Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: SNP to dethrone the King? Sex Education, Jordan Trengrove Wrongly Accused
Episode Date: March 14, 2023On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored, The new leading candidate for the SNP states the future of the monarchy is on the table as Piers debates whether the SNP will look dethrone the King. P...iers delves into when is it too young to learn about sex in schools. Falsely accused Jordan Trengrove joins Piers after his accuser is now behind bars. 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, our Peersbork and Uncensored, the frontrunner to be Scotland's next leader,
says the future of the monarchy is now on the table.
Can the Royals survive the age of populism and attacks on privileges?
The SMP plotting to dethrone the king will debate.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunnak pledges to review sex education in schools
and made a growing row about graphic lessons for kids.
How young is too young to learn about sex?
And attacked, abused and briefly jailed for a crime he never.
committed Jordan Trengrove's life
was turned inside out by an evil
fantasist. Tonight is
accuser, is behind bars,
and Jordan joins me live.
Live from London,
this is Piers Morgan
Unsensored. Good evening
from London, welcome to Pierce Morgan Unsensored
at first sight. The British monarchy
should already be finished. Let's face
it, many people see privilege
as a crime against equal opportunity.
The monarchy, meanwhile, is undeniable
the bill on illogical birthright.
populism rages against elites.
But the royal family are the most obvious elites of them all.
Tribalism and brash opinions dominate public debate
in an age of identity politics,
but were quietly ruled by an unspeaking authority
that takes absolutely no position.
And that's really the whole point.
Fickle politicians tear strips of each other
and survive by dividing us,
but the monarchy is a constant.
Reassuring, above the fray,
that's why it's not only survived,
but thrives against all odds.
But there is growing evidence.
of cracks in Britain's gilded edge.
Humza Yousaf, who's the frontrunner to be Scotland's next leader,
has put the future of the monarchy firmly on the table.
I'm a Republican.
I believe that we should be citizens first, not subjects.
We need to keep the monarchy for a period of time,
but then I'd hope Scotland, an independent Scotland,
but move to be a republic in the future.
Well, since then, Mr. Yousaf has doubled down on his statement,
promising to give the Scottish people a vote on whether to have a monarch
on elected head of the state within five years.
and then Independent Scotland is not the only threat to the monarchy.
The late Queen was emphatically more popular than King Charles, for now anyway,
and young people are much less enthusiastic about the monarchy.
Harry and Megan's antics are that a global crusade of smears
against an unfashionable and what they tried to call a racist institution.
Prince Andrew's squalid scandal has heaped massive embarrassment on the Windsors
and indeed the institution of the monarchy.
Australia has scrubbed King Charles from his banknotes.
Barbados ditched the Lake Queen as head of state.
Jamaica will be next to become a republic.
And the royals are barriced by protests and demands for reparations
whenever they tour the Commonwealth, forcing King Charles to say this.
From the darkest days of our past and the appalling atrocity of slavery,
which forever stains our history,
the people of this island forged their path with extraordinary fortitude.
Well, whether the monarchy can survive,
the era of constant hammering apologies for historical sins,
is suddenly a rather urgent question.
But it should.
The monarchy keeps our sense of nation and patriotism separate from politics.
It gives us a reason to unite, love our country,
its traditions, and its identity that's above the venom of everyday political debate.
We confuse the head of state with the head of government like the US or Turkey or Brazil.
Would that really bring us closer together?
There's no evidence that it does.
God forbid we have a bout of President Farron.
We could have a ceremonial overlord like Germany or Ireland who cuts ribbons and shakes hands for the cameras.
But is that seriously any better for Brown, Britain, than the pomp and pageantry of our oldest, greatest tradition?
The Royals sometimes disappoint us.
They're not perfect.
They're humans.
But the monarchy is worth defending against political attacks like this one from a Scottish nationalist.
And it starts with celebrating it, not constantly apologising for its past.
Well, joining me now as the former First Minister of Scotland, Alex Salmon, talk to you if he contributed to Paul and Roan, Adrian,
and Chief Executive of the Campaign Group Republic, Graham Smith.
Welcome to you all.
So, Alex Hammond, this guy, Humza Yousay, don't know much about him,
although he's popped up, may replace Nicola Sturgeon from all the polls.
It's the book his favourite.
Yeah, which is probably never a place you really want to find yourself at this stage of the race.
But he is clearly not a monarchy.
It's clearly thinks we should just get rid of the monarchy.
Do you agree with it?
I think he's probably right.
I mean, it was different when I was first minister of the Queen.
was head of state. You had to be insane to suggest replacing Her Majesty of the Queen because of her long service, her popularity, her wisdom.
We're a different situation now. And it's quite interesting. If you ask people in Scotland, do you want to keep the monarchy or get a republic?
You'll probably get a majority for the monarchy. If you ask the question, if you're setting up an independent Scotland, a new country, should you start with an elected head of state, then the answer's quite different. You shouldn't.
you should move to an elected head of state
as opposed to the hereditary principle.
But what is your intrinsic argument about the monarchy?
Because the arguments I hear against it is,
well, they cost too much money.
That's palpably not true.
They're a net positive.
That's not my argument.
Right.
So let's part.
I'm sure it might be one of yours.
But we'll part then because they're a net positive.
