Lib Dem, Labour and Tory MPs Address Their Key Promises for the Future
Summary
TLDRこのスクリプトは、自由民主党の副党首が選挙期間中の様々な政治問題に対処する様子を捉えています。彼らはNHSとソーシャルケアの改善を公約に盛り込む一方で、税金の供給源として大銀行や億万長者を指摘しています。また、選挙でのイギリスのEU再加盟に関する公約はなく、現時点では貿易交渉や若者の移動性に関する取り組みが議論されています。さらに、教育や警察の強化もその一環として語られ、政治家は国民の安全や教育に対するコミットメントを強調しています。
Takeaways
- 😔 ライバルデモクラットの副党首は、首相がD-Dayの記念式を欠席した決定を非難し、国民サービスへの忠誠を示すべきだったと述べた。
- 📢 彼らの選挙マニフェストは、NHSとソーシャルケアを救済するために、年間90億ポンドの追加出資を提案し、その資金源は大銀行と億万長者からだと表明した。
- 💰 彼らは所得税や国民保険、VATの引き上げをしないという約束をしており、生活コストの危機中には苦労する家族に税金を増やすことは誤りだと主張している。
- 🏦 財政研究財団(Institute for Fiscal Studies)は、彼らの政策が不正確で、公の出資金を大幅に削減する必要があると警告している。
- 🕊️ 彼らは欧州連合への再加盟を望むが、選挙の焦点はそれではないとし、選挙マニフェストには具体的な再加盟の道は示されていない。
- 🏫 労働党は、すべての小学校に無料でブレイクファーストクラブを設立し、子供たちの出席率や学業成績を向上させると約束し、その費用は非居住者税のループホールを埋めることで賄うとしている。
- 🌱 彼らは3,000を超える小学校内で新的な保育園を開設し、民間学校の税制上の優遇を打ち消すことで資金を調達すると述べた。
- 📉 教育関係者からの報告では、教師の給与は2010年以来平均6%減少し、毎年10%の教師が教育部門を離れていると指摘している。
- 👮♂️ 保守党は、次の総選挙に勝利すれば、8,000人の新たな警察官を募集すると約束し、公共安全を強化する政策を示唆している。
- 🏛️ 刑事司法システムの危機が、逮捕活動に影響を与える可能性があるという警官からの警告があったが、現在はそのような措置は必要なくなっていると述べた。
- 📉 治安に関する国民の感情は、実際に起こった犯罪の減少とは別の問題であり、SNSの普及などが影響を与えていると分析している。
Q & A
自由民主党の副党首がD-Dayのお祝いを欠席したことについてどのように考えていますか?
-自由民主党の副党首は、その決断が非常に悪いものであり、首相の職に恥をかかせたと述べています。彼は、その決断が政治的理由で利用される危険性があるとは思いません。
自由民主党のマニフェストの主な内容は何ですか?
-自由民主党のマニフェストは、NHSとソーシャルケアを救済することを目的としており、GPの数を増やす、がんの生存率を改善する、NHSの歯科医療へのアクセス危機を終わらせるという大きな約束をしています。
自由民主党はどのようにしてそのマニフェストの費用を負担する予定ですか?
-自由民主党は、その費用を大銀行と億万長者から得る予定であり、所得税や国民保険、またはVATの引き上げは行わないと述べています。
自由民主党のマニフェストには、欧州連合への再加盟についての言及はありますか?
-自由民主党の副党首は、欧州連合への再加盟はその党の政策ですが、今回の選挙の焦点ではないと語っています。
労働党のマニフェストには、プライベートスクールの税制上の特別措置をどう扱う予定ですか?
-労働党は、プライベートスクールが享受する税制上の特別措置を終了することで、新たに3,000を超える保育園を設立する資金を調達する予定です。
労働党のマニフェストでは、教育関係者に対する具体的な約束は何ですか?
-労働党は、すべての小学校にユニバーサル 無料ブレイクファストクラブを導入し、税制上の特別措置を終了することで教育者を支援する約束をしています。
保守党は次回の総選挙に向けてどのような公約を出していますか?
