Piers Morgan Uncensored - Piers Morgan Uncensored: Unravelling of Brexit, Threat of China, Toxic Trans Debate

Episode Date: February 15, 2023

On tonight's episode of Piers Morgan Uncensored with Richard Tice and Isabel Oakeshott, debate the unravelling of the Brexit divorce with Lord Heseltine. Also, Richard and Isabel delve into whether is... it time to wake up to the Chinese threat in our skies. Richard and Isabel assess the effects of the Tavistock scandal with fears over the toxic trans debate. 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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Starting point is 00:00:01 Tonight on Piers Morgan Uncensored with me, Richard Tice. And me, Isabelle Oakshot. So, the revenge of the Ramona's. After the secret summits, the cozy cross-party chats, is there a Valentine's plot to unravel the Brexit divorce? I'll ask one of the EU's not-so-secret admirers, admirers, Lord Heseltine. And spy balloons, stealth social media apps
Starting point is 00:00:27 and investments worth hundreds of billions in critical information. Is it time to wake up to China's threat to the West? We'll debate that. Plus, the experimental gender clinic where a thousand British children, some age just 10 years old, we're given powerful puberty-blocking drugs. Did fears over the toxic trans debate cause the horrific Tavistock scandal? Live from London, this is, Here's Morgan Uncensored, with Richard Tice. Richard Tice and Isabel Oakeshot.
Starting point is 00:01:05 Welcome to Peers Morgan Uncensored, and tonight we have a bit of a Valentine special. The big question we're going to be asking is, after a very messy breakup, what exactly is a state of our relationship with the EU? It's four years since we told Brussels we wanted a divorce. Now, what followed was pretty typical of all big breakups. A lot of hurt, a lot of anger,
Starting point is 00:01:31 and a lot of expensive lawyers. The big hope, of course, was that when the nasty paperwork was all finished, it, and that would take another two years, by the way, for us to get out, we'd all be able to move on. And very soon we'd strike up new, more rewarding and exciting relationships with other countries. Unfortunately, it seems some people are still nursing a broken heart. All they want to do is go back to what many people who voted for Brexit, feel was at best a very dysfunctional relationship with Brussels.
Starting point is 00:02:07 The question is, are shadowy figures in government and the civil service conspiring to rekindle the romance? What's that rendezvous in Ditchley Park where Remainers like Peter Mandelson and David Lamy flirted with levers like Michael Gove the beginning of an illicit affair that they hope will lead to something more serious? Well, joining us now, our former Conservative Minister, Anne Whitakum, talk to the contributor, Paul Rohn, Adrian, plus former Deputy Prime Minister down the line, Lord Heseltine.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Good evening to you all. Lord Heseltine, thank you for joining us on Piers Morgan Uncensored. We really appreciate it. So we've only just actually left the trading relationship just over two years ago. It's the beginning of a long-term new relationship, and yet already it seems that some people are trying to sort of bring us back ever closer together. I know that was always your view.
Starting point is 00:03:09 Were you invited to this conference? No. Would you like to have been? So you feel you missed out. But in terms of where we are... No, I don't feel I'm missed out at all. Okay, well, in terms of where we are, since we left the trading relationship, We've got our trade with the EU is actually up some 10% since the end of the transition period.
Starting point is 00:03:37 It's up some 40% since the end of 2016. Our foreign direct investment since 2016 is about the highest of any European nation, well comparable. So it seems to me that people are sort of, they're essentially sort of talking down Brexit before actually it's been given chance to maximize the opportunity. Well, if the figures that you've just given were accurate, why are people so upset? Why is there a concern? I mean, you've just depicted a triumph. Let me just sort of help you a little.
Starting point is 00:04:21 You see, it's not the people like me. Did you see today's tele-telegraph? Brexit is dead. Yes, I did that. And those are your most fanatical. supporters. So how can your greatest supporters allow this sort of adverse propaganda be published? That was, so that was, that was, that was an article by Cheryl Jacobs, Lord Hesteride. But the point is, what she was concerned about is that the establishment figures.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Let's start again. What about this one? The Bank of England. People, a thousand pounds worse off. The Daily Telegraph. It's not me. It's your friends. The reality is that our GDP growth... No, the reality, I've just told you what the reality is. I've just told you what the reality is. It's you. Talking to delude people as you've been doing for six years.
Starting point is 00:05:18 How can you dare to say that it's only two years or four years? The referendum was in 2016. Because that's a question of fact, Lord Heseltine. It's only two years. Nearly seven years ago. And the people who were in charge in the government of the day, Johnston, Leon Fox, David Davis. Did you think they knew what they were doing?