So is it just the idea of an unelected family,
which is at the head of the country?
I think if you're setting up a new democratic country,
you wouldn't start from the hereditary principle.
The monarchy...
But I would say why not? Why not?
Why not?
I don't know.
Well, in recent times, I mean, if you go back 100 years,
new countries started with new monarchs.
I mean, you know, I think Norway imported a,
I don't know, a minor German line from somewhere,
if I remember correctly, or maybe a minor Swedish line.
But right now, in the 21st century,
you wouldn't start from the heredry principle.
Also, I tend to...
I think there's a presidential test in this, Piers.
See, if Britain had become a republic during her majesty of the Queen's reign,
and she had decided to stand as an elected president,
she'd have wiped the floor with any candidate.
Yeah.
I mean, that wouldn't be the case with King Charles.
I mean, Gary Linecker would beat King Charles.
You probably would beat King Charles.
That sounds so surprised.
So therefore...
King King would have his own luster as well if I went the other way.
21st century, democratic age.
You're setting up a new society, written constitution,
protecting people's rights.
the morocate, to an extent, at least, is the pinnacle of a class system.
And you'd want to sweep that away.
It is.
It is.
But when I look at the way that the American system has worked with this two-party system,
fraught with corruption,
thwart with people who just have to have a big enough bank balance to run for president,
you know, the division they have in that country,
I look at the division in this country.
I look at the procession of useless leaders we've had.
The one constant we've had,
and I genuinely believe this,
has been the Queen and now Charles.
We've had two monarchs in my lifetime.
And I do think they provide the country
with just a comfort blanket
which should not be underestimated.
Why are you laughing?
Because it's a comfort blanket.
I think we do, actually.
Why? I mean, it's so patronising
and it's so unpatriotic
to suggest that we need a comfort blanket.
I have never heard a good argument for the monarchy
and it certainly isn't a net positive.
You didn't see any positives about the Queen?
There's no...
Well, I mean, it's not about the queen, it's about the monarchy.
Well, she was the head of the monarchy for 70 years.
But now we have a man.
Just to be clear, you saw no positives in the queen.
It's not about the queen, it's about the monarch.
Well, I'm asking you about the queen.
Well, I don't really know her, and that's the problem.
We don't know.
How old are you? None of us really...
How old are you?
48.
For 48 years of your life, she was your monarch?
None of us really knew her.
Don't squirm off the old net here.
No, because the issue is the monarchy.
Did you not understand that she was one of the not,
if the most respected people in the world?
Well, I think that's disputable.
I mean, the point is...
Who was more respected than her?
That's a silly argument.
Give me a name.
Give me a name.
This is a dead air.
I'm not sure if you're familiar with the interview,
but I ask questions, and your job is to answer them.
The argument is about the monarchy.
Do you not see any positives of the queen?
You'd say no.
The argument is about the discussion is not about which monarchies there,
because the queen's no longer there.
So that's our history.
The discussion is what I decided is going to be.
That's our history.
I'm asking you.
We now have.
You made a statement about the monarchy,
and I said to you, did you see no positives from the queen?
I saw no positives of having the Queen as they had a state.
You didn't see any benefit to the country
in terms of the extraordinary esteem
and respect she was held around the world.
The fact that she met more presidents than anybody else.
I don't think meeting...
Actually, it makes a huge difference, actually.
Well, why don't you ask the presidents?
Why don't you ask all the presidents
who queued up when she died to pay full sum tribute?
If we actually talk about the monarchy rather than the person...
No, I want to talk about the Queen.
Why? Because the Queen is no longer with us.
Because the 48 years of your monarchy deriding life.
She was this extraordinary figure who actually earned this country enormous respect.
She would never have been queen if her uncle wasn't a Nazi sympathiser who was thrown out.
She would never been queen, or she would have had a very short reign.
But she was queen.
If her father had lived longer.
But she was completely random and she's no longer here.
It's not random. She was the only monarch we've had until the new one.
The issue is what happens next.
Now the monarchy is undemocratic.
Actually, the reason is what happens next.
The top of the story was, where is the future?
about what you're reading on my screen.
It's my show, and I can ask you anything I like, right?
And here's my question for you.
Stop reading that.
I'm not reading that.
Somebody else has written that, not me, right?
I don't care what that says.
I was responding to what you said when you're standing over there.
Look at me. Look at me.
And here's my point.
What you're not factoring in, in this general whine about the institution of the monarchy,
is the extraordinary influence and power, in my estimation,
that Her Majesty of the Queen had, and I think Charles can continue.
Which is a fiction.
Which is not a fiction.
There's no evidence of it.
No evidence of it.
Let's summarize why the monarchy is a bad thing.
It stands against our democratic principles.
The institution has been accused of all sorts of questionable behavior.
It's highly significant.
Unlike our politicians.
It doesn't matter.
It doesn't matter.
It does for the rules.
Our politicians can be thrown out.
We can't throw Charles out at the next election because there is no election.
And it's also bad for our constitution.
It centralises power in the hands of government at the expense of parliament and people.
So the whole point of having a republic and no one, no serious Republican in this country is arguing for a US system.
We're arguing for a parliamentary republic which limits power of the politicians.
Which has been going really well in recent years, isn't it?
And has an independent...
What has?
