Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Bill Bratton & Dame Prue Leith

Episode Date: July 13, 2022

On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Piers looks at the latest in Westminster as the Tory leadership race continues with Nadhim Zahawi and Jeremy Hunt failing to achieve the required 30 vo...tes and exiting the contest. Piers also speaks to America's most famous police chief to talk about the emergency of Police trust in America. Dame Prue Leith talks to Piers about her latest campaign. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8pm on TalkTV on Sky 526, Virgin Media 627, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and app. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm Piers Morgan Unsencenton. Tonight, a six-pack of Tories survive in the race to replace Boris Johnson as Prime Minister, but they don't include Jeremy Hunt and Nadine Zahar. We'll have all the latest, live from Westminster. Cops in crisis on both sides of the Atlantic. America's most famous police chief, Bill Bratton, joins me live to discuss the emergency in police trust.
Starting point is 00:00:22 And Bake Off's Dame Prue Leith on her controversial new campaign persisted dying and why she's taking on her own politician's son about it. I think he's quite wrong. First of all, I'm hoping that he will not manage to muster all his mates in Parliament to vote against it, and that I will manage to persuade him. Good evening on Pierce Morgan, uncensored. Tonight, as shocking footage from the Evalde, Texas school shooting shows the most cowardly moment in policing history. And when London's met police in Meltdown, I'm talking live to America's most famous cop, Bill Bratton,
Starting point is 00:01:17 the only man to run police departments in L.A. and New York, America's two bigger cities. up. The first, breaking news. Nadine Zahawi and Jeremy Hunt are booted out of the race to lead the Conservative Party. Six candidates remain in the battle to be Britain's next Prime Minister. Talk to you, Vee, but we're going to have live in the hotbed of Westminster. Kate, good evening to you.
Starting point is 00:01:38 We're down to six and two quite big beasts who would have fancied their chances of winning, gone. That's right. Jeremy Hunt and Adim Zahari, as you say, peers, I just have to reference the music you might be able to hear because there is a party going on over the wall behind me. It is in fact a party linked to Penny Morden who has had a very, very good day on the campaign trail here in Westminster. She was essentially the surprise this
Starting point is 00:02:03 afternoon in that announcement at 5 o'clock because we knew that Rishi Sunak was probably going to be leading the pack and he was with 80 odd votes. But Penny Morden had a significant showing among MPs after her launch earlier on today. And it has to be said the momentum at the moment is behind her. This trust is due to launch her campaign tomorrow but the pressure is on. for her to perform to gather up those votes from Jeremy Hunt and Nadine Zahawi and the pressure tonight too on Kemi Badenok and others in the campaign who are at the bottom end of voting including Tom Tuganhat and Sualla Breverman to essentially bin themselves out of the race and throw their weight behind somebody else because the right wing of
Starting point is 00:02:41 the Conservative Party is really worried that potentially there could be a bun fight to try and run off against Rishish Yunaq and they really do not want the former Chancellor to be the next Prime Minister. And if you're Rishi and you're the favourite at the moment, you're looking at all this and thinking the real problem could be Penny Morden. She's got all the momentum. So he will tactically be trying to stop her becoming the person he has to face off against. How would he do that? Well, at the moment, the Rishi Sunat campaign think all they need to do is essentially keep the focus on why he is the best candidate for the job. And they've got some polling that shows that he could do well potentially against Sakeir Stama. They're not particularly. particularly worried about either one of Penny Morden or List Trust at this stage in the competition because they are relying on the fact that the right wing of the Conservative Party are so divided over which candidate to back to try and prevent him from winning this race that essentially unless they
Starting point is 00:03:39 get their act together within the next 24 hours he could well be fairly safe to sail through the next stage of the vote tomorrow there will only be one vote tomorrow not two and there probably will only be one person knocked out tomorrow so Rishi will make it through this next stage and into the weekend. I think though, Pierce, there are some big questions about whether Rishi Sunak's campaign is inspiring enough, whether it is a little bit too slick for his own good. Even some of his supporters tonight are wondering whether he needs to create a bit of chaos and a bit of momentum to challenge those like Penny Mordant who are getting people here in Westminster excited. Do you know what? I think the last thing we need after Boris Johnson and his shambolic regime is chaos. I actually like
Starting point is 00:04:18 the fact that actually Rishi seems quite calm. I thought Penny Morden did a very good launch today. You know, originally I thought, you know, it might be Rishi v. Liz Trust. I'm not sure now. I thought she was very assured today, Penny Morton. She looked to me like a potential leader. Yeah, and I think that's actually surprised some people here in Westminster. Don't get me wrong, her campaign does have some problems, and she may well come up against some roadblocks, and it's not always the person who looks like they're the frontrunner that ends up in the final two. There are some questions around, for example, her views on trans rights, on women's rights, on what exactly a woman ought to be. She did try and head some of those off today, but those questions linger
Starting point is 00:04:57 tonight, and it's more about her record, people not knowing quite enough about her. And secondly, peers, you're right. This is a vote that appeals to the Conservative Party. This is not about the wider electorate. So actually, the fact that Rishi Zunak is predictable, the fact that people know what he's about, and the fact that he's already been in government may well appeal to the electorate in this case, which is conservatives. And it was interesting because her Achilles-Hila supposedly about women, but she actually directly took that onto that. I thought in rather a clever way, embracing humour, and then an emphatic comment about what she thinks a woman is. Let's go with the humour first. She said this about Margaret Thatcher and one of her
Starting point is 00:05:36 previous top people. I think it was Margaret Thatcher that said that every Prime Minister needs a Willie. A woman like me doesn't have one. Very funny. And then she said this about what a woman is. A quick one, and a straightforward one. How do you define a woman? I'm a woman.
