Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Liz Truss resigns & Ye Exclusive Part 2
Episode Date: October 20, 2022Tonight on Piers Morgan Uncensored from New York City, Piers looks at the chaos surrounding Westminster as PM Liz Truss resigns after just 44 days in office. Is it time for a general election? Also, m...ore from the explosive exclusive interview with Ye, formally known as Kanye West. Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored at 8 pm on TalkTV on Sky 526, Virgin Media 627, 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 from New York City.
British politics in complete and utter meltdown,
as Prime Minister Liz Truss resigns after just 44 days.
We've got a fifth leader in six years, but what about a general election?
And it's a bombshell interview making headlines across the planet.
More from my explosive world exclusive with Ye,
the artist formerly known as Kanye West.
Tonight he takes on President Biden offensively.
The president of the United States
does not have meetings with Elon Musk.
That is...
Hey, here, come, come, come get me.
That's retarded.
From New York, this is Pierce Morgan Uncensored.
Well, good evening and welcome to Pierce Morgan Uncensored,
live from our New York News Center.
Politics can be full of exaggeration.
Everything is unprecedented, a crisis, treachery.
A war. But let me be very, very clear tonight. It is literally impossible to exaggerate the scale of the bedlam that this government has unleashed on our country in the last few weeks. It's by far the worst thing that I've ever seen from any government. These useless clowns have basically ravaged our country, sinking the pound, trashing the market, sending our interest rates soaring. And it really comes down to this.
This is a lettuce.
And this was the front page of the Daily Star newspaper.
Who had a little bet?
What would last longer?
This lettuce, or one very like it,
or Liz Truss, the lettuce.
Well, guess what?
Tonight, the lettuce won.
It's almost beyond parody what's been going on.
To lose a prime minister this quickly,
after all the chaos we've had this year,
But it's real. Another big question is, should the Tories be trusted to actually continue running the country?
Or should, as many of the opposition leaders are saying, there now be a general election to sort this mess out, one which, by the way, would almost certainly lead to a landslide labor victory.
I've said from the start of the leadership race back in August that Rishi Sunak, the former chancellor, is the best equipped to run the country in these very difficult, turbulent economic times.
He's the most experienced in the economy.
He understands the economy.
He seems to me to be a man of integrity.
He seems to be someone who understands what it is to be competent.
He should be the leader, in my opinion.
But tonight there are calls for Boris Johnson,
the recently disgraced Prime Minister,
kicked out by his own members of parliament,
his own cabinet,
that he should be the one who returns in glory
just months later to save us from the mayhem he started.
You couldn't make it up.
But that's what's happening tonight.
And that is the state of the Conservative Party.
That is the state of its government.
That is the state of our country.
Honestly, I'm glad I'm in New York tonight.
It feels like I've just got enough thousands of miles
between me and Great Britain to distance myself from his farce.
But tonight we will be talking to people who are trapped back in the UK
and can't escape yet about what's been going on.
And I've got my star, stellar pack with me here,
who've been with me.
actually, most of the week, following this travesty of political carnage as it's unfurled.
Well, let's start by joining Talk TV's contributor Adam Boland and Talk TV's critical evidence of Kate McCann.
They're both in London. So welcome to both of you. My sympathies that you're stuck in the UK as all this unfurls and you can't escape to the sunnier climes of New York City.
Let me start with you, Adam. You and I have been around this political block for a very very...
long time. Have you ever, in all your time, seen anything quite like these last few weeks?
No, absolutely not. I mean, for a start, we've never had such a short-lived Prime Minister.
Liz Truss has straight into the Guinness Book of World Records. She's going to be there probably
for less than 50 days in number 10. And of course, we haven't had a turnover of prime ministers
with what's now going to be five prime ministers in six years with only a couple of election.
in between. We haven't known anything like that since the 19th century, you know, pre-Victorian times.
So it's quite unprecedented. But honestly, Piers, at the root of it is, I've never seen such
useless people becoming Prime Minister. You know, Liz Truss was useless. Boris Johnson clearly
didn't have the qualities to run a country and to be a national leader of integrity. Yet this is
what the Conservative Party have kept on serving up on the electorate.
Because remember, it's the Conservative Party which has chosen these leaders.
It's not the whole country. It's not like winning a presidential election.
Right. Well, Kate McCann, you're obviously a mere spring chicken compared to Adam Bolton and I.
But I'd imagine you would share his sentiment that this has been utterly unprecedented.
I want to show a clip before I come to you of Liz Truss resigning.
She hadn't been there long enough to even get enough emotion about,
the job to even cry. Here's what she did.
And we set out a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms
of Brexit. I recognise, though, given the situation, I cannot deliver the mandate on which
I was elected by the Conservative Party. I have therefore spoken to His Majesty the King to notify
him that I am resigning as leader of the Conservative Party.
I mean, I think as resignation speeches go, Kate McCann,
that was probably the worst I've ever heard from the worst Prime Minister.
It had no emotion, nothing heartfelt about it,
looked like somebody rather peeved that their rain was coming to an end after 44 days,
and yet I think she was lucky to last that long.
The lettuce lived longer.
