Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Cyclists Fines, British Policing Emergency, Inflation
Episode Date: August 17, 2022Standing in for Piers, Jeremy Kyle discusses cyclists facing road fines and speed limits . Jeremy takes a look at seeing if British police is facing a serious emergency. Jeremy covers how are we going... to to deal with inflation which taking over the country. 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
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Tonight on Pierce Morgan, uncensored with me, Jeremy Kyle.
Cyclist facing fines and speed limits and a road law revolution.
Yippie!
But will it simply drive an increase in traffic?
More criminals, fewer investigations, is British policing facing a real emergency.
And as inflation rockets pass 10% and surging supermarket prices,
give us the chills at the teals.
How are we to survive the food cost crunch?
We know children are the cost of living.
who they evidently come to school having not been fed.
Good evening my friends and a big big welcome to Peers Morgan Uncensored.
I'm still Jeremy Carlin.
First tonight, a road riddle.
How do you get to use the highways with no licence,
no insurance without paying any tax and with absolutely no speed limit?
The answer is, of course, as easy as riding a bike.
That's My bell.
I promise you one thing, this is the only time ever you'll see me doing this.
I get irrationally angry about cyclists.
I mean it.
We wrote this, don't come near me.
I'm a cycle pack.
But seriously, nice. What's not to loathe?
There's the toy hoys.
They dress up like the Tour de France from 15 minute pedal to work.
You've got the chain gangs, usually four of them,
riding side by side, like some massive peloton,
whilst us tax-paying motorists, queue behind,
getting later and later and more irate.
You've got the Sigourney Weavers,
through the mist swerving like a shopping trolley with a dodgy wheel.
And you're Jeremy Vines, whoever he is,
with more cameras than Kodak, picking fights and running red lights.
It's good news, though, it turns like I'm not the
only one thinks these two tired tyrants have run out of road.
Today the government announced, thank God, it might just force cyclists to buy insurance.
Follow speed limits.
Pay fines for ignoring the laws of our road.
So at last, says me with one hand off the wheel, a common sense reform bringing cycling into the 21st century.
Oh no, say the cyclist.
Reckless regulation will end up with more people in their cars.
We're going to debate that in a minute.
But first, my friends, as I run out of breath, and look at why cyclists think I've got this wrong.
I'm getting off now, you see.
I've got carpool tunnel syndrome.
Watch this.
Hey, what the fuck are you doing, man?
You're going to be red, yeah?
Too busy doing that, mate.
Six points.
Is that 1.5 bleat that's overtaking?
So you're in cool.
Bye-bye now.
Brilliant.
Right, Nick Freeman, the transport lawyer,
so good he's known as Mr. Loophole, joins me now.
Plus Britain's most militant cyclist, Dave Sherry.
Let's start with you, Nick.
you have been urging the government to do this for absolute ages.
It is chaos out there.
I know cyclists won't like what I'm going to say, right?
But really, isn't it time there was a degree of responsibility served on the cycling community, Nick Freeman?
You're absolutely right, Jeremy.
They've avoided it for a long time, although it's the small minority who are actually really against it, but they're very vociferous.
There many cyclists have approached me and said, Nick, we actually agree with what you say
because it's going to make our road safer.
And their priority is to cycle safely, but there are what are called the Lycrailouts who are really against it.
In any case, I think the day has now come.
It's not far away when the government are going to listen, and they're going to actually impose
the same legislation that exists for cars and for e- scooters, motorbikes, motorcycles for cyclists.
and it needs to happen.
It's a sensible thing and I think we'll all benefit from it.
And I think it will actually help remove the friction that exists
between the two sets of the main groups, the motorists and the cyclists.
It's an unpleasant experience.
And on the continent that there's a much more friendly atmosphere,
here it doesn't work very well.
And I think this is a step to making us all realise
we share limited road space, we need to be collaborative,
We work together and try and be safe for everybody.
So cyclists have got a new highway code, which they're welcome.
It gives them a massive priority,
but also they're going to have to comply with some legislation.
They're going to have to be identifiable.
And I think if they're identifiable, they'll cycle sensibly
and they'll be more responsible, because they're going to be accountable, aren't they?
Well, I've got to say one thing.
You'll absolutely know in the next 10 minutes, why I won't make a lawyer.
I welcome to the studio Dave Sherry.
You're described as Britain's most hated and militant cyclist,
and you'll sat there in a stab-proof vest
and you've got a camera on your helmet.
Davy, let's just start as we mean to go on, right?
You've got 10 minutes to convince me that I'm wrong and you are right.
As a cyclist, you tell my team,
you have a duty of care under the law
as everyone is using the roads together, yeah?
Yeah, if you're using the same roads as motorists,
then, why don't you have to pay for it like motorists have to then?
Because we don't an omission.
So that's the only reason you should pay road tax.
What about the tax to make sure the roads are safe and well kem't?
Why shouldn't cyclists pay for that as well as motorists?
Right, road tax was abolished, was brought in as a visual vehicle excise duty, yeah?
Basically, it's based on CO2 emissions. Cycles do not do that.
Cycles, I don't think, damage too much tarmac.
So basically...
But you use the roads and you want potholes, fix, so motor is supposed to pay for that as well, right?
supposed to pay for that as well, right?
