The Lancashire Post, Lancashire Lead, Blog Preston and the Local Democracy Reporting Service invited all five candidates standing for the South Ribble constituency at next week's general election to a debate in which they fielded questions from voters.
Topics covered ranged from widening one of the borough's busiest roads to providing affordable homes for young people and from Brexit to single-sex spaces.
Four of those on the ballot took part in the event. In order of appearance from left to right on the stage (with the time of their first contribution) they are:
KATHERINE FLETCHER - Conservative (2'07)
PAUL FOSTER - Labour (3'17)
ANDY HUNTER - Reform UK (4'58)
ANGE TURNER - Liberal Democrats (6'44)
The one other candidate for the South Ribble constituency, who was unable to attend, is:
STEPHANI MOK - Green Party
Topics covered ranged from widening one of the borough's busiest roads to providing affordable homes for young people and from Brexit to single-sex spaces.
Four of those on the ballot took part in the event. In order of appearance from left to right on the stage (with the time of their first contribution) they are:
KATHERINE FLETCHER - Conservative (2'07)
PAUL FOSTER - Labour (3'17)
ANDY HUNTER - Reform UK (4'58)
ANGE TURNER - Liberal Democrats (6'44)
The one other candidate for the South Ribble constituency, who was unable to attend, is:
STEPHANI MOK - Green Party
Category
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NewsTranscript
00:00:00Good evening everybody and a very warm welcome to this South Ruby Huston debate brought to
00:00:13you by the Lancashire Post, the Lancashire Lead and Blog Preston. My name is Paul Faulkner,
00:00:18I'm one of Lancashire's global democracy reporters and I'll be steering you through
00:00:22the next couple of hours of what will be, I'm sure, a lively and informative debate.
00:00:27We'd be very delighted to note you'll be hearing far less from me than you will the
00:00:30people you've actually come to see and quiz and hear from, and they are of course the
00:00:35people who are back in to be South Ruby's next MP. We'll introduce you to them in just
00:00:40a moment. Now, looking out at such a civilised audience, I know that I don't have to say
00:00:44this next bit, but I've had my orders and there are various bosses lurking in the room
00:00:48so I'll skip to them and say that obviously we want this to be a respectful and enjoyable
00:00:55evening so if you could please resist the temptation to shout out or talk across people
00:00:59then we will get the most out of it and I'm sure you'll find there are polite ways to
00:01:04signal your appreciation of what's being said. One other thing, we're not expecting a fire
00:01:09alarm so if it sounds, follow the signs to the nearest exit and if you could put your
00:01:13phones at least to silent, that would be very helpful. Now you've already heard far too
00:01:18much from me so let's get down to the reason that you're all here and welcome the candidates
00:01:22themselves. From left to right, as you look at them, we have Catherine Fletcher for the
00:01:27Conservatives, Paul Foster for Labour, Andy Hunter for Reform UK and Ang Turner from the
00:01:34Liberal Democrats. Now there are five candidates standing in the South Ruby constituency at
00:01:39the general election. We did of course invite them all. Unfortunately Stephanie Mock for
00:01:43the Green Party was unable to attend and sends her apologies but you will still be hearing
00:01:48briefly from her because we thought we'd start by giving each of the candidates the
00:01:53chance to make their pitch to you, the people of South Ribble, in 90 seconds and we thought
00:01:58we'd keep it nice and simple and go in alphabetical order and that means that starting just to
00:02:02my left is Catherine Fletcher. So Catherine, your 90 seconds whenever you're ready.
00:02:07Brilliant. Good evening ladies and gentlemen. Thank you so much for organising Paul. I've
00:02:12been in South Ribble, I've got a track record of delivery from you. We've got a new big
00:02:16£2 million hospital, we've got one school rebuild done, we've got £50 million for Penrith
00:02:21and Gillis to be redone, we've got £50 million for World Kit to be redone. In 2010 only 60
00:02:26odd percent of the schools in South Ribble were good or outstanding. Today it's 92 percent.
00:02:32We're investing in our children's futures, we're investing in our healthcare. What we
00:02:36need to carry on doing is investing in the Northern Powerhouse that brought me to politics
00:02:40about 10 or 11 years ago when I was sat on the sofa shouting at the telly and I thought
00:02:45sod it, I'll stick my head above the parapet and see what I can do to deliver for us. So
00:02:50what do we need more of? We need better trains, we need better buses, we need more jobs, we
00:02:54need more business investment, we need lower taxes that fuel it, we need to drive investment
00:02:59forward and so for South Ribble here I've got lots and lots and lots of things for you
00:03:05and I've got lots and lots and lots of more ideas and I'm very much looking forward to
00:03:10hearing your questions this evening.
00:03:13Catherine thank you, we're within 90 seconds, Paul over to you.
00:03:20Good evening everyone, I'm Paul Foster, I'm your Labour Party candidate for the
00:03:25parliamentary election. Ladies and gents, this country needs change. Since 2010 we've
00:03:33been through 10 years of austerity where all our public services were really really really
00:03:39squeezed financially and none of them, none of them are in a better state now. We were
00:03:46then hit with a pandemic, not the government's fault, but the pandemic exposed the significant
00:03:53weaknesses of our NHS and our NHS couldn't cope. We then had war in Europe, our armed
00:04:04forces might not be fighting that war but our armed forces can't support NATO as they
00:04:10should because our armed forces now, due to the cuts, are at the lowest levels since the
00:04:16Napoleonic Wars. We need change. I'm not embarrassed to say to every single person
00:04:22here, we need to take a step back as a country and drive forward a new agenda with stability
00:04:30that makes Britain great again, puts the United back in Kingdom. I served 15 years
00:04:38in the British Army for my country, I've served as your council leader for the last five.
00:04:44I'm part of the community, I'm proud to be part of the community and I'm more than
00:04:50ready to serve as your MP. Thank you.