I think you're right, Piers, that actually the emotion that you saw there
was somebody who was pretty cross,
someone who was quite frustrated at what has happened
at the way that this has all come crashing down around her.
Because I think Liz Truss and those in her inner circle inside number 10,
and I know you may not believe me when I say this,
but they thought up until last night when that vote on fracking happened,
that they had managed to get enough people inside Downing Street,
those backbench Conservative MPs,
and that they'd managed to persuade them,
that the project wasn't over, that she could pull this back,
and that there was a way to bring the party back together,
purely because none of them really want to go through another leadership election again.
But actually, the moment when this really fell to pieces was that vote last night.
And what happened in the voting lobbies, if you have your chief whip, walking through your voting lobbies,
remember the person in charge of party discipline, essentially holding their hands up and saying,
I give up, I can't do this job anymore, whatever, I don't care.
And walking off, walking off so fast that the prime minister is dragged behind holding her arm,
trying to convince her chief whip to come back.
That was the crucial moment, I think,
and it all just fell apart for Liz Trust.
And she is annoyed about that.
You know, there is a sense of frustration
that it's not really, in her eyes, very fair,
that she thought she could pull it around,
even though for most people in the party,
I think the writing was on the wall.
Well, I mean, the problem was she was not just incompetence.
She was serially incompetent,
and that messing up party discipline last night in a vote
was an unforced error by her.
And, you know, that's the way it goes.
And, you know, what a lot of people are asking,
her themselves right now, is how has she ever gotten that position at all?
Well, exactly. I mean, look, all due respect to you, Mr. McCamber, she's angry.
Liz Truss is angry that we've finally got rid of her after the most cataclysmic six weeks
in the history of British politics, where she tanked a pound, where she crashed all our
mortgages, so we've ought to pay thousands more, where she made us a laughing stock around the
globe. I mean, the idea is she's angry tonight.
We're all angry, Ms. Truss.
I'm not defending her.
I can say in her favour.
The only thing I can say in her favour, let me just finish,
is that I am told this may be the first prime ministerial rule of 44 days in history
where my football team Arsenal have remained unbeaten and won every game
throughout the tenure of a prime minister.
And for that alone, thank you, Liz Truss.
That's the one semblance of gratitude.
can find for the otherwise train wreck of her rule.
Kate McCamp, let me go back to you for a reaction to my rant.
Thank you, Piers. Very kind of you.
I'm not defending her.
I'm not saying that she has a right to be angry.
Lots of people feel the way that Adam does,
that this was a series of unforced errors.
But I suppose at the end of the day,
this is a conservative party when you step back,
which lots of people now think is completely ungovernable.
And that's a really important question
when you think about who's going to lead it next.
because even if the party can coalesce around, let's say, Rishi Sunak,
with Penny Morden in the cabinet,
they have to make such impossible decisions now,
such huge decisions which will affect all of us,
our mortgages, our interest rates, any debt, all of our lives,
that they're not going to come out of it unscathed.
Boris Johnson thinks maybe he might want to come back,
I don't think he'll manage to get 100 names,
I don't think he'll get on the list.
And that's causing some anger tonight.
The party is already divided,
and it will be a real struggle for anybody now to take.
turn that around. Yeah, I mean, whoever comes in is going to be a lame duck prime minister.
And a lot of conservatives are making their calculations on who they support,
Conservative MPs, on the basis of who it would be best to lose under.
Right. I completely get it. Listen, I've got to move on from you guys.
I'm sure, as we go forward in the next few days and weeks, the carnage continues.
But thank you both very much indeed for joining me.
Join now by the Conservative MP, Paul Bristow.
Mr Bristow, you were a big supporter of Liz Truss
and now you want Boris Johnson back.
I'm not sure I'd be brave enough to go on television
if those were my two positions tonight.
Well, that's a perfect introduction.
Thank you very much, Piers.
But, look, I'm a huge advocate of listening to your constituents.
And at the weekend, I was at a Diwali celebration of my constituency.
I was at the Great Eastern Run.
I even knocked us some doors and did some campaigning.
And overwhelmingly the response was bring back Boris Johnson.
And so that's why I've come out early for Boris.
I don't know if he is going to stand.
I think he probably is now, judged by the number of MPs that have come out
and said that they will support him.
But we have to get over 100, and I sincerely hope he does stand,
and I fully expect him to turn our fortunes around.
I don't know you, but I have to say,
I think you and any other Conservative MPs
who are going to be calling for Boris Johnson
to come back as leader
after what we've been through in the last few months
caused by Boris Johnson,
I think you've all lost your mind.
I mean, the polls at the moment show that Labour Party
35 points ahead.
You're heading for an absolute shalacking
in the next election.
And if you think the idea of your saviour
is the recently departed and disgraced Boris Johnson,
who was found to be a liar,
found to be a rulebreaker of his own rules,
who's still being investigated and indeed may be disqualified from Parliament
if one of those investigations comes back the right way.
If you think that's the future, you're all living in Cloucouland.
What's the matter with you?
Well, Pierce, if I may, let me answer the question.
So I stood in a by-election in 2019.
It was quite an infamous by-election in Peterborough.
I didn't just lose.