Yeah, but so do all shriders, mobility scooters.
Oh, come on, man. Listen, listen.
They use the road. Right, cyclists.
Let's get straight to it, right?
The laws for cyclists have brought it in 1861 for horses and carts.
Here's what I want to say to you.
And tell me I'm wrong, right?
So there I am in my car, and nine times out of ten,
and I'm not saying it's all of them in their lycra with their beards.
They go up inside you, onto the pavement through a red light.
There must be an acknowledgement in the cycling fraternity
that there are a number of cyclists,
thousands of them, out to make motorists lives difficult.
You must accept that.
Why have you got a camera on your helmet?
Why are you wearing a stab-proofest man?
Because I don't like the pre-Madonna drivers,
the ones who like to use handheld devices,
the ones who get a bit too close to vulnerable road users.
And I understand what you're saying about the law.
The Road Traffic Act is there for motorised vehicles.
cyclists are not motorised vehicles.
Okay, but if you kill someone,
a cyclist goes down for a maximum of two years
under the 1861 law,
I'm not condoning anything like that.
If it's a motorist, he goes to prison for life.
You can take your CO2 emissions.
I want to ask you something.
Why are a majority, maybe majority is the wrong word?
Why do so many cyclists in my life?
Why are they out to cause trouble?
Why have you got a camera?
It seems that it's gone the other way.
I'm all for cyclists, right?
If it's fair and proper,
but it's not like that anymore.
Motorists in this country, whether you like this or not,
are hacked off with cyclists
because they feel like we're second-class citizens.
Why aren't you insured?
Because we're not on a motorized vehicle.
It's ridiculous.
I'm sorry, but you need insurance for a motorized vehicle.
What about you injure someone?
What about insurance for that?
Then it comes down to a civil claim, civil loss.
Got all the answers, haven't you?
I don't understand why...
All right, give me another one, right?
So if I'm out on a Sunday, packs of them, right?
and I have to move out five.
Why are they allowed to cycle in pairs?
Why not in a straight line?
So, cyclists, road users and entitled to use as much of the lane as they deem fit.
So you can use as much of the road as you want,
because you're road users, but you don't pay for the upkeep of that
because you don't have CO2 emissions.
Is that right?
Do you think that's fair?
Where does it say we have to pay for it or contribute to it?
What I'm saying is, in terms of if you look at it,
cyclists seem to be gaining the upper hand.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?
Bad thing.
For whom?
What?
For whom?
The rest of the world.
Pedestrians are not upset about it, I don't believe.
Halswriters?
No.
531 incidents, I believe, off the top of my head last year with cyclist hitting or bashing into pedestrians.
And how many vehicles?
Is that your answer?
I'm asking.
Do you not think that cyclists should have a series of rules to give them responsibility, be that tax?
You do?
It's called the Highway Code for something.
Do you not think you should get points if you cause problems on a cycle?
Do you not think that you should...
I'm not accountable.
Is that it? The Road Traffic Act. Can I bring in Nick? Nick, come on.
These laws in 1861 for horses and carts. Come on, man. Give me a bit here.
It's outdated, rubbish, isn't it?
Well, you know, Dave's known for being a vigilant cyclist.
And he goes around with his camera, and that's overly his privilege,
to trap motorists who are actually breaking the law.
Many motorists have dash cam footage.
And what they have is a picture of a cyclist going on the pavement, knocking someone down, going through red lights.
They have nothing more than that because they're not able to identify the cyclists.
So, you know, Dave wants it all his way.
He wants to be able to identify the motorists but not be identified himself.
So that's the first thing that's wrong.
The second thing is he talks about insurance and says, well, there's a civil claim.
Many cyclists don't have money.
So if they seriously injure, and you've said 531 were seriously injured,
last year, it was actually a lot more than that.
This is the tip of the iceberg.
Many aren't actually reported because the cyclist leaves.
How is the injured party going to be recompensed
by somebody who doesn't have insurance?
Answer that, Dave. Hold on state, Nick. Answer that.
The person who's injured with it...
Answer that.
Now, let Nick finish.
No, answer the question.
Under everyone's car motoring policy,
you've got a thing called uninsured losses,
and this is for other formalities that transpire on the road.
Would that be agreeable, Nick?
No, it wouldn't Dave, because I'm talking now about when a cyclist hits and injures a pedestrian.
Yeah.
And this is a serious case that's happening more and more frequently.
And cyclists are uninsured.
So there's no remedy for the cyclist.
That's for the pedestrian.
And that's, of course, dependent upon the cyclists being apprehended, stopping at the scene.
Many of them don't.
Do you think the law is biased and cyclists get away with...
At the end of the day, the pedestrian...
Well, the pedestrians, you know, he's injured, his line, they might have.
a broken leg, whatever, loses his job, etc., etc.
No recompense because we haven't got a responsible cyclist who can hold his hands up,
he's got money in his pocket, and he has no insurance.
So there's a huge disadvantage, and that's why, of course, motorists have to be insured.
So it is going to happen.
Cyclists are going to have to be insured, along with e-scooter riders,
and, of course, electric bike riders, which is something that's going to come out.
It needs to happen.
As far as contribution to roads are concerned, of course, there are no emissions.
but there is a cost to the taxpayer to the public of having cycle lanes for allowing them to do what they do.