-保守党は、次回の総選挙に勝利すれば、新たに8,000人の警察官を募集する公約を出しています。
現在の英国の犯罪状況はどのようですか?
-記録された犯罪は2010年以降全体的に減少しているとされており、特に警察は犯罪者を逮捕し、より長い刑期を科し、危険な人物を街から排除していると述べています。しかし、一部の地域では犯罪に対する感じ方の悪化が報告されています。
自由民主党の副党首は、選挙後の政府での主な課題とは何だと考えていますか?
-自由民主党の副党首は、選挙後の政府の主な課題はNHSとソーシャルケアの救済であり、その資金調達は大銀行と億万長者からの税金から行うと述べています。
自由民主党の副党首は、欧州連合への再加盟をいつ実現したいと考えていますか?
-自由民主党の副党首は、将来的には欧州連合への再加盟の機会があることを望んでいるが、具体的な時期は現在言えないと語っています。
労働党のマニフェストでは、教育関係者に対する給与に関する約束はありますか?
-労働党の陰影教育大臣は、教育者への給与に関する約束を明確にしていないが、教育者へのリスニングと支援、そして彼らの労働環境の改善にコミットしていると述べています。
Outlines
😔 政治利用とNHS支援の約束
第1段落では、自由民主党の副党首が政治利用の危険性について話しました。彼は、現在の首相の決断がNHSと社会ケアの危機を招いたと非難し、選挙宣言の発行について語りました。宣言では、GPの数を増やし、がんの生存率を改善し、歯科医療へのアクセス難問題を解決する大胆な約束が含まれています。これらの政策は、年間90億ポンドの追加費用を要すると言われていますが、その資金源は大銀行や億万長者からの徴収になると説明しています。
😠 税金の負担とEUへの再加盟の意向
第2段落では、副党首が選挙宣言の内容と税金の負担に関する質問に答えています。彼は、所得税や国民保険、VATの引き上げをしない方針を示し、大企業やテック企業、水道会社、石油ガス企業からの増税を提唱しています。また、EUへの再加盟についての党の政策や選挙での重要性についても触れられましたが、選挙の焦点はNHSや生活コスト危機の解決にあると強調しました。
📚 教育政策と子供たちの未来
第3段落では、教育に関する議論が行われています。労働党の影の教育大臣が、すべての小学校に無料で朝食クラブを提供する計画や、私立学校の税制上の優遇を打ち消して托児所を開設する約束について話しました。これらの政策は、教育の質を向上させると同時に、子供たちの出席率や学習成果を改善することを目的としています。
👮♂️ 警察の配置と犯罪対策
第4段落では、保守党の公安大臣が警察の配置に関する議論に参加しています。彼は、首相がD-Day記念式を欠席したことについて謝罪し、首相が公務員として働くことに献身していることを強調しました。また、警察の数は増加し、犯罪は減少していると主張していますが、実際には犯罪の報告が増えている地域もあると指摘しています。
🏢 监狱の状況と刑事司法制度
第5段落では、监狱の状況と刑事司法制度に関する議論がされています。警察の逮捕活動が増加したことから、一時期は监狱の収容能力に圧力がかかったとされており、その対策として新しい政策が導入されました。また、警察官の数は人口増加に追い付かず、犯罪は減少しているとされつつも、社会賢媒を通じて犯罪に対する感じ方の変化が指摘されています。
🚔 警察の配置と市民の安全
第6段落では、警察の配置と市民の安全に関する議論がされています。警察官の数は増加しているが、犯罪の報告が増加している地域もあるとされ、市民が感じる安全と実際の犯罪統計とのギャップが指摘されています。また、Sadiq Khan氏がロンドンのknife crime問題と結びつけて批判されており、保守党はこの問題に対処するための政策を提唱しています。
Mindmap
Keywords
💡リベラル民主党
💡政治的利用
💡NHS(National Health Service)
💡マニフェスト
💡税金
💡生活コスト危機
💡教育
💡私立学校
💡警察
💡選挙
💡イギリスのEU離脱
Highlights
The Liberal Democrats' Deputy Leader criticizes Rishi Sunak's decision, calling it terrible and shameful for leaving D-Day celebrations.