I actually came third, which was obviously not a great result.
We were 19 points behind in the polls,
but six months later, we elected a new...
Prime Minister, we elected Boris Johnson, and guess what? We went on and we won the 2019 election.
We're in a similar situation now where we're poor in the polls. I think Boris Johnson's got a
proven track record of turning that around. If you look at Boris Johnson's government, the things
like he did on policy, I think they were very, very popular. We got Brexit done. We powered our way
out of COVID by having the earliest vaccine of any major developed country, and we ended lockdown.
and obviously we were tough when it came to the war in Ukraine.
And we're also leveled up in places like Peterborough, my constituency,
where we've built a brand new university,
and we're going for high-paid, high-productive and high-wage, high-skilled jobs.
Things are popular policies.
Those are popular policies.
I'm having a...
All right, look, let me interrupt.
I'm having a horrible sense of Groundhog Day.
This is the kind of thing that you lot were all saying before about Boris Johnson,
and then the whole pack of cars came tumbling down.
where minister after minister
queued up to sign his death warrant
to get rid of him
because he was such a scourge on the parties,
such a scourge as leaders of the country.
The idea that you're all now clamouring for him to come back,
I honestly think you've all lost your minds.
Well, you said that before.
You said that twice now.
But what I will say is that you did see a number of people resign,
but you also saw a lot of people stay loyal to the prime minister.
I was one of those.
That was a significant number of MP.
I do think he can get onto the ballot.
And if you look at the poll of members,
Boris Johnson's at the very top.
What you're citing now are not policy differences.
The policies that Boris advocated were incredibly popular.
That 2019 manifesto was incredibly popular.
I got the best ever...
All right, well, let me pick on one of them.
In decades.
Let me pick all one of them.
Tell me one good thing that Brexit has done for the British economy.
I'll give you 10 seconds.
Well, what Brexit did, it ended the lockdown we had in Parliament,
which was starving our country of investment,
which was giving no opportunity for us to attract outside people into our country.
In fact, you've actually had more city of London investors come to our country.
Everyone predicted that we all go into Frankfurt.
That simply hasn't happened.
Brexit was what the British people voted for.
And Boris Johnson was able to deliver that.
And I'm afraid, Pierce, we live in a democracy.
That's really important.
I think, listen, I've got no problem.
I voted Remain.
And I said as soon as Brexit was voted for by the country,
I supported the democratic result,
and I wanted Brexit to work.
But as I sit here now, I do not see Brexit working.
And you lock and all shout out as much as he like that he got Brexit done,
but he hasn't actually made Brexit work.
And we're years and years down the line now,
and it still hasn't worked.
So I'm sorry, I'm rather cynical about Boris Johnson
from what he promises and what he delivers.
It's a bit like when he sets his rules in COVID and then Brexit.
But anyway, look, listen, there's other.
like loyalty in life, so I admire that, Mr Bristow.
But I'm honestly staggered that any of you think this is a good idea for your party.
But if you do, that is a decision for you.
We live in a democracy. Good luck to you.
Thank you for joining me.
Thank you.
Well, the leader of the Scottish National Party in Westminster, Ian Blackford, joins me now.
I don't know about you, Mr. Blackford, but I listening to that.
I honestly do think that the Conservative Party has gone bonkers.
Well, it has gone bonkers, there's no other way of explaining it.
You know, it's actually been really weary, so tiresome, just watching politics over the last while.
We've had a woman prime minister that, quite frankly, should never have been near the place.
And I think you've spelt it out rather eloquently at the beginning of your program.
She's done enormous damage.
And the fact that what we've really had is a financial experiment with her premiership.
We've had a financial experiment that's been driven by those at the Institute of Economic Affairs.
And by God, have we paid a price for it.
those are going to be renegotiating their mortgages.
This is not funny what has happened.
And when you look at the Tory party,
I think the only reason this has taken so long to come to pass
is quite simply because they cannot coalesce around the candidate to take over from them.
They're split all over the place.
Brexit's done enormous damage to them.
This is a party that's out of ideas, that's out of time.
And actually, it's why we need that general election,
because the public deserves the right to have their...
on what has gone on.
You know as well as I do.
There'll be many people watching tonight
who absolutely agree.
We should have a general election.
But ultimately, that's in the hand of the Conservatives.
And I mean, why would they?
I mean, they know they'd be heading for an absolute drubbing.
Why would they call an election?
So is there a way that they can be forced to?
Well, I mean, you have heard Tory MPs.
You saw that last night.
They were dispeering as to where we are.
And I would say to them that put the interests of those that live on these islands
ahead of their own narrow party interests.
They know that this is a party that's run out of them.
They know, and we just heard from Kate, we heard from Adam Bolton,
but whoever becomes Prime Minister, it's going to be a lame-d-up government.
Are we really going to just meander through the next two years
with no firm leadership, with no way of leading the United Kingdom,
at a time of crisis at home and abroad?
we need to be able to put this to the electorate
and they need to think about what they're doing
and recognise for them
this is over. They need some time in opposition
where they can think about
what their offer is because quite frankly at the moment
it is not there. We need to have that election
and of course for those of us in Scotland
I want that ability to have that debate about
our own future because
everything that's happened over the last few years
has been about Kearse. You talk about respecting Brexit
and I take that peers
I understand why you make that point
But those of us in Scotland, we were told in 2014 that we stayed in the UK
that we'd remain as EU citizens.
