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tv   Cross Talk  RT  August 26, 2019 7:30pm-8:01pm EDT

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someone should have an answer. put them to. me yes. you know that you're not yeah. he could feel that he had a ticket. you need to move out of that you know enough to have. a low and welcome to cross where all things considered i'm peter lavelle prime minister boris johnson did you ever think you would say that it seems we live in
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a world where anything can happen now after all who would have thought briggs it would destroy the premiership up to rest of me will to break that process do the same to boris johnson. talking bojo and brags that i'm joined by my guess we jasper in london he is a former deputy mayor of london in lancaster we have mark arnett he is a senior lecturer in politics at lancaster university and in plymouth we crossed the james tweedy he is a journalist and commentator on world affairs all right gentlemen gentlemen crosstalk rules in effect i mean you can jump in in any time you want and i always appreciate it and i also know it's sweltering in the u.k. so well everybody don't get hyperventilated here because i don't want anybody to faint ok let me go to james 1st in plymouth james ok we have a new prime minister a figure that most people know. some very much like some obviously don't and he's
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larger than life ok that's all nice and fine that's good for media it's good for clicks it's good for eyeballs but how does it change the equation for britain these if he breaks it how can boris johnson avoid the fate of teressa may go ahead james well though i think the tories have seen the rising on the wall about brits thanks to the parents it passes and they're very rapid. the nominal success and recent elections so the tory party a very very good party is going to steal all the. votes because that's where they get most of your support as when they got rid of theresa may now boris johnson is not entirely trustworthy on bret's and he's talking about tinkering with the political declaration and it so that we will draw all agreement and the political
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that the regime doesn't really mean anything it's the role agreement that's legally binding and that's what the problem is. his election he's been elected to. get done. and to say that stories from electoral. ok let me go to lee here but lee when a good guess really the biggest problem in dealing with brags that at least when it comes to parliament is that both parties were divided on the issue within each party here can boris johnson unite the tories because if he can do that he might be able to poach from people across the aisle as it were here it really gets down to how he manages the party in my not correct go ahead lee well it does if you're playing fantasy politics if you play real politics then you know that the irish backstop the european union is implacable position. and you know the
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record of mendacity and tomfoolery of boris johnson then you really wouldn't put your house on the phone to have boris being able to unify either his party or the country there are lots of people in the tory party with deep emotional scars from previous encounters yeah with boris johnson some of whom are sitting around the cabinet table. cabinet full of deeply ambitious and venal politicians boris being the lead cheerleader amongst them but the extent to which he could maintain unity within that cabinet under the sweltering pressure that he's going to come under in brussels and the european union i think will not unite the tory party but will break it into mark the same question here i mean i think we have a new personality ok at 10 downing street but i don't see the strategy moving forward ok to resume he says to resumes which are all deal is dead ok so what is his deal
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they can appeal to not only his own party but to the public at large i mean i studied this very carefully i'm actually getting very bored with it because i don't see the needle being moved here what can he do that no one else has done mark. ah well he can certainly do something that nobody else's turn and that is he can prove. to be false or true the position that he's put forward to his party in the british public and that position is that the reason may only fail because she didn't really believe in sets and so far i think people on both sides of the aisle on this question probably have reason to be satisfied about what how things are going because he's assembled a team virtually every single one of whom wholeheartedly seem to believe or say they believe in so let's see what happens bring it on and i think that obviously the downside of this is that if there is. no deal broke set and parliament is
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sidelined that we have all sorts of terrible constitutional issues that might happen i think in the end that mr johnson is not the kind of person who will be able to do that kind of thing i think that he's going to go to brussels his real tactic here his strategy is to hope that people in the e.u. think here's a man who really knows what he's talking about rather who believes in what he's talking about so for once we're going to have to really negotiate seriously this is where everything comes to the crunch whereas mrs may we managed to fob her off he's hoping that they'll be movement within the. process and that he won't therefore have to go through with the no no deal threat so in terms of the unity however i think that the danger for people moderate people in the conservative party is that they're going to be accused of being defeatists and not patriotic that's mr johnson's card he's talking up all this optimism ism stuff