00:04:54Paul, thank you very much indeed. Next it's, for Reform UK, a legal gentleman.
00:04:59Good evening and thanks for coming. It's exciting, this is the first time I'm doing it. I agree
00:05:06with Paul, we need to change. I think of us, we're called the Reform Party but I think
00:05:11of us as a common sense party. Who doesn't want to see the votes being stopped, which
00:05:17we can do right now? Who knows who's coming into this country illegally and what their
00:05:23ultimate intentions are? And that's not the real elephant in the room. The real elephant
00:05:29in the room is legal immigration. Net migration in 2023 of 685,000 people. That's a few, that's
00:05:39like Manchester. What was it David Cameron said in 2010? We'll have it in the tens of
00:05:46thousands? That doesn't add up mate. What do we want for our children? We want good
00:05:52patriotic education and we want safe sex, single sex facilities. And the police? We
00:06:01want them investigating burglaries and grooming gangs, not doing the Macarena. We want people
00:06:09to want to work so they get more money in their pockets and not getting taken out to
00:06:15spend on virtue-signalling projects like HS2. We want to cut foreign aid and spend
00:06:21it here. We want to encourage businesses by cutting corporation tax and encourage investment
00:06:30into the country and into the area. Andy, sorry, I've got to be scrupulous, scrappy
00:06:34your rules, stop the war on drugs. Andy, I've got to screw you up, I'm sorry, I've got to
00:06:38be fair for everyone for the 90 seconds, we'll be a bit more fluid and free-flowing later
00:06:42on I promise. And now this is where it could all go very wrong as I try to time myself
00:06:46by reading out Stephanie Watt's statement for the Green Party. So this is what Stephanie
00:06:58Watt for the Green Party says, thank you for inviting me to participate in the hustings
00:07:02this evening. I'll start that one for Stephanie from the Green Party again. Thank you for
00:07:14inviting me to the hustings this evening, I volunteer to put myself in South Ribble
00:07:18because the Green Party wishes everyone in England and Wales to have the opportunity
00:07:22to vote Green. I'm a Green Party activist based in Stevenage in Hertfordshire. For me
00:07:27the Green Party stands for social justice and climate justice. Elected Greens in Parliament
00:07:32would focus on quality housing, education and transport, transform our economy and overhaul
00:07:37the tax system to make it fairer. The Green Party would invest to protect the climate
00:07:41for future generations and bring nature back to life. In terms of the economy and financial
00:07:47support to the most vulnerable in society, Greens would introduce a wealth tax of 1%
00:07:51annually on people with assets over £10 million and 2% on those with assets over
00:07:57£1 billion. We would align tax rates on investment income with employment income tax and remove
00:08:02the National Insurance Upper Earnings Limit so higher earners pay more. We would increase
00:08:07the National Minimum Waste to £15 an hour and offset the cost to small businesses by
00:08:11reducing their National Insurance payments. We would increase Universal Credit by £40
00:08:16per week and abolish the two child benefit cap, lifting 250,000 children out of poverty.
00:08:22We'd set up regional mutual banks to support small and medium sized businesses and drive
00:08:26investment in local economic sustainability. Greens would invest £28 billion in the NHS
00:08:32to reduce waiting lists, increase staff pay and guarantee access to an NHS dentist as
00:08:37well as an additional £20 billion of hospital buildings and repair. That certainly did have
00:08:42more to say but that is 90 seconds, very much up. So last but definitely not least
00:08:48and definitely not forgotten from a Liberal Democrat, Ang Turner. Your 90 seconds, whenever
00:08:52you're ready, start.
00:08:54Thank you, good evening everybody. I'm Ang Turner, a Liberal Democratic candidate for
00:08:58South Ribble and I am the only local candidate who originates from the constituency and grown
00:09:03up in Leyland where I attended local schools. I then moved to Hutton with my parents and
00:09:09gained a degree in business and finance from our local university, UCLan. I now live in
00:09:13Pemberton where I am a local South Ribble borough councillor. My working life was spent
00:09:19in the aerospace industry, supplying goods and services to the Royal Air Forces across
00:09:23Europe and apart from a spell working abroad on a specific European collaborative project
00:09:29supporting NATO, I have lived in the constituency for most of my life. Having listened to residents
00:09:36on the doorstep in South Ribble, my campaign is formulated accordingly. At the heart of
00:09:42my campaign is tackling the crisis in social care and NHS, boosting the economy and helping
00:09:49people with the cost of living, stopping the Aurora sewage dumping scandal and protecting
00:09:54our environment and having lived here most of my life, I am acutely aware of the problems
00:09:59which affect the residents of South Ribble through lived experience. I look forward to
00:10:05your questions. Thank you.
00:10:08Thanks, thank you and thank you to each of you for your opening statements. So this is
00:10:12how it's always worked and I've basically in the evening really split into two parts.
00:10:16A lot of you very kindly submitted questions in advance. Far too many to ask individually
00:10:20unfortunately but what we have done is grouped them into themes and picked some representative
00:10:25questions and also amalgamated some others so that hopefully all of your topics are covered.
00:10:30But if you don't hear your topic or your particular question asked then don't worry because we're
00:10:35going to move to the floor and you will get a chance to put either pre-submitted questions
00:10:39or ones that you've just dreamt up this evening, perhaps even on the basis of what you hear
00:10:43over the next hour or so and put them to all of our candidates. Now each candidate will
00:10:48have up to a minute to make their initial response and then they're going to signal
00:10:52to me if they've got anything to say in addition that they want to come back on in response
00:10:57to what's being said by their fellow panellists here. So the first theme of the evening is
00:11:03housing. A question that somebody here in this audience has asked, what will you do
00:11:08to help the current housing situation here in South Ribble? This person says that for
00:11:12a young person buying a house in South Ribble feels like an unattainable dream. They've
00:11:17lived here their whole life but as a result of rising interest rates, ballooning house
00:11:21prices, sluggish wage growth and spiralling cost of living it seems impossible for them
00:11:26to afford a house and stay in the local area. So how would you respond to that? We'll come
00:11:31to you first Andy.