Well, no, because that's the whole point, peers.
I'm arguing that we reform it by becoming a republic and shifting power from government to parliament of people, having a written constitution.
And a president like the hell of Ireland and Germany who actually plays independent...
Paul, we're going to be two ardent Republicans here, right?
And that's fine.
They're entitled to their opinion, but the polls are also entitled to their opinion.
You go to poll in October after the Queen died, about a month later.
So keep the monarchy 60%, abolish the monarchy, 24%, don't know, 15%.
Overwhelming support for the monarchy.
So these two guys can rant about the monarchy, but the bottom line is...
When you're going with October recently, it's now 30%, 55%, it's contracting.
There is a growth in support for abolition.
It's probably contracting because people like you were running around, screaming, get rid of it.
whole point and so thank you very much for putting that down to my efforts because the point is
you down to your reference can you let paula speak anyway paula where do you sit with this
i think it's it's quite astonishing actually to say that the monarchy isn't important to this
country and isn't important to the people of this country i think that's why peers is so
surprised at what you're saying because as an immigrant as one adopted into this country
there is no doubt in my mind
that the Queen has played,
and the Queen and the Monarchy
has played an incredibly important role in society
and one that is reflected, I think, from childhood right up to.
And we can see that not only from sadly the passing of the Queen
where I think 4.6 billion people around the world
watched that ceremony.
And this is the problem is the monarchy relies on fantasy.
It may be a fantasy, but that's what I understand the figures say.
The figures are fantasy.
And so I think it is surprising that you can sit here and at least acknowledge the impact.
I can acknowledge the figures you're putting out.
Do you ever leave this country?
Acknowledge the impact that she's had.
Let's go to America.
I go around the world.
When we were last in America?
I haven't been to the United States, but I'm not.
Right.
You've never been to the place.
Hang on.
It doesn't matter because no one is arguing for the US system.
You keep responding by saying it doesn't matter because you don't want to answer the question.
But no one has argued.
You haven't even heard the question yet?
No one has argued for the US.
I haven't asked you the question yet.
Here's my question.
If you've never been to the United States.
States. I've lived and worked there for the last 20 years. Then you will have no comprehension
of the extraordinary respect they have for the Queen, for King Charles now, for the monarchy.
And it is an abiding respect that they have. And that's why they all want to come on the state
visits and get the red carpet treatment at the palace. And I think it's actually really
important to our special relationship with the United States, the world's number one superpower.
I have a plenty of... The royal family have been able to be this bridge, constant bridge,
the political turmoil, Alex.
Well, I'm just going to say that it's been the last direct experience
that the Americans had of monarchy was George III,
which didn't go particularly well.
It went well for then.
You say...
You say that the Queen was an exceptional monarch.
I agree with you.
I got on absolutely famously with the Queen.
I like Prince Charles.
I think he's a great guy.
That's not my argument.
I've got no animus...
King Charles.
I have no animus whatsoever.
Yeah, but that's not because I don't like him.
It's not because I don't like him.
It's because if...
You ask people the question, you're setting up, in the case of an independent Scotland, a new country, would you set up with the heredity principle or would you set it up on down?
I think it's a really good argument. And I actually don't agree that the hereditary principle that has been established by this monarchy in the last hundred years or so, certainly, I can look at, you know, from my lifetime and certainly beyond.
I think it's been a power of positivity for the country.
And I would look at my...
Well, I just think you have this family at the top of the market.
Well, they don't have any executive power.
Right?
They don't have any executive power.
They interfere.
The monarch doesn't interfere.
Right.
Okay.
Let's put out.
You think Charles will be a good king.
He might well be a good king.
I think he's already showing that.
Let's say Andrew had been the elder son.
Yeah.
He'd be the good king.
But he's not.
Yeah, well, okay, peers.
But I mean, you know, so it's a lottery.
Would he have been any worse as a king than Boris Johnson was as prime minister or his trust?
Yes, but the point is.
In other words, where is the proof that elected politician could do any better?
but Boris Johnson is no longer Prime Minister.
Right.
Litts Trust is no longer Prime Minister.
But the greatest leader, you're kind of stuck with our bottom.
The greatest leader of the last hundred years, I would say, was Queen Elizabeth.
Of any kind.
That is not a credible argument because...
It is a credible argument.
She was the longest reigning.
She was protected by...
She was the most respected in all the polls than anybody.
She was not required to do or say anything of any particular controversy.
She was never subjected to an election.
She was never suggested to...
She would have won the...
exclusioning.
I think that's...
I think that's...
He would be defeated heavily
because the point it's in an election
he would have to sit here
be challenged by people like you
he would have to stand in a studio
and be challenged by other candidates
and he would be in...
You see Remarker be...
You see Remarker be blinked to...
To be fair.
To any potential positive of the monarchy
when to me it's indisputable
in the last hundred years
which is the, let's say the modern times of the monarchy.
that they have been a force for good.
But they haven't.
What good? What good have they done?
What they have done?
They've propped up a rotten constitution.
They have been a secretive institution.
The single biggest events in the world
outside of massive news tragedies and disasters
and terror attacks have been the big royal events.
Look at the last year alone.
The death of the queen and her funeral.
So that's a really positive thing for the...
No, no, no.
