Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Evacuation of Sudan, Biden's Candidacy, Labour's Boyish Banter Crackdown
Episode Date: April 25, 2023On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, Kate McCann and Harry Cole step in for Piers and assess the evacuation of the British Nationals from Sudan by the Armed Forces. Kate and Harry debate w...hether Joe Biden is in fact to old to run for President as he declares his candidacy. Also as Labour push for crack down on boyish banter and teahc respect for women, Kate and Harry assess whether it's an attack on masculinity. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237 and Freesat 217. Listen on DAB+ and the 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 Kate McCann and Harry Cole.
British forces begin the perilous evacuation of stricken nationals from Sudan
amid a blaze of criticism that they took far too long.
Defense Secretary Ben Wallace joins us live.
President Biden confirms he'll run for the White House again.
The oldest president in history would be 86 by the end of his second term.
So how old is too old for the leader of the free world?
Stanley Johnson makes the case for political antiques.
Plus, Labour talks tough on boyish banter with a pledge to teach women respect for women.
Is this an overdue reckoning for classroom misogyny or an attack on masculinity?
We will debate.
Live from the News Building in London, this is Pierce Morgan Uncensored.
Good evening from London and welcome to Pierce Morgan Uncensored.
Eagle-eyed viewers will have spotted that neither of us is Pierce Morgan.
Sadly, he was up all night with a sickness bug.
These overnight pictures of Harry and Megan smooching in a basketball game are, we're told, entirely a coincidence.
We wish peers a speedy recovery.
And in his honour, we'll have a packed hour of box office material.
Well, shortly, we will be bringing you an interview with the Defence Secretary Ben Wallace.
And of course, Harry, that is about the situation that's unfolding in Sudan at the minute.
And I think one of the biggest questions for the government that really we are going to be putting to Ben Wallace.
And if he's watching Ben Wallace, then you're going to get to.
get a hint about our interview that's coming up shortly,
is the fact that the government had a test case here.
They had the trial of Afghanistan.
They tried to get people out.
It was a complete mess.
And the situation now, they're coming in for a huge amount of criticism in the Sudan.
Yeah, it's not like they haven't been talking about us for a couple of weeks now.
There's been a number of emergency meetings.
Other countries seem to have managed to get their citizens and their diplomats out.
We seem to only manage to get our diplomats.
So mounting questions for what's gone on at the heart of government
and more questions, really, for the foreign office as well.
Yeah, and I think one of the questions really for the government is, and we were talking about this earlier when we were planning what to ask Ben Wallace today, is the fact that Charles Leaver was not in Sudan.
Now, he's the British ambassador.
He was in London when all of this was unfolding.
And there are some serious questions about whether actually the situation with Dominic Rav that the prime minister was having to deal with at the time also caused a bit of a distraction.
Yeah, did the government have the eye on the ball?
were they fighting with a full team,
clearly the excruciatingly embarrassing scenario
for the ambassador to be at his home in Wimbledon
rather than with his team on the ground.
But also, there's questions of why they pulled the diplomats out first
rather than have left a lot of them there
to try and extract British citizens.
And there's a huge number of them.
4,000. There's a lot of dual citizens there.
Yeah.
Well, look, Harry, we're going to bring in that interview
with Ben Wallace, the Defence Secretary.
As soon as he arrives, he's hot-footing it to a camera as we speak.
But for the moment, let's just have a quick chat about US.
President Joe Biden because he's announced his intention to run for a second term in the White House today.
Now, in a campaign video released this morning, Biden pledges to finish the job and continue his fight against what he calls Republican extremism.
But will the job finish him? Already the oldest president in history, Biden would be 86 by the end of a second term.
His blunders are already subject to daily scrutiny.
10, 12, 15, hope, stepping on him.
It's black, anyway.
Happy birthday to you.
Happy birthday, dear Valid.
The president asked me to be in charge of managing that piece,
then President Trump.
Excuse me, Freudian slip.
That was the last president.
He caused, anyway, that was President Obama.
Joining us now is the environmentalist
and former Prime Minister Boris Johnson's father, Stanley Johnson.
Welcome, Stanley.
I'm going to say former father.
Former Prime Minister's father.
It's a tongue to a stir.
Sally, let's start with Joe Biden's age.
He's a bit.
He's a bit over the hill, isn't he?
I don't agree with that at all.
I mean, as far as I concerned,
he got the whole world in front of him.
If I think about it, looking at,
Conrad Adonar, he was 87 when he gave up,
and Biden's not going to be 87,
even if he serves the whole term.
But you saw that video there.
He gets into these blundies,
he's tripping upstairs, he's falling off bikes.
Surely there's big concerns about the man with his finger on the nuclear button.
We all fall off bikes.
I have been falling off bikes all my life.
And I think, actually, you think what he's actually done in terms of the experience
which he brings to this job is worth going.
And in any case, where are the candidates?
Where are the other people stepping forward?
I was going to ask you that, because it's a pretty serious question here, isn't there,
about the fact that, you know, okay, you say that age isn't a problem.
Some people would disagree with you and they might think that it's...
It's not a particularly good luck for the President of the United States to be, for example, forgetting the name of the British Prime Minister.
Which one?
There has been a few.
That's fair enough, but it was a pronunciation issue not forgetting the name entirely.
But I think the question really is for the party.