00:11:38I think that interestingly you may be aware that I've been involved in quite a few planning
00:11:45issues in the borough over the past couple of years and actually I think that in South
00:11:53Ribble these guys, the South Ribble Borough Council do a pretty good job so credit to
00:11:59them. It's a difficult one. This is not an inexpensive area and therefore the cost of
00:12:06houses is going to be quite often above the range of many people, not just young people.
00:12:13We have probably got a lot of brownfield sites that could possibly be potential development
00:12:20areas and if we put the right thoughts into how we can do that and get the right people
00:12:26to invest we can probably start building sensible patterns of housing across the relevant
00:12:34areas of the council. That would be my immediate response.
00:12:40Andy thank you. If you could pass the mic to Angela and she'll go next.
00:12:45Well housing is a critical issue in the whole of the country and it isn't right for our
00:12:50young people to not get a base where they live and build their family and their future
00:12:56here. To be honest with you I think our planning system needs actually massive reform. So for
00:13:05example in South Ribble itself we have building developers who get planning permission to
00:13:14build homes and then they land bank them and what that does is it doesn't provide the
00:13:21requirement in the community that we need. So for instance in South Ribble we've got
00:13:28Pemberton Mills and Ferns and there's probably approximately and I could be wrong on quantity
00:13:33around a thousand houses that could be built there. Hopefully again, I'll keep going, once
00:13:42again the planning legislation in this country is failing people by not being more specific
00:13:52about the sort of housing that should be built. So we've got developers taking advantage of
00:13:57getting planning permission and not building houses. That needs correction. And we've got
00:14:01developers who have the opportunity to amend the planning application to turn what is essentially
00:14:07planning applications that would build affordable homes for both the old people in our communities
00:14:15and the young people in our communities and then they put an amendment in and they suddenly
00:14:20build 200 huge five bedroom houses. This has got to change. If you can't provide the kids
00:14:26in your community a start in life to build a family with an affordable home then this
00:14:35affects the whole of our economy and jobs in our economy as well. So I think our building
00:14:42regulation is broken.
00:14:44I'll stop you there. That's great. If you can pass the mic to Paul for your thoughts
00:14:48on housing in South Ribble.
00:14:50Thanks for the comments. I'll take that. South Ribble does do a good job as best it can.
00:14:57There's two or three issues here at play. Firstly I agree with what Andrew has said
00:15:03that there has to be wholesale planning reform. The current planning system just is not fit
00:15:09for purpose and it needs speeding up and it needs local authorities to be given the assurance
00:15:15that if a local authority makes a decision it isn't overturned by government. That's
00:15:20one of the reasons that we have so many delays in the planning process is the interference
00:15:25from government and many people sat in here will be aware of the Secretary of State's
00:15:30decision to overturn the almost 1,400 properties in Pemberton that this authority refused twice
00:15:37so that's very, very, very valid grounds.
00:15:40The second thing we must do, and direct Paul's answer to the question, social housing. We
00:15:46must allow local authorities like we have started doing here in South Ribble to build
00:15:53their own social homes at affordable rents. We can afford to provide those homes. We want
00:16:00to provide those homes. It's current government legislation that prevents us from doing so.
00:16:06That is the only way we're going to get enough homes in South Ribble for our children and
00:16:12our friends and our families to live in. The undersupply is chronic. We have almost 4,000
00:16:18people, families on waiting lists for social housing in South Ribble. They're living in
00:16:24temporary accommodation, some of them, other than those who are private rented, which is
00:16:28near the Fit for Purpose, and it's probably about twice the going rate, Paul. So what
00:16:33I want to see is wholesale social homes being built as we are doing in South Ribble currently.
00:16:39I think the legislation changed and that will help alleviate the problem. Thank you.
00:16:44Paul, thank you, and Kathleen, finally to you. Your thoughts on how a young person in
00:16:48South Ribble could afford to stay and live in South Ribble?
00:16:51Well, as you're aware, Pete, you would have expected me to monitor this very closely.
00:16:56I've got cousins in Leyland, I've got cousins across the way in the parts of the constituency
00:17:01that I've just gone into South Ribble. You can buy a three-bedroom terraced home within
00:17:0715 minutes' walk of main Leyland train station, which is on a direct line to Manchester, for
00:17:13approximately £125,000, and two people earning below the average wage could, and with support
00:17:22from government, like abolishing stamp duty for first-time buyers, find that an accessible
00:17:28home with some saving. Now, does that mean that that's true all over the constituency?
00:17:33No, absolutely not, but I think it's important to remember that we aren't London and the
00:17:38south-east. When I go down south and advocate for a northern powerhouse, I say to them,
00:17:43why are you not screaming for a northern powerhouse if you're so reassured? Because your housing
00:17:47market is overheating, and they have a very genuine problem. However, here, there are
00:17:52two or three points that I want to make. First of all, Paul, we know we've got £25 million
00:17:59for the Leyland town deal. Within that is approximately £750,000 from Home England
00:18:05to build social housing, to say the government isn't supporting that sector is not true.
00:18:10And the other thing with planning is Labour Party nationally are saying, this is people
00:18:16with the grey belts. Now, we as Conservatives absolutely support brownfield development.
00:18:21I think the manifesto has got some really interesting ideas in it about taking away
00:18:26some of the lack of financial incentives to build brownfield first, as well as continuing
00:18:32to support first-time buyers. But the idea that we just rip it all up is for the birds.
00:18:39Paul mentioned that planning application. The reason that planning application was put
00:18:45through by officials within the department is because the local council has an out-of-date
00:18:50local plan. This is not some kind of nifty-wifty thing. It is a really important document that
00:18:57is what the officials use to identify whether the housing is required by the local council.