What's positive is the way that we then acknowledge
these great moments in the royal family
and we recognise how influential they are in the world.
Jubilee last year.
Only 14% of the country wanted to celebrate the Jubilee last year.
In 2011, 79% of the population said they were not interested.
That is a completely untrue statistic.
This is absolutely.
Only 14% wanted to celebrate it.
UGov polling.
14% wanted to celebrate it.
UGov polling in 2011, 79% were not interested.
2018, 66% were not interested.
But the bottom line...
I don't share...
I don't share...
I don't believe those stats.
I don't share the host of the family.
It's not true that.
It's not true.
It is quite blatantly obvious when it happened,
more than 15% celebrated it.
But, Piers, there is close to home
a rather successful example
of a presidential system, and that's the Republic of Ireland.
They've had a cracking series of presidents by any estimation.
You know, Mary Robinson, Mary Michael Lee's,
President Higgins.
I mean, I've been first-class presidents in a presidential system.
So, well, peers, your argument seems to rest
on the...
Her Majesty of the Queen was an...
exceptional woman. I agree. I think King Charles is an exceptional man.
Time will tell, but there is and a hundred... And the truth is, if you were still the SMP leader,
as we've just seen with you with the Queen, you'd have been brown-nosing away with the new
king for your heart's contention, wouldn't you? We've just been seeing you doing it with you?
To me, the Watershed was the death of the Queen. I think it would have been ridiculous to argue.
You've been. I have been. Do I think that he's the very best that we have to have to offer? We will
find out. What is it that you want?
Do you want a referendum? Do you want a Brexit
style split? This society doesn't
need that. The monarchy is loved
in this country. Whether you accept that
or not. Whether you accept it or not?
Of the kind of we have with Liz Truss.
I think it's absurd. Who tanked a pound, thank the economy.
It is absurd. It's to go after 24 days
and can't outlive a lettuce.
You've got a choice of a monarch in last 70 years
as a lovely, marvellous
big a head to the country who's a calming
influence, respected around the world, or
Liz Truss who couldn't out survive a lexis.
You would rather go a more letters.
Charles who refuses to pay income tax, refuses to pay inheritance tax,
demand secrecy, was accused by me to the police of cash for us.
The British Royal Families estimated to contribute around 2.5 million pounds.
Which is not true.
You see not true to every stat you don't like.
You think, come on a load of baloney stats which aren't true.
Pierce, you literally just dismissed.
They're completely delusional, aren't you?
You dismissed UGov stats.
You're quoting a report that has no sources whatsoever.
There is no evidence whatsoever that's good financially for this country.
And it is a massive drain on our resources, but that's not the reason.
They put MP's expenses into the shade with their...
Let me tell you. I respect your opinion, but you're completely wrong.
Alex, good to see. Thank you very much indeed.
Paul. I think you're staying with us, aren't you?
Yes.
You're not, I'm afraid.
Next to night, we automatically believe those who make accusations of sexual assault or rape.
I'll speak to a young man whose life was turned inside out by a false accusation of rape
by complete fantasists.
We'll see this on the news all day today.
His accuser has been jailed just for eight years,
which to me is a scantlessly short amount of time for what she did.
But that question remains, doesn't it?
When an accuser makes accusations, do you automatically believe them?
Or have there been enough cases now to show that that is a very dangerous road to go down?
Better to listen and investigate and get to the truth.
We'll debate that after the break.
Welcome back.
My next guest to spend the last few years in a living nightmare
after being falsely accused of rape by a woman he barely knew,
Jordan Trengrove was just 18
when he met Eleanor Williams on Lightout in Cumbria in 2019.
What happened next?
Landed him in prison for 10 weeks,
left him branded a rapist, destroyed his mental health.
Eleanor Williams has since been unmasked as an evil fantasist
and a serial liar.
And today, she was jailed for eight and a half years.
Before we speak to Jordan,
let's just hear what he had to say last time he was on the show back in January.
I took an overdose in front of my own mom.
It was that bad.
I didn't ever put other people's feelings first, if you get what I mean,
because my life was just too messed up with all this stuff.
Well, that was Jordan then.
This is Jordan.
Now, Jordan, I was sick of you today when I heard about the sentencing.
Just wonder what your reaction was.
Given the scale of the lying and the fantasy,
given that so many people like you were caught up in this web,
do you think it's long enough, eight and a half years?
No, I don't think it's long enough at all.
I think she should have been given a lot longer sentence in my eyes
because she's got time served as well.
So in reality, she's out in 2025.
So a sentence in reality is only two years,
so I think she should have got longer.
When you saw the lengths that she went to,
buying a hammer, she's seen on video,
buying a hammer to then attack herself
simply so that she could frame people like you
for raping her.
her and grooming her in other cases and so on and attacking her.
What did you feel about that?
What did you feel watching her just so calmly going about buying these tools to create this fantasy?
It makes me feel sick.
I don't know how anyone would want to do that or want to hurt herself in any way like that.
I couldn't imagine ever hitting myself with a hammer or anything like that.
You don't want to do anything like that.
So it just makes me feel very sick in a way.
The big debate, of course, is what happens with cases like this,
when you have somebody come forward who's got all these apparent injuries
and makes all these incendiary claims of assault and rape and so on,
should the system, the legal system, start from a position of believing accusers
or should they start from a position of listening to the allegations
and then investigating the facts?
