The Shadow Home Secretary explores the causes of behaviour she has witnessed.
“We are making progress in the right direction,” the Health Secretary tells Marr.
“I’ve got a job at the moment. I’m not looking past 2021. I’ve come a long way in Scotland…and I’ve got a long way to go.”
Andrew Marr asks her to acknowledge that she has a problem of authority. She says unity is what we’ll “see this week”, and laughs when asked if Johnson is unsackable.
And clarifies that “at that point we will have an agreement as to what the future partnership will be”.
His reforms will cripple his MPs and are a posthumous triumph for Tony Benn’s belief in extra-Parliamentary action.
The Labour leader also wouldn’t say whether he’d rule out backing illegal strike action.
“I got us into this mess, and I’m going to get her out”, she told MPs earlier this summer. She should say so directly to Party members this autumn.
He says he wants “tariff-free access to the single market and a partnership with Europe in the future”.
He stresses the importance of a “smooth transition” for businesses.
Voters “want politicians to…deal with the real problems that people in this country are facing”.
The Chancellor says “yes” when Marr asks if “we’re definitely leaving the EU”, and provides some clarification.
The former Chancellor has taken to the role of newspaper editor, but some will see his attacks on the Prime Minister as unhelpful.
The Brexit Secretary wants “as far as possible, within the grounds of propriety, to not let this put us off” the democratic course.
Has anyone told Barry Gardiner about this latest change? Only last month, he wrote that staying in the Customs Union would be “a disaster”.