Why have they not been able to find a better candidate?
It is a very good question.
Now, maybe, you know, Camel Harris didn't quite get there.
Maybe she will get there next time round.
I don't think he's going to do another time.
I think he's going to do another time.
I'm allowed to do another time, that's for sure.
It's a mystery to me
why there have not been another good
Democratic candidate.
If they had an age limit, for example,
they'd be forced to look elsewhere, wouldn't they?
I mean, that would be a cutoff point.
Yes, I don't know of a society
where there are age limits for...
Well, there are age limits for driving.
You have to be a certain age to drive.
Age limits for being a president.
Well, I go back to it.
If I think, as it were, the alternatives
to Mr Biden,
in terms of him not winning the election,
I say to myself, look, stick with what you know here,
because I would say, and of course I'm speaking as environmentalism,
very kindly Harry, and introduce these environmentalists.
I look at what Mr. Biden has done quite recently on the environment,
and it's pretty good news.
The so-called strangely named Inflation Reduction Act
is actually all to do with an environmental policy, and it's good stuff.
So I am batting for Biden here.
I don't think these gaps are particularly important.
Someone came in today and said,
Piers Morgan is not well because he's been poisoned by sushi.
I said, well, who's Susie?
You know, people do make some mistakes, obviously.
But the problem is, I think what voters will wonder is,
he is the leader of the free world.
Should his age and should his mental status be concerned of people?
Let's go back.
Let's go back.
Let's have a little bit of historical perspective here.
Gladstone, well over 80 during his last administration,
I've already mentioned.
Ronald Reagan.
Ronald Reagan was getting up to 80.
I think he might even have been 80
by the time he stepped down.
They're saying that Reagan wasn't a good bed.
Stanley, why we've got here?
There's a question I've been meaning to ask you.
Next time I see you,
am I going to be calling you Sir Stanley Johnson?
No, I have absolutely no idea.
I know no idea what you're talking about.
Happily, I've been abroad.
Reportedly you're on your son's resignation on his list.
Would you accept the knighthood?
I have no idea.
anything of that nature. And in any case, even if I did have an idea, as I understand,
etiquette is such. Never ever mentioned this. Oh, he must have given you then.
Oh, come on. Back to Biden. Would you accept it, though?
Back to Biden. I'm biding my... I'm biding Biden my time on this one.
I don't think that was the denial. I think that was... I think he left the door open.
Well, you may well find out this week. But, you know, speaking of Boris Johnson,
there's been, I mean, you read the newspapers, there have been some interesting revelations about his
response to the Brexit vote today, Anthony Seldon extracts, of course, from his reporting,
suggesting that Boris said, crikey, I didn't expect that, we don't have a plan.
Well, now you catch me here because I was a Remainan.
Am I allowed to admit here in the Holy of Holies that I was a Remainerner?
I'm not only going to it was an arena.
I fought to keep us in.
We set up an organisation called Environmentalists for Europe.
We fought rather hard.
And I was determined that we didn't want to throw out the baby with the bathwater as far as all of the environmental policies.
And actually, I've still been doing that, you see, because I was really worried by this something called retained European environmental legislation, which, you know, this is Mr. Reese Mogg's plan, to scrap all the environmental laws.
So coming back to the substance, coming back to something, your question, yes, of course it was a, it was a strange moment.
But do you think he said it?
what he was reported to have said by Mr. Selden he probably sir answered
sir and he was worried about that sir Anthony was something like
crikey or something crikey did we did we do it well he said we don't have a plan is that right
well not everybody who wins has a plan you know sometimes the first step is to win you
didn't necessarily have a fully fledged plan but that said yeah that said I think he had to
live through the consequences as we all have as we all have
briefly before we let you go I just want to get your response to something
because it's the first time that you've been interviewed on on television since this
happened and it's it's Fiona Bruce Biden Biden
Fiona Bruce on question time let's just have a quick look to remind ourselves of what happened
it was a wife beat as Stanley Johnson on record
okay let me just let me just interview I'm not I'm not disputing what you're saying
but just so everyone knows what this is referring to so Stanley Johnson's
wife spoke to a journalist Tom Baer and she said that Stanley Johnson had broken her
nose and she had ended up in hospital
as a result.
Stanley Johnson has not commented publicly on that.
Friends of his have said it did happen.
It was a one-off.
Yes, but it did happen.
Well, look, you just said to me in the break there.
I am going to comment publicly.
First, your response to what was said there.
Do you know something?
That is such total garbage.
I mean, total garbage, as far as I'm concerned,
you know, if I have a chance for a comment public,
I don't know.
It's total garbage.
I have my conscience.
It's 100% clear.
And honestly, I'm not going to name.
I hope that I have never to have to meet the people involved.
But I do not believe.
I do not believe that anybody who knows me,
anybody who knows the 40 years I have passed as a real friend
with my former wife since we got divorced,
we'll know that it is total.
So was what happened to Fiona Bruce unfair
because she lost her position with the charity?
Fiona Bruce, I think, did as she did the right thing.
Now, had she been fully briefed,
If she'd been fully brief, she would have read the statement,
which was made by my agent, which said, look, actually,
poor Stanley Johnson's wife, Stanley Johnson's wife, Charlotte,
suffered from a possession or compulsive disorder.