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daring his critics to say to produce reasons for not being quite so mindlessly optimistic and he will then turn around and say to the british public these are people who don't believe in your country and that is a car that will work very well. in england very poorly in scotland and northern ireland not the english for voters it seems quite a lot of them like to distort distortions of reality ok well you know you can you can have you know you could have been to see as i mean certainly has that he said we need optimism he certainly has that but james how does that make briggs it happened i mean the european union all through this process and i think to resume was the worst person to negotiate because she was a remainder and that why did you said to remain there to do briggs that i mean that was ridiculous ok and we got it and she deserved her fate ok but the european union is going to make this is painful as possible for you guys and i don't see why they get to change their tune i mean they can they broke her and they want to break him
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if necessary go ahead james well everyone talks about there is a maze redlined but i don't have any red lines that you want to brussels and you're in commission. yes of course the e.u. wants to make this thing. either create a situation where it doesn't or you get name only which is what it is. or where. the. drop becomes. the imposition of trade barriers between tariffs. ok why do they want to do that while the e.u. was already in a trice. before we proceed to leave. it was in a crisis because north western countries the wealthy. north west and. some in europe and eastern europe in the republican model and colonies and there's
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a lot of and there are a lot of political reasons or cultural. barriers. and so it was we were in a crisis and it gets out. and crossed and the might there may be other countries who might be wondering why in the end that is the reason why one of the reasons why the e.u. wants to make this as painful as possible we i mean they always go back to the default position of w t o rules ok i mean if boris johnson wants to succeed and i have to believe he wants to. do much better than to resume when you were assigned an entire group of people to work with that goal of w t o rules because there are good there's not going to be another deal the deal is that the european union is going to accept is already on the table and the parliament has dismissed it 3 times boris johnson isn't going to go down that path we knew just be saying we have a kitchen cabinet it's
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a deputy oh rules work on it you've got 99 days go ahead lee. i don't think so i think we're w t o rules. are no deal hard brick say and they would be only to the only country in the world operating on the meet those rules and they are sob each in their implications for the country so he asked a realistic option a toll and i also think that the extent to which you know the kind of xenophobia sentiment we see abroad for little england plucky spending against the assembled holds of the european union with their. you know pan-european genda is a is a a a scenario that has been developed and pursued in and propagandized in the british press the decades and funny enough it will be the kind of irrationality that flows from such sentiment that will see this country commit economic suicide by electing
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a prime minister who is not only incompetent as he's recorded in the london shows us but has an opportunity of such grand proportions that even his brother joe johnson who resigned over the breaks it was pretty convinced by boris johnson to come back in government and it's partly signed up to probe agenda so here we are be shown you can spin around on any given issue 360 degrees in a heartbeat and both obviously like sacrifice the economic prosperity of the nation that they said let me just up this conclusion the tories are not even following the global big business agenda because if the tories were following that agenda here to have some rationale in terms of their ideological position and their long time association as being the big hitters for big business now even though boris johnson
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is waving corporate tax cuts in front of them this is. paling to significance with the man from business that we have better arrangements than the no deal there isn't a serious business leader with dead money who is. agreeing with the position of a no deal so it's counted today their constituency base it's a spread on any rational he's not here to spread by or irrational xenophobia and there is no logical conclusion other than to this particular they may really mean generally the election of merchants and we have to get a hard break gentlemen and after that hard break we'll continue our discussion on bojo and regs and stay with.
