The Duran Podcast - Fear and panic grips UK establishment
Episode Date: March 4, 2024Fear and panic grips UK establishment ...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Alexander. Let's discuss Rishi Sunak's meltdown, for lack of a better word.
It was a meltdown after the by-election, which George Galloway won.
What are your thoughts? A crazy. But a meltdown, a meltdown. It was a real meltdown.
Who's advising Rishy Sunak? Who's his media team, by the way? Do you know?
that's advising him to do these things?
I have absolutely no idea,
but I suspect that they're melting down as well.
I mean, the entire political class on Friday morning
was in Meltdown in London.
So Rishi Sunak is just the visible expression of this.
Can I say that people who are not familiar with British politics
in order to understand what an extreme event
this was we had the by-election results coming through over the course of early Friday morning
from the by-election in Rochdale.
Rochdale is a small town near Manchester, which is one of the big cities in England.
There was the MP who was an old guard, old labour person.
long history. He deposed the Iraq war. He'd done all kinds of things. He was, you know, a standard old
type of person. He died so that this created place for a by-election. George Galloway, who I should
say straight away, I slightly know. I mean, I've appeared on platforms and on programs with him.
I don't know him personally. I mean, you know, but I do, I have, I have been acquainted with.
him and we have had conversations, but that's as far as it goes. Anyway, George Galloway, who is an extremely
well-known political figure here, and who is one of the most important political dissidents in Britain,
former Labour politician expelled from the party by Donie Blair because he was outspokenly opposed
to the Iraq War. He's a strong supporter of the Palestinians. He stood in Rochdale as an
independent candidate for his new party, the so-called Workers Party, which, you know, sets itself
out as a sort of anti-Labour, left-wing, working-class, social democratic party. So he stood for
election in Rochdale, and he won, and he won big. And he won, when I say he won big,
he won with more votes than the Labour candidate and the Conservative candidate, and the Conservative
and the Liberal candidate combined.
Now, there have been all kinds of complexities
about this particular by-election.
The Labour candidate lost the support of the Labour Party.
We'll come into that, come to all of that in a moment.
But I do think anybody in British politics
in the political class
anticipated the sheer scale of Galloway's victory.
Oh, is a massive victory.
and they panicked and you saw the panic
and what Rishi Sunak did
and this is just an expression of what the political class is up to
is that he announced that he was going to make
he was going to make a public address to the British people
he came out of Downing Street
he spoke on the steps of Downing Street
now when British Prime Ministers do that
that is always
that's big news
that's they always they do that when they have something really momentous to announce like
thatcher telling everybody that the Falklands Wall had been won for example there's one famous
example of this or alternatively you have you know prime ministers coming up to announce that there's
going to be a general election that's also a very common thing but it's a big statement that
you come out with in fact many people thought that soon act was a
about to announce a general election. And instead, he came out with this utterly deranged speech
talking about the enemies within, talking about protests, being out of control. He was clearly
referring, and everybody who is aware of politics could see that he was ultimately talking about
Galloway and had been spooked by the scale of Galloway's victory in Rochdale, and was dropping all sorts
of heavy hints about the need for the police to take further action.
to control unrest and do all those sort of things.
And the question is, why is the political class in so much panic?
And I've discussed this in program after program that we've done together,
which is that there is this massive disconnect now in Britain
between the political class and its particular obsessions.
the mass of the British people. The situation in Britain economically is very bad.
The economy is stagnant. It has been stagnant for years. The Brexit war ended without a real Brexit
in the sense that there was a Brexit, the political class didn't like it, they sabotaged it,
that hasn't moved forward at all in the ways that people thought it would. The Labour
party has been recaptured by the political class. The Conservative Party has been recaptured by the political
class. There is almost no difference in policies now between Labour and Conservative, or at least
none that most people can see. There is a widespread sense that the political class has no real
plan about how to address the mounting problems that are facing people in Britain. And they sense this
and they know that this is not working for them. And they see all these challenges building up.
They are aware that the mood in Britain has turned against the war in Ukraine. I mean, you never
see flags. Ukraine flags anywhere as it once did. They understand also that the British public
strongly disagrees with the British government's position on the Gaza war, the Gaza conflict.
They know that most people in Britain want to have a ceasefire over Gaza.
They also know that the British public may not be completely united on what they want,
but they do want to see significant change in domestic policies.
There is widespread consensus in Britain.
for example, that immigration really has to be brought under control.
And Galloway, by the way, made a big point about that in the Rochdale by-election.
Again, I want to talk about the specifics of Rochdale in a moment.
So, again, they worked incredibly hard over the last eight years,
ever since the 2016 Brexit referendum and, you know, the rise of the Corbyn movement
to bring the political system back under their control.