Starting point is 00:05:37 Two years before we had a general election. Then we were told we'd get Brexit done. Why now? Are we still waiting to know what that means? I'll tell you why, because it meant a pack of lies. Well, Lord Heseltine, let me tell you why. The reason that we're in the position we are is because Remainers such as yourself
Starting point is 00:05:58 worked very, very hard to thwart Brexit. So you can recite the many years since 2016 thing, but we've had no time to actually make it work. You've had six years with your hands on the levers of power. We'd love to have had six years. Don't tell me it's people like me or civil servants. What's what's your ministers doing? Let's come to our panel.
Starting point is 00:06:25 Anne, many people say that we've got brino, Brexit in name only. only. What's your view of that? Where do you think we are in terms of the journey and the opportunity? Well, I certainly think we're not taking advantage of the opportunities that are available to us. That is the first thing. Secondly, those opportunities are limited by the agreement that was reached, which was, I think, Brexit in name only. But even so, we have got some freedoms that we could use, and we're not using them. And that is why people are so disappointed. Also, of course, things have been conflated. You know, we've got inflation largely as a result of huge
Starting point is 00:07:03 spending during COVID. It's not just confined to Britain. It's in other countries as well. But everybody says, are, you know, post-Brexit, therefore on account of Brexit. And that is a nonsense argument. And I, you know, I mean, with all due respect, Lord Heseltine, he'll know I'm a huge
Starting point is 00:07:19 admirer of Lord Heseltine, but he's just got this one completely wrong. We have not had six years. We've only been legally out for two. I think that's a very valid point, Anne Riddickham, but do you think we Brexit is, and of course I was also a very vocal supporter of Brexit, would we do well to acknowledge that thus far it hasn't been a triumph? We have to kind of accept that bit, right? It isn't that Brexit hasn't been a triumph. It's that
Starting point is 00:07:45 how we have handled Brexit hasn't been a triumph. That deal, which we all warned was flawed right from the start, is at the root of a great many of the problems that we have. Brexit isn't to blame what we are doing or rather what we are not doing with Brexit is to blame. I can see Paula. If you're going to do a job, let's do it properly. Yes. And let's give it a fair time in order to show itself. Absolutely. That's it. We finish it to do now. But you can't do that if the foundation upon which you are working is false. Is faulty. Which bit? And that premise was made on a It was built on a lie. We lied to those of us in the East End.
Starting point is 00:08:33 We lied to those of us up north. We lied to the fishermen. We lied to those concerns about immigration. Who's this we? Those who pushed for Brexit. Lied about what was going to happen in relation to immigration. Lied about what was going to happen to the NHS and how it was going to be careful. And we know that because we are paying the price.
Starting point is 00:08:58 Is it true? Well, then let's flip it round. Is it true that the NHS are now receiving $350 million a week? Actually, it's receiving a lot more. It's receiving more. You remainers just do not want to accept the real truth. Is it true that we were inundated by Turkish immigrants who wanted to come and settle here? Was that true?
Starting point is 00:09:17 Is it true that we were able to really gain control of our borders? And the truth is we've had the highest immigration in the year to June 22 ever. Because you didn't. regain control of the borders in the way that you promised that you would have done. We could have done, but this is. Could it would have should have. That is not the way to win something that's important as making us leave. If we've still got Lord Heseltine here, I would like to ask him whether he thinks that the voters were sold a pack of lies. What are you going to say to that? Absolutely. You think absolutely that was the case? So what was the lie as far as you were concerned? Can I can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I, can I just. Can I just answer the question? Please.
Starting point is 00:10:01 They were sold a pack of lies, yes. And the greatest evidence of that is that six years later, when the Brexiteers have been in charge, we have not seen any of the benefits that we were told we would get. And that's because they were all fiction. So I think your six years is fictional. You can't justify that six years. Forgive me.
Starting point is 00:10:25 Let us be pedantic on this one matter. the referendum take place in 2016. Yes, but we didn't leave in 2016. Lord Heseltine. No, I'm sorry. Lord Heseltine, you know fully. So look, can we just stop? Lord Heseltine, can we just
Starting point is 00:10:43 agree? Will you please? Will you please allow me to answer the questions you've put to me? In 2016, a government was formed in which Boris Johnson, David Davis and Liam Fox, the principal advocates of Brexit were put in charge of the three most important departments. So they were there six and a half years ago. And Lord Heseltin, we left two years ago. I'm going to ask one final question to you, Lord Heselt time, before we let you go. Yes. Would you rejoin the EU or would you get on with doing the job
Starting point is 00:11:17 properly? I would get a job done properly by rejoining the European Union. So then, Lord Houssela time, you're going to negotiate the worst possible deal with no leverage. How ridiculous. I thought you were a successful businessman. I am a successful businessman. Well, then you know that that would be a terrible negotiation. Disaster. I love your interruptions. You see, you won't let me answer the questions
Starting point is 00:11:43 because you can't bear the truth. Oh, we're listening. Let me tell you frankly, you never listen. That's your whole problem. You just interrupt so that anyone who talks something that you don't like, you try to shout them down. And, I mean, we dealt with the issue a few minutes ago.