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us that's my life i started on wall street 40 years ago and i've been living in the luxury of life ever cheaper money ever since literally not having to work a day in my life because the assets of 40 years ago gone straight up. to get up off the ground to sort of begin to. name the folks on the sounds of maybe. mislead essentially. wish to do away from your office or. the obvious or did they kind of lunge for the web in one smiths and then when it happened on 3 swung and i didn't i never saw any
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contact with. any kind of went back to where they were so the answer is back here there again 15 feet apart at this point and that's when the officer is gone you need to turn 3. if you're going to make me believe. that they go not. 6 going to be great and i grumble. welcome back to crossfire we're all things are considered peter lavelle reminder
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we're discussing bojo and breaks it. ok let's go back to mark here i still haven't gotten an answer to my question how is boris johnson going to achieve this if he's going to achieve it now i mention with lee. rules ok that's one way heartbreaks that ok but which all agreement is off the table because it was already down 3 times and humiliated a prime minister ok so can you tell me what the 3rd very into is here does he know and if he does know support a friend ok it was good. last you got it you got ahead of me on that one let me go to mark. you got me on that one ok go ahead mark. well there is. a certain amount of discussion going on about changing the
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withdrawal agreement that relates to the buck stop with really put a border between northern and the republic of ireland of actually having the kind of border between you and the bulk of britain having the irish sea in other words changing the problem. kind of an island problem there's always got the johnson is very keen on to technological changes. in our 50 years on putting a man in the moon but we can't sort out these are the arrangements regarding the movement of goods surely human ingenuity in this new optimistic here of jobs soon is a we should be able to find distribution to that really i think the only thing but the only thing on offer is sheer force of personality plus a certain amount of blackmail i wonder if mr johnson is going to even though the you are quite happy that the divorce settlement 39000000000 i believe that that's
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going to be paid over years rather than all at once perhaps some threat to look at that again and whittle down that figure he's hoping that through really psychological of. this that he knew to change the deal it sounds like black magic that's black magic you're to actually get the token solitaires ok let me go back to the game here i like it now we're going to get to the point of this whole debate here and to see ok well fine ok but fantasy does it the fantasy doesn't usually have much to do with policy or good policy that is here james james said the general election that's been it's in the offering here general election. there's a general election before all of the well it doesn't have to be there's no real precedent for that. parliament probably can't stop being.
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stop us leaving on. about we. are equal and no deal or. any more anyway because. we've sorted out a lot of. buy that some trade deals with a number of countries like norway and south korea and in the last couple years that's not it's not losing interest that we're nowhere near salting out trade deals with any companies we've got preliminary agreements top further discussions there's still some probably stand still this is not the point is that there are a number of labor. you are. maybe 10 or 20 who vote against their own and most of the government or certainly we're. on an emotion that will actually wreck everybody selected in the run up to a general election. and then you can also have a media selected as we speak. and that.
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is. in the labor party although you know it down here you're going down a path that i think it's really important here let me go back to mark in lancaster how have both parties made major parties fared through all of this here because boris johnson has the opportunity to bring some unity to the tories but what about labor because labor has been very well it's been waffling a lot on this here but i and i suppose if i was jeremy carbon i would do the same thing watch your opponents destroy themselves and that's one political tactic here but how both parties have been very damaged i think you could say through this entire process go ahead mark. yes well they'll be an awful lot of mainstream labor politicians just tearing their hair out at the moment this is a god sent opportunity for any credible party of opposition and labor is in its own internal chaos and if it wasn't for the fact you could say the internal chaos is about very different issue of allegations of anti-semitism but it's in chaos over
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breakfast as well and mr coleman has been dragged kicking and screaming to a position which sounds a bit more like remain but he doesn't sound at all sincere on this and that's because he is a british so you have a party that should be ready to cash in having been converted to pro european ways in the 1980 s. that far back it's now divided again just at the moment when it needs to be united and the beneficiary of this is the liberal democrats the one thing i would say that's really dangerous for the cities in the johnson camp is that where ours the party and the conservative party there's absolutely no love lost the tall and their vote is likely to be split if they do face off in a general election i have a very strong hunch that the remain camp is going to be a lot more efficient in a general election it's ensuring that the city with the best chance of winning will succeed in various constituencies so a general election is something that the conservatives may have
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a very mixed feelings about labor i'm afraid they should be just looking at it is an open goal but the chances are under mr colburn's leadership whatever his virtues that they would blaze the ball over that open goal and the british politics would just be completely chaotic and unstable into the foreseeable future ok we have both parties failed the the electorate because they voted to leave ok and parliament and both parties have failed to execute on the people's will here and so this is really the crux of it for me too i mean i'm kind of big gnostic about it but i believe in democracy ok it was a vote at all. winning clear and it was decisive ok for a large campaign like that so i think it's really incumbent upon them because if they can't get a deal through then they've failed the people and that is a very good that will damage the the believe people have in the political system and it's pretty damaged right now all through the western world what can bore us johnson do to turn that around beyond being optimistic which i guess we all want to