We've been taken out against our will, and we're desperate to find our way back in.
That desire to get back into Europe has become even stronger.
We can see that through polling in Scotland over the course of the last few months.
So we want to be able to say thanks but no thanks to all of this,
and to be able to chart our own future.
You know, I talked when I was last on with you briefly about economic growth.
If we've got a plan to really drive up green energy production,
to drive investment, to drive jobs,
to drive up living standards, to improving productivity.
When the Tories were talking about growth,
there was no substance to any of that piece.
There was no detail.
Well, the problem is, as this trust has proven,
as this trust has shown,
you can talk about growth as much as you like.
But if actually everything you do has the complete opposite effect to growth,
then I'm afraid the smoke and mirrors game is up.
Ian Baffell, I've got to leave you there,
But I do think, you know, I was listening to Nicholas Sturgeon earlier,
you know, that one of the other side effects of all this
will definitely be, in my opinion,
a strengthening of support for the SMP
and for an independent Scotland,
because I would imagine a lot of Scots looking down on this with utter horror
and saying, why the hell have we got anything to do with this anymore?
And I wouldn't blame them, even though I don't agree with you about independence.
So I think it's going to be very interesting times.
I thank you for joining me again. Appreciate it.
Thanks, yes.
Okay, we'll take a break now.
Coming up, we'll be dissecting this with my pack.
Liz Truss thought she was the Iron Lady,
but she melted like a lead balloon
that's just been put in front of a fire.
Where did it all go wrong?
Why did it even happen at all?
We'll debate this next
as I clutched my trusty letters.
Robert Pestle.
Welcome back to Pittsburgh and Unsensored
from our New York newsroom.
Joining me now is the editor-at-large of the US Financial Times,
Gillian Tett,
the former Conservative MP, Louise Mench,
and political commentator Ash Sarkar.
Welcome to my guest here.
Here's the lettuce.
It outlasted Liz Truss.
Louise Mench, when a lettuce lasts longer than a conservative prime minister,
dare I say it, you have a problem.
Yeah, talk about vote blue-go greens.
I thought you were a little bit harsh on Liz Truss.
Really?
She did, in the end, do the right thing and went.
She was always going to have to go,
and she at least knew that she had to go right away.
Now, as for Boris, he is incredibly popular with the members in the country,
and only one.
You can't seriously think it would be a good idea.
No, I don't.
I think if Boris wants to stop Rishi Sunak,
he should be talking to Penny Morden's people
and they should be doing a deal together.
But I don't care, Gillian, about the petty politics anymore of this party
and they're feuding.
I care about the country and a national interest and our finances
and the fact there's a war in Europe and there's a pandemic still going on,
that there's this appalling financial cost-living crisis.
Totally agree, Piz.
And what I'd say is this.
What you've basically had is a bad.
between the populists and what I call the technocrats,
the people who are sober and competent and really boring.
So Boris Johnson, total populist.
A lot of Brexit, I would argue, was a lot about populism.
I think the list trust came in on a populist wave.
It's time to give the technocrats another go.
Rishi Sunnak is a technocrat.
He can count.
That's a good start.
Louise, I tweeted yesterday, and I repeated it today,
to me, if you had Rishi Sunnack as Prime Minister,
purely because of his knowledge of the economy,
never mind nothing else.
If you had Jeremy Hart's day as Chancellor,
perfectly competent, it looks to me,
and you have Penny Morton come in his Home Secretary,
for example, or something like that,
that to me at least looks like a competent team.
Well, I will say that whoever wins,
if they don't bring in the big beasts
from the other team, we're just going to be back here again
in another four weeks, right?
There's got to be compromised.
What I would say, though,
is that while you're excoriating Boris Johnson's leadership,
you had these three people that were all cheap.
by jail with Boris throughout his premiership.
Rishi Sunnack was his right-hand man, was his chancellor, until he decided to stab him in the back.
Liz Truss was his foreign secretary.
They're all part of Team Boris.
The only fresh face was Penny.
It wasn't really the policy.
It wasn't really the policy.
It was actually, with Boris, it was the lying and the rule breaking.
That's what did he mean.
At the end of the day, all this internal drama, this kitchen sink drama, okay?
The population doesn't actually care that much.
We need to move on from that.
It's ridiculous.
I mean, I agree with you totally, Piers.
It's ridiculous.
80,000 people got LIS Trust voted in.
There needs to be the voices of people actually heard for a change.
But the key issue is this.
Britain is going to face a winter of discontent.
However you look at it, okay?
It's really tough.
What you need, above all else, is somebody who could stand up, count.
That would be a good start, and actually try and rally people around some kind of vision and unity and shared sacrifice.
I agree.
That is going to be the theme in the next few months.
I agree.
I agree.
Let's bring in the BITZER.
Let's bring in our sock.
I'll be ready patiently.