Starting point is 00:06:01 I am biologically a woman. And I can tell you, Chris, that if you have been in the Royal Navy and you have competed physically against men, you understand the biological difference between men and women. I thought that she showed in both those responses, one humor and a knowledge of history of the party. It was Willie White Law, of course, that Maggie Thatcher was talking about. But secondly, I thought reminding people she was a Royal Navy reservist, big tick, I would think the Conservative Party membership, but also an emphatic statement, really, there, about what is the burning issue of the day,
Starting point is 00:06:37 which is this whole issue of whether transgender athletes can compete against women, for example. I thought she'd pretty well nailed that quite well. Look, I think even her supporters would concede that, yes, she did go some way to nailing that today. But the reason why she's being asked this question is because she has previously said that trans women are women. And she said it at the dispatch box in the House of Commons. And I think she's pretty much the only person in the government who's done that, who's gone that far. And that's the reason why people are asking for her views about women, what exactly a woman is, how you would define a woman, and that whole conversation. Her supporters today, after her launch, believe that she went some way to trying to tackle that issue,
Starting point is 00:07:18 but they acknowledge that that question will probably come back around again. And I think this point about the fact that some people suggest that Penny Morden has taken different views on the same issue over time, that might be a problem for her when she has to face the voters around the country, when there are televised hustings, when journalists can put those questions to her. And it's worth saying, Piz, you know, she did take questions from the floor today from journalists, which other campaigns have not done. and certainly in a much more free way than other campaigns who've had a list of preferred journalists, if you like,
Starting point is 00:07:47 and not allowed others to get in. So it swings in roundabouts, but I think she could have a bumpy ride in some of the later stages. Yeah, it's going to be very interesting, but she's certainly put herself right in the frame. Kate, great to talk to you. I'm sure I'll be back tomorrow.
Starting point is 00:07:58 So bring me some more hot goss tomorrow, please. I will. Well, next, breaking travel news, and of course it's total chaos. British Royal Union is called another strike. They'll bring the country to a stand still again. on the 27th of July. And if you want a holiday, well, good luck with that.
Starting point is 00:08:17 Interminable queues, bursting departure halls, bed limit passport control. Must you're lucky enough to even get a flight. Here's a taste from passengers grounded and are currently seemingly paralyzed Heathrow. London Heath Road today. London Heath Road today. London Heath Road today.
Starting point is 00:08:36 London Heath Road today. We've been here five, six hours. No one of our bags. everyone's just wandering around. I'm fanging you are flying anywhere in the next few weeks, get there four hours early. Oh, no, no, no. Just about sums it up.
Starting point is 00:09:00 I'm joined by aviation analyst and travel expert Alex McChairus. Alex, good to talk to you. Heathrow, what a complete and utter shambles Heathrow has become. They're even now putting a limit on a number of passengers. that can go in, I think it's 100,000, which is 4,000 off what it normally is per day. What is going on? How has it come to this? It's chaos, peers. And you know what? I mean, if we look at Heathrow, for example,
Starting point is 00:09:24 this is Britain's hub airport, the airport that has been vying for expansion for so long, seemingly completely unable to cope. Now that passengers have returned in significant numbers, but also realizing that, wow, we have no staff anywhere, no baggage handlers, no ground staff, following all those redundancies, and it's left to the airport, Britain's hub airport, having to tell the world's airlines, don't fly your passengers out of here, or rather, if you are going to fly your passengers out of here, we can only have 100,000 a day. Just a reminder, peers in 2019, they would have about 125,000 passengers per day. So it is pretty chaotic, and I think we need some honesty here. The worst is not yet over. I mean, the worst hasn't yet come,
Starting point is 00:10:08 because the kids in the UK, the students, the pupils, they haven't yet broken up. We're going to see disruption intensify, and I think it would be far more honest, to be honest about that, before things smoothing out from kind of mid-September onwards. Why is it that some airlines like Ryanair seem to have got this right and are doing really well? They had the sort of prior planning part of all this sorted, but others have got it completely wrong,
Starting point is 00:10:33 and why has Heathrow itself got it so hopelessly wrong in predicting traffic and stuff? on. You've got the famous European low-cost airline, Ryanair, and I just spoke with the Sunday Times about this this past weekend. It really comes down to the fact that they did not get rid of as many staff as other airlines, nowhere near on the same level. O'Leary, their outspoken, kind of bullish CEO, said that he wanted to exercise every other option, including unpaid leave during the pandemic, rather than simply pursue those tens of thousands of redundancies. British Airways, reminder removed a third of their workforce, 13,000 staff members now scratching their heads
Starting point is 00:11:14 that they haven't got staff nine months later to be able to deliver the summer service that they had sold. And that's another problem that we face here is that many of these airlines with the airports were so ambitious for summer 22. They have ultimately sold a schedule that they can't deliver because their staffing levels are anything but normal to be able to deliver as if we're a normal year. And that's why we're in this situation. And I don't think We're going to get much honesty going forward about practicalities of what people can do and how the government can work with the airlines and the sector, because we've got this kind of weird zombie government now in the middle of a leadership campaign.