The Liberal Democrats' Manifesto focuses on saving the NHS and social care, with pledges to boost GP numbers, improve cancer survival rates, and end the access crisis to NHS dentists.
The Liberal Democrats plan to fund their NHS and social care improvements by taxing big banks and billionaires, not by raising taxes on ordinary people.
The Liberal Democrats' policy position on Europe is to rejoin the EU, but this election focuses on immediate issues like the NHS and social care.
The Liberal Democrats aim to renegotiate the existing Brexit deal to reduce red tape for small businesses and improve various trade and mobility agreements.
Labour pledges to provide free school breakfast clubs for all primary school pupils, funded by closing non-dom tax status loopholes and clamping down on tax avoidance.
Labour plans to create 100,000 new nursery places by opening over 3,000 nurseries within primary schools, funded by ending tax breaks for private schools.
Labour's strategy for education includes improving attendance, learning, and academic outcomes through universal free breakfast clubs and more nursery places.
Labour aims to recruit more teachers and provide better mental health support in schools using funds from ending private school tax breaks.
Labour acknowledges falling pupil numbers in primary schools and plans to upgrade and utilize the space for new nurseries.
The Conservatives plan to recruit an additional 8,000 new police officers if they win the next general election.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak apologized for missing a D-Day commemoration event, acknowledging it was a mistake and expressing regret.
The government commits to spending 2.5% of GDP on defense expenditure, with a focus on supporting veterans and the armed services.
The policing minister emphasizes record police numbers and new technology like facial recognition to catch more criminals.
Despite falling crime rates according to the crime survey, there is a public perception of increased crime, partly due to social media magnifying incidents.
Transcripts
the liberal Democrats Deputy leader uh
joins us now uh very good morning to you
uh it was very moving what you said uh
the issue I suppose is um is there a
danger of exploiting this for political
reasons I don't think anybody's
exploiting what happened the fact is
that this was rishy Sun's decision and I
think it was a terrible decision and I
think we're all within our rights to say
that he's brought shame on the Office of
Prime Minister and that many of us who
do have a connection to people who
served uh in the Army at that time who
were ordinary folk who did their Duty
and ran towards danger and death I think
many of us were very personally that it
was a terrible thing to do to leave
those D-Day
celebrations it's Manifesto week this
week so um you are launching your
Manifesto today
we have to be honest don't we about the
fact that things are going to cost a lot
of
money tell us what you're going to
promise the
electorate and where you're going to
find the money to do
it well we're launching our Manifesto
today and uh unashamedly the liberal
Democrat Manifesto is a Manifesto to
save our NHS and social care we have big
bold pledges to boost GP numbers to
improve cancer survival rates and end
the access um crisis to NHS dentists and
we are being honest with the public
about that we know that it's going to
cost us an additional 9 billion PS per
year um and we're setting out today
where that money is going to come from
it's going to come from the big Banks
and from the
billionaires so you're saying no rise in
income tax or national insurance or vat
it's possible to do all the things you
want to do in your Manifesto while
saying to um to Ordinary People to
working people to all of us we haven't
got to pay any more tax that's
absolutely right liberal Democrats have
said time and time again it would be
absolutely the wrong thing to do to
raise taxes on struggling families
during a cost of living crisis I knock
on hundreds of doors every week and I
speak to people who are barely coping
with the cost of living crisis and
that's why liberal Democrats are saying
we should be looking to places like the
big Banks the big tech companies the big
water companies the big oil and gas
companies many of whom are raking in
billions and billions of pounds in
profits and small increases for them
could help struggling families and
improve our Public Services the
independent Institute fiscal studies
says that you are wrong about this and
labor and the conservatives they say the
ifs there is a conspiracy of Silence
they say that there are huge cuts in
public spending coming and you making
these promises on tax is just dishonest
and that people are going to have to pay
more and you should just own up to that
rather than pretending that some somehow
we can have better public services and
save the NHS and social care without
anybody paying any more tax they say
that you're calling people well there's
no conspiracy of Silence here uh the
liberal Democrats are publishing our
Manifesto today and we'll set out in
detail um a fully costed Manifesto I'm
here this morning talking to you and
your viewers to be very very honest and
very clear about where the money will
