Kwasi Kwarteng's Side of The Disastrous Mini-budget

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Why did the Tory Party choose to make Liz Truss and Boris Johnson prime minister? How does it feel to be the second shortest-serving chancellor in post-war history? What was the true thinking behind the disastrous Truss-Kwarteng mini-budget?
    Rory and Alastair speak to Kwasi Kwarteng, former Chancellor of the Exchequer, about the future of the Tory Party, New Labour's conservatism, Rishi Sunak, Rwanda, Brexit, Liz Truss, diversity in politics, the British Empire, and much, much more.
    00:00 Intro
    04:50 Would you pass the Eton entry exam today?
    06:36 Parental heritage and upbringing
    11:25 In simple terms what was good and bad about the British Empire
    13:29 Why has the British Empire taken such a hold on the right wing psyche
    19:33 Rory and Kwasi weren't popular at Eton
    21:05 What are the pros of Liz Truss?
    23:58 How Boris Johnson's premiership started good but lost its way
    28:18 Why did you want a career in politics?
    33:08 Would you give advice to Rachel Reeves?
    36:32 Thoughts on Keir Starmer going more left and now being more right
    40:41 Why there has to be an element of populism in the Conservative Party
    41:46 Talk us through ethnicity in British Politics
    45:23 Do you think the Rwanda plan is working?
    46:25 Net Zero climate goals and how can we financially make it
    49:46 Importance of not being so reliant on China
    51:15 Rory and Kwasi entered parliament at the same time but had different experiences, one is a romantic and the other a realist
    1:00:06 What was a bigger mistake, backing Liz Truss or backing Boris Johnson?
    1:00:55 Did you not have an operation to become Prime Minister?
    1:02:45 Role as Chancellor - the pace was absurd and it moved 150 mph
    1:22:14 Why didn't you support Rishi Sunak?
    1:23:48 Can you see a way that Labour won't win at the next General Election?
    1:30:30 Who are the historians that have impacted you?
    1:36:54 Do you believe in virtue?
    1:38:23 Outro
    1:39:27 Debrief

Комментарии • 589

  • @dddddbbb
    @dddddbbb Месяц назад +290

    A great example of one of those politicians that sees it all as a game.

    • @MyMongo100
      @MyMongo100 Месяц назад +6

      Yes, he came across as pretty arrogant

    • @MayorMcC666
      @MayorMcC666 Месяц назад

      so someone like you?

    • @heyhonpuds
      @heyhonpuds Месяц назад +3

      Yes that famous politician dddddbbb. Just like him

    • @dddddbbb
      @dddddbbb Месяц назад +4

      @@heyhonpuds And so it was my life was diverted from that point onwards to become a politician. But not just any politician, the greatest game player of all time!

    • @PermaBear-bi9jk
      @PermaBear-bi9jk Месяц назад +2

      Campbell included, still not an ounce of remorse or guilt. Just carries on trying to accumulate as much money as possible…

  • @MrTomwazere
    @MrTomwazere Месяц назад +265

    Fascinating interview. Two things:
    1. Kwasi seems like a really really intelligent and nice person.
    2. Kwasi sounded like he didn’t give a damn about anything. He made it sound like a big game.

    • @terminallybill7073
      @terminallybill7073 Месяц назад +41

      Nice? He shorted the pound for his rich buddies, he deserves prison. Absolute scumbag.

    • @russodoni5331
      @russodoni5331 Месяц назад +14

      It is all a big game. For all his and Truss' pretence of being radical political disruptors, their entire mini-budget was really just 'let's do neoliberalism, but even more'; it wasn't actually a huge set of changes and absolutely wasn't some serious attempt to shift the foundations of the economic order. He's really just the epitome of the Blair/Cameron neoliberal consensus politician, who operates in such a very small window of possible moves (low tax, minimal state spending, privatize everything) that politics is just a distracting reality TV show with very little positive impact on anything. Politics in this world view is simply a matter of playing out party games and making enough noise to get people to look at you, with no real program for changing or improving anything.
      The reason the Tories have basically nothing to show for 14 years in power is because their entire philosophy of government is to do nothing.

    • @Red1Green2Blue3
      @Red1Green2Blue3 Месяц назад +10

      And that's why he's more dangerous than the likes of Suella. It's easy to oppose people you find distasteful

    • @FranzBieberkopf
      @FranzBieberkopf Месяц назад +4

      A textbook example of the difference between education and intelligence

    • @chrisspencer6502
      @chrisspencer6502 Месяц назад

      Yes it’s the accents don’t be taking in. He’s making about as much sense as a manic crack addict

  • @midnightwolfee2128
    @midnightwolfee2128 Месяц назад +496

    A fabulous example of how intellect without emotional IQ can be so dangerous.

    • @oldschool3670
      @oldschool3670 Месяц назад +35

      I only see pseudo intellect

    • @paulwalker797
      @paulwalker797 Месяц назад

      There is no intellect. Just a tired rehash of old failed ideas. An intellect learns from failure rather than repeating failure in the hope that things will turn out different.

    • @Newerasamearea
      @Newerasamearea Месяц назад +38

      ​@oldschool3670 the guy was a kings scholar and phd'd at Cambridge. Also smashed his exams at eton. EQ, Leadership, common sense maybe but tough to doubt his intellect.