Starting point is 00:11:52 We're already in late July. And so I think they're going to think, well, kind of let these rough few weeks get out of the way before they can take some. Yeah, but for most people, these rough few weeks, the holiday they've been waiting for, in some cases, for nearly three years, right, after a pandemic. And now there's going to be no trains to get them to the airport anyway. and if they do get there, the flight may have been cancelled, and all hell will break loose on the ground as well.
Starting point is 00:12:12 I think it's a complete disgrace, particularly from an industry that was so bailed up by the government through the pandemic. This just comes down to bad management. Bad, bad management. Bottom line, right? In one sense, you are, yeah, because the airlines could have seen this coming.
Starting point is 00:12:29 I wrote a column myself in January saying that the staffing levels were not adequate for the summer schedule they had sold. The airlines will blame the government because they'll say that they were cornered, those erratic decision-making policies, the overnight Amber Plus, the Thursday night travel roulette from Grant Shaps, in saying that they had to go ahead with the redundancies, and the redundancies have now left all of these empty vacancies and therefore the disruption.
Starting point is 00:12:52 So, you know, there are a variety of contributors here, but for passengers, I think, try to arrive not too early, around three hours before, because too early doesn't achieve much. And also, if you've got an iPhone, then pop an air tag into your luggage, because luggage is being lost left, right and centre. If you haven't got an iPhone, use a similar product, like a smart tag and so on. There's only so much the passenger can do, but in this scenario, it would be helpful
Starting point is 00:13:17 if we heard about passenger rights. But of course, if everyone knew their rights, these airlines will go bust. I can give everyone a tip for nothing, which is only take-hand luggage. I've been doing that for years, and that way, they never lose my luggage. Alex, good to talk to you.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Take care. Thank you. Unsensored next. New security camera footage, shocking footage shows police. delaying for over an hour while the school shooter in Avaldi, Texas, slaughtered 19 children. One cop even used hand sanitizer rather than engaged the shooter. They've got blood on their hands, these cows, and it was a devastating blow for trust in the police. So how to restore faith in policing? I'll ask the top US cop, Bill Brat, after the break.
Starting point is 00:14:11 Well, trust in policing is in crisis on both sides of the Atlantic, so what do we do about it? On one side, a radical fringe, wants to defund the police, tear down those broken institutions, as they see it and start again. On the other, back the blue, spend, strengthen, support our cops, defend the police. I'm with those, but it's not always easy, not when you see videos like the one I'm about to show you. And warning, it is truly shocking.
Starting point is 00:14:34 This is shocking security camera footage of the school massacre in Evaldi, Texas, where two teachers and 19 children were shot dead, and it shows craven cowardly police, cowering in the corridor for more than an hour as the children were slain inside their classroom. Two minutes later, Ramos strolls down the corridor. A child turns to run for his life as the killer opens fire.
Starting point is 00:15:10 And just three minutes after that, armed police enter the building. But within 60 seconds, they retreat, even as the government continues to fire at the kids. Officers with ballistic shields, rifles and body armour, then wait in the corridor for more than an hour as the massacre unfolds. One checks his phone. Another is seen sanitising his hands. And at one point, Sheriff's Deputy Felix Rubio has to be held back by his own colleagues in tears because his own 10-year-old daughter was inside. She died.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Well, finally, at 12.50, 77 minutes after the government first entered the school, these armed officers eventually summonsed up the guts to go into that classroom and kill him. But not before 19 children. That kind of policing is impossible to defend. On the subject of trust, how can we defend the racial disparity the number of people killed by American police? Or the sickening murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. Well, this is where it goes to. This is where it ends up.