come from Liberal Democrats do want to
spend an additional 9 billion per year
to save our NHS and social care and
we're setting out how we'll find that
money it will come from the big Banks
and the billionaires is there also a
conspiracy of Silence from the liberal
Democrats on Europe because your party's
policy position is to rejoin the
European Union and yet you don't ever
want to to say that uh I bet it's not in
your Manifesto even though it's your
party policy well you'll see what's in
our Manifesto by midm morning today um
but you know we're not uh embarrassed
about this at all the fact is one of the
reasons I'm a liberal is because I'm an
internationalist it's no uh Secret that
liberal Democrats want the UK to be back
in the hearts of Europe again but no
such deal of any kind is on the table
and that isn't what this election is
about when I speak to ordinary folk on a
day-to-day basis they tell me that what
they want to hear from their politicians
is a plan to fix our NHS and social care
a plan to tackle the cost of living
crisis and a plan to protect our local
environment and that's precisely what
the liberal Democrats are publishing
today so it is your policy to rejoin the
European Union but that's not what the
election is about the election isn't
about that and no such deal is on the
table the fact of the matter is there
are things we could be doing right now
which quite frankly the conservative
government should have been doing we
could renegotiate the existing botch
brexit deal to tear down the red tape
that's currently strangling our small
businesses we could have a Mobility
scheme for young people so they can
travel and study in other European
countries we could have Veterinary
agreements plant agreements we could
renegotiate those terrible trade deals
with Australia and New Zealand which are
undercutting our Farmers those are the
kind of things that we could be doing
right now as a country these are the
kind of things democat want to get on
with so so let's just establish because
previous campaigns under previous
leaders have used rather fruity language
about brexit and uh what your
predecessors uh thought about it so are
you saying that you would not take us
back into the European Union you would
simply Tinker with the various
individual deals that we've been left
with as a result of
brexit we are the only uk-wide party to
publish a road map as to how we want to
rebuild our relationship with the EU but
we shouldn't be in any doubt about just
how damaged that relationship is not
least from the sort of tweeting
diplomacy that we had from Boris Johnson
and Liz truss um of course we want to be
back in the heart of Europe again one
day but that's a long-term how would you
do that as a government if you were
elected would you hold another
referendum look that's a decision and a
conversation for another day what we're
talking about is Manifesto day literally
today Manifesto how can you say that's
not for today I mean if you're telling
us you want to rejoin the European Union
which is perfectly fine you got to kind
of be honest with us you can't say it's
not for today we want to be at the heart
of Europe but let's not talk about that
let's talk about something else we want
to know the answer to this question if
you want to be back at the heart of
Europe eventually you just got to say
that's what I want and that means
rejoining the European Union and we'll
do it when we can I mean is that what
your ouro our Manifesto is setting out
what we would do in the next Parliament
and what we do in the next Parliament is
improve the existing trade deal sort out
the trade deals with other countries
have these Mobility schemes for uh young
people to travel and work around Europe
but fundamentally this election is about
the NHS and that's why our Manifesto
Parliament
after well it's at some point in the
future and you can't ever predict what
the world's going to look like the
result you shape it and that's the whole
point of campaigning to be in government
look the reason that I'm asking on
behalf or we're asking on behalf of
voters it's because a lot of Voters
wonder why brexit is not a big deal in
this election why every single party
seems to sidestep brexit and they might
there might be viewers out there who
think they would like to vote for a
party that would take us back into the
European Union but from what you're
saying even though you say you don't
want to talk about it even though you're
not revealing all the details of the
manifesto because despite the fact today
is your Manifesto day we have to wait
until midm morning what we're asking is
if viewers voted for a libdem government
would they would you have a second
referendum on brexit or would you aim to
take us back into the EU if you got into
the government in the next Parliament
what we would like to do is to
renegotiate the existing trade deal that
has wrapped up our small businesses but
let's be clear now can we just be clear
is your answer no next Parliament no if
we got into government no no referendum
no plan to take the UK back into the you
there is no such option on the table so
no that's not going to happen in you
could put the option on the table so are
you saying no no in the next Parliament
it's not going to be on the table but