    • @paulwalker797
      @paulwalker797 Месяц назад

      @@Newerasamearea You don't have to be an 'intellectual' to pass an exam. You only need application under given circumstances. Many super-smart people are crap at exams and tests and many dumb people have passed endless exams...I know, I saw it firsthand when I spent 25 years teaching. Don't respect someone's background or training, respect what they do.

    • @paulwalker797
      @paulwalker797 Месяц назад

      @@Newerasamearea As a teacher of 25 years I can assure you that you don't have to be an 'intellectual' to pass upwards through a system of testing. Plenty of the smartest, most creative people struggle with testing and the examination system while their below par classmates sail through. We have enough evidence in the current conservative party of 'well educated' fools destroying the country.

  • @nicka3697
    @nicka3697 Месяц назад +221

    I was surprised how much I liked Kwarti while being horrified at his view of politics as a game where positioning wins over substance.

    • @DrakenKorin140
      @DrakenKorin140 Месяц назад +6

      It is a bit depressing to hear, but looking at all the infighting in the UK and US. It makes a degree of sense if longer term prosperity is the goal

    • @kwabenaakuamoa9897
      @kwabenaakuamoa9897 Месяц назад +9

      He’s a realist and a pragmatist

    • @plasticsstrings
      @plasticsstrings Месяц назад +4

      Charisma is the killer of the people

    • @chortler
      @chortler Месяц назад +2

      Agree. Really awful man.

    • @curingd
      @curingd Месяц назад +6

      Precisely. I get the impression that everything is an intellectual game to him with no real world consequence (which he has been mostly shielded from).

  • @Xesgoodness
    @Xesgoodness Месяц назад +118

    So grateful for Rory. I’m incredibly thankful for pausing the conversation and breaking down what’s been discussed in layman’s terms. Incredibly. Pls keep it up!

  • @knightsnight5929
    @knightsnight5929 Месяц назад +217

    Kamikaze Kwarteng! What a guy! Did more damage to the UK economy in the least amount of time than anyone before! Quite an achievement!

  • @xavierhucklenbruch1798
    @xavierhucklenbruch1798 Месяц назад +164

    It's good to hear from somebody I do not agree with at all

    • @Jablicek
      @Jablicek Месяц назад +14

      Absolutely. Especially when they're chasismatic and have a way with words. They're the ones to really look out for.

  • @lamarnolan6727
    @lamarnolan6727 Месяц назад +175

    We need more guests who bring out this antagonistic side of Rory😂

  • @m00plank90
    @m00plank90 Месяц назад +46

    He’s financially comfortable, so it’s all a game. He has no real existential skin in the game. Win some/lose some/move on. While millions suffer for his part. The glibness about it is concerning.

  • @samuelmelton8353
    @samuelmelton8353 Месяц назад +175

    'You spaffed tens of billions'
    Kwasi: AHAHHHAHHAHA 🤣

    • @samuelmelton8353
      @samuelmelton8353 Месяц назад +20

      Rory: 😬

    • @rigs7748
      @rigs7748 Месяц назад +16

      It's really not an overstatement when it is said that it is all a big joke to these people. This being just another in the long list of blatant confirmations. Awful.

    • @samuelmelton8353
      @samuelmelton8353 Месяц назад +2

      @@daves301 For all of it that went to average people, it was probably cancelled out by the damage to our economy they inflicted.

    • @chadvader974
      @chadvader974 26 дней назад

      whats the timestamp please?

    • @janethornton3834
      @janethornton3834 23 дня назад +1

      God and these people were in power...a big game and doesn't impact their own finances but the idiots like me who work for s living

  • @NessieAndrew
    @NessieAndrew Месяц назад +43

    Probably one of the best interviews you've done.

  • @TheYoungVeganUK
    @TheYoungVeganUK Месяц назад +20

    I didn't realise how much I had wanted him to explain himself and his reasoning

  • @kicorse
    @kicorse Месяц назад +73

    I do appreciate his honesty, which Campbell lacks when discussing Iraq, for example. At the same time he comes across as the opposite of a footballer still having nightmares about a missed penalty from two years ago. His mistakes have had devastating consequences for many people, but to him he just lost a game. Probably the best attitude for his own mental health, but politicians should really appreciate the gravity of the decisions they're making.

    • @zt2019
      @zt2019 Месяц назад +3

      Very good point

    • @MyFluXx
      @MyFluXx Месяц назад +2

      Very insightful, I was thinking the same thing but could not articulate the thought!

  • @jakestevenson6388
    @jakestevenson6388 Месяц назад +34

    Really interesting to compare him to people like Theresa May. For her, as much as she did terrible things in power, there was a sense of public service. For Kwasi, it's all about getting into power and holding it. There's a terrifying lack of empathy here.

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад +1

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

    • @maxhaughton1964
      @maxhaughton1964 19 дней назад +2

      It would surprise me if Theresa May did better than him on some kind of empathy test. She's more sympathetic but he's probably a better read of a person and smarter (there being a massive difference between "IQ" and "EQ" isn't particularly useful IME - it's just personality differences).

  • @largesatsuma
    @largesatsuma Месяц назад +26

    I loved Rory’s reaction when Kwasi said he thought Boris would be reigned in 😂

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @juliangilbert5465
    @juliangilbert5465 Месяц назад +17

    The last Eton entrance question is extraordinary . This is dystopian .