Because in your case, you were named on the case.
the front page of a local paper, you had rapists graffitied over your house and had to move.
You were the one who felt suicidal.
She, meanwhile, remained completely anonymous.
Yeah, I do think that they should be listened to and taken into account.
And regarding my newspapers and being named in the newspapers,
I think that should be changed because that was one of the main things as well,
what went towards destroying my life.
I shouldn't have been named in that paper.
and I was only remanded, you know, like, fair enough if I was convicted.
Yeah, I mean, you know, when I think about the scale of what she did,
and I heard the sentence, and like you say, you know,
if she behaves herself in prison, she'll be out in the next two years.
You know, to me, I don't understand why she didn't get a life sentence, frankly.
I think the exact same.
I think she should have been given life.
Perverting the course of justice can hold the maximum of life,
and she's destroyed so many lives, not only.
mine so she should have her life took away from her.
Jordan, how have you got on with rebuilding your life?
Now, has it helped having her now be named, identified, and jail for lying, and you be
associated with that?
Are people now, you know, are you able to go back to your place where you grew up and
people treating you now as an innocent victim rather than as a supposed rapist?
I don't like going into Barrow so much anymore
I don't like going anywhere near that town
and I said to my partner after the sentencing
I said this gives us two years to just move out the area
because I don't want to be in the area when she's released as it is
but I can rebuild my life now
and I've started like last time I've seen you
I've been doing steps towards rebuilding my life yes I have
if you had been found guilty
of the allegations that she made against you.
Had you been told by a lawyer
how long you may have to have served?
I think my solicitor told me back then
I'd been looking at like 22 years
because of the severity of it.
You see, that to me is just extraordinary, isn't it?
You were told you might get 22 years in prison
for a pack of lies about you
and the person that perpetrated the lies
ends up getting eight and a half, literally about a third.
Exactly, and I think it's so unfair because if I was sent to prison,
it had been so many more years, and this is exactly what I said to quite a lot of the press
when I came out of court today.
If I was sent to prison guilty on what she accused me of, it had been a lot longer,
but she can go out and destroy and fabricate and do so many people's life or damage
and pretty much just get a slap on the wrist,
it just shows it's very, I don't know,
it's messed up in the system.
Yeah, I mean, to me, it's grotesquely unfair and imbalanced.
Jordan, really appreciate you coming back on tonight.
It must have been a difficult day for you,
but ultimately, I guess, a satisfying one
that she at least is remaining behind bars
for another two years or so.
But like you say, ridiculous,
that then you have to fear going back to where you want you're from,
because she'll be there again,
which she will be in two years.
It seems ridiculous.
I really appreciate you coming back, Jordan.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much.
All right, Ava, this guy, I've interviewed him a couple of times now.
He's so, like, impressively calm, eloquent,
but there's a kind of searing anger there, too,
about what he's had to endure.
18 years old.
I've got three sons in my 20s.
This is every parent's nightmare for a son.
Now, I'm very aware that a lot of women
that make allegations of sex or sort of rape get no justice.
The rates of conviction for these things are ridiculously low.
I totally agree with that.
But for the purposes of this debate,
it's specifically about what's happened to him.
To me, it seems ludicrous.
To carry on with this notion that all accusers should be believed.
We saw it with the nasty Nick character
who invented all the stories,
the paed-of-ha stories about, you know,
some of the most eminent people in the country.
We've seen it now with this woman.
We've seen it from a man and woman.
To me, there should never be a presumption of belief.
Why should there be?
I think that, gosh, I don't really know where to begin with that.
I mean, we live in a country where under 1% of, you know, rapes even go to conviction.
I'm quite taken aback by what you've said.
Why should you automatically believe an allegation?
Because we live in a country where women aren't believed.
And it is extremely difficult for women to come forward and talk about sexual assault that has happened to them.
And look, this situation is grotesque.
were right to call it that, it's abhorrent, and he is a very nice guy. But it's quite clear that
the girl in question is really unwell. If you look at her mental health all around this case,
she was reported missing one year 32 times in just one year by her own mother. She's clearly not well.
I actually don't even think she should be going to prison. I think she should be doing. I think
she should be sectioned. I think she's not well. And I actually don't think prison is a safe environment
for her. Well, I don't really care with the safe environment for her, frankly. And I don't think that being
well as a justification. You wouldn't be saying that...
It's not a justification, but it might be an explanation.
If we had a male... If this guy had been convicted of what he'd been charged or accused of doing
and arrested over, like he said, 22 years, you'd have called him a monster.
You wouldn't have made some excuse about his mental health.
Yeah, I mean...
Right? Why are you making an excuse for her?
I'm not giving her an excuse.
You are? I'm not. I'm explaining. I think... I don't think that she is well,
and I don't think she's going to be rehabilitated in a prison.
I actually think it's going to be really awful for her.
and actually is an indictment of our justice system.
Actually, what's an indictment is that he would have gone down for 22 years.
She's going to be out of the next two years, having served half of an eight and a half years sentence.
And do you think that she's going to be any better?
She's not going to be any better for it.
Prison is about rehabilitation.
She is not going to...
You wouldn't be saying that if he had been found guilty and gone to prison for rape, would you?