I mean, Ash, I'd imagine you're feeling a little bit smug tonight in a sense that every single thing you've said about the Conservative Party has now been born into horrifying fruition in the last six weeks.
The thing is, I would be able to enjoy the spectacle if I wasn't so worried about what this meant for the British people.
As has been already said, we are looking at a winter of discontent already with the increases and energy prices.
You've got reports of people turning off their heating,
turning off their electrics and saving up that little bit of juice on their lecky card
until their grandchildren come to visit.
You've got reports of people riding the bus to stay warm.
This isn't just about a Westminster Dog and Pony show.
People are really suffering.
And what worries me about the Conservative Party is that they've got two options.
They've got one option, which is sort of go full on culture war,
really try and give red meat to the spectator and no one else.
Then the other option, the technocratic option, is a return to austerity.
Now, those 12 years of public spending cuts have really helped us get into the kind of mess where we are now.
It was just reported today that somebody has died in the back of an ambulance because there weren't enough hospital beds.
Who was the architect of many of those policies?
Jeremy Hunt, who's being praised as one of the grown-ups.
Well, actually, you know, on Jeremy Hunt, I've been very critical of him because he was the,
health secretary who failed to prepare us for a pandemic, despite in 2016 having a three-day
pandemic exercise trial run, which made a series of recommendations he then didn't act on.
And yet there he was pontificating about COVID for months and several years on end.
And I'm like, really? You were the guy that didn't prepare us.
So I think he's a skillful politician, Mr. Hunt.
But actually, how good he is, I think we're going to have to wait and see.
Let's come back to Louise and Gillian here.
I mean, it's not just about the conservatives now.
It's really about the country.
As that's like I said, a lot of people are really hurting.
I mean, food banks, the cues are getting bigger.
People are worried about power, literally being turned off.
Yes.
You know, this winter of discontent could be one of the toughest winters we've ever seen.
We don't know what's going to happen with Putin and Ukraine to make things immeasurably worse.
That's right.
Well, but the fact is we would be going through this winter of discontent,
even if you could wave a magic wand to make Kirstarm a prime minister tomorrow.
That would still be true.
This is why I advocate for Penny because I think she is the Queen of Compromise.
You certainly need to have either Rishi or Jeremy in as Chancellor,
but it's going to hurt no matter what you do. That's where we are.
OK. Or, Gillian, you actually could be very Machiavellian about it and say,
we'll go to the country, we'll call a general election, we'll get a massive beating,
and then the problems are all yours, Kirstama. Good luck.
Well, exactly. The reality is that isn't going to happen because turkeys don't vote for Christmas.
At least of all, when the turkey threw in the Tory party.
And so they're not going to do that because I know they're going to lose their jobs.
But yeah, the wrong line is.
It's a poison chalice.
Whoever wins that.
I mean, frankly, that lettuce probably has a better job.
This would do a better job.
Well, the letters probably wants it more than anybody else right now
because you know what?
It's going to be a really nasty job.
You think Penny Morden would be the best bet.
It's the compromise candidate.
We need compromise.
What do you think?
I prefer Rishi Sunak because I like people.
I work for the Financial Times.
I like somebody who understands financial markets and has the credibility.
And what we've learned is bond vigilantes,
those people who have the ability to push markets around and stuff.
They're not dead.
You don't have to bow down to them, but you can't ignore them.
And that's what Liz Trust was trying to do.
Asa Sarka, if it does become the case,
we have a Kyr-Stama Labor government,
are you confident that they would have the tools in their armory
to fix all these problems?
Or could it be one of the worst poison chalices ever handed over?
Well, I think the worst thing that Kiyosthama could do
is cowtow to the austerity logic
and say that the only answer is to cut back on public spending
because what 12 years of austerity did
is create some very expensive problems for us to fix.
We did have growth during those 12 years,
but it wasn't fairly distributed.
What StarMat has to do
because expensive borrowing isn't really an option,
particularly borrowing for day-to-day spending.
We had a 12-year window of low interest rates.
We don't have that anymore.
What he's going to have to do is start making a very clear case
for taxing billionaire wealth and corporate profits
and redistributing them downwards.
What we've had over the last 12 years
isn't really a crisis of low growth
that we have had sluggish growth.
It's been a crisis of money being taken away
out of the pockets of workers,
stagnant wages, declining worker purchasing power,
and being concentrated in too few hands.
And I would rather that Keistama has one term in Parliament
where he's able to take drastic action
to fix some of those things
and set us up for a healthier economy in the long run,
then not do enough, try and, you know,
count out of this austerity logic
and then ended up with the worst of all worlds,
which is unpopular, not having changed enough,
and eventually being booted out
in favour of a much more populist conservative option.
All right, and just give me a one word response
to the potential return of Boris Johnson.
I mean, the Conservative Party are like a horrid.
horrible hybrid of a Phoenix and a suicide.
One word.
I mean, I gave you a long sigh, and I think that's the only word that I can offer.
That's off-com friendly.
I mean, it's laughable.
Oh, didn't you were, Jeremy?
No, there's a word.
Impossible.
Well, one way to sleep we did it is impossible.
That pretty well sums up every base.
Ash Sarko, thank you very much.
Gillian, Louise, thank you both very much indeed.