And there's no such thing as a free cycle.
There must be some level of contribution.
And it's blind to simply say, you know, we don't cause any damage to the road surface.
We don't harm the environment.
So why should we contribute?
Well, the answer is the motorist is having his space surrendered to the cyclist.
And that's something that he's contributed to financially.
And there must be a price for the cyclist to pay for that.
Completely agree.
We're sharing limited space.
It doesn't come free.
Thanks, Nick.
What's your answer to that, Dave Sherry?
I agree with Nick on that in principle.
But then my argument in return would be, are the horse riders?
You should be a politician.
Are the horse riders home to use the house?
It's not about horse riders.
It's about, but look, here's what I'm going to say.
You go out with your camera.
and your stab vest, you're looking for trouble,
you're a vigilante, you love all this stuff.
I'm simply saying to you,
we motorists feel like
it's all stacked in your favour.
We pay all the bills, we take all the rubbish,
we've got all the fines, and it's
about time cyclists who seem to increasingly
dominate our down roads, took a bit
of responsibility. What's wrong with that man?
Car drivers, over the years,
have had that same mentality.
The shoes on the other foot, because too many
cyclists were being killed due to
negligent driving.
And basically the highway code changed, changed the mentality.
Why is it so important to you?
Why are you so pro-cycling?
Did you fail your driving testers, I mean?
No, I'm a professional driver.
You're a professional driver.
And you've taken this.
And what, so do you literally feel like you have to wear a stab-proofest?
So bad are my fellow motorists.
Is that right?
Sometimes motorists misbehave.
So do cyclists?
No one's perfect.
But it's, well, that's a really,
Again, you should be in the Conservative government, man.
You haven't answered a question.
Do you think that Cycli should take more responsibility?
Final question for road-upkeep, for insurance.
Do you think they should be regulated?
Yes, or no.
Yes, if it makes the road to save a better place.
There we go.
Every road user.
So you agree with me?
To a degree, if it makes things improve, yes.
Excellent.
There you go.
And just get rid of that camera.
Thank you very much, Dave Sherry.
Thank you, in Chesh and Nick Freeman, Mr. Loophole.
Next on Uncensored.
And this is a story that affected everybody and will continue to do so.
87-year-old Thomas O'Halloran was minding his own business yesterday on his mobility scooter
when he was stabbed and left to die in broad daylight.
He is the latest victim of what feels like an increasingly lawless Britain.
The big question is, what are we going to do about this?
It's getting so, so difficult out there.
We're talking to former Scotland Yard Detective Peter Blexley next.
And a wonderful guest, a victim of antisocial behaviour, Roy Muller,
who says, and I quote,
Jez, I've given up on the police.
They can't help me.
We're coming back next.
Welcome back to Unsensored, my friends.
Now, if it feels less safe in the UK right now,
that's probably because it is.
More crimes are being committed.
Fewer crimes are being investigated.
And London has seen six murders alone
in the last four days.
Thomas O'Halloram was out on his mobility scooter
just around the corner from this studio yesterday
when he was stabbed in broad daylight.
The 87-year-old was able to travel 75 yards.
on his scooter to ask for help, but died later in hospital.
The grandfather was described as a much-loved member of the local community.
The police, the Met Police, have released this image of a man
who ran away from the scene with a knife.
But this sensitive violence that happened in Greenford
follows a disturbing recent pattern.
Down the road in Brent, a triple shooting
has left a 21-year-old man with life-changing industries,
injuries rather impressed,
and a murder investigation has been launched
after a man was attacked by two men following a disturbance on a night out.
In Geisborough, a 16-year-old boy
has appeared in court charged
with the murder of 62-year-old Alan Garbert
early this month.
And in Birmingham, a grandfather of nine, Roy Muller,
was assaulted outside his own home by a gang of youth
are facing years of torment.
Now, in a moment, I'm going to speak to Roy,
and really, really looking forward to that.
But first, I want you to look at this door-cam footage
of the attack.
And I just want to say, it's tough viewing.
Have a look.
Roy joins me now,
and I'm also joined by former Scotland-Lawd Detective
Peter Blexley.
Peter in a sec.
But I want to start with you, Roy, if I can.
I wanted to do this story more than any other
since I started uncensored
because it drives me to distraction what's going on.
You have suffered 10 months of abuse
from Yobbs outside your Birmingham home.
Just put in your own words
what that's done to you, psychologically, emotionally,
just in terms of your entire life.
It's actually, you put my life on hold.
for a while. I sit, wait at the window, waiting for any more attacks and that's,
and any time I heard noises out there, I'm rushing over to see, is this it again happening?
If I'm in the garden and I hear people outside, I have to rush through to the house and just see what's going on.
And it's just all the time I'm waiting for another incident.
Tell me the worst moments. We see the footage there which is just appalling.
Are you scared? Are you resists?
Are you resilient? What goes through your head on a daily basis, right?
Well, I'm quite a resilient person, which is why I challenge them.
But since that footage that you've got, there was another incident a couple of days after that.
And the guy who come there, remember me?
Remember me? Not particularly. I have to take your mask off and I'll tell you.
And he said, we're coming back for you.
And anyhow, they tried to surround me, but I was having none of that.