Starting point is 00:11:59 What was the motive? of Boris Johnson's electoral victory, get Brexit done. So why hasn't it happened? Because people like you thwarted it. Because the promises... You see, there you are. There you are interrupting again. It's a conversation, Lord Heseltine.
Starting point is 00:12:18 It's a conversation, not a monologue for me. No, this is not a shouting match in which your technique is to shout down anyone you disagree with. You do it all the time. And your technique is to lecture me. Well, you're doing it again. You're doing it again. I knew when I came on this program, I would have to behave in a way that I deplore and to fight, get a word in edgeways, because you think that if you can censor what people are saying, by shouting them down, you'll win the argument.
Starting point is 00:12:48 You'll never win the argument with me that way. We're very grateful for your time, but the truth is you've actually spoken more than anybody else. I bet you're not. Thank you very much indeed. Lord Hesertrtheid for your thoughts. And by the way, just to clarify, it's only two years since the end of the trading relationship. You're off again. You're trying to get the last word. I know the tricks. Came out to you, we remember. Just finally, Paula, before we conclude this piece, Lord Heseltine would rejoin tomorrow. Would you rejoin tomorrow?
Starting point is 00:13:17 And can I answer that in as long as time as you can give me? George Eustace told us how things have gone wrong. He finally admitted how things had gone wrong. and I have my friends and family in the East End who can tell you how it's gone wrong. We have the fishermen who can tell you how it's gone wrong. We have those up north who tell you how to go wrong. We can have those who are sitting in Calais.
Starting point is 00:13:38 You have no question. I say get it done properly. Do it properly. Do it properly. It's voted, get it done properly. Yeah. Next tonight, our US China tension's about to explode over spy balloons and how scared should we be?
Starting point is 00:14:06 Welcome back to Piersmore's. and uncensored. Well, just before we move on to talk about China, I do think we need to just catch up on that extraordinary debate and interaction with Lord Heseltine. I mean, Lord Heseltine, I did expect him to be pretty punchy. He is, after
Starting point is 00:14:21 all, an arched Ramona. He was completely brilliant. I thought he might... We'll come to you in a minute, Stanley, because we know you share the same... But look, the reality is that he keeps using the word lies, but he couldn't admit that it was only... That was polar as well. Both of them. But, but
Starting point is 00:14:36 Lord Heseltine couldn't admit that it was only two years since the end of the training. I mean, I think we've got to completely nail this six years thing. Absolutely, which they keep on using it, don't they? As if the more they say it, the more true it will become. Hey, I've got to tell you. Hey, Heseltine nailed you two. He did a brilliant job. Welcome to the show to Stanley Johnson, who we're going to talk now about China,
Starting point is 00:14:58 because we can be reasonably sure that aliens were not indeed responsible for the four unidentified flying objects that were shot down in the last few days over America. China, despite official denials, is of course suspected of launching balloons to spy on our American friends. The first one travelled across the US before being shot down on the 4th of February
Starting point is 00:15:23 off the coast of South Carolina. And a further three objects were taken out in the last few days. A former head of MI6 today, the West is under the full press of Chinese espionage. Next week, world leaders are gathering in Munich for a major security conference. And they'll be connecting their mobile phones
Starting point is 00:15:44 to, you guessed it, telecoms infrastructure provided by none other than Beijing telecoms giant, who are we? Well, joining us is the author campaigner in China fan, Stanley Johnson. You may say that's fair or unfair. We'll come to that. And best-selling author Douglas Murray, who's joining us. from New York.
Starting point is 00:16:06 We will, I think, first of all, we will have to come to you, Stanley. So keen to get involved in the debate. Well, why not, well? Look, Stanley, the bottom line is here. Put it simply, the Chinese are spying on our allies. We've probably got to assume that they are spying on us too.
Starting point is 00:16:24 Are you now embarrassed at your stance of being so pro-Chinese? I'm not at all embarrassed. Absolutely not. Look at the debate you just had with Lord Heseldon. Here we are, an isolated country, more or less losing our friends in Europe. We are not in a good shape as far as Russia is concerned.
Starting point is 00:16:42 So let's cozy up to the Chinese. Can we really afford to develop a hostile relationship with China? I think not now. You ask your point. Am I a sign of foul? Well, in 1961, I tried to ride a motorcycle from Oxford to Beijing. We got to the Chinese border. I'm going to finish that journey off this summer.
Starting point is 00:16:58 I've been in China. I think I was the first EU delegation to go to China in 1975 when Mao was still in charge. I've been there lots of times. One of my sons was educated, not Boris, by the way, not one of my younger sons was educated in Singhua University. But you haven't answered the question. I am spying on it, Stanley. Well, we're spying on them.
Starting point is 00:17:16 That is the nature. However, I happen to believe that if the Chinese say this is a meteorological, let's wait until they're disproved. We have satellites. I'm not sure Britain has satellites, but the US certainly has satellites. We certainly have all signs of science. Are we floating balloons?