And yes, the only time that happened was as a result of a domestic.
I mean, it was absurd, and I have felt very strongly about it.
Well, thank you so much for your response.
Sandy Johnson.
Thank you for joining us.
Next tonight, we will speak to the Defence Secretary Ben Wallace,
who is wearing to go.
after the break. Welcome back. The first UK evacuation flight from Sudan has now landed in Cyprus
with two more planned overnight. While we're joined by the Defence Secretary Ben Wallace now to talk
through all of this, Ben, thank you so much for joining us this evening. Let's start with what's
happening in Sudan. We've been talking about it a little earlier on in the program. Why wasn't the
government faster in responding to this situation? Well, I think we went in at exactly the same time
as the French. We were the first in. So, you know, you could argue why didn't the international community
see this coming and I think that you know that that is that is those are questions to be
answered I think in any inquiries but I think fundamentally when it did deteriorate
the British the French and the United States all went in on the same night it was
important to make sure we were coordinated but it was also important that we've got
permission of the Sudanese armed forces they they are the government of Sudan
and they were not only fighting their side of the conflict but also they
control the airspace and indeed the airfields we needed. So we had to do some negotiations.
We all had to coordinate and get permissions. And then when we did, we went in. And the difference
between the French and the British was a matter of hours. In fact, the British, early parts
of the British forces went in with the United States first. Well, I mean, I think there is some
criticism, though, of the fact that, you know, there are lots of British nationals and their
dependents who are saying, we've not heard anything, we don't know where to go. We're not sure
whether the government knows that we're here.
I mean, it's taken eight emergency meetings to get to this point.
The first flight, of course, has left.
I mean, can you really say that you learned any lessons from what happened in Afghanistan?
Yeah, I mean, first of all, this is not Afghanistan.
So in Afghanistan, the Taliban were in control and gave us a 20-day window.
So there was some certainty that we would be able to fly in and out.
Secondly, in Afghanistan, we and the Americans had had military troops on the ground,
for 20 years, so there was a proper footprint
and a large embassy.
There's many more people to get out.
Thirdly, in Afghanistan, we expanded
not just British passport holders, if you remember,
the Arab scheme, which is some
nearly 12,000 people, those are people
who over the 20 years had helped us. It's very different
and also the chaos and the things
that we saw at the humanitarian
challenges around the airfield
are not here.
What was going on in Sudan?
What was going on to Sudan?
What was going on to Sudan, Kate, was that
first of all, the
national community because of the fighting and the diplomatic quarter was sandwiched
between the two headquarters of the two factions because of the fighting you know knowing
hour by hour was going on was very difficult and you reference people not having heard from
the foreign office that isn't because the foreign office isn't trying to communicate with them
it is because the internet cover the television the telephone cover is very very minimal
at some say just 2% and that presents a real challenge but i suppose that's my point really because
the foreign office is supposed to be able to see these things
coming. It's supposed to have the planning and the resources to know that they have what they need
on the ground to get people out. You are, of course, in charge of what happens when people are
airlifted out of a country. And what you seem to be saying is that that is going well. So actually,
is that the Foreign Office letting the side down again here? No, look, I mean, look, the whole
international community, if you think, realized what was going on. But it descended pretty quickly
into a fight. Sudan had settled into some form of stability where the
the two factions were supposed to merge together to form the main army.
Suddenly, I mean, literally, in a space of a few days or hours,
that broke down.
And the two leaders of the Sudanese armed forces and indeed the RSF,
the former sort of Janjahid militia,
some people might remember from the past,
started fighting, and they started fighting around the area of the diplomatic sector.
That meant a matter of hours.
And a country like Sudan, it's very...
difficult, poor infrastructure, very poor country, that presented some real problems.
And look, you know, we made a decision early on that the people directly...
Secretary of State, you're saying there's no criticism at all for the Foreign Office?
Absolutely none. You're perfectly happy with how it went?
Look, we are all learning, we're all working together.
You know, I don't criticise the Foreign Office. People often expect the Foreign Office have a sort of magic wand.
You know, this was a very difficult and dangerous environment.
And it was absolutely right that the first advice was hunker down.
That's important.
You didn't want people moving around in the middle of a conflict.
And one of the reasons we've changed the advice is twofold.
One is after a few days, the food and water problem becomes a greater risk to those people.
And therefore, they may be better off actually trying to move to extract themselves.
And the second thing, Harry, is that there's been a 72-hour ceasefire.
And thirdly, we've got to know more about what's going on the ground
because of our experience since the weekend.
And I think that allows us to have a window in Khartoum.
And 99% of the people registered with the foreign office
are all in Khartoum at the moment.
But I do expect that to change.
But in the meantime, I've put in place plans in Port Sudan,
which is 500 miles away,
but nevertheless, one of the major towns of Sudan.
I've put some raw marines in there
and working with the Sudanese armed forces
to make sure there is a backup, should that airfield,
and your listeners should remember,
and viewers, that the airfield is a military airfield
from which the conflict is being run from.
So we're only guests there,
and we have to be slightly careful
about how many people we put in
and how much we get in the way of the Sudanese.
Of course, Secretary of State.
And you speak on behalf there of the international community
to talk about working with allies.
Are you pitching for the top job at NATO again?
No, no, I'm...
pitching on helping as many of our friends and allies as possible.