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 Месяц назад +11

      That's why they call it a Prepare-a-Tory school.

    • @philipvjones397
      @philipvjones397 27 дней назад +2

      It's meant as a written q. Not easy for a 12 year old admittedly, but it depends on how your brain works. It's the sort of thing you would have had in an 11+ back in the day - when there were actually decent schools.

    • @juliangilbert5465
      @juliangilbert5465 27 дней назад +2

      @@philipvjones397 I passed the 11 Plus and went to a grammar school. We were never asked how we would react to protestors being shot. Get your head out of your backside.

  • @onenote6619
    @onenote6619 Месяц назад +24

    Kwarteng made one serious mistake. He listened to Liz Truss and ignored everyone who knows anything about economics. But if you can make that mistake, you can make any mistake.

    • @0_________________
      @0_________________ Месяц назад +6

      he was desperate for power even he knew he made a mistake.

  • @susanbaker7282
    @susanbaker7282 Месяц назад +7

    Intelligent without any feelings nothing will affect this man. Thank goodness he was stopped

  • @davidfoote9088
    @davidfoote9088 Месяц назад +30

    His openness to be a part of, and to welcome, popular politics convinces me that he will not be missed from parliament. Why does he think that so many of the electorate admire being told lies and half truths in a bid to capture their votes. Such arrogance to believe that we are not intelligent enough to interpret an honest debate. I agree with Alastair, such populism has had its day

    • @accountnamewithheld
      @accountnamewithheld Месяц назад +1

      Why do you think Reform polls so well? They are flat out honest

    • @StopTheRot
      @StopTheRot 27 дней назад

      @@accountnamewithheldI agree. They are Nazi sympathisers and - while not quite happy to admit it - they don’t deny it either. People respect that they haven’t sacked Gribbin because it shows they are willing to stand by their opinions.
      Their opinions aren’t for me though. Hell no.

    • @niyiawe8804
      @niyiawe8804 22 дня назад

      ​@accountnamewithheld and they will shaft you properly cos they keep saying whay you wanna hear😅😅

  • @spanishinquisition8678
    @spanishinquisition8678 Месяц назад +14

    Really appreciated Rory pointing out when Kwarteng was being incredibly blasé. And I still think Rory was in the wrong party!

    • @MouldyCheesePie
      @MouldyCheesePie 22 дня назад

      Rory was naive to not realise what that party was like behind the scenes.

  • @carltontweedle5724
    @carltontweedle5724 Месяц назад +26

    14 years of trickle down economics where the bloody money gone. Not on the people we are ripped off by the gas the electric the water. If you drive a car your goosed.

    • @tomblackwell6374
      @tomblackwell6374 Месяц назад +2

      Yeah, time for trickle up, universal income for all with a cap on pricing so the markets don't jack prices up. That way businesses and services which working people actually want will thrive not credit and debt buy now pay later trampy shells

    • @boas7742
      @boas7742 Месяц назад

      We have not had trickle down economics for the past 10 years though, nothing about conservative economic policy has been conservative or neo-liberal economics in nature they have repeatedly raised income tax in order to try and fix an inflation and debt crisis that they fundamentally misunderstood and anyone suggesting trickle up economics is a socialist and border line communist who if they got their way would entirely collapse the economy

    • @fl-ri-
      @fl-ri- 20 дней назад

      I would say 27 years of socialism ruined the country

  • @xxteresaxx9227
    @xxteresaxx9227 28 дней назад +5

    Bad, bad, bad. Everything is poor: morals, accountability, competence, values. I'm horrified we have had someone like him in government

  • @twelvebears1971
    @twelvebears1971 25 дней назад +8

    I don’t understand why everyone is being so forgiving. It’s not a bloody game and the consequences of his actions and those of his party have seriously affected thousands. This is just arrogance of the worst kind.

    • @MouldyCheesePie
      @MouldyCheesePie 22 дня назад +3

      They're allowing him to speak and giving him a false sense of security, which makes him open up more and more 🤦‍♂ At least we now know what was going through their heads.

    • @chukwudiilozue9171
      @chukwudiilozue9171 7 дней назад

      @@MouldyCheesePie Air. Air was in their heads.

  • @hustlinmagic
    @hustlinmagic Месяц назад +234

    After listening to this, it becomes quite clear that Kwasi Kwarteng is part of the problem with our politics.
    Too much ego, too much Eton confidence, but not an ounce of common sense and very little genuine understanding of what public service actually is.

    • @larslarsen5414
      @larslarsen5414 Месяц назад +19

      Exactly. I have been following Brexit way too much sitting here in Denmark for eight years (my youngest childs entire life!). What I have seen is this endless stream of extremely well-educated, very articulate, very smart, very confident men ... very charming also.... but with absolutely no realistic political project. They are living in fantasy land. The real worlds problems are just not very interesting to them. They are aiming higher...

    • @Jaaj2009
      @Jaaj2009 Месяц назад +8

      100% agree, statements like Boris was the right man for the job at the time because he was a good campaigner, when he got to office clearly had no idea what he was doing. This over confidence they have that they can make big statements on paper to attract attention and that's all you need to get in government. He says himself that governing is totally different, but the idea that if you are in the right crowd you can have a go and take your turn and then walk away from it and pursue other projects like its not your problem. It's honestly repulsive, he has no interest in seriously building a good country, its all about career ambitions and getting to the top.