Starting point is 00:17:34 over Beijing. Well, that's a pretty antiquated form. I don't see. It might be totally appropriate for British technology to have a few balloons. The French could do it with Monsieur Blérier. No, I think the real tragedy of the whole thing is just at the moment when Mr. Blinken, Anthony Blinken, was about to go to China, to, as well, reset a relationship which had been slightly knocked off kilter by Mrs. Pelosi's visit to Taiwan. Just at that moment, this unfortunate episode occurred. And the balloon floated over North Carolina.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Yeah, let's move on. That's my line. This seems an awful lot of apologist waffle to me with apologies from me for saying that to you. I mean, you seem to be actively proud of cozing up to Beijing. We're all cozy up to Beijing. If you look at the trade figures, we'd cozy up to Beijing every day. You just pointed out all the things we use every day, all the things we buy from China every day. And by the way, in the world I do, you very kindly, I think you introduce me as an author. Well, one of the things I do is write books about the environment.
Starting point is 00:18:35 I campaign. That's the campaigning part on the environment. Without China, a lot of the work we do on the big environmentalists would go down the drain. I'm sure that's true. I'm not sure they're being terribly helpful. Can I just, let's just establish just how close your relationship is with the Chinese. How often have you been in and out of the Chinese embassy here in London? Well, you could probably get some records of that.
Starting point is 00:18:58 I'm asking you the question now. Have you been in an out quite a few times? The first time was in 1961 when I was trying to get a visa to go. All right. Let's not go way back to 60. No. Is it 10 times? 20 times? Oh, not as many as that. But I have certainly been, I went to the Chinese embassy,
Starting point is 00:19:16 had a very good conversation with the then Chinese ambassador just in the run up to COVID. And that I think was on the record. Cranky, right. Just in the run up to COVID. So you've been in and out quite a few times. Well, I think you might say three or four times over the period of time. Right. that I think is perfectly legitimate.
Starting point is 00:19:33 And do you make any money at all from any companies? No, I don't at all. And I'm very happy to say... Not one penny. No, not one penny. Not one penny. I work as an honorary capacity. And by the bit is tremendously important.
Starting point is 00:19:48 It makes my point actually about the whole thing about China and the relationship. I work as an advisor to the Chinese non-governmental organization called ECHO Forum Global, which is working to try and put in place. a World Coastal Forum. And that is crucially important. Sounds all very worthy. The reality is they're spying on us. They haven't got our best interest in heart.
Starting point is 00:20:13 Let's bring in Douglas Murray in New York. Douglas, very good evening. Thanks for being with us. Look, how serious should we take this threat? Stanley Johnson has just said it's sort of old technology, this spying balloon. But geopolitically, what's really going on here and how should the Western ally
Starting point is 00:20:31 respond well first of all we're learning on a day-by-day basis more and more about this and the American government has been perhaps understandably coy about exactly what it is that's been going on and what they've shot down and what they've intercepted and what they've indeed missed so far the balloon the first caused attention was of course described by the Communist Party of China as simply being a weather balloon that had gone astray a story which absolutely nobody believed and And you could only spin if, like, the Communist Party that rules China, you're used to just asserting things and not having to prove them to anyone's satisfaction. Beijing tried this line. Nobody was convinced, although there have been people, as I'm sorry to hear Stanley Johnson just play this trick himself.
Starting point is 00:21:18 I think it's quite a disgraceful thing to do to say, oh, well, we spy on them, they spy on us. Here's just one of the many differences. Western satellite technologies have indeed been used. to look at, for instance, the concentration camp network operated by the Chinese Communist Party in the Xinjiang province. That isn't anything like what the Chinese were trying to do in America. Chinese were flying balloons over, for instance, American atomic bases. So this isn't anything like parity. As for the larger question of our relationship with China,
Starting point is 00:21:56 nobody wants war with China, but we are in an increasingly dangerous, standoff thanks to the behavior of Beijing. Just look at what Stanley just mentioned happened in the last few years. Look at what happened with COVID. China crashed to the entire global economy by, at the very most benign explanation, not telling the world that an incredibly infectious
Starting point is 00:22:19 respiratory disease was coming out of Wuhan. It did everything it could to cover that over. And you get up to more recent times. They have the goal to threaten a Democrat, a speaker, of the House, Nancy Pelosi, for asserting her right to go to Taiwan. This comes after years of threatening British officials, perhaps something we should get into. Because anyone who pretends that what we're dealing with with the CCP is a sort of benign operator can't possibly have their spectacles on.