But she's clearly not a day...
You wouldn't, would you?
No, I think that's a false equivalence.
It's not a false equivalence.
He's literally just told you.
He was told if these lies stuck and he was found guilty,
22 years in prison.
You would have been quite happy with that.
Right?
If she had gone through the justice system and the justice system had convicted him, yes, I would say that was disgusting.
You wouldn't have made all these excuses.
I wouldn't have been quite happy.
Richard, here's the dilemma for me.
I do think it's completely wrong that so few rape allegations end up with convictions,
when in many cases we know they're probably true.
So this is an absolute disgrace in this country about what happens to women who make legitimate
claims and the system lets them down.
I think we can all agree on that, right?
But this is a different area.
This is the area of what the police
do when somebody comes and says
X, Y, Z. And I feel strongly
now, after several very high
profile cases, you cannot make
a presumption of belief.
You cannot call them victims
from the start because they may not be.
They might be fantasists. But surely
appears there's a difference between belief
and listening to someone,
seriously investigating it by people.
who are really skilled and qualified.
That's what I said. If Eva thinks that's outrageous.
You've got to...
Genuinely look to me in total disgust.
Yes, she was. But I think that's because you didn't consider the point
about seriously listening, properly investigating,
by real specialists who understand the likelihood.
I know a guy who, luckily, he...
Luckily, he did remain anonymous,
but he had 18 months of absolute hell on earth.
Right.
And it turned out, it went all the way through trial,
And at the end of the trial, jury, 10 minutes.
Right. And in this case, this poor kid, he's not even 20.
And his name is branded in all his local town as a rapist on the local paper front base.
She, meanwhile, remains completely anonymous.
Yes.
Now, I know the argument for the police is if you name people who are accused of sexual assault and rape,
it encourages other people to come forward.
Exactly.
But actually, why should he be named and shamed in that circumstance?
and a woman like that remain anonymous
until she's finally charged with lying.
So this is about what happens in our minds.
Does you work in family laws?
I do. But this is about what happens in my mind.
He's not named and shamed.
But he was?
He's named.
And it's the approach.
Literally people have dorn rapists on his house.
And it's the approach that's taken by people
because we have to all remember
that you are innocent until proven guilty.
And unfortunately, we forget that in society.
And Christopher Jeffries is a classic example.
He was the unfortunate landlord.
who went on to later sue the press and certain individuals.
Who behaved recklessly?
Absolutely.
And I was one of them at the time.
No defence for that.
Absolutely.
And so this is about our responsibility as a society.
Knowing what we know...
I saw it with that poor missing woman recently who disappeared.
Exactly.
Everyone racing two conclusions about that.
Exactly.
And TikTok detectives and all of that unattractive.
That was down to the woeful police handling of it.
I couldn't possibly answer.
But the point is we all have to take responsibility.
In a society,
where human beings are running a system,
it is going to make mistakes.
Absolutely. It's not about believing accusers from the start.
It is. It is. Because if you believe them,
you call them, you call them, that guy, that guy Nick,
who invented all the stories, right?
He was believed, and in fact the commander of the Met Police at the time
called him a victim, right? At the moment a policeman of that rank
called somebody a victim, there is a presumption of guilt.
and a presumption that everything he's saying is true.
And it turned out it was all complete fantasy.
And I think you can avoid all this if you say, look, someone comes with an allegation
and you say, right, we're taking misceracy,
we absolutely will treat you with due respect,
we'll take all the details down and we'll properly investigate.
Then it's compellingly important that the police investigated properly.
But only at the point that you have enough to charge somebody, in my belief,
should anyone even be considered to be named and shamed, right?
And that is technically what should happen.
That's not what happens.
But exactly.
And why not?
Because people talk, the police will inform the press.
Right, but, Eva, is that...
Why is what I'm saying wrong?
Because you can name two people, two men that this has happened to.
You name all of the thousands of women who can't get a conviction.
But why is it going to be either all?
You're making it an either rule, actually.
You are, you are...
I'm not. I'm saying there should be a presumption of an allegations
been made, not a presumption of
a true allegation. Do you know what a woman
has to go through? Do you know what a woman has
to do to record rape? Would you want,
if you had a daughter, would you want her
having to give her knickers over?
I have got a daughter. Okay, would you like her
to give her underwear over to a police station?
But I think you are conflating two different things.
I'm not conflating to other things. You are. What's that got to do
with a presumption of innocence or guilt?
No, because right now we are talking about
a woman who is a fantasist and has ruined
someone's life and it is grotesque.
Comparing that to women who are assaulted
and should be believed in the get-go
so that they can go through the process
for someone holding their hand.
Why was she believed in the start,
and why was he disbelieved?
Because she was a woman
reporting a sexual assault.
Because she was a woman.
And she also did turn up
with a hammer to her face
and she did look like she had been assaulted.
Right.
The police did let him down.
I will say that the police in this situation
let him down.
Why is it sensible to just believe accusers?
I don't even think we can have that conversation
because actually victims are never believed.
It's very rare that they are.
This is just a high-profile case
where a woman, unfortunately,
has been believed wrongly.
Richard, final one.
We've just got to have higher quality specialists
who've got more experience about assessing these
and quickly.