00:19:04So if you have a planning authority that on one hand is saying, here is a field, please
00:19:08build on it, and on the other hand is saying, no, no, no, don't build on it, then unfortunately
00:19:13you put government in an invisious position. For the record, I don't think BMO is suitable
00:19:18to take it out of the local plan and update it.
00:19:22I think you've given Paul a few things that he'd like to respond to. Can I ask you as
00:19:26well, Paul, in terms of Pickering's Farm in Pemberton, which you mentioned, it was a specified
00:19:32and allocated site, wasn't it? So it's difficult for the council to then justify refusing it.
00:19:37No, it's not, because the land is identified as a potential site, Paul, if the proposals
00:19:43brought forward by the developers were appropriate and they weren't appropriate. So, Catherine,
00:19:49just a couple of points. The local plan in South Ribble is in date. We have a current
00:19:53local plan that is valid until 2015.
00:20:01But ladies and gentlemen, you've just been told that South Ribble doesn't have a valid
00:20:05local plan. South Ribble very much does have a valid local plan. It is valid until 2015.
00:20:12We are currently in the process of developing the new local plan with our partners in Chorley
00:20:30and Preston and that's going to be submitted to the Secretary of State next year. Within
00:20:37the justification that Mr Gove gave for overturning the democratic decision of the local authority
00:20:43here in South Ribble, there was no mention of the local plan not being valid. He actually
00:20:57stated in his response, as did the Inspector, that the local plan was sound. The reason
00:21:05it was refused was on highways issues, the 582 in particular, amongst other issues that
00:21:13the planning authority had. Catherine, you also mentioned the town deal having £700,000
00:21:21in the town. The reason it was refused is because of, as I said, the lack of housing
00:21:31didn't have any money from Homes England for housing. South Liverpool Borough Council with
00:21:37the town board then applied to Homes England afterwards and we gained, it's actually just
00:21:44short of £8 million worth of contributions towards social housing as part of the town bid.
00:21:52Paul can I just bring in or ask whether Andrew and Andy on those particular issues,
00:21:57the issue of the local plan and its suitability and its being here.
00:22:02I think this is an interesting debate and I feel like we can carry on with this, it's great.
00:22:07Nothing to say on that one then Andy, and yourself, nothing to add to it.
00:22:11Excuse me, can we just ask a question?
00:22:13Sorry sir, we're opening it up to the floor at the end for questions on the local deal.
00:22:17Why ask now when we're talking about social housing?
00:22:19Just because that's the format that we want.
00:22:21Sorry sir, that's just because that's the format that we've already agreed to.
00:22:25You'll be able to ask that question when we open it up to the floor at the end.
00:22:33The format we've agreed is we will go through some individual themes and representative questions
00:22:45and then we'll open it up to the floor. I promise you you'll be able to make that issue or any
00:22:49other thing. At the risk of permanently bouncing between both of you on this particular issue,
00:22:56fine, maybe you wanted to go back on the point you just said.
00:23:01Very, very briefly because we will have to.
00:23:02Our kids need somewhere to live.
00:23:06Just specifically on what Paul's saying, otherwise we can't go backwards.
00:23:09No, no, our kids need somewhere to live and I think the reform answer really does put
00:23:15a local window on the national line which is vote reform, get Labour.
00:23:20Thank you very much indeed for that.
00:23:27How we have peer service next, you won't be surprised to know we have several questions
00:23:33on the NHS. One in particular though is asking what the individual candidates plan to do to
00:23:39support staff morale, recruitment and retention in the NHS. So we'll start on that one with you
00:23:46Anne, so we've got the mic at the wrong end of the table.
00:23:52Well as most people know the NHS and care is at the heart of the Lib Dem campaign and
00:24:00basically what we want to see to boost staff morale, I think you said, to recruit
00:24:08personnel like doctors and nurses. So at the heart of our campaign we do have an £8 billion
00:24:13package which we want to invest in health and care. In order to boost people's morale you need
00:24:21to make sure that they're not overworked and we want to put plans in place so that staff do not
00:24:27have to work outrageous hours under pressure, being tired and fatigued, potentially that
00:24:34affecting their decision making. We want to see an extra, our funding that we've done is to see
00:24:41an extra 8,000 doctors. We want guarantees for dentist appointments for everybody and we want
00:24:50to see establishing mental hubs for young people in the community. All this will do is reduce the
00:24:59burden of the NHS and spread out the workload which will hopefully benefit the morale of staff
00:25:08and we want to help people to spend more than more years in their life in good health by investing
00:25:14in the public health, as I said, which is our £8 billion package. There's a lot more I can add to
00:25:19this but I'd better stop there. Thank you. Thank you. Paul, have the Lib Dems outflanked Labour on
00:25:26this particular issue in terms of the investment that they're planning? No because we've not stated
00:25:31how it's funded Paul. The NHS needs to do, sorry the government needs to,
00:25:41the government needs to listen to its staff and treat its staff with some respect. Well I remember
00:25:49during the Covid crisis, Mr Johnson and Co used to clap for the NHS 8 o'clock on a Friday. As soon
00:25:57as the Covid crisis was over each and every one of those unions was targeted to the point we've
00:26:02still got strikes today. We need to change the rosters for the staff and the working
00:26:08cycle for the staff. We need to listen to them and treat them with respect. The Labour Party,
00:26:13you'll notice, has stated we're going to create 40,000 additional appointments per week and we're
00:26:20going to do this in conjunction with the staff. The doctors and nurses within our wonderful NHS
00:26:27are the best people to decide what's best for the NHS and how to deal with the challenges that we
00:26:33have. They don't want people to have to wait two years for a scan. They don't want people, Paul,
00:26:41to get ill. So we need to listen to what they say to us. We're going to utilise those facilities.
