection. and so forth are threatening that supply chain system if you like then we'll probably not do as well as we would if trays of maize agreement falls at the last hurdle first hurdle in the goldmans what do you want we want people spent on an opportunity for the people to make a decision between what have a deal is available i was twenty nine we're leaving well because of your vote if we manage to win a an amendment in some legislation to secure people's vote then of course we then have to put in the place for the mechanism for a people's given that march is coming up then we would probably be wise to get started soon but there are always you think you'd have more johns in germany. well jeremy. strode in there really unclear about what he would do in connection with
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the people's vote his instinct is. to leave the european union but he knows that vast majority of his supporters are in favor of staying in beirut and desire saudi arabia and iran. you can always feel it geopolitically that a lot of talk in the foreign secretary in iran trying to secure the release of the jewel national saudi arabia concerning congress over the killing where do you feel as in terms of british policy as regards these two books well good foreign policy is about finding out and finding a strong case to promote on in the situation that you've got in saudi arabia and iran we need to make sure that you know. human rights are properly respected you know i think that's a colon. well that's certainly an issue that has to be considered
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because one of the questions we've got to ask is what are the almost being used for we should be using our skills and our soft power as well as sort of a reputation as a country which is always promoted liberal democracy and everything else to the best possible advantage thank you thank you and that's of the show join us on saturday when we question a drone operator about u.s. u.k. military collaboration backing saudi arabia and yemen after this week's shoji assassination tape until then people judged by social media will be back on saturday thirty nine years to the day washington admitted u.s. soldiers are being exposed to chemical weapons against the people you know the two point four million veterans of a class action lawsuit millions of dollars rewarded and out of court settlement meeting of guilt seven companies injured and months hundred.
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dollars. dollars on the good dollop of dollars is what i will do you. got carried away here we care the music with us. we are here we were dry gear. why you don't go to get rid of those who will not go away we will not die quiet. real the hard work we do is the truth.
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comes on already has a significant portion of all u.s. commerce something approaching twenty percent i guess our goal is to get fifty percent of all commerce in america it would be amazon commerce and they need artificial intelligence to do that an artificial intelligence needs data to run effectively so jeff bezos put the call out to all the cities and they said we may come to your town just give us all the data on all the people living in your town and we'll jump into our computers and our ai systems and by the way you don't get anything. going to please close camp sundown you can't for people that can't decide and they're like so vampire camp this is like a safe house i guess they don't have to talk about what they go through but that's because we understand our daughter katie was first diagnosed with a very rare some sensitive condition if i get sunburned i heal she does or she'll patients when they have problems with the walk to talk to some of the brains that are actually shrinking inside the stove gets thicker and branscombe small. the
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pain is indescribable it's. feels like a really really bad chemical burn but it goes through your skin in your muscles down the but. there's no relief. we're not to sure this is just so. you know world of big part of the lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that made history media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door on the back and shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the troops the time is now for watching closely watching the
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hawks. iran's foreign minister describes trump on a shameful for pledging america's continued partnership with saudi arabia as the u.s. leader a shift focus from the murder of journalist jamal khashoggi to fighting a perceived they're really in threat. also ahead on the program americans are.

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