Starting point is 00:22:49 Douglas Murray, can I ask, are you on TikTok? No, absolutely not. And, Stanley, are you on TikTok? Not TikTok. Okay. Do you think that we're naive about social media apps like TikTok. There have been some concerns expressed
Starting point is 00:23:05 that it's not all as it seems with TikTok. I don't sure. I know what TikTok is. TikTok, I do. TikTok, I wrote the first piece in the British press about this after interviewing then Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Sun several years ago. TikTok is a piece of Chinese malware,
Starting point is 00:23:23 which is a data harvesting entity, among many other things. It's not permitted to be operated in China. is used in the West to collect data from young people in the West. Anybody watching who has TikTok or whose children have TikTok, take it off your phone. You are not the user of the product. You are the product.
Starting point is 00:23:44 We've just got a clip on TikTok. Let's just watch this. It always blows my mind when I look at the number of people who use TikTok. I mean, I'm one of them, right? You use the sort of videos. Are we being a bit... Sophie, get off it. Are we being naive?
Starting point is 00:24:02 Are we? I'm worried now. We are being naive. So look, TikTok gave evidence to my committee where they said that there was no way that individuals working in China could get access to the data of Britons. But what we've now seen is that people working in China
Starting point is 00:24:17 for TikTok hacked into European data so they could track down the source of a journalist. Stanley, I know you're itching to come in here. You've actually travelled out to the province, haven't you? Or you were intending to travel. to the province where the Uyghur crimes have taken place. I mean, how are you comfortable with that? You're using words which, you know...
Starting point is 00:24:38 Oh, you don't think the treatment of the Uyghurs is criminal? No, I'm not getting into that. Why not? Why not? It's a hugely important. I tell you why, why, Isabel. The journey I'm going to do is to follow, to re-follow, the steps of Marco Polo in China in the 13th century. And it's a bridge-building exercise. want to make a point here because all of you, the people on the far right of the Conservative Party...
Starting point is 00:25:05 Excuse me, I don't think either of us are on the far right, just to be clear. Even more right, then. What we're trying to do, I think, is not whip up the temperature on China. That is not the game. Is that what you'd say to the Uyghurs? It is a big, big mistake to whip up the game, and I'm certainly not going to play that game. I think I'm there for bridge building. That is the point. And so you're just going to blinker yourself to... the mistreatment of the Uyghur Muslims. You're just going to ignore that because it's inconvenient to you.
Starting point is 00:25:35 Well, hold on. I don't know what I'm going to see. Do I know what I'm going to see? Well, you haven't even researched that? You haven't researched the human rights abuses? Everything is there. I've read the reports of the UN rapporteur. I've read them, and that is...
Starting point is 00:25:51 And you're still comfortable with that? Well, who is not... Are you comfortable buying Chinese food, buying Chinese products? That's different to national security issues. Let's go back to Douglas. How do you respond to Stanley Johnson's sort of view of the Uyghurs that it's irrelevant to the broader picture? I didn't say that. Stanley has his own game he's playing.
Starting point is 00:26:13 I'm not entirely sure what it is. But it's obviously not an investigative game. We can say that at the very least, can't we? I mean, you don't have to know exactly what's happening in Jingjiang, although I would if I were you. You can just look at what the CCP's done to our friends in Hong Kong over the last decade. just look at what it's doing with its overflights into territorial airspace of the Taiwanese, look at its assistance to Moscow.
Starting point is 00:26:39 Go back 10 years. If Stanley doesn't care about our allies like America in its treatment by the CCP and doesn't care about the people of Hong Kong, doesn't care about the people of Jingjiang and so on, perhaps you could care about the way in which the Chinese government has treated the government of our own country. Ten years ago, the then-conservative Prime Minister David Cameron had the gall to meet with the Dalai Lama. He met with Nick Clegg as well, the deputy prime minister.
Starting point is 00:27:04 After that happened, I'm sorry, Douglas. May I please finish my point? May I please finish my point? Because it's very important. It's better than the waffle you're going to get from Stanley. The prime minister and deputy prime minister, after having the goal to meet the Dalai Lama, were informed that there would be no more trade negotiations with Beijing.
Starting point is 00:27:23 They were put in the freezer, those negotiations, until there was a formal apology, by the British government, which at the next meeting with their Chinese counterparts, was pushed across the table, and the British diplomats were asked to stand up, read the apology, and were told we just wanted to know you meant it. So that's how the Chinese have treated us for years. Indeed. Anyone who at this point is ignorant is willfully so.
Starting point is 00:27:47 Indeed. Thank you very much, Douglas Murray. Finally, Stanley, you boasted about one of your sons being educated in China. Was all this apology shared by your other son, Boris Johnson, when he was a prime minister, did he share your attitudes towards China? I can't speak for Boris on this, but I'm perfectly sure that he, like any other sane person at this moment, does not want to get into this bidding up war of letting them, let's really drive China into a corner and so on and so on.
Starting point is 00:28:14 That's what we're seeing. You're basically just going to appease them and just kowtow to them. We have to wrap up. But you have to turn up to them. That's a good word. I think we're going to have you back on on this program. We could spend a long time talking about it. I can see that you were vexed by.