And anyway, they did disappear shortly afterwards after throwing a load of abuse at me.
But, yeah, it's not pleasant. She's not pleasant.
Obviously, the neighbours don't want to get him.
Of course not. I'll bring Peter in in a minute.
But I thought the most shocking thing about your story, Roy, was when you said I've written directly to the Chief Constable of West Midlands Police, Dave Thompson, asking for help.
And shame on you, Dave Thompson, because you haven't written back.
This is a statement from the police, if we can just put this up on the service.
screen, we're investigating after receiving reports of a man in his 70s being the victim of
assault and harassment in Great Bar. We fully understand how distressing this is and are looking
to safeguard the man whilst progressing inquiries to establish those responsible. Peter Blexley,
a former Scotland Yard detective, a 76-year-old man, this really gets me, so forgive me,
who spent his entire life working for a living, paying tax, would expect more from the British
police. Dave Thompson, Chief Counsel of the West Midlands, I repeat,
disgraceful. What the hell is going on, Peter? I'm sure you remember the expression. An Englishman's
home is his castle. Yeah, absolutely. Well, to be attacked, to be threatened in or outside your own home,
must be utterly ghastly. I'd be very interested to know when these matters were first reported to the
police. But this is not a lone case, sadly. We are hearing time and time again about people who are
becoming victims of crime and they are not receiving the resources and the investigation
from the police that they deserve and that we should all expect.
People write stories and newspapers go on television programs like this and say that out
there it's like the Wild West and people say to me it isn't. It is. And what people want
to know, you're a former couple. What they want to know is where are the police? I mean we see
newspaper reports about, you know, they're in training for diversity or they're having, I don't know,
a weekend away to discuss her brainstorming.
Why are they not protecting Roy Muller,
who's done nothing wrong and is an upstanding citizen?
Why have we got to a point where we cannot expect our police force
to be there when we don't need them, Pete?
I'll tell you where, unfortunately,
so many of our frontline, courageous men and women in uniform are,
they're dealing with mental health crises.
They're going from call to call to call to call,
and then they're invariably going to hospital
because they have to be with this person
who's going through some form of crisis.
They are kind of pseudo-social
slash mental health workers.
That's where they are.
There are police officers
who go through an entire shift
day after day not dealing with crime.
The other services need to step up,
they need to break out of their nine to five working mentality,
they need to organise themselves,
get the funding they need
so that mental health services
can deal with mental health,
and then hopefully our police will get back to doing what are their core principles, keeping the streets safe.
Do you think we've got to a point where the priorities have changed because of pressure?
What I've told you before on the radio, I did a program several years ago and spent several nights out with the police.
And there was one particular story that stayed with me a bit like Roy's, but we went to the same place five times.
And patently the guy had mental health issues, but they were having to do that.
Do you excuse the police?
I don't excuse the chief constable, by the way,
not writing back to him, do you?
I don't excuse any chief constable
who has not stood up and been vocal
and been there for his staff saying,
we're dealing with mental health,
we're not dealing with crime and policing matters.
They should be banging on the door of 10 Downing Street
and the home office.
There's nobody there.
Taking it off its hinges and saying,
get mental health workers to deal with mental health
so we can tackle crime, criminals,
and protect the public because it's not happening.
Roy, my team tell me that you have had so much of this abuse
that you are considering moving away from your home in Birmingham.
What does that say about society, sir?
Well, it's sad, isn't it, that I've lived in that house,
43 years, brought my children up there,
and now I'm being forced out of it by these thugs.
It's not good. It's not a good sign for society.
Pete, what really does my head in is, and you will agree with me, I know,
but if Roy decided to, I'm going to say take the lawyer his hands,
but lamp one of them, right?
I absolutely am saying it, right?
The police will be around and he'll be in court quicker than you can say anything,
but they're nowhere near where these youths are doing it in their masks,
terrorising this aged man.
That's just not right.
I mean, mental health or not, and I'm going to keep saying that,
I'm going to do it every night until we get a response.
Where is Dave Thompson, Chief Council of the West Midlands Police?
Ridiculous.
At least spend some time with that.
You're not in it anymore, but what advice would you give to Roy Miller?
What should he do?
What are his options?
Roy needs to go back to his home.
He needs to be a beacon for all the people that are suffering from crime at the moment.
So West Midlands Police need to facilitate that.
They need to investigate it.
They need to put in place whatever infrastructure to ensure that Roy can live,
safely in his own home.
I get that, and I am not in any way.
Let me just say this.
I'm not advocating anybody taking a laundry hands ever.
What I said was, here's a guy that if he did, you know, think,
nobody's helping me, the police would be there.
So, you know, and he will say, I mean, Roy, you've told us,
you have tried and tried and tried again with the police.
Pete, you ask him, he's getting nothing back.
You say, go back to your house, be a beacon.
Nobody's coming to you, are they, Roy?
nobody's giving you any help.
Well, when they have turned up,
it's been half an hour after the event.
It takes you five or six minutes to get through it on a 9-99 call,
and they have to come, I don't know how far they travel,
but from a place called blocks, which is miles away.
They've closed down all the local police stations,
and a 9-99 response is not what it should be.
Peter?
My heart sinks.
We know that policing is in crisis in so many regards.
with regards to Mr O'Hallahan who was murdered.