let me be clear about this right now you
want you ask why people aren't talking
about this issue so much my
internationalist of credentials and
passion hasn't wavered at all but people
are in a state of Crisis people's lives
are in crisis families are in crisis
because our NHS and social care isn't
working Daisy Cooper we would we would
we would so love you to be clear about
that I wean we really want you to be
clear more c a very simple question as
Deputy leader of the liberal Democrats
at some point in the future do you want
Britain to rejoin the European Union at
some point in the future obviously I
hope that we might have that opportunity
but that is not what's on the
table election in than four weeks that
definitely failed the clear test it's a
really simple question in the future at
some point this Parliament or the next
would you like Britain to rejoin the
European Union is that yes or no look
I've been I have been clear about this
the UK you really haven't yet but I feel
as though I feel as though we're
teaching we're teaching on the brink of
clarity we're almost there I mean just
say yes or no I think it's yes yes is
fine let let let me answer your question
clear again because we're going to all
explode I'm happy to answer your
question we do want the UK to be back at
the heart of Europe one day but that is
not on the ballot paper in four weeks
time we have set out what we want to do
in the next Parliament and who knows
where that's going to end up just look
at the results that we've had across
Europe in the last 24 hours we we're
living in a very uncertain world it's
impossible to say when we might have the
opportunity to renegotiate having a
closer relationship with Europe whether
that's a single Market or full
membership but I think what millions of
people around the country want to know
right now is what the liberal Democrats
are offering on the ballot paper this
time round and what I'm saying to you is
our number one issue is saving our NHS
and social care Daisy Cooper thank you
very much indeed thank you very much
they say that SL School absences and
save parents over £400 a year thanks to
their pledge to provide free School
breakfast clubs for all Primary School
pupils yes they say the plan will cost
£365 million the Tories claim the true
figure is up to four times more we're
joined Now by The Shadow education
secretary Bridget philipsson good to see
you this morning Bridget philipson uh
back in the classroom it seems um how
are you going to pay for this
so we'll deliver Universal free
breakfast clubs in every Primary School
in England and we'll pay for it by
closing the loopholes around non-dom tax
datus and by clamping down on tax
avoidance as Rachel Reeves has set out I
think it's incredibly important that we
set up our children to succeed and the
evidence is really clear that breakfast
clubs don't just provide extra help for
parents at the start of the school day
but also uh deliver improved attendance
learning and academic outcomes and we
know that after the pandemic a lot of
our children have struggled uh and this
is an investment that a labor government
would make to secure our children's
feutures um The Guardian reporting this
morning that you're pledging to create
100,000 new Nursery places as well can
you confirm
that absolutely we'll create 100,000 new
Nursery places by opening over 3,000
nurseries within primary schools we'll
do that by ending the tax breaks that
private schools enjoy and we'll put that
money directly into delivering the child
care places that parents desperate need
and also to drive up standards in our
schools as well because too many
children are arriving at reception not
ready to learn and not ready to benefit
from a brilliant education so this is
about the impact that we can make in the
early years okay people will start to
hear that certain pots of money are
going to be used for increasingly large
numbers of things so for instance that
that on private school fees uh it was
understood that was going to buy in more
than 6,000 teachers
at State schools um improving funding
for schools and mental health counseling
are you now going to eek that out too
far if you're going to pledge a 100,000
Nursery places as
well no this is all fully funded and
fully costed and is within the estimate
that the independent Institute for
fiscal Studies have set out in terms of
what this policy will raise around
ending the tax breaks that private
schools enjoy so they say it's 1.3 to
1.5 billion pounds net and we'll use
that money to deliver 6 and a half
thousand new teachers more mental health
support in our schools and what I'm
setting out today around Labor's plan to
deliver more than 3,000 new nurseries
within primary schools using the space
that's opening up because of falling
pupil numbers to upgrade that space to
create more child care places and to
give children a really brilliant start
in life what uh the other issue that has
come out of this is is that if the
number number of parents who see your
plan to tax their private school fees
they go right we can't afford to send
our kids to private school anymore
they're going to whip their kids out of
private school and pop them into their
local state school now Emily Thornbury