We've taken out, we took out French, we took out Norwegians, we took out Danish,
and we'll take out on these planes if there are seats spare, or indeed, you know,
as the Germans have found out, not all their nationals turn up at the same time.
So we will take out all our friends and allies across the world.
So you're not interested then in being the next Secretary General of NATO?
I hear you're in the running.
I'm always interested in a variety of interesting jobs, Harry.
At the moment, the job I have is the Defence Secretary.
But you're not saying never.
Well, when I left school, I was a ski instructor, Harry.
I'm always interested in going back to do that job.
That's a non-denial there, I think.
That's quite a grin, I think, Ben Wallace.
Look, it's Rishi Sunak's six months in office today.
You didn't back him originally for the job.
As he convinced you now that he is the right man.
Yeah, he's doing an excellent job.
And I witnessed firsthand over the last a few days,
his chairing of COBRA has been very good, it's been efficient,
and he's taken the decision.
You know, sending men and women in harm's way
is not an easy job for people to do.
He's done it really, really well.
He's led from the front.
He's, whenever I've needed assistance to speak to another leader
so we could get more troops in or more aircraft,
he's delivered, and I think he's providing that stability
that the country currently needs.
Well, I mean, Ben Wall, as you say,
he's providing that stability,
but he just lost his deputies.
Prime Minister, not even a week ago?
Look, the Prime Minister took a decision based on the report he read.
It was a, I think it wasn't an easy decision
because I don't think it was overwhelming one way or the other.
But, you know, we have to make sure we stand for some of the issues.
People, civil servants were feeling, certainly in the evidence they gave,
that this was behaviour that wasn't appropriate.
I think it's a difficult call, but I think he wanted to uphold the higher standards.
But also, on the other side, Dominic Rab, I worked with when he was Foreign Secretary.
Fun enough, I recognise the issue about Gibraltar.
I think in that, some of those claims he made were correct.
And I think it's very tough sometimes when you're working under pressure as a leader of a department
to make sure you get the outcomes you need.
But, you know, the Prime Minister read the report.
I haven't read the report myself.
He read it. He took a decision.
I think it was a tough decision.
but the price of leadership is sometimes tough.
It sounds like you think that Rishi Sank could have fought a little bit harder for his deputy prime minister there then in that case.
No, I think Rishi, as I've seen him in his six months, he absolutely, he reads the briefs he's given, he reads the reports,
he makes an analytical view of what he thinks he's going to do.
He talks to the leaders of the department, so if it's a defense matter, he will talk to me,
and then he makes his decision.
And I think he made a decision in that case, by all accounts, I think he made a decision.
in that case, by all accounts,
I think it was a difficult decision
because it wasn't necessarily overwhelming,
but it was a decision where I think he erred in the right place
and he took that tough call.
Ben Wallace, Piers Morgan, very sadly, isn't here tonight
and we are doing our best to keep his seat warm.
Well, I'm not being shouted at.
Usually he shouts to me.
Oh, there's still time.
There's plenty of time.
But look, there is a question that Piers Morgan wanted to ask you tonight.
Let's just have a quick listen to him talking about this topic.
I hope Prime Minister you do the right thing.
This man is a hero who helped us take on the Taliban.
His family are in Afghanistan.
We have a moral compulsion as a country to save this man and to take care of him and to take care of his family.
Ben Wallace, that is a plea there from Piers Morgan.
To the Prime Minister, fair enough.
But I'm putting the question to you tonight because Pierce is saying that the Prime Minister should step in and not deport this Afghan pilot who has entered the UK.
Of course, you know, as the government would say illegally, but has done a huge amount for this country in the past.
Well, first of all, when I heard about that, I asked and I asked my department to look of Hedra applied under the Arab scheme, which was the scheme for those people in Afghanistan who had helped support or work directly with the United Kingdom, mainly security forces and the foreign office over those 20 years.
And it transpired. He hadn't applied, and he has now applied for the Arab scheme.
And I think he did that at the beginning of April when it was first presented to me.
we will work through his application.
I've asked my officials to keep an eye on that
and we'll then see what comes to the outcome.
And we'll make sure to see if it meets the criteria
of the Arab scheme.
And I think the Arab scheme has some differences
that people might have forgotten now,
which was if you were in the mainstream Afghan army,
for example, and you were a soldier in the army,
but you weren't working with the British
or the Americans or the else,
you weren't eligible for that scheme
because we didn't want the army at the time
just to all leave, and we wanted, obviously, them to stay and support their government so the Taliban
weren't victorious. If you worked directly for us or in support of us over those 20 years, then you
were eligible, and your viewers and listeners will know that that's been in the thousands of people
we've brought over already, and we will continue to do so. We're not closing that scheme.
So we'll look through his application, and then obviously I'm very happy to make it clear what the
result is on that. It sounds like an element of hope there in that difficult story.
Wallace, Defence Secretary, thank you so much for giving us your time this evening.
Thank you, Kate.
Well, next tonight, should boys be taught to respect girls at school to stop misogyny and violence?
That's coming up next.
Welcome back. And wow, what a load of guests there, a year since we've been on air, and quite a year it's been.
Labor is pledging a crackdown on laddish banter today in classrooms and says that boys should be taught respect for women as part of the national curriculum.