    • @JK-zx3go
      @JK-zx3go Месяц назад +3

      Its all about him.

    • @NoNo-we6mp
      @NoNo-we6mp Месяц назад +5

      ⁠​⁠@@larslarsen5414I think a lot them are just in it for the status and don’t actually care. There are a lot of these office seeking types in the uk.

    • @whtwht
      @whtwht Месяц назад

      Most UK politicians don't give a damn about the public and helping towards a we'll run society .They should look at well run countries but hubris is quite a thing.

  • @benglishman
    @benglishman Месяц назад +15

    Kwasi comes across as someone who thinks that making "bold" statements, doing something "different", making headlines and campaigning well are all that matters in politics. Exactly the sort of person who shouldn't be in politics and not surprising that when he was in government it was a total disaster.

    • @mrzubairarshad
      @mrzubairarshad День назад

      Completely agree, a lot of his words didn’t carry any meaning apart from when he talked about himself. The fact he highlighted what was positive about Truss, Boris, Trump and correlated this with good politics shows how poorly he understands the whole objective of politics.

  • @lachd2261
    @lachd2261 Месяц назад +43

    When I listened to this, I did hear someone who was thoughtful and intelligent, as well as apologetic, but at the same time strangely disconnected from the terrible impact of the policy he implemented.

    • @TheYoungVeganUK
      @TheYoungVeganUK Месяц назад +7

      I didn't hear someone who was apologetic at all

    • @lighting7508
      @lighting7508 Месяц назад +3

      idk where youre getting apologetic from chief

    • @herewegoo2677
      @herewegoo2677 Месяц назад

      Agreed, he wasn't apologetic. He agreed that he made mistakes, yet he's unable to say, "I am sorry, I am idiot who toyed with the lives of 60 million people." He will never be apologetic because he's an egotistical etonian who doesn't care

    • @accountnamewithheld
      @accountnamewithheld Месяц назад

      "Fuck their pensions"

    • @user-uf4rx5ih3v
      @user-uf4rx5ih3v 26 дней назад +1

      When you say intelligent, what do you mean? It's quite clear to me he has no emotional intelligence, nor does he have any common sense, or much understanding of the UK economy. Perhaps you mean well-read? Sure he is, so what?

  • @julianroberts8760
    @julianroberts8760 Месяц назад +8

    Wonderful example of disagreeing agreeably. A really enjoyable episode to watch in spite of the seriousness of what was talked about.

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @colinseeney471
    @colinseeney471 Месяц назад +51

    It's a really interesting podcast. Kwasi was much more thoughtful than I expected

    • @MouldyCheesePie
      @MouldyCheesePie 22 дня назад +1

      Thoughtful but doesn't appear to have learned much, or care much. It's like he lacks the real world understanding.

    • @jackm1310
      @jackm1310 7 часов назад

      ​@@MouldyCheesePiethis

  • @barry013
    @barry013 Месяц назад +15

    We were going at 150 mph - into a brick wall…

  • @davebryant7114
    @davebryant7114 Месяц назад +53

    fascinating, he came across far more human, likeable and interesting than I had expected.

    • @Brokout
      @Brokout Месяц назад +6

      We don’t need those traits in a public servant, we just need them to not ruin the country. Judge someone by their record, not how interesting they are in an interview

    • @gdwe1831
      @gdwe1831 Месяц назад

      ​@Brokout whilst I agree with you, I don't think we practice what we preach

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @alanb9443
    @alanb9443 Месяц назад +40

    I feel that it was all just some big experiment for him. He comes across as slightly sarcastic rather than vindictive. He just doesn’t seem to compute that what he did had a major affect of people’s lives. ‘We got it wrong’, yeah but it’s more than that. This isn’t some math problem in an exam u didn’t get right.. peoples lost their homes over this… family members from sucide etc. he doesn’t seem to fully grasp what happened outside his direct world.

    • @alanb9443
      @alanb9443 Месяц назад +1

      Sorry that’s was auto correct, I meant to say he was narcissistic.

    • @sluglife9785
      @sluglife9785 Месяц назад +8

      Arguably people like that are more likely to end up in government, as it exists. If you were deeply affected by the results of your actions as a minister, you'd have a great deal of difficulty acting at all. I often think of it with the Police. Sensitive people don't become cops, because how can you live with yourself taking these giant interventions in other people's lives?

    • @InsanitiesBrother
      @InsanitiesBrother Месяц назад

      What he did didn't actually have much effect. It's more media stuff than actual long term economic damage. What he did 'sounds bad' and is a good attack from a political perspective. But in the grand scheme of Ukraine and the subsequent energy crisis... his budget did next to nothing. You could argue it was less than Gordon selling our gold for instance.

    • @user-uf4rx5ih3v
      @user-uf4rx5ih3v 26 дней назад

      @@sluglife9785 Being sensitive and having morals have nothing to do with each other. This man is not particularly emotional, he is also morally deficient and an idiot. He got in government because he was well connected.

    • @jackm1310
      @jackm1310 7 часов назад

      ​@@sluglife9785this

  • @sbing7
    @sbing7 Месяц назад +9

    Brilliant interview! Thank you all. Kwasi was open, relatively honest and not defensive, which is saying a lot about any politician! But the key to the success of the discussion, in my opinion, was Rory's constant push toward the meaning and morality of our actions. He was , in a word, tough and that makes it so much more interesting. Good work for all 3 guys!