00:26:47A lot of the NHS facilities we have now are wonderful at all times, but we may come to that
00:26:51later, but they're used basically 9 till 5 from Monday to Friday. We're going to start using the
00:26:57facilities into the evenings and at the weekends. And guess who mentioned that to us? Who proposed
00:27:04that to us? The staff. Thank you. Catherine, do you not make any earth-shattering commitments
00:27:12on the NHS in the Conservative manifesto, are you? So I think the original question was about
00:27:18staff and staff morale. We've done the thing that no government has done for decades, which is put
00:27:23a long-term workforce plan in to understand what training places. I've personally campaigned to
00:27:28make sure that UCLan's medical school places increase because they're a very paltry figure
00:27:34and we want local doctors trained here from our local community to work in local hospitals.
00:27:39We've got Chorley's Hospitals Future Secure as one of only 8 elective surgical hubs in the country
00:27:46and actually it's one of the best performing, which is credit to our staff. But when you talk
00:27:51to the trust leadership, they talk about staffing, they talk about contracts, two things are really
00:27:56bothering them. One, they put it beautifully. Do you remember those pictures you used to get
00:28:00where it was a blank square in the corner and you moved the squares around to make the picture?
00:28:06The hospital trust leadership described the new hospital that I've secured
00:28:10to replace the one in the North East as one of the most important things, not necessarily just
00:28:16because it's a big shiny white elephant, but because it creates the blank square that allows
00:28:21for the rearrangement of the services for the 21st century. You know, pathology samples are getting
00:28:26lost because they're getting shipped around a number of different labs. Now, just to be clear,
00:28:31on reform of terms and conditions, we've done that with the nurses, we've done that with the
00:28:35consultants, we've done that with the specialists. The only people that are still on strike and not
00:28:40accepting they're on strike right now and they're not accepting the reform of payment conditions
00:28:45is the junior doctors because they are holding out for a 35% pay rise and it is absolutely
00:28:53criminal and is letting down their other colleagues within the NHS. So I think that's
00:28:59super important and Paul mentioned 40,000 more appointments per GP per week. Do you know how many
00:29:08appointments each GP in the country do? It's millions. 40,000 is a rounding error and this
00:29:13is the problem with the Labour Party, is their soundbites are good but their numbers don't add up.
00:29:18So if you go and talk to the trust, what they want is the capacity to allow them to look after their
00:29:25staff and for their staff to not strike for silly amounts of money but to accept the reform of the
00:29:30working conditions that allows for things like weekend working.
00:29:34I know you're enjoying the debate but I'm sure you've got something to say on the NHS and reform's position really is one of reform, isn't it?
00:29:41Sorry?
00:29:42Reform's position really is one of reform for the NHS.
00:29:44Yeah, it's just I don't like it in its current form.
00:29:47The sort of gist of the first question was morale and the staff, how they feel about things.
00:29:53I think within the NHS the frontline staff are pretty good. You know I've got a few issues myself
00:30:00and they've been pretty good. I've really enjoyed working with them and them getting me better.
00:30:07When you talk about morale, we're suggesting that all frontline staff are pretty good.
00:30:15They pay zero basic rate tax for three years. That's going to keep people in the NHS
00:30:23and it's going to attract people who have left the NHS to come back to the NHS.
00:30:29We're going to end training caps for UK medical students.
00:30:33That means UK medical students will graduate into their profession in the UK.
00:30:39We're going to write off student fees if they stay in the UK.
00:30:44Then there's sort of things that you know might just motivate people to want to work here.
00:30:48That might just motivate people to try and end the doctor and nursing carer shortages.
00:30:55When we go to waiting lists, we recommend that we start using more independent and not-for-profit
00:31:04health provision in the UK and overseas. We think we should introduce relief on private
00:31:10health care and insurance. More private health care would relieve the pressure on the NHS.
00:31:16The frontline staff will be under less pressure and morale would improve.
00:31:23Operating theatres open at weekends. Let's get things moving more effectively
00:31:28within the operational side of the health service.
00:31:31Pharmacy first, GP second, A&E third. If you're feeling a bit ropey, don't go to the GP.
00:31:41Let's get a pharmacist. They're pretty smart cookies, these people. Let's get a pharmacist
00:31:45saying, yeah, you know, take some penicillin, take some aspirin or whatever it might be.
00:31:50Let's get more pharmacists. Let's get tax incentives for people to open more pharmacies.
00:31:58All of those reduce the pressure on the frontline NHS, which is working pretty hard,
00:32:05and that will improve morale.
00:32:07Andy, thank you. If we can bring you back in on various points that were raised,
00:32:11but if you could just stick to the specific points, if you can,
00:32:13I think it answers the challenge to you as to how they would pay for the extra investment in the NHS.
00:32:20Okay, we have absolutely made it clear how we'll pay the £8 million package
00:32:26for the NHS and care by closing the tax loop, tax loops for the wealthiest
00:32:33and recovering and reversing the tax cuts to the banks.
00:32:37It's costed in our manifesto, and that's where we're going to get the money from.
00:32:42Thank you.
00:32:43Thank you. Paul, what were some challenges that you wanted to come back on there,
00:32:48particularly in terms of the 40,000 appointments that Labour have promised
00:32:51and whether they're GP appointments or otherwise?
00:32:54Yeah, and the hospital appointments on the second day.
00:32:57Well, I think we've got Will in this tonight.
00:33:00Will's a matron in the NHS.
00:33:04It's Will, but we should be listening to Paul about the issues with the NHS
00:33:08and speaking to him more often and his colleagues.
00:33:13Katherine Genshin.
00:33:14Can you speak to the...
00:33:18We've got to speak to...
00:33:19I'm being barracks here, ladies and gentlemen. I'll carry on.
00:33:23So Katherine mentioned, she speaks to the trustees and the management often
00:33:29about the hospitals.
00:33:30That's one of the problems we have.
00:33:33The NHS is far too top heavy with its management structure
00:33:36and it's not going to focus on the doctors and nurses
00:33:39actually delivering these services.