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help to mislead but i don't see how that moves the needle at all go ahead lee. you know the only realistic optimism is an incredibly dangerous character is speak to have when you're playing high stakes politics is soon you have a greater control over external inventors then you then you do not you have talents which you do not have. and they outcome can be absolutely catastrophic i think it poses an existential challenge to both parties that is absolutely clear i'm neither . labor all tory have really taken the opportunity to borrow my teaching position that would benefit them but also align fully with the interests of the country labor is prevaricated too much it is on denali it's not been clear in its messaging and i couldn't stand the frustration in the party i think when we come to
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a general election the question is going to be binary what is going to be pro bricks or bricks and i said good position for labor to be in even if they lose the election because even if they lose a general election if we come out of european union without a deal so it will be the recession and the economic impact that the tide of popular opinion will turn when people feel in their pockets we could be in for another general election much sooner than people think so either you seem porton for labor to stick to a principled position and the fact is you can't extricate yourself from a 60 year relationship with a european union that has got by one time levels of bureaucracy legislation and policy and simply get to work in part to get it together and fix that and resolve it overnight it takes decades to unravel that european union relationship. i don't see anybody being able to do that any time soon ok james we've talked about labor
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and we talked about the tories how does the brig's in party play into this because they really kind of. a dramatic arrival on the scene here what you all can they play in all of this here and can the tories in the in the breaks in party work together i mean i would be a very interesting combination. well nigel farage is. going to. and this is why and that someone at least sounds like. right now it's tories and the brits made in the election were a lie and it would be a joke because you have a local organization. and you. know. i don't like. you know. about the environment. there's only one where there's a big debate here and i get here and. i love this is just this judge has already
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announced a visit by a boat a potties for oddities a wonderful young you know carry on service and you know it's just as opposed to the post-modernism in late nights postmodernism absolutely baby. so we possibly have seen the mess they've gotten sounds into it and they're saying it now labor's policy is not they don't know what the problem is. you sure go big on this as you said i he said. told me. that kaberle grazing were moved out by by farache i think farache i think i think that boris has moved to the right to compensate for farache you could if you could never move to the right hot enough for some of these people and i think the i.g. fire on art will do for boris as they did for man cameron ok let me go tomorrow let me go to mark shang and i want to go to mark mark is going to finish it out for us here how does this all and mark is all going to be. transparent here it's a trail of tears ok how is it all and i mean we have where we have 99 days and
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a lot of optimism how does it all end mark go ahead. well if you look at 1st of all i'd say napoleon where he lives today would be very flattered to be compared to nigel for i mean i think if we're talking about this 99 day thing to paraphrase t.s. eliot this is the way the british politics basically the pieces smash and reassemble not with a whimper which it was in a way into to reason maybe but with the back and say this is bringing all these underlying things to the surface you could say if you think that remain is the right option this is a chance to lance the boil of this and this and to europe in sentiment and to actually get britain into a more realistic course in the world equally by sheer force of will and also the very interesting populist measures mr johnson on the domestic front is suggesting sorting out care for the elderly getting rid of all sterrett see all these kind of
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things which have lasting money problems if this kind of thing is is going to be a no ok i have to jump in here to get we've all run out of time here he's going to have to solve all problems at the same time many thanks to my guests in london lancaster and in plymouth and thanks to our viewers for watching us here darkie see you next time remember. why a paradise with some ground turned into a round the experimentation field for agricultural chemicals we know that these chemicals have consequences they are major here tell us there's no question otherwise why would the chemical company workers themselves be geared up and suited
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up locals attempt to combat the on regulated experiments that often in day. you have many of these people who have one foot into the biotech pharma and the other foot in the government regulatory bodies this kind of collusion is reprehensible while the battle goes on the chemicals continue to poison hawaii and its people so one has to ask the question whether there is a form of environmental racism going on in hawaii whether these companies feel they can get away with this because the people have less political power. so it's seemed wrong. roles just don't hold. any you didn't get to shape out these days to come to agitate and engage with equals betrayal. when flamini find themselves worlds apart when she's to look for common ground.
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need to quit counting. i'm one of them but i think. we're buddies. i don't want that for any candidates i mean yes i knew she needed that name of community yeah. it's kinda any kind of chicken dad's going i say he made
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a move of hogan that he i want to i don't know before i don't mess with. the french leader speaks out over tension and conflict within the ranks of the g 7 as the host wraps up at the summit in the luxury resort of the b r it's. a court finds pharmaceutical giant johnson and johnson guilty of contributing to the opioid crisis in the us ordering it to pay over $500000000.00 in fines. and radical new rules in force google with good tech. telling employees not to engage in political debate on.

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