Schools are reportedly battling increases in misogyny and abusive behaviour towards girls
bound by some on the popularity of influencers like Andrew Tate.
But what's fuel of that popularity in the first place?
And is it really the roles of schools to fix it?
Joining us now is Talk TV contributor Esther Cracu
and broadcaster Jenny Clemen.
So Esther, to you first, what is wrong with teaching boys' respect in schools?
I mean, is chivalry dead?
Well, some might say feminism killed it.
One, I don't think it's the responsibilities of teachers to teach their kids good manners.
I think it's the responsibility of parents.
I don't see why, you know, with all the pressure that teachers are under,
they now have the added responsibility of teaching young boys how to behave properly.
But I also have an issue with how this sort of discussion is being framed.
They're equating bad behavior towards women or whatever as solely being men's fault.
What about teaching women respect for boys?
I mean, we talk about the popularity of, you know, people like Andrew Tate.
But taking him as a person aside,
why does his message resonate with young men so much?
And it's not the fact that he is some sort of superhero character,
but because there's clearly a gap with young men
in talking about actual positive forms of masculinity.
He is a symptom, not the cause.
And we need to be talking about that
instead of making this a cultural issue
and saying, actually, it's men being bad to women.
Jenny, I can hear your sigh from here during that.
What's your response?
I don't see the two as mutually exclusive.
I think, you know, it's all very well.
I think it's totally right that parents should be having this.
this discussion with their children. But what if your dad is Andrew Tate? What if your dad has all of
these opinions? We ask schools to have PSHE lessons. This could be part of that. It doesn't necessarily
have to be an extra amount of workload. And it's a sort of thing that can very easily be
included in a curriculum without making boys feel like being a man is a bad thing. We're quite good
at teaching difficult issues in schools. But do you not have a problem with the way it's framed?
They didn't say we're going to teach people how to respect each other. It says we are going to
teach boys how to respect girls to crack down on ladish culture. But there's such a thing as toxic
femininity. I guess so many messages of young women being horrible to young boys. We don't talk about
the flip side. But I think the effects of toxic masculinity of like men putting revenge porn videos
online, which women don't tend to do, can ruin lives in a different way. There are the kind of
women influencers encouraging young women to go and ruin male eyes. Esther, isn't that the point here,
which is that actually this isn't necessarily a conversation.
about how women are negatively affecting young boys.
I mean, what this is proposing is to teach young men
that it's not right to video you having sex
with your girlfriend and then post it on the internet.
You can get arrested for that.
It's illegal to do that.
You shouldn't do it.
And trying to guide people in what is, in some cases,
a new world, yes, of social media,
but in others, just actually a behavior code
that has kind of grown up piece by piece
that some people actually do struggle to understand.
But then what about young women filming men at the gym
and then claiming they're being harassed?
How many times have you seen?
That goes viral on TikTok.
No, but I'm saying the issue with labour is,
one, I do think this is a distraction,
because I don't think people are thinking,
oh, actually, the cost of my food is going up,
so let's teach young boys how to speak to women in schools.
I don't think that's their priority.
I think it's a distraction.
But I think the bigger issue here is,
they are framing it as a cultural issue.
If you don't want to make it look like the onus
always on men and how men behave in society
with men and women, you have to phrase it differently.
I think there are a lot of cultural wars,
but I think you're wrong with this.
This isn't being framed.
as a cultural.
This is framed as a focus of violence against women and girls.
Let's Jenny speak.
I think this is being framed not in terms of culture wars at all.
It's being framed in terms of really low rates of prosecution
when it comes to rape conviction as well.
That's the justice system's problem.
This is not a cultural war.
We have a problem in this country
and we have to look at the causes of those kinds of crimes
as well as looking at prosecuting them.
But that's a problem for the justice system,
not young kids in school.
My issue is when you're telling young,
impressionable, you know, teenage boys and girls,
that actually the issue is how boys are treating girls,
you're framing it as a cultural issue
because there's no on women to behave properly.
Is there any problem with having a conversation about this,
because it's clear that sex education in schools is a total mess.
There's a government review going on about it now.
Parents are unhappy with finding out what's going,
why not have a talk about this without framing it as a culture war issue?
In homes, where people are actually being raised.
But not everyone has that ability to have those conversations.
But I'm sorry, but that's not the government's responsibility.
The government barely gets many things right.
Why are we now offshoring more responsibilities
because if you leave some things just to parents
and some children are going to have
absolutely no inflation at all apart from Andrew Tate
and other people on the internet. If you leave parents to parent
if you leave all of this solely to parents
You mean parenting? Some parents are not very good at it.
Hold on if you leave parenting to parents. You think all parents are good at it.
No, but it's the parents' job. That's the thing.
Yeah, but some of them can't do their job
and you need to step into the void. I'm sorry, that's not the government's job.
The government's barely getting policing right.
Our roads are full of potholes.
You know, there's so many issues.
I want it to be that at the moment we do rely on schools for a lot of safeguarding, for a lot of partial...
But that's Esther.
Esther, let's take a step back here because what Jenny's saying is that, you know, the rate of rape and sexual assault prosecutions, for example,
let's take something that fundamentally mostly affects women in this country are really low.
In some cases, politicians, including from the Labour Party, have said that rape is all but legal now because of your chances of being prosecuted.