Where's the money for that, Richard?
We've got to find it.
We've got to find it.
That is not a good enough answer.
We have to get higher quality.
Well, then we'll ad-
And when we defund the police, this is what happens.
I'm not talking about defunding the police,
but that's what happened.
You've got to increase it, you've got to increase the quality.
It's not good enough.
You know what?
It's complicated.
But I do think there have been too many of the people.
these cases now and the problem starts
if you just say, I believe you
from the start, rather than
I listen to you. Which is
what happens in every other form of crime.
Right? Pretty much.
Right? Why do we just assume
people are telling the truth?
Why? Listen and investigate
properly. Yes. Treat with respect.
Absolutely. Listen to them seriously. Then investigate.
Otherwise, you get into this kind of
situation, which I think is incredibly unfair.
The problem is
when the system is so backed up against those who report,
it's never going to win.
The system is deeply flawed.
And it has to be, and the conviction rates are a disgrace.
It's an interesting debate, but thank you for having it.
Coming next to night, Prime Minister Rishi Sunat pledges to review sex education in schools
and we're going to grow up about graphic lessons for kids.
How young is too young to learn about sex?
Welcome back, Rishi Sunak's ordered an urgent review into sex education classes
after claims of extreme teaching, as laid out by Conservative MP,
Kate's in Parliament last week.
Graphic lessons on oral sex.
How to choke your partner safely and 72 genders.
This is what passes for relationships
and sex education in British schools.
Across the country, children are being subjected to lessons
that are age inappropriate, extreme, sexualising and inaccurate.
This is not a victory for equality.
It is a catastrophe for childhood.
Join me now is columnist and author of Stolen Youth, Carol Markowitz.
Welcome to you, Carol.
This has been a big issue, obviously, over in the state.
It's a big issue now in the UK as well.
And it just raises this whole question of how young is too young
to even get into discussions at school about sex and gender and so on?
Well, I think that that's a great question,
and one we should answer before the materials get to the schools.
A lot of the materials that are being featured right now,
both in the U.S. and in the U.K.,
I think, are far too graphic for elementary and middle school,
which in the U.S. is until about 14-15.
So I think that when we look at this kind of materials
and that they end up in our schools,
I think we need to trace back how that happened
and really get to the bottom of it
because this isn't accidental,
this isn't just accidentally landing in our schools.
Somebody's pushing this and we need to find out why.
I mean, that's the big question.
I don't get it really.
I've got four kids.
And I'd be horrified at some of this stuff,
which I'm reading now,
had been put on them when they were young and impressionable kids at school.
I don't understand why it started.
It never used to be that this was going on in schools.
Right. I think the sexualization of children is happening younger and younger.
And in our book Stolen Youth, we really point out that this is part of a overarching indoctrination campaign.
To throw kids into kind of a disarray, they're much easier to convince into things.
And, you know, in the U.S., we call it the word has been grooming.
But there is some element of grooming to this.
When kids are introduced to sexual concepts too early, they're literally groomed to be taken advantage of.
And again, I think that, you know, before we all dismiss this as, oh, wow, this is so weird, how did this happen in our schools?
Like, this must be an accident.
We need to investigate how this is happening and why and really trace it back to where these books are coming from.
I live in Florida where this has become a giant debate.
my governor, Ron DeSantis, has demanded that these books be pulled out of school libraries.
And for this, he's been called, you know, a book burner, a book banner.
But nobody wants porn in the school library.
I haven't met a parent yet who's for it.
So I think he's really doing what parents want.
I completely agree with DeSantis.
I don't understand why he's being portrayed as the devil here.
The people who are behaving in a devilish manner to me are the ones putting all this stuff in the schools to start with.
Yeah, I agree, obviously.
And living in Florida just means that one fewer thing for me to worry about with the kids and knowing that my governor and the parents around me are supportive of the fact that, you know, pulling these books out is not book banning.
It's not book burning. It's none of that. It's really just taking into account what kids are designed for and what they're not. And pushing these ideas on two young children. We know it's going to have a backlash. We know that there's going to be some bad effects on them.
And I don't know why we continue to pretend that this is some, you know, not important issue.
People don't run for school board, for example, on let's get porn into the school libraries.
It's all done in secret.
But once you discover it, I think it's up to the parents and the schools to act.
And I like that my governor, Ron DeSantis, is doing that.
Yeah, I mean, one story involved a child who allegedly was made to leave the classroom
when he disagreed with a drag queen that there were 72 genders.
I mean, the war's gone completely nuts.
the child who queried this, who got told he had to leave, not the drag queen spewing some nonsense
about 72 genders.
Yeah, I like to imagine that my kids would say, no, there's not 72 genders in their class
and not to have a problem leaving the classroom when they were challenged on that.
But that's really also the thing.
Parents need to lay the foundation at home.
Throughout the book Stolen Youth, we teach parents how to do that because your kids are going
out into the world.
They are being introduced to new ideas and new concepts.
And if you want to challenge those concepts before the kid gets indoctrinated, you have to teach them at home.
You have to lay your values out for them at home.
And you need to give them the strength to move through the world and be brave.
Yeah, I totally agree.
Carol, thank you very much for Dave for joining me.
I appreciate it.
Thank you, Pears.
Well, coming next.