I hope they catch that suspect very, very quickly.
Broad daylight. Yes, they round the corner from here just in his mobility scooter.
And that, you know, I mean, how long will that take?
How much will that, Kate?
And then probably the person who did it will come up with some excuse and get away with it.
I don't know what's going on.
We're having a new broom come in to the Metropolitan Police very soon and a new deputy.
Yes, of course, standards matter like appearance, shoes and haircuts.
But you know what?
shoes and haircuts aren't going to fix the fundamental flaws that exist within the Met and other forces.
Policing must get a grip.
What I've always said is, I understand that the policemen and women don't like any of this
because they want to be there for the Roy Mullers.
But which you understand briefly how people like Roy Mueller are losing confidence and belief
in the very service that's supposed to protect us and keep us safe.
Absolutely. I join the police to catch crooks and lock them up.
If I had to spend day after day dealing with people in a mental health crisis,
which I'm not qualified for and is fundamentally not my job,
I'd be out of policing in a flash.
Credit to those who are sticking with it.
And what needs to happen for those good men and women
is that these chiefs have got to stand up, take responsibility,
and force change through, get police officers back to doing policing
and not mental health and social work.
Completely agree, Peter Blacksie.
Thank you very much, indeed. Roy, I'm so great.
for you sharing your story.
I hope you don't have to leave your home
and I hope that doing this story tonight
spreads the word and I repeat and will continue to do so.
Dave Thompson, I'm not coming for you
but I'm going to keep saying it.
Have the decency, sir, to respond
to somebody who pays your wages and needs your help.
Right, next on uncensored.
Inflation hits 10%.
This for the first time in 40 years
and food prices are surging.
The big question, how are we going to beat
punishing prices of the tills.
We're coming right back. Don't go anywhere.
Welcome back to Uncensored, my friends.
So apparently, sad news.
It's the beginning of the end.
Removal vans are at 10 Downing Street.
Boris is getting the exit done.
He's taking back control of Carrie's golden wallpaper.
And fittingly, in a financial emergency,
today's report suggests that the PM
will serve the remainder of his premiership
at the Chekker's mansion in Buckingham.
Sure, a source says he wants to keep calm and carry on,
doing absolutely nothing.
Of course, that's all speculate.
The removal vans may well simply be packing for his next holiday,
or perhaps they've just been to the cash machine in Mayfair before doing the weekly shop.
Because based on today's inflation figures, that's where we're heading, my friends.
Rocketing fruit prices have pushed inflation above 10% for the first time since 1982.
Prices, I have to be honest, are now higher than Keith Richards on New Year's Eve.
And this is what it means for shoppers.
Chills at the tills.
Consoling in the aisles, it's murder on the Tesco's Express.
Now we've done a survey of the UK's biggest supermarkets
and found that a year ago, look at this.
This is a medium white loaf of bread.
This is very good.
It comes from the Kyle supermarket,
which, by the way, is actually quite slow
because we can't afford the electricity anyway.
It was £1.5.
Oh, it's there!
Now it's £1.20, which is an increase of 15%,
and it goes on.
Hopefully a bit quicker.
A tin of beans, right?
A fixture on everybody's cupboard.
was 85p.
Very quick.
It's not here yet, see.
Come on, wind it up.
There it is, see.
Now, £1.21, that's a massive 42% increase.
And they'll have gone out on another 10%.
At the time these graphics are finished, I should imagine.
Six eggs, different colours, probably one smashed.
They used to be 172.
Moving quickly.
And here they are.
Unfertilised.
But now they've gone up 15%.
Nearly 2 quid at 197.
Moving back.
Pack of bacon.
It's going well, isn't it?
Two pounds and thruppence.
That's what my old girl used to say.
And over here, in about a minute.
Come on then wine. Oh, there's the bacon.
We see it's now £2.68.
That is up 32%.
These, by the way, of course, are some of the ingredients
for the once humble, full English breakfast,
an ordinary morning staple for thousands of working people.
But at this rate, they'll probably only be serving it
at the Dorchester and Chequers.
In a moment, our experts will have their say
and what the hell we're going to do about it.
But first, and this is important,
we got out on the streets
because we wanted to know what you thought.
Have a look at this.
We know children with the cost of living
who, they don't,
They evidently come to school, having not been fed, but they don't want to say it.
They don't want to mention it at all.
The cost of living is going out by inflation.
Oh, God.
inflation is, like, can I swear?
I can't swear right.
Okay, cool.
Because they're going to go so high, so quickly.
At the moment, it's mostly, like, travel and stuff is, like, really bad.
But also, I'm just about to move into a house, so I'm, like, really concerned about what my bill is going to kind of start out as.
Join me now is our financial expert, Gemma Godfrey.
the former founder and managing director of the 99P store, Hussein Llani.
Gemma, welcome. Hussein, welcome.
We've been talking about this for two weeks.
Now inflation, the highest for 40 years at 10%.
And just an attempt by us to explain how staple food,
staple food, is almost for many people impossible.
And I know we say it every night, but we have to say every night.
What are people supposed to do, Jim?