  • @fplyerbs5251
    @fplyerbs5251 Месяц назад +34

    Alistair flippantly moving away from the Iraq war... Almost joking about it... disgusting!

    • @PermaBear-bi9jk
      @PermaBear-bi9jk Месяц назад +4

      The brass neck on him to be constantly accusing other people of lying is extraordinary too…

    • @jackm1310
      @jackm1310 7 часов назад

      Absolutely

  • @battina
    @battina Месяц назад +65

    Alastair: “You spaffed tens of billions.”
    Kwasi: *Laughs like it’s the best day of his life*. Total sociopath lacking compassion or respect.

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

    • @danielkarmy4893
      @danielkarmy4893 Месяц назад +3

      @@acheampongkf To be fair to him, when you consider the job he did as Chancellor, expecting him to be able to pronounce his own name may be getting ahead of ourselves ever so slightly!

  • @jdg9999
    @jdg9999 Месяц назад +5

    Honestly pathetic that he tries to suggest that you had to be yearning for the British Empire to want to be a sovereign independent country.
    Wanting to be free of foreign rule is the opposite of imperialism.

  • @davidbaker5561
    @davidbaker5561 21 день назад +3

    Your parents should be proud of you Kwasi, you’ve done a lot more to destroy the Tory Party than most 🥳

  • @stephengreen6683
    @stephengreen6683 Месяц назад +9

    I got through this interview and at the end, upon reflection, it was the word WOW! that kept coming to mind.
    Total lack of empathy for the seriousness of the impact of his actions, all just a game and every time he backed a candidate for leadership was based on who he thought would win.
    A fantastic insight into why conservatives need to be ejected on the 4th July

  • @fateenshareef8716
    @fateenshareef8716 Месяц назад +4

    It was a great episode to watch for me as non-Brit, but I can't blame the brits in the comment section abusing and seething at him. This is the man who single handedly spiked their mortgage rates. Doing the crazy things, he knew were crazy because he wanted the top job.

  • @nickbarton3191
    @nickbarton3191 Месяц назад +8

    Kwateng, although obviously intelligent, showed an incredible lack of judgement on hitching himself to Truss. She is a fruit loop, that was obvious years ago. A rational PM would have reined him in, and conceived feasible plan. What they seemed to do was blurt out perhaps their final objective, rather than step-wise moves. Who doesn't want lower taxes, but that has to go in hand with a growing economy. Their reasoning that low taxation of itself causes a growing economy, is incredibly naive.

  • @piccalillipit9211
    @piccalillipit9211 Месяц назад +5

    *WE WERE GOING 150MPH* yeah, the wrong way up the motorway on your phone whilst pissed....!!!

  • @jamesbrodrickmusic9567
    @jamesbrodrickmusic9567 Месяц назад +39

    This guy is so used to hanging out with wronguns he has lost all perspective. Seems he has no idea how awful he sounds

  • @user-ws2ip5qe5o
    @user-ws2ip5qe5o 20 дней назад +1

    He is "like" the villain you end up liking more than the hero.

  • @AM-gy5xg
    @AM-gy5xg Месяц назад +39

    Thanks for my morgage costs going up not voting Tory ever

  • @charlespilgrim9318
    @charlespilgrim9318 Месяц назад +4

    One of the best podcasts to date

  • @StopTheRot
    @StopTheRot 27 дней назад +5

    The reason I’m NOT voting Conservative is populism. I hate this right wing BS: it’s so patronising.

  • @samuelmelton8353
    @samuelmelton8353 Месяц назад +20

    He backed Brexit, Johnson, Truss - does he ever make the right decisions?

  • @benrevell6208
    @benrevell6208 Месяц назад +10

    intellect ≠ competence

  • @TheYoungVeganUK
    @TheYoungVeganUK Месяц назад +9

    I work in medical testing. Because of brexit, directly, we can no longer get malaria testing kits. Staff have left the country, supplies cost more and are severely delayed. Brexit has definitely changed things for the worse.

  • @hrishikeshricky3130
    @hrishikeshricky3130 17 часов назад +1

    I love Kwasi - he’s so intelligent 😎

  • @kwabenaakuamoa9897
    @kwabenaakuamoa9897 Месяц назад +18

    Interesting conversation. It’s refreshing to witness past politicians share their experiences so candidly. Case in point: Rory’s experience of Liz Truss as a manager/leader. As always, Kwasi Kwarteng provides frank, rational and pragmatic insights on modern politics. I look forward to reading his future books.

  • @tisFrancesfault
    @tisFrancesfault Месяц назад +17

    By all means an Interesting interview. Kwarteng does come off as the type of person that I would love to talk with; though ultimately not the kind of person I'd like to see in a Great office of state. Again though, The idea that Truss and Kwarteng were responsible for the issues following the budget is overly simple. Fiscal conditions at the time were already pushing UK pension funds to a degree of crisis, and that would have played out regardless.
    Truss and Kwarteng Budget was much like throwing a jerry can into an already burning building. Not helpful, but not the cause.

    • @bakerbaker4455
      @bakerbaker4455 Месяц назад +3

      Well, not really. Thier brand of econimics is outdated and innefective, they also didnt actually know where they were going to get the money to pay for unfunded tax cuts. It was completly inevitable what would happen, which is why the did everything they could to avoid scrutiny before the budget. It was a purely ideoligical move and it was incredibly grim.