Starting point is 00:16:36 More shocking footage. This time, a small child in Minneapolis, Floyd's home state, swinging punches at a cop and abusing him. No respect whatsoever for the police. In the UK, the Met Police in London is beset by scant. scandal after scandal, the murder of Sarah Everard by Met Police Officer Wayne Cousins, put the forces failings under a brutal international spotlight. The force has been accused of institutional racism, homophobia, misogyny. We're witnessing a massive breakdown here, too,
Starting point is 00:17:21 in policing trust, much of itself inflicted. So how do we fix this mess and restore confidence in the police? Well, Bill Bratton is a man to ask. He's a former police chief in both New York and Los Angeles, as well as an advisor to the Met Police here in London. George Pian, Bill, great to see you. Thank you very much for coming on. Good to be with you and your audience. What is the start, if I may, with this shocking footage that's been leaked from the massacre in Valdei. We don't normally see this kind of footage, and it's extremely harrowing. But perhaps the most disturbing part of it is the inaction of all these armed police.
Starting point is 00:17:55 What did you make of it? Well, it is almost impossible to explain the unexplainable. We are handicapped in some respects by looking at video that's been edited, unedited. We don't have the durable aspect of it, the audio. But just what we are looking at makes you angry, extraordinarily angry, particularly as somebody who spent 50 years in the police profession. Can't explain it. Certainly not going to try to justify it.
Starting point is 00:18:29 There's going to have to be a lot of very thorough, investigation of what went wrong there because everything looked like it went long. No supervision, no coordination, no organization. And in some instances, maybe cowardice. In some instances, bravery that was first exhibited in first offices down the hall was shot at and then be treated. It went against everything we trained for in American policing. Since Columbine back in 1989, I think it was, we train our office.
Starting point is 00:19:01 We train out of offices. One of you, two of you, three of you, four of you, you go to the danger. That's the expectation you take the oath of office and put that badge on. Most of these offices did not go towards the danger and can't justify it. Truly shocking.
Starting point is 00:19:19 On a wider point, Bill, you've, I think you're the only top policeman to have run the police in both New York and L.A., so you've been in this game a very long time and dealt with all sorts of crimes. You were famous for the broken window strategy, where you take care of the lesser crimes in an effort to try and stem the tide of the more serious crimes. And it was very successful. When you've looked at what's been going on with crime in America, but also in London, you came over here to try and advise the beleaguered Met Police, are there parallels and what should be done to restore trust in the police?
Starting point is 00:19:55 There are extraordinary parallels between British police services and American police forces. The issue of broken windows that, while I'm noted for my support of an implementation of that strategy, dealing with so-called quality of life, victimless crime, there's a more famous individual, Sir Robert Peel, your first head of the Metropolitan Police, Prime Minister, in its very famous nine principles of policing, which is the foundation. stand on. The first one is the basic mission for which the police exist is to prevent crime and disorder. In my country, in your country, in the 70s, 80s, to the 90s, and unfortunately, in some communities even today, the emphasis was strictly on responding to crime, wasn't believed
Starting point is 00:20:43 that police could prevent it, and the focus and prioritization was serious crime with an almost totally neglect of the so-called broken windows or quality of life offenses of loitering public drunkardness, graffiti, prostitution, the hooligans hanging on the corner all night long, keep you awake. My advice in American policing was I recognize very early on that you need to focus on both serious crime in quality of life. Why quality of life is what people see every day. It might be victimless in a sense you don't have a specific victim, but what is destroyed our neighborhoods, they deteriorate. What has destroyed is confidence in police and government that we care on it can be effective.
Starting point is 00:21:29 The turnaround of New York City began in the subways when we started focusing on the 5,000 homeless, or you call it sleeping rough in our subways, the 250,000 people, they're not paying the fare, the aggressive begging, the defeating. By focusing on that, the Bidorship began to feel more secure.
Starting point is 00:21:48 Based on that success, Rudy Giuliani, I, in 1994. Interestingly enough, I learned from the Mexico, Metropolitan Police, the British Police Services. That's where I got Sir Robert Peele's nine principles. Sir Robert Mark visited Boston in 1975 and met a very impressionable young sergeant named Bill Bratton, and I marry those nine principles. That is the foundation of your new Met Commissioner, Sir Mark Rawley.
Starting point is 00:22:15 He is really going to focus on policing by consent. The reason you call police services in your country versus police forces in my country is this idea that you dare to serve and service the community. And you try to do that with the minimum of force. In your country, I applaud, and I'm always amazed being quite frankly that
Starting point is 00:22:37 the majority of your officers still vote when it comes to a vote to not carry firearms because the appeal that will reduce the confidence that the public has in them and the idea that they are a police service and not a force. It's one of the problems for police, both in America and the UK, and indeed everywhere at the moment,
Starting point is 00:22:59 that social media can very quickly amplify anything, good, bad and ugly. You know, I'm thinking of the George Floyd video. If we'd never seen the video, which came onto social media by someone's cell phone, if we hadn't seen that, I doubt it would have ignited the kind of firestorm that happened. But once you saw it, you couldn't unsee it.