You seem to be suggesting before that that has nothing to do with culture, has nothing to do with behaviour, has nothing to do.
has nothing to do with attitudes,
but actually in a lot of cases,
rape is not strangers.
It's people that we know, it's a boyfriend,
it's a person that you've met on a night out.
That's about culture, isn't it?
But I don't think equating,
I mean, there's a huge gap
between how men and women,
young, young boys and girls interact with each other.
There's a huge gap to get from there to rape
and, you know, the level which rape is prosecuted
in this country.
I think the prosecution rate is about 10% or something like that.
I don't think it's a gap.
I think it's a continuum.
No, it's not a continuum.
I don't agree with that at all
because you cannot say that actually
to reduce the level of, you know,
rape prosecutions in this country,
we need to teach young boys how to use better language.
How do you make that gap?
When it really should be the parent's responsibility
is to teach their kids how to treat each other.
To reduce the number of rapes,
you have to increase the level of respect
so that people see the humanity of each other
and don't treat each other like objects.
Do rapists just happen to forget that it's illegal to rape?
Is that the other than...
No, they don't see their victims as fully human equals.
So they forget it's illegal to rape someone?
It's got nothing to do with the law.
It's to do with how you see your victim.
You're talking about web prosecution.
Yes, I'm talking about actually reducing the number of rapes.
And the way to do that is to make people respect each other
and for men to see women as people who are their respect.
Let's bring this back because it's a Labour policy.
And the Labour Party has been a fair bit of criticism leveled at Sakea Stama
and the leadership of his party about their attitudes towards women.
Let's just take a quick look at this clip, which is Sakeer Stama speaking.
For the vast majority of women, this is all about biology,
and of course they don't have a penis. We all know that.
99.9 something percent of women, it's all biological, and it's very straightforward.
I mean, you both laughed there.
99.9% almost there, Keir.
Look, for the longest time, Keir's treated this whole trans issue as just a cultural thing.
I mean, Rosie Duffield has made it very clear that the leader of her party really tried to
distance himself from it because he thought it was just something that was, you know, down to the
culture war and he didn't want to engage with it to breathe life into something that he didn't
think was a big issue. But clearly it is a big issue because many women in this country, as unhappy
as they may be with the Tories, are generally envisaging a scenario where the Labour Party
will come into government and you start to see, you know, trans rights in women's spaces go
haywire and it really rolls back women's rights in that way. And so I don't think the
argument should be whether, you know, young boys should be talking about.
how to speak to girls to reduce prosecution rates.
It's about the Labour Party actually taking women's rights seriously
and stopping, you know, distracting from the real issues
by saying, actually, just teach your kids in school better,
when that's not really a domain that should be involved in.
Kirstarmer would say that he is taking women's rights seriously
because what him and the transgender critical women,
they all agreed on the same thing,
which is the problem that women face is violence from men,
violence from male-bodied people.
And they are all on, yes, from men, from men.
People with penises.
I'm happy to call it like it is.
I'm happy to call it like it is.
And I think that's what Keistama is saying today
with this education.
The greatest threat that women faces from men.
How is that legitimate though?
Because he can't even do it.
He's saying 99.9% of women have.
He's very uncomfortable because he realizes that these questions are elephant chat.
We can't trust him because he's illegitimate.
But do you think this is, this is,
Kirstama's been as far as I can see,
trying to run away from talking about these issues
that seem to get him in trouble,
those clips are up?
Do you think he's now trying to actually take that fight
to the government in the culture wars?
And do you think it'll work for him?
I think it will certainly do a lot better for him among feminists
than his inability to answer the question of what a woman is.
I just think he's completely disingenuous.
I mean, the fact that yesterday he couldn't define what a woman is,
now he's saying 99.9% of women don't have penises,
which of course leaves the question of what happens to 0.1% of women
that apparently do have a penis?
I mean, how does he have any credibility on this issue?
Do you think this is an election-deciding issue?
Do you think voters really care about this?
When they're going into the ballot box,
is the next election going to decide on this issue?
They do care about crime.
and that's what he was trying to bring it back to today
by talking about violence against women and girls.
And education is part of that.
But yes, this is part of a wider remit of things he's talking about,
which is to do with crime.
I think the Labour Party really should be focusing on the core issues.
I'm not saying this is not a core issue,
but the reality is most people's concerns
are to do with the cost of living crisis, security, immigration, all of that.
I cannot believe that with most people facing these concerns,
the Labour Party's grand solution is actually,
let's teach boys how to speak to girls in schools.
I mean, that's, quite frankly, not a priority.
That's a parent's job, not the government.
Well, I mean, I think we've covered this video fairly well, haven't we, team?
Jenny, Esther, thanks so much for both of you for joining us this evening.
Well, next tonight, Harry and Megan, are caught on Celeb Cam at a basketball game in L.A.
Was it a royally awkward night for the notoriously private couple.
We'll debate that after the break.
Welcome back.
Prince Harry and Megan Markle made a surprise of appearance of a basketball game in L.A. last night.
The couple who now live in California are all smiles at all seen,
cheering on the Lakers with a celebrity camera up on the big screen.
But many royal fans are questioned why the notoriously private pair
would be so comfortable appearing on television.
Well, we're joined now by Talk TV contributor, Paula, Rohn, Adrian and Talk TV presenter, Richard Tice.