Starting point is 00:28:28 has all time. Not at all. We're vexed by. Your position on China. That's what we're vets by. Stanley Johnson, thank you very much for coming in and sharing a lot with us. Next tonight, we'll talk to a former patient who's suing the NHS over gender reassignment surgery that he says he didn't need. Welcome back. The controversial clinic that pushed teenagers into changing their gender when they might actually have been gay or had autism. The Tavistock in North London is set to close this spring after an independent review said it risked harming those in its care. Now, a new book sheds further damning light on the clinic.
Starting point is 00:29:21 In Time to Think, the writer Hannah Barnes says that medics ignored the fact that a huge 97% of children who were looking to change their sex were actually autistic or suffering from depression or other mental health problems that might have caused their unhappiness. Instead, doctors,
Starting point is 00:29:41 routinely referred under 16s for drugs to block the onset of puberty, with no idea of the long-term effects. Kids as young as three were sent to the clinic, and anyone who spoke out against it was demonised. Well, joining us now is journalist and campaigner for sex-based human rights, Helen Joyce, Richie Heron, who's preparing to sue an NHS trust following his sex change, and in the studio, Paul O'Rone. Adrian is still with us.
Starting point is 00:30:13 To start with, Helen, can we go to you, please? Can you just set the scene here because many people will not be familiar with the details and the extraordinary scandal that's emerged? It really is a scandal, completely shocking. It's been clear to anyone who has paid attention for several years now that evidence was not properly used at this clinic.
Starting point is 00:30:38 It wasn't run the way that other NHS services were. ideology had taken over rather than proper medical practice and proper medical ethics and evidence. But yet if you tried to say something about this, you got called transphobic and you, for example, people would say you should lose your job. So it's so kudos to Hannah Barnes, a wonderful journalist, that she managed to get this book published. She used FOIs. She pushed through. She found a publishing deal when publishers tried to blacklist her. And she's got this book out now. And as I say, we've known for years that things weren't right, but now we've got chapter and verse.
Starting point is 00:31:12 She's got it there in a book with all the evidence, amazing quotes from former patients, former clinicians, whistleblowers, and now it has written in black and white that this was not done properly. Children were not properly cared for. And Helen, why is it taken so long? I mean, when we look back at it,
Starting point is 00:31:29 you look at the extraordinary growth in numbers from something like 50 children a year being referred to thousands of children being referred. Why did it take so long? Was it all about the money, the growth in revenue for the trust in question? I'm sure that played a bit of a part, but I wouldn't say it was the main part. Sadly, this happens in medicine. We see medical scandals again and again,
Starting point is 00:31:55 and what happens is that people who are inside a particular paradigm, who have a particular idea about how treatment should work, become completely obsessed with that and they push it, they don't look for evidence, they demonise people who say, that hang on, you haven't got the evidence. And unfortunately, on this occasion, identity politics got involved too. So these children were seen, instead of being ill children or unwell children who needed help and had very complex problems, you mentioned autism, you mentioned that maybe they were going to grow up gay, so they face homophobia. There was child abuse, depression,
Starting point is 00:32:28 self-harm, anorexia, all sorts. And instead, they were seen as trans children. Right. And that meant that they had to be just affirmed. Absolutely shocking. Yeah. Well, I'd really like to bring in Richie Heron here because I suppose when all said and done, what really matters is not the politics of this, but the actual profound impact on patients
Starting point is 00:32:51 and on children, impacts that would be lifelong. And Richie, whilst you were not treated at the Tavistock, you have a very powerful story to tell, don't you, from your own experience, of what can happen when young people are, as it were rather rushed through this treatment, their transition, they're put on puberty blockers, they may have second thoughts later. Can you tell us what happened to you? Yeah, I found the Jeff Fagenda affirmation approach to be a little bit of a slope that got steeper after every
Starting point is 00:33:28 pass an appointment. I am gay. I still have severe mental health issues, one of them being or CD, which they knew about for me going into the clinic. And all these issues were kind of explained away. And then when I eventually had the surgery, I was told that the reason that I regretted the surgery was because of those mental health issues, which before weren't related. So I was kind of like gas lit a lot on the way there, you know, and it felt very unfair. And to me, one of the reasons And why I want to raise the alarm is it's terrible what's happened to children. And credit Hannah Ellis, Hannah Bond, sorry, for a wonderful book. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:17 Just by way of background with your story, am I correct, that you were born male, then you thought you wanted to transition to female. You went through pretty brutal surgery. And then was it how long a period passed before you thought actually maybe that was a terrible mistake? Well, the surgery itself, as soon as I was conscious, I knew it was a mistake, even before I knew it hadn't went well. Really? And then, yeah, after I realized how bad it was, it just got worse and worse. And then that brought into question a lot of my whole transition and why I individually wanted to transition.