Starting point is 00:23:20 And the reaction of that little boy in the earlier clip, abusing police in Minneapolis can probably be charted right back to all the furority around George Floyd's death and the Black Lives Matter protest and so on. And the same here with the Sarah Everard story. Where you have a serving police officer,
Starting point is 00:23:37 kidnapping and murdering, a beautiful young woman, again social media drove that story to a tremendous height of rage by the public. How significant do you think it is social media And how do responsible police forces deal with this?
Starting point is 00:23:55 It's very significant, but I look at it from the perspective, a plus and a minus. The minus is that incidents can be amplified and magnified in a very significant way. We saw that with George Floyd, going back to Rodney King, back in the early 90s, the first time of videotaping was aired on American television before social media even occurred. and what that brought about in America. When I talk about the plus and the minus, the plus side of it is police can use social media to their benefit, which I certainly have done
Starting point is 00:24:30 in Los Angeles, in New York, with the billions of followers who access our Twitter sites, our Facebook sites, the idea of us telling our story from our perspective and sometimes with more facts than the media on social media might have. In the Boston Marathon bombing back in 2003, The police commissioner, Ed Davis, was able to, his newly created Twitter site,
Starting point is 00:24:56 Boston Police, was able to very quickly refute reporting by the New York Post and the CNN News Network that was harmonious information in terms of who the suspects were, what it was happening. I remember that, Bill, because I was actually at CNN at the time. I was on air covering that story. And I remember that. You're quite right. You've done this book, The Profession, A Memoir of Police. in America.
Starting point is 00:25:22 How important is something that I think is hugely important? What I think my viewers probably feel is very important. Physical presence of police on the streets, that if you cut the number of officers on the streets, if you cut the visibility, that automatically crime goes up. I am a big believer in that the importance of disability, the importance of not just visibility, but the police being actively seen doing something.
Starting point is 00:25:51 And it doesn't necessarily mean enforcing. It means greeting. How are you? Good day. Nice to see you. Eye contact. I find it infuriating when I'm walking down the street and I see a police officer coming toward me. And they don't make eye contact.
Starting point is 00:26:07 Recently, as in London two weeks ago, for the policy exchange, to discuss the new Metropolitan Police Commission selection process. And I noticed that you very seldom see police in London now, other than around major major. institutions. I did a presentation 10 Downing Street, certainly down by the palace. But you see the police cars racing by, but you just don't see walking offices. Maybe it's the area that I was in. I was up in the high park, Marble Arch area, and then down by the government offices. But the mistake I think that happened in York Country Pierce was a number of years ago. You effectively, well ahead of us, defunded your police. Yes. You cut the police budget by 20 percent. You close. You close.
Starting point is 00:26:51 Rose Graham's Hill, you sold off half your police stations, and you have not recovered. Huge mistake. We took 20,000 cops off the street. It's a catastrophic mistake, and we've been playing catch-up ever since. And I know that you believed in that. Bill, I can talk to you for a lot longer. Thank you for joining me. I really appreciate it. No one has better credentials about policing the use, as we've just heard. So thank you very much indeed for sparing the time. All the best. should you let your family have a say in your right to die? Bake off star Dame Prouliffe thinks not.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Yes, we would only be having this conversation when I was within six months of dying. I don't believe that my son would make my last six months even more distressing by refusing me that. Great British Bakelough star, Dame Prue Leith, is a passionate advocate for assisted dying, which at the moment remains. illegal in Britain. Her son, the Conservative MP, Danny Kruger, completely disagrees.
Starting point is 00:28:12 He spoke out recently in Parliament against assisted dying, a debate which was held after a petition reached 100,000 signatures. Over half the people in other countries where assisted dying is legal choose it because they feel they are a burden to their families. Tragically, a lot also say that they are lonely. Isn't this terrible? People getting the state to help to kill them because they don't want to be a burden on a family that never visits them. Talk to any hospice manager about relatives, and they will quietly confirm it. There are a lot of people who want granny or grandpa to hurry up and die.
Starting point is 00:28:47 Well, here we have a very famous mother and her nearly as famous political son at loggerheads on a fascinating debate. Well, I spoke to Dame Prue Leith a little earlier about this. Well, I'm joined now by Prue Leith. Pru, I love her to talk to you. Hello, Piers. This is a very serious subject, and opinions have been raging. on both sides about it.