Lovely to have you both with us this evening.
Good to be with it.
But let's start with that clip, because Richard, it is incredibly awkward.
Whatever you think about it, I mean, he goes in for a kiss, she completely dodges it.
What's going on there?
Good question.
I'm actually not their greatest.
fans and I've been pretty critical in the past.
But actually, I thought the whole thing,
the photos, I thought it was rather sweet.
I thought they were in great form,
smiling, having fun.
Actually, that's sort of what
they should be doing. In a sense,
if they've done a lot more of that, we may not be in the
place we're in, frankly, having fun,
being celebrities,
you know, on the West Coast, that's
who they are, that's what they are. We almost want
to see more of it. Don't worry about the odd
kiss or mist-cress.
Paul, is this part of, I mean,
I mean, maybe I'm too cynical, but do you think this is part of a bit of a rebrand,
trying to ensure that people see them as, you know, as Richard says,
as celebrities, young people having a good time,
and not just being really critical of the royal family ahead of the coronation, of course,
which is just in a couple of weeks' time?
You're right. You are fond of too cynical.
I knew you were going to say that.
I knew you were going to say that.
And it has to be said, let's take ourselves right back to the day
when Harry and Megan stood in Buckinghampton,
gave the speech about, you know, having to sadly leave.
and move away.
This wasn't about seeking privacy.
They wanted to be able to continue
to add value to the royal family
in terms of doing charitable work.
And they've continued to do that.
This isn't about seeking out publicity.
Oh, Richard, you're shaking head, and I can hear, I can hear.
We can agree with it.
They have not added any value to the raw family.
Well, they wanted to.
They may have added to people's bank balances
selling books and all sorts of stories.
Yes.
But they have not added value in raw family.
Isn't it that they want privacy, except when they don't want privacy on their own terms,
that they're very good at their own PR, but the second anyone else holds up a mirror
or perhaps asked an awkward question, the shutters come down?
Absolutely not.
And this is an absolute classic example.
And can I just say...
But why haven't they done more of that point?
Hang on, hang on.
Can I just say, in terms of that footage, did anyone hear any booing?
Did anyone?
No, no, I didn't think so.
Perhaps if the Duchess of Sussex came to London for the coronation,
they would be to booing there, I think.
They would be welcomed.
and anybody who did boo them, I think, would probably be castigated
because that's just not what the great British public do
in terms of celebrating and supporting the royal family.
Richard, on that point, do you think people have moved on now?
I mean, if Meghan did come over for the coronation,
which we know that she's not going to, I mean, chances are she probably wouldn't be booed, would she?
I don't think, actually, they would be booed for the reasons you've just inferred.
The British people are recognising the respect, the pomp, the ceremony.
But actually, I nevertheless, I think risk reduction, they've made the right call.
and Harry's going to pop over and then disappear pretty quickly
and frankly go and have fun like that
and if they're carried on doing more of that
then that would have been adding value but I'm afraid that's not quite often.
I was going to say I could hear Pierce Morgan screaming at the television from him
but thankfully Harry Cole brought it back around
I'm sure he was very pleased with that.
Triggered here.
Paula Richel just talking there about the great British public
and their respect for institutions
but I want to show you a little clip because just stop oil
huge protests.
They've been sitting in the road, they've been walking slowly
through the streets of London
Just have a look at this guy.
You had absolutely no time for those protesters.
Richard, is that the backbone of Britain?
Is that the best of the British public there?
He is absolutely right.
There's other footage right.
I thought you might say that.
thrilled to bits to see that.
He's doing the job that the British Bobby should be doing.
Because the 1980s Highways Act, I know I've actually read the stuff.
It says they can.
cannot willfully obstruct the highway.
And the police should be moving off the highway.
Protest peacefully, lawfully on the pavement.
Wonderful.
We can enjoy your lovely banners, but don't block the highway.
And if the police won't do the job they're supposed to do,
then the great British public end up having to do it.
Well, Richard, you would also know that, of course,
you have the right to protest.
Yes.
And that is what these people were doing.
And what they were doing was trying to save our lives, Richard.
What do you mean save our lives?
We know.
They're endangering lives on the highway.
In 10 years' time, the statistics have told us that in 10 years time...
We could be facing millions annually in terms of death due to drought.
We know that in 20 years' time, we are being told about famine
and what that is going to happen in terms of the movement of people.
And let's be honest, if anyone's worried about the 46,000 that made it across the channel,
we are going to see far higher numbers due to what, due to climate change.
And fine.
So if you get to net zero tomorrow, the IPCC report says,
how long will it take until sea level rise stops?
Is it one year? Is it two years? Is it five years? What's the answer, Paul?
Well, shall I tell you what?
I'll tell you what the answer is because you don't know it?
Shall I tell you what Professor King told us, who, of course, was the advisor for the government?
He told us we had three to four years, didn't he?
So you'll be aware of that.
Three to four years.
It'll make no difference whatsoever.
There's no climate crisis.
So then we don't bother?
Without getting into the net zero debate too much,
we've had many, many times before.
Just on that clip, though, where do you both think?
The right of one person's right to protest
infringes on another person's right to go about their business
and earn their crafts, go to work and get to work?
There's a clash there, and this is the fundamental issue
with Justop Oil, isn't it?