Starting point is 00:34:59 And it wasn't until, like, reality hit me that I was able to really think. about the reasons why and it was just too little too late I'm afraid for me. So what is your situation now? Are you sort of at peace with where you are or do you have more surgery to do? What's the next step for you if there is one? I think the lesson learned in this is that mental health problems can't be solved with hormones and scalables and I'm reluctant to touch another scalpel unless it's to help fix what I currently have. for instance I'm about to undergo a procedure that will have to have every four or five years for urethral dilation because my urethra constantly gets constricted which causes a lot of issues pain and incontinence and a lot of personal things I don't want to get too much in input I have yeah yeah of course um Paula I think that Richie puts it so powerfully there doesn't he you know a lot of people mental health problems can't be fixed by hormones and scalples.
Starting point is 00:36:09 And the reality is that once you've gone down the hormones and scalples route, there is no turning back. And he's so right. And before we even get to the difficult issue about gender identity, and we look at the issue of mental health, and in particular the treatment of mental health issues with children, it is in a shocking state, an absolutely shocking state. And when you are a parent of a child who's suffering with men,
Starting point is 00:36:35 mental health. You have very limited options in terms of where you can turn to for help. And what seems to have happened in relation to some of these children, particularly we know that there's up to a thousand cases that are going to be brought against the Tavistock in relation to treatment that was being received. But it seems that issues in relation to their mental health just were not addressed and the title, gender identity, was what was in focus. Where was the safeguarding in this? I mean, I've been a governor with many of us being governors of schools, safeguarding is absolutely four square at the centre of everything, including, as you say, mental health.
Starting point is 00:37:12 And yet safeguarding seems here to have gone completely out of the window for some of the most vulnerable, anxious, depressed children, very often victims of bullying. I mean, I cannot believe, having been a governor of a normal school, how this could have got through. Well, ultimately, remember, the treatment pathways lie with your medic, with your treating clinician and that's where that duty and responsibility lies. And one of the things that I understand from having read the interim report is that they were just simply overwhelmed with the amount of patients that were being referred to them. They simply couldn't cope and the systems weren't in place, the processes weren't in place to manage that overflow. Yeah. Well, I think it's important because
Starting point is 00:37:58 we've been very critical here just to give the Tavistock and the Portman NHS trust a bit of a writer reply. They're the ones that run the Tavistock Centre for the NHS. And they say that the Jenta Identity Development Service, often known as GIDS, worked on a case-by-case basis with every young person and their family thoughtfully and holistically with no expectation of what the right outcome for them might be. Concerns relating to young people's well-being are taken seriously and investigated. So that's their defence. I mean, Paula, you, speaking quite from the heart on this. Is this something that you've come across in your work as a family lawyer?
Starting point is 00:38:39 Or just something you've taken an interest? Oh, no, no, absolutely. In terms of children who are in the care system, in terms of children whose parents are unable to agree on where the child should live, it's incredibly hard for that child who unfortunately suffers emotionally and expresses that suffering through their mental health and will struggle with their mental health. For the parent being able to access help,
Starting point is 00:39:07 it's practically non-existent. Can we just bring in Ritchie before we wrap up on this? If we can bring Ritchie back, if there was one thing that you could change about the way young people who go to clinicians to seek their advice on these matters are treated, what would you change? I think it's not just a one single issue.
Starting point is 00:39:33 Of course, I'm just looking for a quick hit here. A quick hit. I would say more information about your background and motivations for trauma. A lot more work around trauma, I think, would be helpful for a lot of. And perhaps more time because a lot of patients are saying actually they only needed a couple of consultations before they were prescribed this stuff. Yeah. Yeah, more time maybe, but I mean, for those who are obsessed as hours to go down it, I don't know how much time would have helped.
Starting point is 00:40:09 But maybe if they addressed the obsession itself, that would have been. That's a really interesting point, isn't it? Richard, thank you so much. Just before we have a chat, Helen, can just bring you in one last time? I'm concerned that when Gid's closes, that these are going to be pushed out to regional centres in the country, and that these horrors, frankly, will continue. This worries me too. At least with one clinic at Jids, although it was a terrible clinic,
Starting point is 00:40:37 it was the focus of everybody's attention and campaigners could look in one place to see what was going wrong. We'll have to watch like Hawks how these four regional centres are run and make sure that the ideologues don't come back in. Indeed. Thank you very much to all of you on that debate. Really quite disturbing. I mean, I did think, Richard,
Starting point is 00:40:54 made an important point about the obsession that young people develop. And, you know, the clinics themselves are on a lot of pressure to come up with a solution, aren't they? Absolutely. Well, on a lighter note, yes, it's Valentine's Day, the most romantic day of the year. Here's my roses. That for you. We'll be looking at who's been paying the right price and who's been paying through the nose for one of those red red roses. Welcome back.