was asked about this of course your
colleague in the labor party um and uh
she acknowledged this is going to be a
huge problem for State schools let's
have a listen so we've got more children
going in to have uh breakfast we've got
more teachers that you're buying uh with
levying this tax we've got mental health
counseling we've got a 100,000 Nursery
places and we have more children in
classes for teachers to have to teach
and control this doesn't look like it's
going to add
up so I'm afraid that Emily wasn't
correct in what she said just there
partly because actually the number of
students arriving at State schools is
falling so take private uh take primary
schools for example there are currently
6 and a half thousand spare places in
primary schools that's due to rise to
800,000 by 2027 and the situation right
across the country is falling pupil
numbers but in addition to that if you
look at the work that the insute for
fiscal Studies have done the independent
institut it's the pattern that's
happening right across the country and
will continue to happen we're going to
be in a position actually where schools
will be merging and closing because of
the very low birth rate that we see at
the moment but alongside that the
institute for fiscal Studies have set
out how they anticipate there'll be
little effect in terms of movement but
even if there were any changes it would
still raise 1.3 to 1.5 billion pounds
all of our plans are within that
envelope everything is fully funded and
fully costed we know it's really
important to voters they can have
confidence that we are clear about how
we will pay for policies and are clear
about how we will deliver them and
precisely on Nursery classes we' set out
how we will do that alongside it we'll
in the first year of the labor
government we have an early year
strategy to make this a really big focus
of our work it would be my number one
priority if I were education secretary
because all of the evidence is clear
that we have to support children when
they're young it has the biggest impact
on their
life the difference as well as to voters
can I ask you about um I mean you've
been clear about your priorities there
breakfast clubs um recruiting extra
teachers can I ask you about existing
teachers in the state school system
there's a report last week from The
Institute FAL studies which said that
teachers since 2010 have seen their
earnings on average Fall by 6% where in
the population that they've gone up that
one in 10 teachers are leaving the state
sector every year that it's more
experienced teachers who've seen a huge
uh an over 10% fall in their real pay in
your priorities and your Manifesto are
you allocating any funded and costed
money for existing teachers to keep them
in teaching what are you going to do
about teachers pay
I recognize that it's a really big
Challenge and it's one that has got
worse over the last 14 years under the
conservatives you'll know that under the
last Labor government we made sure that
teachers were properly supported we need
to reset and rebuild that relationship
between government uh and schools and
particularly the teaching profession
they
felt under appreciated in recent years
but in the manest priority you're
allocating money for is the question I'm
asking you'll know I'm not going to talk
about the manifesto but what we've said
and that will come in due course what
we've said already is that we will
deliver a teacher training entitlement
to make sure that teachers have got the
opportunity to develop their skills and
progress in the classroom but what I
hear from teachers as well right across
the country is that part of the workload
pressure they're facing at the moment is
those wider challenges around families
and schools so actually if we take
action on mental health and make sure
there's proper support if we make sure
that children aren't experiencing uh the
situation where they turn up hungry at
the start of the school day that would
make the job of teachers a lot better
and a lot easier and my commitment to
the teaching Workforce and our school
staff right across the country is that
if I'm the education secretary and the
next Labor government I will listen to
them I will take their concerns
seriously and I will take action I can't
make commitments on pay of course I
can't the economy is in a terrible mess
but there will be a different tone a
different approach and we will value and
respect their work we will not deride
them we will not talk them down in the
way the government currently does that
and that's School leaders too who I know
are working really hard
pressure want government on their side
you listen to them and if they ask for
more money what will you
say I'll say what I've said when I've
visited schools across the country that
we will invest uh by ending the tax
breaks that private schools enjoy that's
an immediate down payment uh and
investment directly into our schools but
we've got to get our economy growing if
we're going to have more money to invest
because the last Labor government grew
the economy there was more money to put
into our schools and hospitals and
that's why Rachel Reeves has has made
economic growth such an important
priority but I think teachers and school
leaders recognize like everybody else