They sort of sensed that they'd managed it.
They've neutered Brexit.
They've banished Corby into the wilderness.
They've got control of the two parties.
But they are also aware of the malaise.
They're also aware of their own popularity.
And now shock horror.
Even as they thought they'd driven all opposition away,
they have this outspoken, extremely skillful orator and debater, George Galloway.
He's come back. He's in the House of Commons.
He's going to be able to talk and challenge them there, you know, at the heart of their power.
So that's why they're freaking out, because they know how unpopular they are
and they don't want to allow any appearance of opposition to themselves, be it.
from the right or from the left, and now they're faced with it.
Yeah, they really showed their weakness with that Sunak speech.
I mean, it looked really weak, really panicky.
I'm still trying to figure out who's consulting them on their media and their press.
Because even if you are in a panic, you just don't come out and give speeches like that.
it looked very weak.
It looked really weak and really unhinged.
What do you think are the goals of coming out and doing that?
I mean, what are they trying to signal to the British population?
I mean, what are they saying?
Because they are trying to say something.
More crackdown, more censorship?
What exactly?
Outside of the panic and fear.
Exactly, exactly.
I mean, there is the panic and the fear, but the clear signal from the speech,
which noticed, by the way, that the Labour Party is not pushing back against.
I mean, they seem to be absolutely comfortable with this agenda that Zunak now has,
is a further crackdown.
You know, talking to the police about, you know, a tough policing of protests,
one gets the sense that protests are going to become more and more difficult of any kind in Britain today.
There's hints about more control on what people are allowed to say.
All of this, in other words, we are heading towards an even tighter control of the information space
than what we have had previously.
Now, you know, the thing that they're bringing up is that there is this danger of violence
and they're basically insinuating that a lot of it is coming from within the Muslim community in Britain,
which, by the way, is very large.
And this is a community that has established itself in Britain over many years.
Remember, the Indian subcontinent was part of the British Empire.
People from India had been coming to Britain for centuries.
There was a major increase in immigration to Britain from the Indian.
the subcontinent after the Second World War, the post-war decades.
This is a big community now.
And most of it, by the way, votes historically, has always voted Labour.
And I'm going to say straight away, within this community, you will find, I can say this,
I know this for a frat, you will find some people with very extreme views.
I want to acknowledge this.
why is this so well partly it is because the british government itself facilitated it now this isn't
something people like to talk about but the british government as we know supported uh insurgencies
i'm choosing my words very carefully now in Afghanistan in Syria in Libya in all sorts of other
places. That meant that all sorts of people came to London because that was where a lot of this
was being organised from, strange and difficult people. And, well, networks were established
and they do exist. But this is a historic problem. It has existed for a very, very long time.
And my own sense is that the security services have it under control. It is not
something to be confused with the other much bigger question of current immigration, which, by the way,
again, to my knowledge, many British Muslims today actually oppose because, of course, waves of
immigrants affect their position, their socio and economic position as well. So there is this problem,
but it doesn't exist in the way that soon.
Hennack himself is trying to imply.
But they're using it now in order to justify a further crackdown.
Just as they used fear of Russia before, now it's fear of a political Islam, which to the
extent that it exists in Britain is something that they played a role.
I'm not saying it's exclusively, therefore, but they played a sense.
certain role in creating themselves as I have personal knowledge of. So they're using all of this
as I said to prepare the ground for a crackdown because they sense that they're losing control
of the political situation. They were shocked all the way back in 2016 when they began to sense
that the British public was turning against them.
And they're panicking even further now.
And one of the most interesting things about Rochdale,
which is that it's a community,
which is working class, British working class,
and also Muslim.
And it seems as if Galloway was strong with both.
both. He was able to win over many Muslim voters to a great extent obviously because of the
stance he took over Gaza, but also he was also able to win over many British, English,
working class voters because the stance he took on economic issues. He's success in projecting
himself as an old-fashioned, old-style, labor, pro-worker, social democrat.
So this is what's spookingham.
Can you explain the association with the far right as well?
Because Sunak didn't only bring up, I think he said, Islamic extremism.
But he said Islamic extremism and the far right are two sides of the same coin or something
like that.
What does the far right fit into all of this for Sunak?
Well, it doesn't.
And with Galloway in this election. I mean, where is the far right in all of this?
Yeah, I mean, when British political leaders talk about the far right, what they're really talking about is people on the right who support Brexit.
By the way, I should say that Galloway also is an outspoken supporter of Brexit and always has been.
He embodies the anti-EU stance, which was once upon a time, well within my men.
memory, the majority view within the Labour Party.
But anyway, that's another thing.
But yes, of course, there are real extreme right people in Britain.
They exist in every single country.