00:33:43Katherine also mentioned and specifically mentioned 40,000 GP appointments.
00:33:48Just clarify that one.
00:33:49That is not what we have said in our manifesto.
00:33:53We said 40,000 additional appointments.
00:33:56That could be for a scan.
00:33:57It could be seen as a physiotherapist.
00:34:00It could be a multitude of issues.
00:34:03And Paul, can I ask one more point?
00:34:04Are we discussing a new hospital later?
00:34:07If that new hospital comes up in the audience questions...
00:34:09I'm sure it will.
00:34:10I'm sure it will.
00:34:11Well, Katherine, one for you.
00:34:13Your colleagues are about to join the hospital in South Ribble
00:34:15through some method.
00:34:17Would you like to respond to that?
00:34:18Is it not the fact that South Ribble is really the only place
00:34:21that could house a new hospital?
00:34:24I'm incredibly excited about it.
00:34:26I think the lack of borders or political cynicism
00:34:29for something that's so important.
00:34:30The NHS has been a political football for too long
00:34:32and that's part of the problem of it.
00:34:34They're absolutely brutal.
00:34:35Now, the only reason...
00:34:37I've had a lot of people say, where's it going to be?
00:34:39And I can't tell you because you've only bought
00:34:41two out of the three pieces of land.
00:34:43And if I go gobbing off for my own political advantage,
00:34:45I would stick a zero on the price for the taxpayer.
00:34:48And I am not going to do it for my own political advantage,
00:34:52but it would be a fantastic site.
00:34:55Because let's face it,
00:34:55the people of Wycreston are wonderful,
00:34:57but it's a cramped site.
00:34:58You can't park and you have to shut the road
00:35:00when the air ambulance lands.
00:35:02We need a seat also that helps rearrange
00:35:05and consolidate services.
00:35:09Katherine, thank you very much indeed for that.
00:35:12Wrap up there on the NHS.
00:35:13We'll come back open in the public questions
00:35:17later on in the debates.
00:35:18The A5A2 was mentioned during the housing question.
00:35:21I've got a specific question on that.
00:35:23What plans do any of the parties have
00:35:25for the dualling of the A5A2,
00:35:26which in case anybody doesn't know,
00:35:28has been a decade long aspiration, more than even.
00:35:33Due to the increase of housing,
00:35:34Lancashire Cricket Club developments
00:35:36and Lancashire Cricket Club developments,
00:35:37this section of road is already congested
00:35:39and it's only going to get worse in the next few years
00:35:42without action now.
00:35:44The current plans are not to dual,
00:35:46but to partially dual it, aren't they?
00:35:49Katherine Stone, for you again,
00:35:50isn't that a sop, basically?
00:35:52I haven't seen the current plan,
00:35:53so you're a step ahead of me, Paul.
00:35:55I mean, the A5A2 is a car park,
00:35:58so I live over in New Longton
00:36:00and I'm coming off the motorway.
00:36:01If you do it at the wrong time
00:36:02or if there's an accident,
00:36:03you're like, oh, that HPH truck turned over,
00:36:05you know, it's an absolute mess
00:36:07with all those little roundabouts
00:36:09that people don't understand.
00:36:11Lancashire Towns Council have applied
00:36:12for up to £40 million, £50 million
00:36:14of the money that we released
00:36:16taking the tough decisions
00:36:17to stop HS2 at Birmingham
00:36:20and that was because HS2 was taken,
00:36:22I was very briefly raised in those stats
00:36:24at an internship, if I'm honest,
00:36:26but what was very true
00:36:27was that there was not a penny left
00:36:29in the transport budget
00:36:30because all of the money was going on HS2.
00:36:33So last autumn, we took political counters
00:36:36to say, well, stop at Birmingham
00:36:38because there are other
00:36:39more important priorities.
00:36:40We'd rather spend £19 billion
00:36:42in the north of the Midlands
00:36:43on other things
00:36:45and part of that is the bid for the 5A2.
00:36:47But as far as I'm aware,
00:36:48the plans aren't finalised,
00:36:50so I will support anything
00:36:52that stops it being a car park
00:36:53but not a roads engineer,
00:36:54so I'm not going to say
00:36:56this particular solution
00:36:57solves the problem
00:36:58but the government is making
00:37:00the hard decisions
00:37:01so we've got the money available
00:37:02to solve the problem.
00:37:04Paul, to you on the A5A2,
00:37:06the connected Tavis and Pickering's farm issue.
00:37:09Yes, it is and that, Catherine,
00:37:11has referenced and accepted
00:37:12that it's a car park, Catherine,
00:37:14because that's the very reason
00:37:15why the planning committee
00:37:16in South Ribble refused applications twice
00:37:19because of that reason
00:37:20and the Secretary of State
00:37:25overturned the decision
00:37:27of the planning committee
00:37:29because they said it was already congested,
00:37:32therefore another 1,200 homes
00:37:34wouldn't make a material impact
00:37:36which is utter nonsense.
00:37:38Just a point of clarity, Catherine,
00:37:41the government hasn't released funds
00:37:44from HS2,
00:37:45they were borrowing money
00:37:46to fund HS2
00:37:48and you're still therefore
00:37:49borrowing money
00:37:50that you're reallocating,
00:37:52you're not releasing funds.
00:37:54The 5A2 that the Conservative
00:37:56Lancashire County Council
00:37:57have decided now
00:37:59not to duel any of the 5A2 at all.
00:38:03They have now decided
00:38:04they're going to re-profile
00:38:06some more of the roundabouts
00:38:08and the majority of the funds
00:38:10that Catherine's referring to
00:38:12have now been moved
00:38:14to fund the road improvements
00:38:17around the two major
00:38:18Lancashire County Council.
00:38:21Catherine, you haven't seen them
00:38:22so you can't comment.
00:38:25So, let me just, let me answer.
00:38:27You can't say the funding.