We're coming next to his last words and promise of questions were Astor-la-Vista, baby.
But is Boris going to be back now to?
terminate us. I'll ask his father. Stanley Johnson next.
Well, welcome back to Piersbogne on our censored from New York City.
So could Boris Johnson really be back?
Well, for me, this is a dreadful thought, but the warning signs are here.
And his political hero is Sir Winston Churchill, who famously returned to number 10.
Boris does like to compare himself to Roman statesman Cincinnati in his leaving speech,
who came back as a dictator, by the way.
Johnson also said this at his final PMQs.
I want to thank everybody here and
Hastel Avista, baby. Thank you.
Astor-Lavista was, of course, the famous signature,
theme speech of The Terminator,
who then terminated everything that he got in his way.
Well, joining me now is Boris Johnson's father,
not a Terminator, Stanley Johnson,
also Conservative Cabinet Minister Anne Whittickham,
and the editor of the US Sun newspaper,
Natalie Evans. He's with me here in New York.
So welcome to all of you.
Stanley, let me start with you.
if I may. Look, I'm not keen on the return of your son so soon after his ignominious departure,
but you are his father and therefore will have very different loyalties, I imagine. But do you think,
as his father and as a conservative man, do you think it would be the right thing for him and the
right thing for the country to even put his name in the ring again so soon?
Well, peers, I've got to say, I heard your rant about half an hour ago, so I have no doubt about
what your position is. But my position is simply I'm looking at this as a voter. I'm
looking at this, he won't believe this, but I say to myself, I have a vote in this election.
I've just got a message from Conservative Central Office saying I'm going to get an
electronic password before the end of the week. And as a voter, I say, well, what we want is
someone who's going to do the right thing for the country. I say on this point, the country
is probably more important than the Conservative Party. So yeah, frankly, I have absolutely no idea
whether Boris is going to be a candidate
in this election. No idea at all,
but I think he has a very strong
record to be considered
as a viable candidate, and I very much
hope he will let his name go forward.
So that's why I stand on this.
All right, but if he wasn't your son,
and he was another
conservative prime minister who'd
had to leave the post in some
degree of shame, voted out by
over 50 of his own
ministers, would you think
that within a few months of that happening,
good idea that he then become Prime Minister again, given the state of the Conservatives right now?
It's a good question. And I've looked at this, I've looked at the record, and I looked at the
things I absolutely care about, and I do absolutely care about, as you know very well, because
you've had me on this program before. I absolutely care about the environment, and I think he made
a big effort on the environment, not only with the COP 26, which we had in Glasgow, but he's,
he made a big effort with the G27, I'm sorry, the G20 and the G7, very big effort.
made a big effort on COVID. So I look at those things, I say these were serious achievements.
Now, I'm not saying, you know, I'm not saying that Partygate wasn't a blip.
But as far as I'm concerned, I think he knows how to deliver on the environment.
He knows how to deliver on the economy. And he knows how to deliver in terms of international relations.
So I hope he will put his name forward. And I hope that the parliamentarians who voted for him this time will realize that, you know,
you know, there's joy in heaven over the sin that repent is.
And I think you'll get...
Scum off in Stanley.
You can't start bringing the good Lord into this.
Let me turn to Anne Whittaker.
Anne Whittaker, I say this with great respect,
but your party is in a complete state of utter disarray.
What is going on?
I don't know.
I mean, I honestly think at the moment
I'd rather vote for screaming Lord such
than for the Conservatives.
I'm not sure what's going on.
On the issue of Boris, let me say this, that the one thing that would concern me if he came back
is that we still have the inquiry being led by Harriet Harmon.
He has no sympathizers on that inquiry, and a lot of people on it who've already said what they think.
And I'm not sure that the Conservative Party would be wise to have Boris back
when that inquiry could pronounce adversely having spun it out for some people.
time, then pronounce adversely, and we'd have more chaos, peers, more chaos. So regardless
of Boris's strengths and regardless of his weaknesses, I think that is a major consideration.
Okay, let me bring in Natalie Evans here from the US Sun. I mean, it's funny being in New York
when this is all unfurling. Because of modern technology, it doesn't really make any difference
other than you get a feeling from people in New York, wow, we thought our politics was crazy.
Look at these guys across the pond.
That's exactly the feeling.
And I sympathise with you and you say,
it's great to be thousands of miles away from this.
I don't often miss being home.
And when this kind of thing happened, it's like, okay.
But I mean, yeah, it's not very often that Americans,
you know, they're used to the world looking at ours
and going what's going on in your country.
So it's quite nice to be able to tear around and go,
hang on, someone else has got it as...
I mean, somebody did a brilliant tweet earlier.
It was actually...
I think a political journalist from the Sky News,
I had to see if I could find it because it was very, very funny.
Have we got it up there on the screen?
The Sky News one.
It was something along the lines of his...
He said, my son has lived through four chancellors,
three home secretaries, two, nearly three prime ministers,
and two monarchs.
He's four months old.
I thought, I thought Natalie, that summed it up, right?
It really is.
Chaos.
I mean, I think we established before, like,
Liz Truss' president, prime minister, her stint as prime minister,
is four, for Scaramucci's.