But again, they are not a significant political force.
They never have been.
They've been trying to sort of establish them.
themselves at various times, but they've never really established themselves. But people who are
on the right and are for Brexit and who are also opposed to mass immigration, and there are many
people on the right who are, well, they get talked about as if they were part of the far right.
So, I mean, you know, it's, what it is, again, is this, it's a globalist political class
trying to say, you know, people on, you know, the left are who challenge them from the left,
well, they're agents of Putin or they're engaging, you know, they're in league with Muslim,
is, you know, people who are out of control and dangerous, and people on, you know, on the right,
who are for Brexit and who want to control immigration.
where they're really the far right and they're dangerous as well.
And you must vote for us or you would support us
because we are the rational democratic center.
And in order to support us, what you must also do
is support us as we try to control this thing
by basically banning protests, controlling speech,
doing all that kind of thing as well.
That's the democratic question.
A final question. Is this the end of tsunami?
was this speech the end of Sunac because I thought it was so out there so bizarre so panicky
it looked so bad for Sunak that I said this guy's done is he he is done yes what do you think
yes I would have thought so I would have thought so I would have thought it is probably the end
of Sunac what is the beginning of the end of Sunac I mean we still have an election nobody I think
seriously expects the Conservatives to be reelected this time but that isn't the issue because
as I said many times
if you're looking at the political establishment in Britain
their preferred candidate
has never been Sunak
it's always been Kirstama
they think that they get Kirstama
in with a big majority he can
stabilize the situation and consolidated
and he's by no means
someone who is averse to all of this kind of
rhetoric that we're getting from
Sunak in fact at times he talks
a bit like that himself, just said.
So they're going to get Stama in
and they're going to get Sunaak out.
But it's not going to change anything
about the underlying situation.
What we're going to see is the same pressures,
both from the right and from the left,
are going to grow.
And if I could talk about Stama a moment.
I mean, we had a very strange situation
with Roshdale,
where the Labour Party put up a candidate,
it. He was also drawn from the Muslim community. And then suddenly, Labour announced that they
weren't supporting him anymore. And it turned out that he'd said certain things. I'm not going to
discuss what they are, but they were all related to the Gaza affair. And this person apologized
for all of that. And anyway, even that apology wasn't accepted. And to be frank, see what he said. I'm
not surprised given the mood here at the moment.
So anyway, Labour backed off supporting this person,
even though he continued to run in the by-election as the Labour candidate,
all very strange.
Now, another very strange thing about this by-election is that there was very, very little polling.
We weren't being given information about who was really leading.
leading the race to anything like the kind of detail that I would expect, or at least if it was
happening, it wasn't being widely reported in the media. And I have to say, I do wonder,
and you know, this is pure speculation on my part, if what happened was that the Labour Party
found from its own internal polling that Galloway was going to win the seat anyway,
that the Labour candidate wasn't doing terribly well, turnout.
to end this by-election was about average,
about slightly better than average,
for a by-election in a seat like this,
just to say.
The vote for Galloway, as I said, was overwhelming.
They didn't want to be defeated by Galloway in this seat.
And so they arranged for this to happen
as an excuse for pulling away their support
from this particular candidate.
So they're now able to say,
well, the only reason Galloway won in Rochdale
was because we weren't putting up,
we weren't supporting our candidate against him.
We would support it our candidate.
We would have probably won the seat.
I thought that might be the case
before the by-election.
But when I saw the sheer scale of Galloway's victory,
I have to say, I don't believe that any longer.
I think he would probably have won
even if Labour had fully supported their candidate in the seat.
This is my own view.
Now, I ought to say that Stama himself,
almost certainly if there was such a plot,
and I don't know that there was,
wouldn't have been involved.
He tried to cling on to the candidate for a while,
and that caused him some damage.
But I would not be surprised
if some people within the Labour machine
took this decision. We can't risk a humiliating defeat to Galloway in this kind of way.
But one way or the other, what this shows to you is how fragile, even Starmer's position
ultimately is. He might win an election whenever it's held. He might even win big.
But he doesn't have a strong depth of support in the country. People, you see this all the time.
in a poll after poll after poll people don't like him they prefer him to sue knack and who wouldn't but they don't
think in the end that he's the person to give britain a clear lead and to pull it round so people are
looking for someone to do it they're looking some of them who are on the left look to people like
Galloway. Some people who are on the right look to others like, say, Nigel Farage, if he comes back
on the scene. But the one thing that one senses is that the British have completely lost
faith in their political class. Rightly so. All right. We will end it there. The duran. Dot locals.com.
We are on Rumble Odyssey, bitch, you, telegram, Rock Finn and Twitter X, and go to the Duran
shop 15% off t-shirts. Take care.