00:38:31So, the 5A2,
00:38:33sorry ladies and gentlemen about this,
00:38:34the 5A2 duelling is no longer going ahead.
00:38:39They've reallocated the funds
00:38:41to do highway improvements
00:38:42around the Lancashire County Council
00:38:44creek ground that's being built
00:38:45and the works around
00:38:47the Hewden development site
00:38:48that is Lancashire County Council site as well.
00:38:52Very critical,
00:38:52you put the full funding for the 5A2
00:38:55even though it could cost no more than £1 million.
00:38:57Yeah, it is absolutely critical
00:38:59to this constituent support
00:39:00that that 5A2 is duelled.
00:39:02Therefore, we need to find the money,
00:39:05invest the money and build the road.
00:39:08That is causing no end of issues
00:39:10to the people of South Liverpool.
00:39:12Thank you.
00:39:12Andy, the 5A2 needs to be duelled
00:39:16or upgraded to a lesser degree?
00:39:20As you know,
00:39:21reform is fairly new to this game
00:39:23and I think we'll let the people
00:39:25who are going to be in control
00:39:27fight this one out actually
00:39:29because we just want to be able
00:39:31to drive on the roads, don't we?
00:39:33We don't want all the roadworks,
00:39:34we don't want all the potholes,
00:39:35we don't want all the,
00:39:37you know, all the often mad drivers
00:39:40that are around because of the bad roads
00:39:42and the potholes and the roundabouts and things.
00:39:45So once again,
00:39:46it's a very interesting discussion
00:39:47between you two people
00:39:49and I'm enjoying it.
00:39:51As I get more involved
00:39:53in the game of politics nationally
00:39:56and in South Liverpool specifically,
00:39:58I'm sure I'll have more to say on it.
00:40:01Andy, the A502,
00:40:03worth the investment to duel it in full or not?
00:40:08So I've got a real issue
00:40:10with roads in general
00:40:12and I think if a lot of you've been abroad
00:40:15on holiday or as I did,
00:40:17working in Europe,
00:40:18I think successive governments
00:40:20have massively failed us
00:40:21by focusing investment on roads.
00:40:26This country has a high population,
00:40:30it's part of Europe,
00:40:32which is going to continually grow,
00:40:33it's a growth area on the planet
00:40:36and I actually feel,
00:40:39answering this honestly,
00:40:40we should be focusing more on public transport
00:40:44so that we get to a point
00:40:45where when I was living in Germany,
00:40:49in fact,
00:40:50we have the choice of a tram,
00:40:53an underground,
00:40:55a train
00:40:57or a bus service
00:40:59and I really do get upset
00:41:04when I hear about road building infrastructure
00:41:07when actually we need a government
00:41:09that's going to start focusing on public transport
00:41:13because in the long term
00:41:14that's going to be best for our country
00:41:16and best for the environment
00:41:18and if I want to talk specifically
00:41:20about the A582,
00:41:22it's just going to be one of those projects again
00:41:25that just gets left
00:41:25because if you listen to the candidates
00:41:27and this isn't a cluster from them,
00:41:29it sounds like it's something,
00:41:32it's like the bridge over the river in Carrick,
00:41:35it's been talked about,
00:41:36it's going to happen
00:41:37but the money's never been available.
00:41:39In the meantime,
00:41:40we're moving on decades
00:41:42and our public transport system
00:41:43is way behind Europe.
00:41:45Thank you.
00:41:49The funding is being re-profiled
00:41:51for the
00:41:57When did we make the decision to
00:41:59stop HS2 at Birmingham?
00:42:00It's not November.
00:42:01So to be fair,
00:42:04that's a whole slug of money,
00:42:05plans coming in,
00:42:06plans being developed
00:42:07so I don't think it's fair to say
00:42:09that it's not going to happen.
00:42:09I think it's important
00:42:11and Paul's highlighted
00:42:13and I've highlighted
00:42:14that we care about this stuff.
00:42:16I think what you can't do
00:42:17is just make claims to say
00:42:20oh the money's gone here,
00:42:21the money's gone there
00:42:22when you haven't seen the overall picture.
00:42:23I mean a part of the HS2 money,
00:42:25you know people talk about potholes,
00:42:27Lancashire County Council
00:42:29has ended up with about 240 odd million
00:42:31over the next few years to do potholes
00:42:33but to be fair to them,
00:42:35you know it's poured down all winter
00:42:36so we've given them money
00:42:37and it's poured down
00:42:38and they need to catch back up again
00:42:40but if they're just on public transport
00:42:45Angie's right,
00:42:46it has to be within the balance
00:42:47of road and public transport infrastructure.
00:42:49We've got a train station
00:42:51in the constituency
00:42:52where the train stops,
00:42:53people peer out at the platform
00:42:55and they can't get on and off
00:42:56and this is an absolute nonsense
00:42:58and for a relatively small sum of money
00:43:00you could probably have four
00:43:02of what it would take to dual the A582
00:43:05and with the money
00:43:05that we've given to the buses
00:43:07to improve the bus services
00:43:08and the get around for two pound
00:43:10that has to be part
00:43:11of an overall responsible portfolio
00:43:13but I think the illustrative comment was
00:43:16we need it Julian,
00:43:17it's going to cost 100 million quid,
00:43:19I don't know where we'll get the money from
00:43:21but we need it to happen.
00:43:22Life isn't like that,
00:43:23you've got to make tough choices
00:43:24and make sure you spend your money
00:43:25in the right way.
00:43:26Okay, clarify those points.
00:43:27Paul, very very quickly,
00:43:29a couple of sentences
00:43:30just on this issue of the funding
00:43:31and whether it's...
