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Dec 30, 2019
12/19
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and the panel was lighting up and i walked over to it and i picked it up and it was ken clark, detectivelark calling to tell me that they had arrested harvey. it was a real great sense of relief. it was almost indescribable. >> reporter: which is perhaps where the movie version of this story would end. but real life is not quite like that. for all the suspicion of steven's friends, the murder case against harvey morrow was rather weak. no evidence sufficient to prove that harvey shot steven then dumped his body in the ocean. >> we were looking for steven's dna on the boat. knowing that his death was caused by a gunshot wound it was pretty obvious that there should be something that said this is where it was. >> reporter: but there wasn't. no blood, no gun, no significant fingerprints. what they needed, couldn't find, was something that put the two men together on the far side of catalina island where that current would have caught the body, carried it round to the spot where boaters saw it floating face down in the water. they hunted everywhere for harvey's gps, but they never found it.
and the panel was lighting up and i walked over to it and i picked it up and it was ken clark, detectivelark calling to tell me that they had arrested harvey. it was a real great sense of relief. it was almost indescribable. >> reporter: which is perhaps where the movie version of this story would end. but real life is not quite like that. for all the suspicion of steven's friends, the murder case against harvey morrow was rather weak. no evidence sufficient to prove that harvey shot...
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Dec 21, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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i'm ken clarke, health secretary, home secretary and chancellor of the exchequer. are you voting? i've decided i am going to back the people who have been early supporters of the people's vote. in terms of my own vote, i'm going to vote for keir starmer. so, are you campaigning for the other party? yes... and i will help dominic grieve and david gauke, i think. i have endorsed people like david gauke, anna soubry and dominic grieve. you and ifor the first david gauke, anna soubry and dominic grieve. you and i for the first time in our lives, although we get on perfectly well personally, you are definitely a labour man and i am definitely a labour man and i am definitely a labour man and i am definitely a conservative, both of us, in ourways, definitely a conservative, both of us, in our ways, our definitely a conservative, both of us, in ourways, ouractively supporting the same candidates in particular constituencies. parties are polarised, labour has gone left, tories have gone right. in both cases the left and right haven't purged the parliamentary party as they
i'm ken clarke, health secretary, home secretary and chancellor of the exchequer. are you voting? i've decided i am going to back the people who have been early supporters of the people's vote. in terms of my own vote, i'm going to vote for keir starmer. so, are you campaigning for the other party? yes... and i will help dominic grieve and david gauke, i think. i have endorsed people like david gauke, anna soubry and dominic grieve. you and ifor the first david gauke, anna soubry and dominic...
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Dec 22, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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we paired alistair campbell who was once tony blair's spin doctor with ken clarke, a conservative mpy 50 yea rs. one a lifelong tory, one a lifelong labour supporter. did they have more in common than they realised 7 that's better. i can see myself. my name is alistair campbell. people will know me as having worked for tony blair. i'm kenneth clarke, health secretary, home secretary and chancellor of the exchequer. how are you voting? i've decided i am going to back the people who have been early supporters of a people's vote. in terms of my own vote, i'm going to vote for keir starmer. so, you are campaigning for the labour party? lam. no... yes... and i will help dominic grieve if i can, and david gauke, i think. i have endorsed people like david gauke, anna soubry and dominic grieve. you and i, for the first time in our lives, although we get on perfectly well personally, you are definitely a labour man and i am definitely a conservative, both of us, in our ways, are actively supporting the same candidates particular constituencies. parties are polarised, labour has gone left, tor
we paired alistair campbell who was once tony blair's spin doctor with ken clarke, a conservative mpy 50 yea rs. one a lifelong tory, one a lifelong labour supporter. did they have more in common than they realised 7 that's better. i can see myself. my name is alistair campbell. people will know me as having worked for tony blair. i'm kenneth clarke, health secretary, home secretary and chancellor of the exchequer. how are you voting? i've decided i am going to back the people who have been...
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Dec 5, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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time i'm going over a road hump with a taxi driver and my back goes, and i will say, "that is ken clarke's the rest of your career. so that's not the real mistake? i will carry my mistakes to the grave. i do think the really important big mistake in the blair government was the invasion of iraq, which even i never thought its consequences were so tragic and long lasting. so certainly the government with which you are most associated, i'm sure, with hindsight, you agree that was a terrible mistake? i'm sure, with hindsight, i agree with your assessment that you should never necessarily... i might pick you up at health of having been a bit slow on the uptake about the tobacco lobby. well, i'm a lifelong smoker... and the public health agenda more generally, maybe. i used to have an amusing relationship with the public health lobby. are you still smoking? cigars nowadays. are you still? i gave up cigarettes. but you're quite right, you know... i'm getting old, so i always tell the same stories. but when i returned as secretary of state for health and went into the room, the first question i a
time i'm going over a road hump with a taxi driver and my back goes, and i will say, "that is ken clarke's the rest of your career. so that's not the real mistake? i will carry my mistakes to the grave. i do think the really important big mistake in the blair government was the invasion of iraq, which even i never thought its consequences were so tragic and long lasting. so certainly the government with which you are most associated, i'm sure, with hindsight, you agree that was a terrible...