There is a clash there, but shall I tell you what worries me the worst,
is that whilst I Prime Minister is surrounded by his 60-odd police,
protecting him...
From these people?
They didn't know, they didn't attack him.
They didn't attack him.
They were peacefully protesting, and that's what Just Oil did.
do say they are peaceful protesters.
No, they're obstructing us.
So whilst Rishi Sunak was being, you know, cocooned by the police,
what we have is a member of the public frustrated, frustrated attacking the protesters.
It's that frustration that I'm afraid our government have let.
No, so you actually support me.
You're basically saying the police are not doing their job.
Well, if you say that the government have failed, the protesters and the members of the public, absolutely.
The police are there to manage that conflict that Harry's just referred to.
and they consistently fail to uphold the law.
That's what they're there.
I'd like them disciplined for failing to uphold the law.
So Richard, what's the answer here?
Because these guys are not going to stop protesting.
In fact, the coronation is a prime opportunity for them to protest.
The front page of some of the newspapers of the weekend
carrying pretty worrying stories about things like rape alarms
being thrown at horses to distract them on the parade.
And if they do that, they will continue to damage their reputation.
But what's the...
We don't know where that stories come from.
We don't know where that stories come from.
But if they do that, I suspect their people...
PR people would say that's a catastrophic mistake.
Because the Great British people,
we want a fantastic, wonderful coronation of pomp and ceremony
that goes off faultlessly.
We don't want these grungy people interfering it.
They've had their protest, but you protest lawfully on the pavement.
There's nothing wrong with being grunggy.
Did you see them? I saw them yesterday with their little diesel-powered lorry.
And there were a bunch of about 20 or 30 grungy people.
Frankly, most of them look as though they need to go and have a bath on a moment of the way.
But let's move on, because we haven't got much time left.
I want to bring you both back to politics, because this is our favourite subject,
and talk about the SMP, because Nicola Sturgeon has been speaking today.
She's obviously had a difficult time of it.
Her party is an even more difficult position, Paula.
Let's just have a quick listen to what she said today.
I understand the view that some people might have,
that I knew this was all about to unfold, and that's why I walked away.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
I could not have anticipated in my worst nightmares of what would have unfolded.
over the past few weeks.
I believe the S&P, notwithstanding the real difficulties
that surrounds the party just now is in good shape.
Now, Paula, there are two things about that clip.
The first is that people are saying it shows Nicola Sturgeon
showing some genuine emotion.
But the second is, I mean, she's saying now,
it's a real, it's a nightmare, it's a stuff of nightmares.
I mean, her party and the new SMP leader
has been left to pick up the pieces here.
Well, I mean, she's still a Scottish member of Parliament, isn't it?
So, you know, she's still going to be having to deal with this.
You know, and in terms of what her voters are saying to her, this must be incredibly hard.
So in terms of as an individual, in terms of what's happening with, you know, her husband,
in terms of what's happening with the party, this is absolutely massive.
I have to say the suggestion that, you know, this is the first time we're seeing her showing emotion.
We saw her show in real emotion when she resigned.
Well, some people said that it wasn't real emotion because she knew.
exactly what was about to happen and it was very well choreographed.
You think it was terror?
Could have been complete terror that she knew what was coming down the hub.
But it was extraordinary in that clip.
One moment she said it's a nightmare,
and the next moment she says the SMP is in good shape.
She must be the only person in the whole of the United Kingdom
that thinks the SMP is in good shape.
But what else can't...
Actually, this might have been one of those rare moments
where she'd have been best saying, not a lot.
But the polls don't seem to be really shifting in Scotland, they do there.
The SMP remain very popular.
And so the real question is, given that there are two independence parties,
the extent to which if people lose confidence in the SMP,
I think a true independent supporter is much more likely to go to Alex Salmon's Albert.
He's the guy with a great opportunity.
Why would you then go to Labour?
That doesn't seem logical to me.
I just think in terms of who the SMP are and what they,
SMP are and who they mean to Scottish people,
I don't think that they are concerned, as you're suggesting, that they should be.
think that they have a very strong base
and that that strong base will continue.
Did you believe the crocodile tears then?
Crocodile tears.
I'm literally drowning underneath the citizens.
Those were real tears,
just like the real love we saw for Harry and Meghan.
Right, look, we've only got a minute left.
Richard, I want to get your thoughts on this.
Briefly, in a word, both of you, I'm going to ask you,
President Biden, he's announced today he's going to stand again.
Is he too old for office?
He is, but he had no choice.
Otherwise, he would have had a lame duck presidency
for the last 18, 20 months.
He had to say that, but I don't think that he will be actually on the ballot paper in November 2024.
Paula?
Oh, God.
Okay, steady yourselves, everyone.
Oh, no.
Yeah, I agree with...
Oh, wow.
This is a moment.
I know.
It appears it's not going to like this.
Someone take a make chance.
It's required to blind intervention.
Kiss, can.
Kiss, Cam.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have to be honest with you.
I'm disappointed.
It's a shame.
It's a shame that he didn't feel it appropriate to mentor someone.
Paula, Richard, on that note, thank you so much for your thoughts.
Thank you for joining us this evening.
And thank you for watching because that is it from us.
Pierce Morgan, we hope you feel much better tomorrow.
What you're up to, whatever you're up to, all of you, make sure it is uncensored.
Good night.