    • @tisFrancesfault
      @tisFrancesfault Месяц назад

      @@bakerbaker4455 This is conflation of separate factors. In many respects it stems from the BoE QT in 22 onwards, and the Impact of that on LDIs with pension funds with respect to liquidity and margin calls,.
      pension funds not typically being fully funned rely on LDIs etc and venerable to the bond markets, and the leveraging of said bonds. Even before the MB, they were having to liquidate Gilts for cash.
      (Its kinda funny cos high yield rate gilts are typically good* for pensions. ...if not leveraged)
      All the other crap of the MB, exacerbated not caused. Again BoE was planning on selling more gilts, the Gov was planning on selling gilts all at a time when the market was already dumping gilts. Basically it was a sideshow.
      Not to defend the MB at all. Though the real stupidity of that was it was striving to be growth based, which during a inflationary crisis ...would/was an interesting approach. (read: Dumb approach)
      In short, bad policy, implemented at a worse time, thus terrible result.

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @josyms7849
    @josyms7849 Месяц назад +29

    No experience of the real world

  • @grantleymorgan8996
    @grantleymorgan8996 Месяц назад +2

    Interesting that we found 4 characteristics for PMs: intellect, experience, temperament, moral compass. If we can move voters to valuing these over ideology and charisma, we'll be far better placed for the next 12 years than the past 14.

  • @lakedistrict9450
    @lakedistrict9450 Месяц назад +35

    Does he have a fearsome intellect? He’s learned some Etonian phrases, but clearly lacking qualities needed for public service.

    • @odin3158
      @odin3158 Месяц назад +8

      he does -- otherwise he wouldn't have topped his classes (as here described by a classmate of his). I don't know what 'lacking qualities needed for public service' has to do with intellect.

    • @lakedistrict9450
      @lakedistrict9450 Месяц назад

      @@odin3158 Are the classes he topped a measure of fearsome intellect? Doesn’t seem so in the light of his poor judgment when in high office. Intelligence is one element of public service is it not?

    • @odin3158
      @odin3158 Месяц назад +4

      @@lakedistrict9450 being at the top of your class in eton and cambridge is a more accurate measure of intelligence than your (in)ability to perform in public office. He obviously failed engaged in the latter, but there are different qualities necessary to excel.

    • @lakedistrict9450
      @lakedistrict9450 Месяц назад +1

      @@odin3158 I understand the distinction you are making. Would you conclude that that being top of one’s class at Eaton, and a humanities degree is not a reliable indicator for the workplace?

    • @odin3158
      @odin3158 Месяц назад +4

      @@lakedistrict9450 Yes. However that wasn't the original question, it was concerned specifically with his 'fearsome intellect'. I dont't want to argue semantics however -- if your last reply was what you were initially intending i'll apologize for unnecessarily splitting hairs.

  • @ajw9533
    @ajw9533 Месяц назад +19

    How the hell could he work with Johnson after his picaninny comment? No dignity at all.

    • @PermaBear-bi9jk
      @PermaBear-bi9jk Месяц назад +1

      It may shock you to discover that jibes and jokes about skin colour and race are not exclusively said by white people…

    • @stevenhodgson4227
      @stevenhodgson4227 16 дней назад

      He's the whitest black man we've seen, to paraphrase Gaddafi's remark to Obama.

  • @jaexiusnem1267
    @jaexiusnem1267 Месяц назад +6

    30:25 ‘they started to spend a lot more money’ yes, and? New labour had many problems but spending more money was not one of them, yet unsurprisingly Kwarteng acts like this is on par with the illegal Iraq war.

  • @LaurenceGill2000
    @LaurenceGill2000 Месяц назад +1

    Alastair will absolutely be remembered for the Iraq war not election wins or Northern Ireland

  • @scout7972
    @scout7972 День назад +1

    He has no conception of the lives of ordinary people. I don't think this man has ever had a working-class friend in his life to be honest. When he talks about New Labour losing him after 2001 because they spent more money ("I guess that money had to be spent")... he has no idea how funding public services in the early 2000s changed people's lives. I grew up in one of the poorest areas of London in that time and public services like SureStart changed my family's life, as well as the lives of so many families in the neighbourhood. Kwasi is able to move on from his time as chancellor and can just see is as a career misstep. Working families lost their homes and their livelihoods because of the economic crash his policies caused. He and Truss are honestly sociopathic.

  • @christopherhutchinson6101
    @christopherhutchinson6101 Месяц назад +13

    So mini budget was made and thought at end of announcement was MMMM LETS SEE! and it was the people of this country which suffered on a Lets see. These are the Conservative politicians today and how they operate. We are in such a mess, no wonder.

    • @InsanitiesBrother
      @InsanitiesBrother Месяц назад +1

      How are people so disenengious... The 'hmmm let's see' was his thought on how the rest of the house was going to take the announcement. He even elaborated and said how some people seemed shocked in a good way and some in a bad. The context is clearly that he didn't know if the house was going to overall support it or hate it.
      Even the question was about how he read the room.
      You and many others are why our politics are so shite. Someone could say they like the colour red and you would go "OH MY GOD, YOU LIKE SEEING BLOODY MASSACARES"

    • @user-uf4rx5ih3v
      @user-uf4rx5ih3v 26 дней назад

      @@InsanitiesBrother I think you just argued against yourself, my guy. How are you going in with a budget proposal that your own fucking party might not even support?