Starting point is 00:41:34 Well, Paula is still with us, and Anne is back. And happy Valentine's Day to you both. Valentine's Day to you two. Thank you very much indeed. I was actually a bit worried you were going to forget it. Of course I wouldn't forget it. How could I forget it? I mean, I spent a fortune on roses.
Starting point is 00:41:49 I don't want to know how much you spent. But while we're on the subject... While we're on the subject of money, it turns out that actually you can spend a massive range. You can go from £5 at Tescos. Is that what you were going to do for me? No, certainly not. 14 pounds at Morris.
Starting point is 00:42:06 15 pounds in Eminus. If you had Liverpool Street Station... This is just for red roses. just for red roses. Have a guess, have a guess, Anne. How many hundreds of pounds at Liverpool Street Station for a dozen red roses? Three quid. Three quid? Where's your generosity, Anne? MP salary and double it. Paula, how much at Liverpool Street Station for a dozen smart roses? Posh ones. Posh ones. What's a posh rose? Well, actually, since you ask, I give you this rose, which was one of the the 12 that this gorgeous man gave me. I believe that he says it's a posh rose. Well, actually, since you ask, I give you a posh rose. Since you'll ask, I give you
Starting point is 00:42:40 rose. I mean, I have no way of knowing. This is a high-end rose. You can get supermarket versions, which I don't think they're as good. Mine was not a supermarket version. But it does seem that we are a very romantic nation. Last year, despite the cost of living crisis, it turns out that almost £1.4 billion, £1 billion, was spent on Valentine's Day. In the UK alone. In the UK alone, that's a 15% increase on the previous year. Were you part of that spending power? I certainly wasn't part of that spending power, no. And that, quite honestly, it hasn't even got any scent. I mean, I'd cheerfully send that. I gave that. What? I was going to say I'd cheerfully send it to Giva Hofstadt.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Oh, dear. Maybe we'll need to do that. Well, look, Richard's very romantic. We know this, because he's even written a poem for Valentine's Day. Oh, well. Oh, spare us. Come on, Richard. Come on. I mean, obviously, I'm not going to recite your poem. Spare us. Go on there. Oh, dear. Well, I put this on Twitter. Rose's a red, violets are blue. It's great being free outside the EU, happy Valentine's Day. Wow. Yeah, I like that. Exactly. I like that. How embarrassing are you? What do you mean? Talking of embarrassing.
Starting point is 00:43:50 He didn't warn me he was going to do that by the way. Otherwise, I'd have stopped him. That is so cheesy. Talking of embarrassing, we did come especially early this evening in order to open the multiple cards and roses that we thought Peers would have. But it turns out, sorry,
Starting point is 00:44:05 peers. There were no bunches of flowers. Zip. Absolutely. Niente. So, Anne, is it fair to say that you're not a fan of Valentine's Day and you don't celebrate it? I certainly don't celebrate. You've got your red dress on? I certainly don't. Yes, I know by accident.
Starting point is 00:44:21 I certainly don't celebrate Valentine's Day, but I'm always pleased for British business. And if people want to go and spend their money on rot, that's fine. What did you get, Paula? What did you get? Oh, still waiting, it sounds like. Are you serious? Exactly. No doubt it will be there waiting for me when I get home.
Starting point is 00:44:39 I've been in Luton all day. Otherwise, he's coming in this studio, Jake. It will be trouble. I'm sure. She says she's been in Luton all day. I think she deserves something pretty good. You absolutely deserve a huge. But you say you don't celebrate Valentine's Day, but do you celebrate love?
Starting point is 00:44:55 No. And I think that's the end of the show, right? Anne, come on. And the great thing is you're happy that actually in terms of business, British corporates, it's growing. That's going well. they want to do. If they want to celebrate, what is it you said, celebrate love. They want to celebrate Valentine's Day. If they want to celebrate anything at all and they want to go out and they want to
Starting point is 00:45:20 spend their money, that's good for the economy. So bang on. But you're not joining in the game. It's broadening though, isn't it, Valentine's Day? I think it's getting bigger and it's not just about romantic love now. Yes. You can get cards for all sorts. Exactly. Yeah. You know, it's good, It's good to, you know, it's about children. It's about your gal Valentine's. Did your children remind your partner to do the Valentine's Day Day? They did. That's Mother's Day.
Starting point is 00:45:45 You can get belated. I mean, you can extend it over a week and have sort of, you know, sort of... We can have another one tomorrow. We can have a later dinner. I mean... More flowers are coming, my way, hopefully. Posh ones, high end. I do think, like, on a serious note, I do think it's really important to celebrate love.
Starting point is 00:46:02 I'm not surprised that the figure has increased since last year. Remember, we were just coming out of the last horrid lockdown. We've got to be able to express ourselves. We're feeling the love here. We're feeling the love. Well, look, that is it for us.
Starting point is 00:46:15 Fantastic. We're feeling all sweet and lovely. Whatever you're doing, make sure it's uncensored. Good night. Good night.

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