Starting point is 00:29:10 Why do you feel so passionately about this issue? Well, I suppose it's because I'm 82 and heading for the big decision. But I really, I mean, I started getting interested in the whole subject when my elder brother died and he died a really horrible death. And recently my younger brother died, and he died at home with his family around him
Starting point is 00:29:39 and he didn't have assisted suicide because he didn't need it, but he had the sort of death that I think that people who want assisted suicide would dearly love to have, you know, at home, their own bed, surrounded by their family. What is very interesting, prove, is that in many states in America,
Starting point is 00:29:58 including California and New Jersey, Washington, Vermont, in many of these states, assisted suicide but is completely legal. It's legal in many parts of Australia. It's legal, I think, in Canada now. So there are lots of countries in the world where assisted suicide is now a legal practice. And what's more, it's being, you know,
Starting point is 00:30:22 it looks as if Jersey, Scotland will get there before us. I mean, it's only the UK government that has been so deletrious. To play devil's advocate for a moment. There are reports out of Oregon, for example, where 53% of patients who are helped to die gave us a reason that they were a burden on family, friends, and carers rather than citing pain or fear of pain.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Are you concerned about that part of it? Yes. I think that, first of all, I think it's a legitimate reason. if you know if you know that you are causing your family a lot of anxiety and anxiousness and and worry about you and you are either in huge pain or not enjoying your life then it's a valid reason i mean i'm not saying for a minute that that people should want to commit suicide or have an assisted death just because they're a burden. But being a burden is one of the things
Starting point is 00:31:40 that is so distressing. I mean, see, this is where I think the slippery slope argument, which I think Gordon Brown and others have espoused, I do think there is a concern there, isn't there, where you're from a lovely family of well-intentioned people. I have no doubt. However, there are lots of families
Starting point is 00:32:00 which perhaps are not quite so well-intentioned to their oldest and not so dearest, who, particularly if there's money, perhaps, lurking in wills and so on, would be tempted potentially to really make these people feel they are a massive burden and should shuffle off this mortal coil very sharpish. Yeah, I mean, that is a really serious worry. I mean, first of all, I think we have to have enough safeguards
Starting point is 00:32:28 to be absolutely certain that this is the patient or the person's real choice and that they're not being in any way coerced. And there are ways to do that, but it does require a lot of interviews and care. But also, I really think this is a bit of a bogey man that doesn't, although it does exist, it is quite small. One of your sons is a Tory MP who's actually vehement. opposed this legislation. So what are you going to do if you decide in a few years' time,
Starting point is 00:33:00 you've become a massive burden, and he says, sorry, sorry, Mum, I'm not doing it. Well, that's going to be a real problem because we are devoted to each other. And he has generally very principled objections. I think he's quite wrong. But I hope he'll, I'm hoping I'll manage to, first of all, I'm hoping that he will not,
Starting point is 00:33:24 managed to muster all his mates in Parliament to vote against it, and that I will manage to persuade him before I get there. I mean, it's a fascinating situation where your own son is literally in the House of the Parliament campaigning for the complete opposite. Many families have disagreements about all sorts of things. We happen to have one about this. But I really think, I honestly believe that I should be in control of my own life. I mean, I think the idea that somehow human life is so sacred.
Starting point is 00:33:59 I mean, sacred to whom? It's not sacred to me, and it's my life I'm talking about. I all make him think his life is. I get it. But here's the thing. If I talk to your son about this, I'm sure he'd say, well, that's fine. That might be her view, my mother's view. But actually, I love my mother, and I don't want to lose my mother.
Starting point is 00:34:18 And I want to get every moment I can out of her. And if she's not in searing agony, but it's simply drifting towards the end of her life. I don't want her to be pulling the plug. Yes, we would only be having this conversation when I was within six months of dying. I don't believe that my son would make my last six months even more distressing by refusing me that.
Starting point is 00:34:43 I think he would argue. I don't want to speak for him, but I think from the arguments he's put forward, he would probably argue to that point. Sure, he would. He would say that you're doing, your decision would compound his distress. What about his right to not let you take your life? No, I'm sorry, when it comes to my own life, it's my life.
Starting point is 00:35:06 Tough. He's going to lose me within six months anyway. So, man up and bear us a few months earlier, a few weeks earlier. Prueleath, it's a fascinating debate, not least your own situation with your own family. But fortunately, you're looking in rude health, so we won't have to encounter this issue, I would imagine, for a very long time to come, thankfully. But thank you for joining me. I appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:35:31 There are so many people who are not in rude health, and we need to think about them. Yeah, we do. It's an interesting debate. And as you say, most of the public are with you, not your son. Yeah. Prue, great to talk to you. Bye-bye.
Starting point is 00:35:48 Well, on censored next, this could get quite fiery. Tonight's Peers pack, journalist Ash Sarker last screaming at me on Good Morning Britain and talk TV presenter Julia Hartley Brewer who screams at me morning, noon and night. It's not going to be pretty. Join us after the break. Well, tonight's Piers back.