  • @tobyjaffe270
    @tobyjaffe270 27 дней назад +1

    Kwasi mentioning that New Labour was an influence on his entering politics was fascinating and does sort of put Campbell in a little bit of a bind. He is not entirely innocent here in terms of the degradation of politics since the late 20th century.

  • @jackm1310
    @jackm1310 7 часов назад +1

    Wondering whether not many people watched the whole interview and instead skipped to the end where Alistair says "it's all a bit of a game". Kwasi never said he thought it was a game (not that I support what he did at all)

  • @nw988
    @nw988 Месяц назад +5

    Good afternoon gentlemen!

  • @lynxo5695
    @lynxo5695 Месяц назад +2

    Absolute fascinating discussion. Really enjoyed it 👏 👏 👏

  • @erongi233
    @erongi233 Месяц назад +34

    Another inter Old Etonian discussion , yet another Old Etonian. So well connected,so exclusive ,so annoying to the rest . It is like nation is colonised by a very ,very small elite who all know one another and decide things in discussions between themselves most often behind closed doors decade after decade, century after century.

    • @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn
      @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn 27 дней назад

      Blister didn't go to Eaten

    • @erongi233
      @erongi233 27 дней назад

      @@KevenHutchinson-gt1nn Kwatang and Rory Stewart went to Eton.

    • @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn
      @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn 26 дней назад

      @@erongi233 Yes, but Alister didn't.

    • @erongi233
      @erongi233 26 дней назад

      @@KevenHutchinson-gt1nn 2 is outrageous but 3 out of 3 would be extreme coincidence gone far too extreme even for Old Etonian dominance.

  • @andal7404
    @andal7404 24 дня назад +1

    You knew what Boris was really like all along. That's unforgivable.

  • @andypicken7848
    @andypicken7848 23 дня назад

    Gents thank you for making this available.
    I had no idea how how intersting as well as entertaining this man is.
    A really good informative podcaste

  • @happychappy7115
    @happychappy7115 Месяц назад +3

    It's all a big game for Eton boys😢

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

    • @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn
      @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn 27 дней назад

      Alister didn't go to Eton.

  • @bradwhiteuk
    @bradwhiteuk Месяц назад +3

    Kwasi appeared to believe himself disconnected in some way from the damage he is so deeply responsible for. I think he not only lacks judgement, but also seems unwilling to acknowledge that there IS such a thing as good judgement. Politics is a game to him, and he knows he lost, but he seems vague on the real-world consequences of his defeat.

  • @xf9068
    @xf9068 19 дней назад

    Its unbecoming for a politician to talk about Government policies to another politician; extraordinarily candid insight into how it is in Westminster

  • @mikekaaks8501
    @mikekaaks8501 Месяц назад +2

    I loved Kwasi's couple / few uses of "its the vibe" - memories of that great Aussie movie The Castle

  • @stuartmcloughlin
    @stuartmcloughlin Месяц назад +2

    Great interview chaps. Glued from start to finish. As usual.

  • @kathrynhatton7851
    @kathrynhatton7851 Месяц назад +1

    Alistair, you were so right to be depressed at the school girls view of politics, but here is the reason why.

  • @adamcourtenay
    @adamcourtenay Месяц назад +5

    £150bn of spending commitments at a time of the energy crisis after the pandemic just absolutely spooked the markets. Britain was exporting over 10% of our electricity production to france who had a much more aggressive energy cap. the serious plan should have been to force France to drop the anti-competitive cap or we'd block energy exports - even if we compensated for loss of profit at the interconnect it'd have been far cheaper than subsidising everyone's energy bill

    • @fatfreelondon
      @fatfreelondon Месяц назад

      When Kwateng blows £150bn, he's a hero of the right. When Corbyn does it, he's a hero of the left.
      Takeout: spending makes you a hero, but ends badly

    • @MachivelianBear
      @MachivelianBear Месяц назад

      And how do you see that going? The British can’t force France to do shit.

    • @adamcourtenay
      @adamcourtenay Месяц назад

      @@MachivelianBear we should not have been exporting energy to France who were not playing by free market rules - and that goes for Germany and Spain too. British pensioners should not have been suffering so that Macron could heat his pool on the cheap whilst mining bitcoin

    • @MachivelianBear
      @MachivelianBear Месяц назад

      @@adamcourtenay yes France is in the EU. A Nice protectionist market. Something the UK voted to get out off. Best regards from Denmark:)

    • @doghat1619
      @doghat1619 26 дней назад +1

      @@MachivelianBear well we couldn't force france to do shit whilst in the EU anyway, it's all just a wash

  • @dsjwhite
    @dsjwhite Месяц назад +2

    This has been amazing. All my preconceptions are wrong. Thank you for this insight. I'm still confused.

  • @maryconnor6173
    @maryconnor6173 7 дней назад

    Really enjoyed this discussion. Kwarteng is interesting and very engaging. Surprised by Rory’s comment that they select people for the pod that they admire - George Osborne? I thought they both despised him and his politics.

  • @gammamaster1894
    @gammamaster1894 Месяц назад +1

    Very interesting interview, I'd enjoy more of this kind.