how difficult things have become in the
economy but they want to see real and
deliverable change like more mental
health support like support around
progression and development and like the
breakfast club's policy that we're
setting out that's really popular among
School staff as well as parents yeah all
right thank you very much indeed we more
children into those teachers classrooms
of course uh because as a result of that
that policy in private schools the
conservatives say they would recruit an
additional 8,000 new police officers if
they win the next general election and
the policing Minister Chris philp joins
us now from Westminister of course it's
Manifesto week Mr F we ought to be
talking um about your um your
commitments to come but we're going to
have to start I'm afraid on the events
of last week uh and the prime minister's
um failure to stay for um the D-Day
commemoration the photo call with the
president of France the president of of
America Joe Biden um Chancellor Schulz I
mean a decision was made that this was
not a priority didn't happen by mistake
but it was a decision in
retrospect how do you feel about that
decision well clearly it was a mistake
uh and the Prime Minister apologized the
next morning for that and as obviously
you all know it's quite rare for senior
politicians uh to make an immediate and
fullsome apology but the Prime Minister
did so on this occasion because he
realized that he should have been at the
event hosted by President macron just
for context he did of course attend all
of the events in the UK in Portsmouth
the previous day last Wednesday meeting
veterans he attended the events in
Normandy hosted by the UK government
again meeting British veterans and uh
attending the memorial which the British
government funded over there um but he
should have attended the event hosted by
President macron as well and uh the
Minister apologized femely the following
day and I think that was the right thing
to do no one can doubt his commitment to
Veterans we've got a veterans minister
in the cabinet for the first time ever
we've got you know more support for
veterans via the Armed Forces Covenant
we've committed to spending 2 and a
half% of GDP on defense expenditure
which labor haven't matched that's in
excess of our NATO commitment so no one
can doubt Rishi Sak's uh commitment to
the armed services and to vet is Mr Phil
people doubt exactly that and one of the
things that people say is if you're
having to explain it away then you're
losing the argument I mean on the one
hand you've lost the respect of that
generation who put their lives on the
line saw their comrades die couldn't see
the Prime Minister stay for the whole
day and on the other hand you've lost
the respect of the 18year olds and above
who wonder why you're asking them to
spend a year of their lives doing
national service when the Prime Minister
can't can't do a whole day paying his
own national service who won in this
D-Day disaster well look it was a
mistake and the Prime Minister
apologized immediately for that which is
as I said pretty rare in politics but
you mentioned the point about service I
mean whatever whatever your politics are
I think everybody would agree Rishi
sunak is someone who works incredibly
hard for our country who is dedicated to
Public Service who has supported
veterans through the armed services
Covenant strengthening that having
Johnny in the cabinet uh and supporting
the military with the increased defense
expenditure no one question terrible
lack of judgment as a prime minister
representing us on the national stage or
was it his advisers who he's made the
mistake of listening to well I I mean I
don't know uh sort of inside inside the
room as as Edward say on his um
excellent podcast I don't know who would
uh who was saying what and Whose advice
was given to who um but look it was a it
was a mistake and he's apologized Mr
Phil just interrupt you there because
you know I'm trying to help you here um
I ask how you
feel and I think saying it's a mistake
isn't enough lots of people feel very
upset and I just wondered how did you
feel on the day how do you think the
Prime Minister feels about it now
because I'm not sure whether saying it's
a mistake quite quite quite gets there
well I mean I haven't I haven't spoken
to him we' exchanged text messages but I
haven't spoken to him uh directly so I I
I he hasn't told me he feels but I but I
but I imagine well I imagine that the
Prime Minister deeply regrets missing
that event he is completely committed to
I mean you would accept this I think
he's completely committed to Public
Service he's completely committed to
this country when gold Brown made a
mistake about Mrs Duffy in 2010 I
remember that moment it was mortifying I
was I I felt I felt horror I felt horror
for him I know how upset he was but I
just remember feeling like sick inside
that this was one of those those
mistakes I just wonder how did you feel
um well look I said it was it was a real
mistake and I you know I I personally I
I look I personally uh you know really
support our armed services the Prime
Minister I mean just to say the point
again he should have been there and he's
recognized that and it and as you will
know um it takes a lot for a politician