We had the mootum last night and he was saying that he actually feels like he doesn't feel so bad now.
No, it makes it look good.
The son, I think, you know, tried to embrace Liz Truss and get behind her, but pretty soon,
I think, began to be a bit spiky in the comment pages about, you know, what was going on.
Who do you think the son might get behind now?
I mean, would they be tempted to go with Boris or is it more likely?
they'll go with someone like Sunak?
Well, I mean, I would say
Rishi is sort of the
frontrunner there, but we've
actually been polling our readers.
And I mean, we might find it's crazy that
Boris's name has even been thrown into the mix today.
But more than
50% of our readers actually want him back.
He's 52% Rishie's
trailing with 27. So
it might not be so crazy after all. Well, it's not, I mean,
Stanley Johnson, I can say my own
son, my oldest boy, who's 29,
Spencer, is a massive
die-hard fan of Boris, thinks he was unfairly done in,
and he's absolutely thrilled at the idea that he might be returning in glory.
Well, good for him. Good for him, here.
He's a fan of all the kind of Marvel films, you know,
where there's an action hero who has a Pitts moment and then returns.
Hey, well, good for his eldest son.
Boris is my old son. This is what I think. He's going to be crucial
in uniting these warring parts of the Tory party. And why do I say that?
Because he is probably the only man of the man who pushed for Brexit.
I wasn't very keen on Brexit, you know, who actually realises now that the crucial thing is to rebuild the relationships with Europe.
We look at the trade figures now, and we realise that, as you said earlier as well, Brexit has not been a good deal.
If we don't really make an effort now to get closer to Europe, we are going to be in trouble.
And I think what Boris may be able to do is tone down the re-smogs.
Rees-Mogg has got a plan now, as you know, to sunset clause, any single law which originated from Europe.
There's about 2,000 of them.
Well, Boris has got to put a stop to that now as a voter.
I'm going to say, who am I going to vote for?
I mean, look, you know what?
You know how he could persuade me as a remainder?
I have to say, although I respected the result of the referendum,
if Boris Johnson actually did come back in charge and said,
you know, I've had time to think about this, Brexit hasn't worked.
We're going to have another referendum.
I suspect the British people would vote overwhelmingly against Brexit.
I'm not talking.
Well, you may not make a moment, may not because I'm not actually saying.
saying, let's go for another river. I am saying he needs to clamp down on what you might call
the theological, ideological view of certain parts of the Tory party, not only, of course,
like Europe, but about China and so on the civil. So I think in this sense, Boris really could
be a unifier. And he's probably the only man who can bring back these wings of the party together.
He has to dump the right wing. He has to fix himself firmly in the centre.
Okay. Let me bring, Anne, you've been furiously shaking your head for the last few years.
which was not an unusual spectacle on my programme,
but why are you enraged by what you've been hearing?
Well, quite honestly, if that was going to be Boris's programme,
Boris would be the last person I want back,
because I think one of the big problems over the last few weeks
has been that we had somebody who appealed to the membership
on a completely different programme, on a very bold programme,
which she then bungled and mishandled.
Let me concede that.
But she had a very bold programme.
And what we've got now is just more of the same that was happening before
that wasn't actually getting us anywhere.
And the idea that Boris is going to ditch completely,
what Stanley calls the right, by which he means that bold program completely,
and just go back to where we were, I find absolutely horrifying.
But then quite honestly, Piers, I find the whole darn thing horrifying.
Well, you know what, Anne, and I understand that.
If I was a conservative, honestly, I would be ashamed of what's been going on.
I saw that clip of Charles Wheeler really speaking from the heart last night, which went around social media.
And it was really quite heartbreaking, actually, to see somebody that upset about what was happening with his party.
But someone's got to get this thing back on track.
And when you have a lettuce lasting longer than a conservative prime minister,
let's take a little look, actually, a bit of Charles Wheeler's comments last night.
I've had enough.
I've had enough of talentless people putting their tick in the right box,
not because it's in the national interest,
but because it's in their own personal interest to achieve ministerial position.
And I know I speak for hundreds of backbenchers who right now are worrying for their constituents all the time,
but now worrying about their own personal circumstances.
It was Charles Walker, not Wheeler, on apologies,
but the statement speaks for itself.
And the whole thing was worth it.
Only two or three minutes, but my God, it was powerful.
And says it all, I think a lot of Tories are in complete turmoil.
My thanks to Stanley Johnson, my thanks to Anne Whittaker.
And Natalie, you're going to stay with me and talk about Kanye West, I think, after the break.
Which the next part of my explosive, more exclusive interview with Yey, the artist formerly known as Kanye West.
We're going to run the whole interview tomorrow night.
But it's already had a million views on YouTube, just one small clip.
So a huge, I think, interest in what is coming up tomorrow in our two-hour special.
We're talking about that now.
Welcome back to Piss.
Live from New York City, the first installment of my explosive world-exclusive interview,
one of the most brilliant but controversial artists in the world.
Yay, formerly known as Kanye West, has already hit over a million views on YouTube.
He and I went head-to-head for two hours yesterday on everything from anti-Semitism to George Floyd to White Lives Matter, the T-Shody War.