Question of Times Fiona Bruce quits as ambassador for refuge, pushed out, really, after claim she
trivialized domestic abuse as part of a discussion about Stanley Johnson or as Johnson's father.
wasn't she just doing her job
debating that next
is there anything on God's earth
that people want less than Mega Markle
reviving her blog, TIG?
Absolutely not
I just want to do a shout out to Mick Jagger
who it turned out was at the Arsenal
volume game at the weekend
with a baseball cab, I know one was quite sure what it had on it
but it turned out he had the letters
Dilth which we've got one here
and I don't think I can actually say what that stands
for other than if you know you know, right?
I want to talk about Fiona Bruce, because I got quite angry about this.
Because Fiona, I was watching question time the other night.
And this exchange happened. Let's watch the exchange first.
For a change, I'm not blaming Boris Johnson or Stanley Johnson.
Actually, Ken, he was a wife beat as Stanley Johnson on record.
Okay, let me just interview. I'm not. I'm not.
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.
Now, as a result of that,
Fiona Briggs who worked with Refuge at a domestic abuse charity for 25 years
and being one of their top ambassadors,
has been forced to step down.
A refuge just threw her
to the virtue signalling wolves
with a ridiculous statement, in my opinion,
saying this was completely unacceptable.
We know the words weren't Fiona, as they said,
but the words, she was legally obliged to read out,
this doesn't lessen their impact,
and we can't lose sight of her.
These words minimise the seriousness of domestic abuse.
This has been re-traumatizing for survivors.
What a load of nonsense.
Sorry, what a load of nonsense.
Fiona Bruce is a decent person.
who read out a prepared BBC legal statement
if somebody had raised a Stanley Johnson thing.
And for that, she's been thrown out.
All that work she did is being thrown out.
You going to defend this over?
Well, I think actually it's the BBC who seemed to be in the wrong here
because it looks like they've left her out to dry a little bit.
I mean, it seems like there might have been an overzealous...
Unlike the BBC to do that to one of their presenters.
Quite.
But I mean, maybe there was an overzealous producer who was in her ear
and, you know, was telling her to correct it.
but actually what Yasmin was saying didn't need correcting.
Right, Yasmin responded.
And, Richard, my point is this idea that Refuge felt the need to say
it's been re-traumatizing for survivors.
It's just nonsense.
And it's so ungrateful of them.
A, it's nonsense.
But, you know, Fiona's worked so hard for them.
And what it will do, it will disincentivise other celebrities
to help really important charities like that.
If you know at the first sign of the slightest slip of the tongue,
you're going to be ditched.
The BBC, though, I mean, you know, they have completely
not supported.
It's terrible.
I think it's shameful.
A bit like the linica fiasco.
That's a different story.
Am I wrong?
You are completely wrong.
Go on.
You are wrong because, and I hate to say it,
but Fiona Bruce does have to take some responsibility
for this.
You've been an ambassador for refuge for over 20 years.
You would understand the impact,
the severity of those words.
It only happened once.
His friend said, there is no...
Where's the legal obligation in relation to that?
Well, that's the only public statement that's been made.
Where's the legal obligation?
All that needed to be said was allegedly.
That's all that needed to be said.
Now, as an ambassador of refuge,
if I saw that statement and was being asked to read out that statement,
I would have said, hmm, guys, I'm a little bit uncomfortable about this.
Have you ever done presenting live television?
With an audience?
I haven't.
With an audience.
But it is my job to speak carefully.
Fine.
And I understand.
She was being clearly told, you've got to read the clarification on Stanley Johnson.
She read it.
All right.
It could have be word is slightly better than it turned out.
Why has the BBC come out?
I don't understand.
It's really hard, it's really high pressure on something like question time,
and you can't do it word by word.
She was told what to say, and then she was thrown to the wolves by the BBC and by the charity.
It's a-calling.
I haven't heard that that is her response, i didn't want to say it, or I raised a challenge with it.
We're all left to speculate, though, because they have...
Honestly, I think it's cowardly by refuge and gutlessness to do this.
It's pathetic by the BBC, and they should all be better than this.
Fiona Bruce is one of the most decent people you meet.
and after all she did, that's how they treat it.
For one step of the time.
I just wonder if you would have that attitude
in terms of dismissing the trauma
and the suggestion that is,
and the suggestion that if you went and spent an evening
in a domestic abuse refuge.
Somebody was watching question time and went,
oh my God, I've just been traumatised by what she just said.
Yes, is the short answer that question.
And secondly, do you know everything
that we've had to listen to today
in terms of it only happened one?
That's like 1980 talk peers.
Come on, we're past that now.
I want to think to something else before we have time.
We discuss this a lot today, which is left-wing people, you two.
I might have the problem.
Apparently, you do suffer from genuine more anxiety than everybody else.
It's the politics of depression.
Apparently, ones that are liberal, young people in America,
that's suffering surging rates of depressive symptoms compared to conservatives.
It is depressing being on your side of this fence.
Well, I don't think that's quite it.
think that if you are, you know, veering more towards left-wing politics, particularly in the US.
Give me a smile. Show me you're happy not to prop you to. Running out time. Quick. There we are.
That's it from me. Thank you, Pat. Whatever you're up to, keep it on. Stay happy.
Let me go, one life.