Starting point is 00:36:16 The last time I appeared on television with one of these ladies, this happened. Tell you why I do, Ash, I'd go and check out some basic facts about your hero Obama. He's not my heroic, you're idiot. You didn't plan any protest against him, did you? Well, I'm happy to still call myself. an idiot, identifies an idiot. Do you still identify as commie? All day, every day.
Starting point is 00:36:38 Welcome back, actually. It's been a while. And Julia, lovely to see you. Julia, Arley-Bruhe is a talk to you presenter. I want to start with women, because Penny Morton today is becoming under a bit of flack for her views about women. Said two things today which I suspect will ruffle probably all the right feathers. Take a look at these. I think it was Margaret Thatcher that said that every Prime Minister needs a willie. A woman like me doesn't have one.
Starting point is 00:37:07 A quick one and a straightforward one. How do you define a woman? I'm a woman. I am biologically a woman. And I can tell you, Chris, that if you have been in the Royal Navy and you have competed physically against men, you understand the biological difference between men and women. Well, apart for the fact that I loved her campaign slogan,
Starting point is 00:37:28 PM for PM, which has a great ring to it. All right, Ash Sarker, you identify. identifies a woman? Sometimes. Always? You are a woman. I am. What is a woman to year?
Starting point is 00:37:39 For me, a woman is someone who is an adult, who is human and is female. And female is both a biological category, where we're talking about biological sex, and a gender category. So depending on what we're talking about, if you're saying best female rapper, no one's checking chromosomes,
Starting point is 00:37:53 if you're talking about female reproductive health, you know, people aren't just talking about your social life, it can be a biological or a gender category. So when, for example, the hot issue, of the day, when you have trans women athletes who are competing against women born to female biological bodies, do you think that's fair? Do I think that's fair? I think you'd have to take a look at the whole picture.
Starting point is 00:38:15 Or Leah Thomas, the swimmer, for example. So it might be that in five to ten years when you have much more trans athletes breaking through and you might see cisgender women at a disadvantage, you have to go, let's rejig the system in a way which can protect women's sport and include trans people. I think right now, because trans people have been so marginalised from... See, here's my problem.
Starting point is 00:38:36 You're all smart, young lady. I follow you on Twitter. You're very smart. You're very intellectually rigorous about stuff. You know, you know, when you look at stuff like Leah Thomas, demolishing women in the pool in America, that this isn't fair. And you can support, as I do, and you do, trans rights, fairness and equality, and understand that on issues like sport, it is unfair.
Starting point is 00:38:59 But the thing that I'm saying is that we haven't had... a trans Olympic medalist yet female sport. We've had a trans weightlifter in the New Zealand Olympics team depriving a woman born to a female body of a terrific place. Can you please stop saying woman born to a female body? Well, okay, fair enough. Woman, there's only one kind. We're not a variant of women.
Starting point is 00:39:21 There's only one kind of women. I'm not a cis woman. I'm not a woman born to you. I'm a woman. That's all I am. I'm a woman. And the other kind aren't women. And I guess my point, fair enough.
Starting point is 00:39:30 And my point about this, I think, would be that, in that case, this weightlifter was unsuccessful competing against men, suddenly becomes Olympic standard as a woman, and deprives an actual woman of being able to get an Olympic place. She was also unsuccessful competing against women in the Olympics. Well, she did badly in Olympics, but she still got to the Olympics. She's an Olympian, and yet as a man, she never got anywhere near it. I just don't think that there's enough evidence that women, as a sex,
Starting point is 00:39:59 are en masse being drummed out of elite sport, And the thing that I would say... They are, but, Ash, it's just wrong. We're seeing it in sprinting, we're seeing it in rugby, we're seeing it in cricket, we're seeing it in swimming, we're seeing it everywhere. As there are more and more trans people coming out as trans, and I've got absolute respect for that.
Starting point is 00:40:16 But there's more and more people do. I had Lord Winston on last night, who couldn't have been clearer. There is biological sex and there is gender, and they are completely different things. And look, I'm not here to talk about, you know, this is biological sex and this is gender. When it comes to the condition of trans,
Starting point is 00:40:32 people in this country. We know that they're disproportionately excluded from using athletic and healthcare facilities. We also know... Yeah, we don't. Yeah, they are. No evidence for that statement. There are reports without trans people. Yeah, because that's all we've got to go on. But show that trans people use gyms, use athletics facilities at far lower rates than cisgender people. So I'd say, let's deal with that. The other things I'd say, let's deal with is, look, the day-to-day problems trans people face on about whether or not they can compete in the Olympics. We're talking about one in eight trans people report being assaulted or abused at their place of work by a colleague or customer within the last 12 months.