And also, well, the biggest problem with this is that when we talk about
staple food. Staple food is a bigger percentage of people's weekly budget and when they're
the worst off. So it means that for the worst off, they're actually not seeing 10% inflation,
that it could be about double. So people are really struggling and they're spending more on credit
cards. But in terms of what they could do, obviously, it's a very, very tough time. And honestly,
many families are really struggling. But there's, for example, there's, you know, help for households.
So there's feed your family for a fiver at Sainsbury's. There's one pound children's meal at
ASDA. There's, you can get free children's meals in the cafe of Morrison. So a lot of
supermarkets are trying to do what they can. But one of the most, I think, savvy things people can do is also change the time in which they shop.
So, yes, because, you know, yellow sticker items, you know, a lot of the supermarkets start to discount their food and they do it at certain times of the day.
Well, that's good because there's so much food that's wasted, right?
Absolutely. And not only that, but there was a family, it was again reported across the press that they got 85 pounds worth of food for 14 pounds a few years ago.
And so it means that, again, the three times to watch out for are either they'll put those yellows,
sticker items for one's approaching best before dates overnight to go first thing in the morning,
or it'll happen just after the lunchtime rush or an hour just before closing. And the key thing there
is to try and pick freeable food because it is approaching its best before date, but if you can freeze
it, it'll last for longer. Amazing, as ever, Hussein, the 99P store was a business you set up. You
sold it to pound land in 2015. I wouldn't, I think, be unfair to say that seven or eight years ago
people would go pound land, many people, right? The reality is that these stores now are now
providing staple things for people because of what's going on.
How bad is it out there?
It's bad.
And we saw this, we saw inflation creeping up when we sold our stores.
But what's happened in the last six months is unprecedented.
You know, pound land stopped selling products for a pound five or six years ago after their quidus.
It's really pound plus.
You only find a handful of products for a pound in a pound store.
And, you know, food inflation is one key problem.
But you can't ignore energy costs going up.
Well, I've actually got some breaking news, which is really interesting,
and it caused you to look at me weirdly.
OffGem director, Christine Farnish has quit tonight over the energy price cap.
What does that mean?
Because she can't handle...
Well, the biggest pushback people have had is,
what's an energy price cap when it's not capping anything?
And also they came...
It's a target, it's not a cap?
Exactly.
And also, the problem is, is that they used to adjust it if it was going to be adjusted at all,
once every six months.
And they recently came out and said,
they're going to be adjusting it every three months.
Obviously, to allow it to fall,
but really it's to allow it to rise much more quickly as well.
So she's not, the big criticism was that the off-gem didn't do enough to protect consumers.
And during that time, obviously, energy companies have benefited.
Unbelievable.
Hussein, how do we get out of this?
For people watching who watch and go, yes, but we know about that, inflation up, food prices through the roof.
Petrol, diesel, electricity, gas.
So what we've got to do is we've got to focus on the most vulnerable in society.
Quite right.
The average household income is about £30,000.
And, you know, they will weather the storm.
They will have to cut back.
The middle class will maybe not go out for the fancy meal,
not get a new sofa or a new TV.
But the most vulnerable in society, the poorest in society,
those on benefits, those on universal credit.
Because as you so rightly said, food and energy
makes up a bigger proportion of the small amount of money they get.
And that's what we've got to focus on.
So one great idea I've heard recently
is to have social pricing for energy.
for those most vulnerable in our society.
It's a good idea.
Having a special tariff just for...
Can I do something that I do all the time
and I do it without apologising?
I absolutely know what you're saying
about people on benefits and people on universal credit,
but I talk about jams every single night in the show.
They're just about managing
because people who are not on benefits
and do not get universal credit
and both the couples, partners, work
and they pay all their bills and they have jack left.
And those people could do with help as well
because they are right on the line.
But you're right.
They're right on the line, and the danger is...
That they will fall over the line?
And all of a sudden, they won't be able to keep up with their mortgage payments.
And then, you know, we've got issues of homelessness.
More people losing their homes.
Interest rates are going up.
That's another factor that's now affecting every household budget.
And, you know, the scary thing is this is a cascade
because the family stops going out for meals.
So the restaurant now suffers.
The workers in the restaurants get laid off.
unemployment and you know people stop going out shopping to buy luxury items buying a new suit or
a pair of trousers again retailer suffer the employees suffer the whole logistics chain did nobody
you're a businessman i'm not right but both of you cascades a great word it's like the dam has been
broken and everything is falling about our our feet did nobody see this coming i mean and people
go oh boris but i mean i've heard about ukraine i've heard about the pandemic i've heard it but
the monumental scale of how people's lives are going to be
impacted, as I think shocked everybody.
The government as well or not?
Well, the thing is, as soon as you had the Russia-Ukraine conflict,
that was inevitably on day one, that was going to affect the oil price.
If that was going to affect the oil price, it's going to affect energy bills,
and it was going to affect everything.
What's really interesting is there is a bit of light at the end of the tunnel
in terms of the wholesale price of flour, of wheat,
and also of oil, has actually come down recently.
But it'll take about six months for that to filter through to supermarkets.
And in those six months, if we're having such a damaging,
effect on consumers and not going out and buying as much.
Businesses then suffer, more jobs are lost.
And by the time that actually filters through,
the economy's already been damaged. And then we're talking about
winter as well. Excerivating
every problem. It's terrifying for so many
families. You know, I used to be
on the board of Age UK, and we
look after the elders in our society.