  • @tosin8401
    @tosin8401 Час назад

    What a wonderful interview

  • @MrJTB606
    @MrJTB606 Месяц назад

    Listening to this man makes my skin crawl.

  • @moarguitars6322
    @moarguitars6322 Месяц назад +3

    Rorys face at 31:54 is golden

    • @Zebedee777
      @Zebedee777 Месяц назад +1

      I love his facial expressions. Genuinely think it’s a large part of why I like him 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @thomasoroarke7789
    @thomasoroarke7789 Месяц назад

    He is really good speaker .He explains things really well

  • @Timehasfallenasleep
    @Timehasfallenasleep Месяц назад +2

    I think Rory’s critique of Liz Truss was spot on. But Rory and Alistair were too easy on Kwasi who was patently out of his depth as Chancellor. The big take away from this interview is what useless people our leaders are.

  • @asherrevises8601
    @asherrevises8601 Месяц назад +8

    Fully agree, Liz truss is an unserious person

  • @kiriakoz
    @kiriakoz Месяц назад +5

    I like how none of these people can admit they were financed by dark money and shady lobbyists rather just making an accidental error.
    Of course it is often incompetence but more often than that, it’s corruption.

  • @arthursattler2344
    @arthursattler2344 28 дней назад +1

    This was a brilliant episode!

  • @tonybenson8303
    @tonybenson8303 Месяц назад

    What a great discussion, thank you

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @nlewin5072
    @nlewin5072 23 дня назад

    I didn't want to watch this, such is my antipathy towards him and Truss for their wacko arrogance, but eventually I succumbed.
    One of the most engaging, open, and entertaining guests you've ever had. It was also a reminder of how we should be careful who we elect as politicians. Not once did he talk about people and their lives -the people and lives he was making decisions about, it was all theory and ideology. I got the imression that it's just a big pissing contest as to who can leave office with the most impressive stats for growth, GPD, interest rates and all the othe bollocks that they are consumed with.
    This was a great episode of Leading.

  • @clytontravasso6488
    @clytontravasso6488 26 минут назад

    The jokes he made about the school bus shows how out of touch they are

  • @Symbioticism
    @Symbioticism 25 дней назад +2

    I really came away from this interview thinking Kwasi is a jerk: friendly and amiable, but totally lacking in moral fibre.

  • @jeremyquantrill4137
    @jeremyquantrill4137 Месяц назад

    Brilliant interview, thank you.

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @rossa809
    @rossa809 Месяц назад +1

    Excellent interview

  • @rowanberryglass
    @rowanberryglass 8 дней назад +1

    The lack of remorse and true awareness of what he's done to the UK was shocking. I found it genuinely upsetting seeing him relaxed and laughing like nothing happened. He seems like he lives in his own bubble. Uncomfortable viewing but well interviewed by Rory and Alistair.

    • @conniptions1533
      @conniptions1533 4 часа назад +1

      Please, the economy reacted badly for like 2 weeks and then immediately bounced back. Don’t pretend like your life was destroyed by it

  • @akeandersson2672
    @akeandersson2672 Месяц назад +1

    Extremely interesting.

  • @ER1CwC
    @ER1CwC Месяц назад +1

    1:34:45 - This is very interesting. What they don't realize is that Thatcher, whom they love, was pragmatic, even if she was a conviction politician. She became ideological towards the end, and that's what got her in trouble.

  • @garrybynon6080
    @garrybynon6080 23 дня назад

    how he talks to his fellow peers and how he spoke to the public, just a game to him, to all of that cabinet

  • @TheMrChugger
    @TheMrChugger Месяц назад +1

    I genuinely think he could have been an amazing chancellor if he was working with a competent PM

  • @hudsonfrempong224
    @hudsonfrempong224 Месяц назад

    Brilliant interview

  • @shimrodson5443
    @shimrodson5443 Месяц назад

    Great interview

  • @odin3158
    @odin3158 Месяц назад +3

    You mistranslated 'Victrix causa deis placuit, sed victa Catoni'. 'The victorious cause pleased the gods, but the defeated cause pleased cato'. It is a phrase used in a situation in which ones fundamental principles are correct, but one still fails due to (random) cirumstance. As such it is not a reference to brexit, but rather to his mini-budget.

  • @colinbrigham8253
    @colinbrigham8253 Месяц назад

    Thank 😢you for being so open for

    • @acheampongkf
      @acheampongkf Месяц назад

      He pronounces his name incorrectly. Its pronounced Kwehsi (its an A but quickly overtaken by an E sound and its an S, not a Z)

  • @TonyTsobanis
    @TonyTsobanis Месяц назад +4

    Kwasi talks about this tax problem being something complicated. Its not, tax the super wealthy and ensure companies pay their fair share, then you will have to enough to cover your public outgoings. Why is this never on the table?

    • @lukeskywalker8543
      @lukeskywalker8543 Месяц назад

      High tax=companies leave

    • @TonyTsobanis
      @TonyTsobanis Месяц назад

      @@lukeskywalker8543 I did not say high tax, I said fair share. Companies use all sorts of loop holes to avoid paying the normal rates the world over. Close the loop holes.

    • @lighting7508
      @lighting7508 Месяц назад

      @@TonyTsobanis close the loop holes = companies leave. Horrible but true.