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Dec 5, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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today, alistair campbell — who was once tony blair's spin doctor — meets ken clarke — a conservative bour supporter, but now they've both been kicked out of their parties. so will they find they have far more in common than they ever thought? here's how they got on. my name is alastair campbell. i think people will know me as having worked for tony blair. so, yeah, i've always been labour. kenneth clark, health secretary, home secretary, and chancellor of the exchequer. lord chancellor and justice secretary. i'm a discontented conservative. corbyn orjohnson. such a joyless election. it's different. oh my god. forgive me for not leaping to my feet, i'm rather lame nowadays. what are you going to go to? well, i've voted every election in my life so far, i voted conservative. but i'm a discontented conservative. i know a lot of people in the major government, not quite sure who they are going to vote for. there's a spectrum, 0k? corbyn is there and farage is there and johnson isjust inside farage. so where are you? i'm centre—right about there. right, 0k. and where the lib dems? the lib
today, alistair campbell — who was once tony blair's spin doctor — meets ken clarke — a conservative bour supporter, but now they've both been kicked out of their parties. so will they find they have far more in common than they ever thought? here's how they got on. my name is alastair campbell. i think people will know me as having worked for tony blair. so, yeah, i've always been labour. kenneth clark, health secretary, home secretary, and chancellor of the exchequer. lord chancellor...
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Dec 13, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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we have lost one father of the house after the departure of ken clarke and we lost another in the defeatle. the conservative general election landslide means sir peter bottomley, who entered the commons in 1975, has now become the father of the house. we can talk to him now. in guildford, how do you feel about taking on the mantle? it's a job you do not apply for, there is no merit and no responsibility so it's not exactly a great burden, but it is a great honour to have been around for some time. but i must recognise dane margaret beckett, who was elected before me but because she was elected before me, but because she had a broken period of service, but i will still refer to her as the senior member of the house. i'm not sure how flattering that is. in the last few months we have seen some fairly unedifying scenes in the commons and it came to the fore in october when some of the language was really quite unsettling between members in the house. do you think you will return to something as toxic as that, is there still the potential for that level of divide? i don't think so. i think t
we have lost one father of the house after the departure of ken clarke and we lost another in the defeatle. the conservative general election landslide means sir peter bottomley, who entered the commons in 1975, has now become the father of the house. we can talk to him now. in guildford, how do you feel about taking on the mantle? it's a job you do not apply for, there is no merit and no responsibility so it's not exactly a great burden, but it is a great honour to have been around for some...
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Dec 17, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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it was ken clarke, and it is because you are the longest serving mp, continuous service, is that it?e role that lindsey skinner would have had, so i have the role that lindsey skinnerwould have had, ken so i have the role that lindsey skinner would have had, ken clarke added, edward heath had it, a number of steepest people. what does it mean in terms of what you have to do? you had a role today, as you re—elected the speaker. what does it mean, being farther up the house question on nothing, you get it with no merit, you have no response abilities and no pay. i am supposed to convert those that need comforting, provide a bit of quiet when things get too noisy, and generally remember things before most other were born. it means that you tend to get called to ask questions, including at prime minister's questions? that is possibly right, it is not something i would normally want to use. he tried to do something in the past, when things need pulling together. there are times in the past when speakers, like jack weatherall, and has got out of control, would call me because i could act a
it was ken clarke, and it is because you are the longest serving mp, continuous service, is that it?e role that lindsey skinner would have had, so i have the role that lindsey skinnerwould have had, ken so i have the role that lindsey skinner would have had, ken clarke added, edward heath had it, a number of steepest people. what does it mean in terms of what you have to do? you had a role today, as you re—elected the speaker. what does it mean, being farther up the house question on nothing,...
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Dec 13, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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let's talk to the veteran conservative and former father of the house, ken clarke, who's in nottinghamternoon. it's quite a remarkable victory. boris has got an amazing opportunity now. he has powerfor the next five years and he could exercise an immense amount of discretion on what he can do. the labour party is in a crisis that will take a year or two to resolve. the liberal democrats haven't broken through. part of the big problem is scotland. boris is now quite clear to decide what he wants to do. i very much hope he will stop campaigning, fewer photo opportunities, try to get as rapidly as possible a plan for where he is going that will deliver recovery for the economy and better distribution of it. he has a lot of tough and difficult things to do that are best donein difficult things to do that are best done in the first couple of years of parliament. it's a bit like margaret thatcher in 1979. but we had done a lot more preparation before margaret thatcher won in 79. the question we a lwa ys thatcher won in 79. the question we always ask of large majorities, who keeps them in che
let's talk to the veteran conservative and former father of the house, ken clarke, who's in nottinghamternoon. it's quite a remarkable victory. boris has got an amazing opportunity now. he has powerfor the next five years and he could exercise an immense amount of discretion on what he can do. the labour party is in a crisis that will take a year or two to resolve. the liberal democrats haven't broken through. part of the big problem is scotland. boris is now quite clear to decide what he wants...
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Dec 16, 2019
12/19
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BBCNEWS
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i think when boris johnson, boris johnson supported ken clarke for the leadership of the conservativeof people than he has donein and those sort of people than he has done in the period of trying to land brexit. take the main chance is another way of putting it.” brexit. take the main chance is another way of putting it. i think borisjohnson is another way of putting it. i think boris johnson is in another way of putting it. i think borisjohnson is in both a good and bad sense politically ruthless, he has done some things that i didn't like. i don't like the commitment after a year to leave the transition period. i don't like the 21 mps being... expelled from the party to have the whip taken from them. i'm still against it. if you look at it coldly, you have to say, i wonder whether he would have won the election without it. he understood that. both he got dominic cummings m, that. both he got dominic cummings in, borisjohnson that. both he got dominic cummings in, boris johnson is that. both he got dominic cummings in, borisjohnson is a hard politician and so is dominic cummings and
i think when boris johnson, boris johnson supported ken clarke for the leadership of the conservativeof people than he has donein and those sort of people than he has done in the period of trying to land brexit. take the main chance is another way of putting it.” brexit. take the main chance is another way of putting it. i think borisjohnson is another way of putting it. i think boris johnson is in another way of putting it. i think borisjohnson is in both a good and bad sense politically...