They're terrified.
You know, they can barely afford
electricity and heat anyway, and they've got
winter approaching, and right now
there's no help. What is £100
pound energy credit going to do for them?
You know, the advice they're getting now is get some more blankets.
That's why I got so upset about that story with Roy Mueller,
who's worked all of his life and paid his taxes in his house in Birmingham being, you know,
just dealing with yobbs, you know, threatening him each and every day
and wants to leave a house he's been in for 44 years.
Can we, both of you, is there anything you can say to give people hope?
Because I don't want to sit here and say, you know, sugar-coated, it's not great.
But you've been really constructive over the last two weeks.
What can you say, Jim?
Well, I think one of the big stark stats I saw recently is the fact that people are now using their credit cards to buy essential goods.
It's not for luxury items anymore.
It's for essential goods, which means that people are more likely to be falling into debt.
And obviously that gets more and more expensive.
So things like becoming a little bit more savvy about where you shop, be aware of convenience stores, try to go to larger stores,
and look at loyalty programs, but also try and compare them.
You know, all these little small things, look, it's tiny things.
But at times like this, it really is about surviving, not thriving.
It's about trying to survive this period to be able to get to the three things.
The winter.
Hussein, just sum it up for me.
What would you say to people watching this tonight?
I would say, watch your pennies.
You know, when I had my stores, you know, it was a 99P store, and we said, watch that.
You know, we give you a penny change.
But today, more than ever, that penny change really does count.
And you're right.
You know, trade down, go to different stores, shop around, buy frozen products because they last longer, less likely to spoil.
And, you know, just tighten your belts.
And, you know, let's just hold tight and try to weather the storm.
But it won't last forever.
And that's the message.
And it won't, you know, it won't last forever.
Eventually we will get out of this war with Ukraine, you know,
Russia will withdraw from Ukraine and that will get the balance rights.
Really good, thank you.
Love it.
Jemma Godfrey, Hussein Lalani, Fonremy of the 99Pistour.
Thank you for joining us.
Right next and Uncensored, tonight's Jezis Journows,
our former Labour Minister Stephen Pound,
and Talk to TV, presenter, David Ball.
We're coming back in three.
Don't go anywhere.
Welcome back, my friends to Uncensored.
It's time for Jezersers and joining me this evening as ex-Labinister,
the Stephen Poundland and Talk TV legend, Dr David Bull. How are we?
Very well, thank you. You made it here. I did all this way. You're still alive.
And I just walked from around the corner. There you go. Fantastic.
Gentlemen, so much to talk about.
Gentlemen, it's us. Yes. Let's start with Liz Trust, the leader,
the leading candidate to be the next prime minister. She says, and I quote,
well, look at this. Britain's are lazy. Watch this for a minute.
There's a fundamental issue of British working culture.
It's about wanting easy answers.
That's my reflection on the election and what's come before it.
And the referendum is like, who say it's all Europe that's causing those problems.
So it's my friends that are causing these problems.
And actually what needs to happen is, you know, a bit more graft.
And it's not a popular message.
That's not a good look, Stephen Pound, is it?
No, it isn't.
I mean, she's supposed to be on a charm offence.
I think she's forgotten the charm bit.
I mean, she's insulted Nicholas Sturgeon.
This morning she insulted Michelle O'Neill.
and now she's insulted the entire British working class.
I mean, it's not better.
I think she may be making the fatal mistake
that the Labour Party made in choosing a leader
who appeals very much to the core membership
but is not mildly popular on the doorstep.
I think she could well win,
but I think to actually say that we're a bunch of work-shy Skyvers
is appalling, because we actually work the longest hours in Europe.
Our productivity may not be great.
But the key thing here is productivity is usually measured
in widgets and cars and things.
What we do in this country,
what we make in this country,
It's sort of the modern digital economy, the different world.
We make films here.
We make computer games, and you can't actually calculate them
in the same way that you can widgets and washing.
You can tell a politician, they just got on and on.
They're very well done, though, Mr. P.
At my age, it's not bad.
No, I've heard that.
At least trust will win, I think.
Definitely.
Good luck to Rishi Sunak.
I've said it many times.
I think if whoever did what he did to Boris Johnson,
the 180,000 people who decided on next Prime Minister doesn't seem right to me.
Is this going to make any difference?
No, I don't think it is.
I think you're right.
She is talking to, obviously, the Conservative members, 150,000.
I think we think that 80% of the votes have now been cast.
I think it's pretty clear that Rishi Sunat cannot catch up at this point.
I may be wrong on that.
But just in terms of what she said,
I think it's such a gross generalisation, isn't it?
I think it's about people being instilled with values by their parents.
I know loads of working class people who've done fantastically well,
because, of course, they actually tried really hard and worked hard.
I get that.
But that whole soundbite thing is being aimed at 100.
I don't know, it's 50, 60, 70 or 80,000.
But who leaked it? That's the problem.
Well, probably seen it, but I don't know.
But do you think that, very briefly, do you think that the membership would go, yeah, good on you, Liz.
Because to me, it's a bit soundbitey.
I'm just, that would be more.
I don't think the membership will actually appreciate that particularly.
I think there'll be very split on that.