Starting point is 00:41:13 A quarter of all trans people will experience homelessness at some point in their lives. And I think that your audience are home at... So why... So your audience are home at empathetic people. And you're an empathetic now. That's important to note. And I hate to hear that. And I'm aware of that.
Starting point is 00:41:27 So why choose the hill to go on? I want to have an unfair advantage. over women in sport. Why not just say we get it, that's unfair, and bring people with them as they move towards proper fairness and equality? No community is a monolith, all right? No community is a monolith.
Starting point is 00:41:43 And you're going to have some trans people will go, for me, the really important thing is I want to participate in sport. That's going to be, by its definition, because it's elite sport, a really small number of people. Okay, the problem... I want to move on, but the problem is it is getting more and more people. Julia, let's talk about COVID and Novak Djokovic,
Starting point is 00:41:58 because you know I've been going at it on Twitter, right? So I don't think you should be allowed anywhere near the US. Because if I want to go to America, which I will be quite soon, I have to take a test and show my vaccination status. That's it. So does he? Yeah. So he shouldn't be allowed to play, right?
Starting point is 00:42:13 Well, he has to abide by the rules, same rules as everyone else has to do. Although, interestingly, in 2020, everyone seemed quite happy for sportsmen and women to have completely different rules than the rest of us being able to travel, things like the Australian Open when other people couldn't even get home to see their families. Yeah, he's not asking for special treatment, though. He simply said, I'm not vaccinated. I'm not showing my vaccine status, and therefore I can't play in the US Open. The point is, it's a stupid rule.
Starting point is 00:42:36 Your vaccine protects you, anyone who's taken a vaccine, it protects them. We know with Omicron, it doesn't actually provide much protection at all from infection. It does protect you from getting seriously ill or dying. Well, the key point is it stops you from dying. I mean, that's the whole point of the vaccines. Piz, a young, healthy man, what is he, in his 30s, his chances of dying on. But you're a young, healthy woman. You've been jabbed, right?
Starting point is 00:42:57 I have chosen to disclose my jab status when I close the disqualest. You sound like one of those people talking about transport and women. That's my business. But whether one chooses to actually show that at a border, you can choose. This is the thing. You should be able to make a choice. Bodily autonomy is the most fundamental human right.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Novak Cholkvich isn't asking for special treatment. I think it's incredible. He's standing by his principles. He's a young, healthy man. Peak of physical fitness. Yeah, I know. But he's also a role model who will have definitely deterred a lot of people who perhaps should have the jab from having it.
Starting point is 00:43:28 sports people standing up for their principles. They're huge role models. Like the England footballers who take a knee for Black Lives Matter. But they'd happily go and compete in the World Cup in Qatar, where we have outrageous treatment of gay people. I've no problem with them taking me in knee. I think it's a good one to take them in. In fact, funny enough, when the players take the knee at Arsenal when I go,
Starting point is 00:43:46 the entire crowd of 60,000 people, white, black, and any time of it, they all cheer. I don't hear a single dissenting voice. But it's hypocrisy because you can't, you can't do that and then go and play in At all. Ash, this pack of Lurpak has nearly doubled in price in the last few months. Is that the 9-5? Was 335, now 4.89 themselves.
Starting point is 00:44:07 So 50% or more rise. This is indicative of what's going on with prices everywhere. We're choosing a new Prime Minister. We can talk about all the cultural stuff and I think a lot of it is relevant and important. Actually, for most of our viewers, around the world, cost of living, cost of
Starting point is 00:44:23 butter and margarine. And when you look at the costs of heating on top of the increase of the price of fuel, the price of food, the price of rent, everything getting more expensive. You know, it's not going up people's pay packets. And in that kind of context, what political party is standing up for those people? There's no major political party in this country saying absolutely everyone deserves matching inflation pay rise. So effectively people are being told you're going to be made poorer, deal with it. And I think there's only so long a society can hold itself together under those kinds of conditions. Julia, Rishi's
Starting point is 00:44:55 soon our favourite at the moment. Penny Morden making a march. The problem is in a poll that came out today, apparently at least two people who were asked in the poll thought she was Adele. Just take a look? I'm sorry. They do not quite similar. But the point big, she doesn't have much recognition. We've got a few seconds
Starting point is 00:45:11 there we are. Do you think she can beat Rishie? I think she can. I think it's all to play for. Anyone making predictions right now is probably a fool. I think their second preferences is going to be where it all goes and that could all change. And as Boris said he went today with his head held high. Last thought from you. I mean, this is a man with a almost pathological lack of self-awareness.
Starting point is 00:45:30 I'm not surprised. She should have gone with his head held in shame. That's it. Thank you to my panel. I should quite civilised. Come back. I like it. That's it from me. Whatever you're up to, keep it uncensored. Good night.

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