Kim Kardashian, of course, his ex-wife.
Donald Trump, here's a taste of what's to come in our two-hour special tomorrow.
The interview.
everyone has been waiting for.
You're being a Karen.
I'm not a Karen.
Pierce Morgan speaks exclusively to Yeh,
explaining his controversial comments on George Floyd.
As the most influential person on the planet,
I am questioning it.
Kim Kardashian.
Would you like one day to get back with Kim?
And his anti-Semitic tweet
that got him kicked off Twitter.
It is racism when you say I'm going death-confront for him Jewish people.
No, it's not.
Interview adjourned.
And then he walks out of the interview.
And then,
He walks back in and apologises.
I will say, I'm sorry for the people that I hurt.
Pierce Morgan Uncensored, exclusive two-hour special.
Friday, 8 p.m.
And there's a lot more where that came from.
It was two of most extraordinary hours I probably ever had, I think, as an interviewer.
Yay is no normal interview subject.
He mocks my British accent.
He delights him being uncensored and then really tests the waters of our lack of the
censorship. He's rude about a lot of people. He's warm in past what I didn't expect him to be.
It's funny. He's outrageous. He's shocking. He tries to defend the indefensible, but then apologises
for it. So it's a really fascinating watch. That'll be tomorrow night from 8 till 10 on Talk TV.
Natalie Evans, I mean, we knew him as Kanye. It's now yay. Everything about him is kind of fascinating,
but he's been through a pretty awful few weeks of saying deeply inflammatory things about the Jewish people,
about George Floyd, about White Lives Matter T-shirts,
enraging community after community.
What do you think of him?
What's going on with him right now?
Well, I think he's clearly a very confused, very vulnerable guy who, I mean, as he said in your interview,
you know, he has this huge platform, you know, he's the most influential person in the world.
And perhaps the mental state he's in, we all know he's got, you know, mental health issues.
So he denies he has any mental illness?
He said that to me.
He said his main problem is sleep deprivation,
which might well be the case,
because he's got one of those,
I can tell he's got an incredibly restless,
curious, fizzing mind.
This is why he goes off on tangents all the time.
Very hard to interview.
It's sort of compelling challenge as well.
But I think there's something about his mind.
It's just not normal.
Whether it qualifies as mental illness,
he says not.
Well, I mean, if it was sleep deprivation,
there'd be far more of us running our mouths on Twitter
and our social media.
Is it any defense for some of the stuff he's been saying?
I don't think so. No. I mean, it was fascinating to watch your interview, the clips that we've seen. It was quite a journey with him, you know.
I mean, it was fantastic. Scoot, we'd be very proud of that. It was on our sight. But, you know, for him to come out, you know, this whole concept of I'm fighting fire with fire. You know, it's one thing to, you know, stand your ground, be defensive.
But he's also, I mean, he's like a kid in the playground that's like, oh, you know, that guy punched me, so I punched him back.
It doesn't make it right.
He can say he's been the victim of racism.
That doesn't mean that he should target other groups, you know, incites hate in different directions.
And as someone with that profile, he shouldn't be doing that.
Yeah.
No, I think it was interesting because he started off wanting to double down everything and was quite belligerent and almost sort of offhand about it.
But then the longer he said, he walked off at one stage, giving me an ultimatum.
He said, I'll only apologize for what I said about the Jewish people.
If all these business people who've ripped him off as he says, get around a table and apologize to me.
But he went away and thought about it.
And when he came back, he then actually did issue quite a sincere apology to any Jewish people who've been offended by what he said and said they weren't the target of his anger.
I think he's got a lot of pain and anger going on, Kanye, from all sorts of different directions.
His upbringing, the breakup of his marriage, maybe not seeing his kids enough, I don't know.
But I've got to say, there are moments of great levity in this interview.
He's very entertaining.
He's compelling to watch.
And by the end, I kind of felt, I just don't think he's the devil.
He's certainly not the angel.
You may want people to think he is.
But it's interesting what people think.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, it was fantastic the way you actually did kind of tease that apology out of him.
He clearly was not looking to do that.
And yeah, maybe storming off again.
I mean, a lot of the parts of the interview were quite childlike.
Well, there's a bit when he says to me, you know, I'm trying to give him advice about if I were you.
I think I would think about what I said.
Was that when he's like, la, la, la, no, he says, la, la, la.
And then he says, how rich are you?
Well, not as rich as you, obviously.
And he said, exactly.
So what should I take your advice?
Is it somehow only money is a currency for being able to offer wisdom?
And I said to, well, why do you actually listen to my advice?
And if you like what you hear, then they have nothing to do with money.
Yeah.
Everyone is perfectly fine to disagree.
I mean, I completely agree with you.
He's been through a lot and he's been through it on a very, very, very,
public form, you know, it's no easy thing to go through divorce. You know what? It doesn't defend
the indefensible things. No, not so. But I call him out on those and it's an interesting challenge.
Natalie, thank you very much indeed. Good to see you. That's it from me tonight. My two-hour interview
for yay tomorrow at 8 p.m. until then, whatever you're up to, keep it on sensing. Good night.