But the point is that actually we should celebrate British people working hard.
Everybody will think, as long as it applies to somebody else, they agree.
But the minute you actually look at yourself and it's back at you, then I have to say.
I've got to throw this in.
Minneapolis public schools, defence.
its upcoming contract, promoting, laying off white teachers over teachers of colour,
part of a new agreement starting in the spring of 2023.
Can I just nail this? It's racist, isn't it?
Well, it's bloody depressing. I'll tell you that.
Look, the thing, you've seen this thing today about the Air Force
when they're saying that they would actually recruit people from colour and women.
Did it yesterday, mate. You're 24 hours behind the show.
But this insults all those people of colour, all those women, all those people who fought for the
RAF in the last.
What an absolute bloody insult.
Minneapolis, they haven't got a particularly brilliant record, have they?
when it comes to race relations.
But also you don't find racism with racism, and this is positive discrimination.
I think it's totally wrong.
We actually broke that news, if you remember, yesterday about the RF.
Absolutely.
And it's all wrong.
I just don't understand why we've got to this stage.
The point is we should get the best, the brightest people into all of these.
But that's the point in any job, isn't it?
Of course it is.
Diversity is important, but if it comes at the expense of who's the best person for the job,
where are we headed?
This is an interesting one.
Young Brits are less likely to pick fish and chips as their favourite.
favourite takeaway with just one in 14 under 20.
Uh-oh.
Who's there? Oh, God, honestly.
This is what I...
It's handy andy.
Yes, handy.
Oh, look, Morgan's meals.
They didn't change the name.
I'd have cut.
Ow, got my finger caught in your zip.
Kyle's cafe.
What is this?
Oh, God.
Look at...
You're going to be so...
Oh, yum.
My dad works in a fish and chip shopping.
He's very proud of me right now.
Really? Well, just you built your part up.
Get off.
There you go. So would you like some of my fish?
That's very kind of it.
I'm going to have a chip. Thank you very much indeed.
Would you like that?
I'm between a cod and a hard place here.
A poundland joke from Stephen Pound.
Ninety-N-P at best.
Honestly, those are as cold as anything.
Your bag's not a warming bag.
The world's changed.
Yes, but they're too woke, aren't they?
We started this very quickly about the food prices and inflation
and how staple food is now becoming too expensive.
And I'll finish by asking you both.
Not a lot of time. This costs a living crisis. This is appalling, Stephen, for so many people.
Well, of course it is, which is I think the idea of actually bringing in a proper energy cap,
instead of letting it roar up to £4,000, which will kill people in this.
It will. And it won't just kill people in the domestic environment.
It'll actually mean that they have no money to spend.
They'll be, therefore, business will slow down. Nothing will be done in the high street.
This, I think, you know, without being alarmist, we're looking down the barrel of a gun here.
We've got to do something bloody serious now.
And actually, David, tonight, offgone director, Christine Farnish, has quit.
So I see. I mean, I think the whole thing is disgraceful.
What on earth have they been doing?
One job. How well have they done it?
Very poorly.
It's not a cap, is it?
It's a target, man.
I spoke to you yesterday about this.
People are struggling now.
How can you afford $350, $400 a month on top of...
You can't.
See, you go into debt, and that doesn't help the situation.
And I keep saying, I said it earlier,
we should be making it a...
We should look at the people that need it.
I really believe that. I said earlier about jams.
People on the edge of benefits in universal credit
who pay all their bills and do their best.
are really, really struggling.
It's difficult not to paint a bad picture.
Can we just finish with strikes, train strike tomorrow?
Mick Lynch on this show, very quickly, as a Labour MP,
he's a disgrace. He's a disgrace, I think he's a disgrace.
I think he's a very good operator, but I think he's totally wrong.
He's not a very good train operator.
It's totally wrong in this particular case.
Would you be on a picket line pound?
No.
Because I'm not a member of that union.
And I think the idea that the Labour Party
has to automatically do a bit of virtue signalling
by rocking up to every single picket line everywhere.
Not if you want to be on the front.
bench under Stama, you can't turn out?
I was on the front bench under Jeremy Corbyn, and I never went on.
Good Lord, that's something to be unproud of.
Also, let's be clear here. This is an industry that was paid a lot of money by government
to keep it afloat. This is an industry where they had furlough. Let's look at the 1 million
small businesses that got nothing.
And let's explain to a carer on 14 grams and an ass left train dry and is on 59,000.
A lot of train drivers will then go into the higher tax bracket because of fiscal drag.
Of course, they get this pay, right. You know, they're going to be...
Fill your face full of my chips. You've been amazed. Very greasy.
Dr David Bullen, the legend that is Stephen Poundland, as ever brilliant on Jessus' journalists.
99 Peter. Yes, thank you, sir.
No, I'm paying the penny back.
That's it for me.
By the way, if I don't do this, I'll be in big trouble.
Good luck to all the students expecting their A-level results tomorrow morning 8am.
I'm a nervous man because my daughter, Alice, is waiting.
Good luck, Al.
I will be discussing out of the show tomorrow.
Yeah, good luck, Alice.
Just remember, whatever you're doing tonight, Piers makes me say it every single damn night.
Keep it, make it, make sure it's uncensored.
Have a great Wednesday.
Tara!