to apologize in the middle of a general
election campaign immediately but that's
what he did because he felt I think he
recognized immediately um that you know
wasn't after you know media pressure it
was immediate he recognized he should
have been there um and that's why he
apologized straight away but he has done
he has done more than any other prime
minister and Chancellor I think to
support our veterans and support our
armed services and it's that substance
which is important as well but he should
have been there and he's apologized can
I ask you about the state of um policing
and criminal justice I think an
important thing to say that you are
still the policing Minister people don't
stop being ministers during an election
campaign even though you're seeking
reelection a couple of weeks ago um
there was a letter from the senior
police officer saying that because of
the crisis in our prison places um there
was to be um to be fewer arrests and
then you then made a statement to the
House of Commons saying that actually
that pressure is easing somewhat and
therefore you didn't need to go ahead
with that advice not to arrest people I
just wondered what is the state of the
crisis in our prisons today this this
week um is it are things under control
or is there a possibility you might need
to to revive that advice not to arrest
people well um I haven't received any
official briefing um suggesting there is
a problem uh as I sit here today there
was a period of eight days about 3 weeks
ago while we waited for a new policy
measure to come in when there was some
pressure and there was a concern that
that might have an impact on policing
thankfully as I said to Parliament at
the time in the event um those
contingency measures were not needed and
the system uh you arrests obviously
continued uh to be made the police have
always been clear they will continue uh
to arrest criminal so that 8-day period
uh there was a concern but actually it
didn't it didn't crystallize in the way
that had been feared and the new measure
came into force and that released
pressure looking for now on Election Day
there's no possibility of that being
something that you as a minister have to
look at again well see running the
prison system is a Ministry of Justice
uh matter I look after police but
looking looking forward kind of more
widely we're in the middle of building
20,000 extra uh prison places 5,900 of
those will be on stream by the end of
next year and they're constantly
refurbishing prison sales they add these
things called rapid deployment CES rdc's
to create more capacity because the
police have successfully arrested so
many people in the last uh couple of
years uh we now have more people in
prison than ever before um often serving
longer sentences as well keeping
dangerous people um off our streets and
I'm as police Minister I've supported
the police record police numbers I've
supported them with new technology like
facial recognition and live facial
recognition to catch ever increasing
numbers of criminals so that's a good
thing I fully support the police in
doing that um just like to point out the
number of police officers has not kept
up with the population growth since
2010 um population growth up around 8.5%
number of police officers only increased
by
2.4% but crime has fallen crime has
fallen in that period according to the
crime survey and we do have record ever
police numbers 100 last year 149,000
officers before we let you go do you
think people feel safer now than when
people when you came into government
people feel safer on the streets that's
a really good question so let me with s
of the facts and then with the emotion
the facts are I asked about the how
people but the facts are important too
so I'm going to talk about the feeling
second crime recorded by police in the
year ending 2023 increased by 7% a
number of robberies involving a knife or
sharp in instrument up
20% offenses sord to the highest level
car theft vehicle theft increased by 17%
so report so reported crime and recorded
crime in some areas that by the way
those knife crime figures are mostly
driven by London under sadik Khan if you
take out London uh the knife crime
figures are much better but recorded
crime depends on people's propensity to
report it and the police's um sort of uh
accuracy in recording the office for
National statistics say the best measure
is the crime survey and according to the
crime survey crime has come down since
2010 but there is a perception a feeling
that you mentioned and even though crime
has demonstrably gone down according to
the crime survey sometimes people don't
feel so safe and that is partly because
of uh social media so events you know an
incident like a knife crime incident
gets sort of magnified across social
media in a way that wasn't the case even
five years ago certainly uh 10 years ago
and there are particular places like
London under Sadi Khan where there is a
excuse me I've got a bit of a cold a
particular a particular knife crime
problem but overall crime has gone down
okay sadik Khan the mayor who's just
been reelected as the mayor of London
but um Chris pH thanks very much thank
you indeed do you feel safer let us know
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