00:43:32So the report,
00:43:33Catherine says that we can't comment
00:43:35on the scheme that's been put forward
00:43:37by Lancashire County Council
00:43:38for the re-profiling of the 582
00:43:41but can because I've seen them
00:43:42and the council's debated with Catherine
00:43:45and this is to put the funding application
00:43:47in your right
00:43:47because the funding hasn't been allocated
00:43:49but I've read an email today
00:43:51because they're absolutely interested in this,
00:43:54they're waiting to consult
00:43:56after the general election
00:43:57with whether the MP himself
00:43:59would be at that point.
00:44:00Andy?
00:44:03Just not specifically on the A582
00:44:06but generally on potholes
00:44:07and the conditions of the roads.
00:44:11Really quick,
00:44:12electric vehicles weigh stacks
00:44:14more than hydrocarbon vehicles.
00:44:17They are ripping up the roads on the estates.
00:44:19Why are we not taxing Jeff Bezos
00:44:22for all his Amazon trucks
00:44:23that are driving around
00:44:24and ripping the roads up?
00:44:26Andy, you may as well keep the microphone
00:44:27because the next issue is Brexit.
00:44:29I'll start with you on that one
00:44:30because I'm sure you will have
00:44:31something to say on that.
00:44:32There's a question in the audience
00:44:34who would like to know
00:44:35whether each of the parties
00:44:36will be trying to gain access
00:44:38to the single market.
00:44:40We certainly won't,
00:44:41that's for sure.
00:44:43And I think if Labour decide
00:44:45that they want to re-engage
00:44:48with the people in Europe
00:44:49we're going to have a nasty little shock
00:44:51because Georgia and Italy
00:44:53and Marine France
00:44:54and the AFP in Germany
00:44:56are going in exactly
00:44:57the opposite direction
00:44:59that Sir Keir Starmer
00:45:04was hoping for.
00:45:05So it's going to be a pickle again
00:45:07but the problem is
00:45:09with the Conservative Party
00:45:11that they've just betrayed the country,
00:45:12haven't they?
00:45:13They've absolutely betrayed the country.
00:45:15We voted,
00:45:16and the civil service
00:45:17has betrayed the country.
00:45:19We voted to come out of Europe.
00:45:23Us.
00:45:23You're out, aren't you?
00:45:24Yeah.
00:45:25You're out, aren't you?
00:45:25You're out.
00:45:26Well, so why on earth
00:45:29would we want to go back?
00:45:31We don't, we don't believe...
00:45:34Nobody's saying that.
00:45:36Exactly.
00:45:37We're not planning on going back.
00:45:38I suspect Labour
00:45:39is going to want to tie
00:45:41the country more closely to Europe
00:45:43and they're going to have the problems
00:45:44that I've just explained.
00:45:46I don't know what the Conservative position is now
00:45:48because they were in power
00:45:49when we came out of Europe
00:45:51and now what have we done with it?
00:45:53Can I just ask you briefly,
00:45:54what is the reform vision for Brexit
00:45:57that looks different
00:45:58to the way it is now?
00:45:59How's the single market?
00:46:00How's the customs union?
00:46:01And the barriers that come with that?
00:46:04Well, we can only do things
00:46:06if we get in power
00:46:07and we know that this election
00:46:09we're not going to get in power
00:46:10but we're going to be in people's faces
00:46:12for the next five years
00:46:13and maybe in five years time
00:46:15we'll be able to say
00:46:17that the trade opportunities
00:46:21that have been missed,
00:46:23the free ports that could have,
00:46:25you know, been managed quite readily
00:46:27and kicked off
00:46:29and there are some projects
00:46:30that are beyond political time frames
00:46:34and we need a method
00:46:36as we did with the referendum
00:46:38to be able to get cross-party agreement
00:46:41on how things move forward in the future
00:46:43so that we don't stop and start
00:46:45and stop and start every time there's a change.
00:46:48Andy, thank you.
00:46:48And has the Liberal Democrats
00:46:50made a virtue of their campaign
00:46:52on Brexit in the past
00:46:53but slightly quieter this time around?
00:46:55Is that fair?
00:46:55Yeah, well, I wouldn't say it's quieter.
00:46:57I mean, it's not in our manifesto
00:46:59because there are critical issues
00:47:00in this country
00:47:01which are far more important at the moment
00:47:03as I said, healthcare
00:47:05and the NHS
00:47:07and the cost of living crisis.
00:47:08However, what I would say
00:47:10is that my opinion
00:47:14is that it's coincidental
00:47:18that since we left Europe
00:47:20our economy has faltered
00:47:22and has flatlined
00:47:24for the time that we've left Europe.
00:47:27I think it's absolutely clear to me
00:47:29if you are part of a trading group
00:47:32you're stronger
00:47:34than you would be if you're on your own
00:47:36and basically
00:47:37all the trade agreements
00:47:38that the government has negotiated
00:47:43has not come to a great deal.
00:47:46Our economy is suffering
00:47:47because our business people
00:47:49who buy goods and services
00:47:52export them out of the country
00:47:53and import them in
00:47:55are paying higher duties
00:47:57and it's making businesses
00:48:00actually go out of business.
00:48:03I am still a passionate European.
00:48:06I worked in Germany
00:48:08on a collaborative European project
00:48:11to build a jet
00:48:12to support the NATO alliance.
00:48:15We worked collaboratively
00:48:17and we ended up
00:48:19as a result of that
00:48:20having a more efficient
00:48:21more reliable
00:48:24protection and defence for our country
00:48:26and we did it because we did it together
00:48:28because no country can afford
00:48:29to build a product like that on its own.
00:48:33So I'm totally pro-European
00:48:35I think if we join Europe again
00:48:37it will massively affect
00:48:39the output of our economy
00:48:42and we've got a massive trading nation there
00:48:45of you know
00:48:46500 billion market trading nation
00:48:49to deal with
00:48:50and I think by leaving Brexit
00:48:52it's affected our economy.
00:48:54Paul, does this mean I'm not going to be
00:48:57a big stage star with James' lineup?
00:49:00Absolutely not.
00:49:01So let's make it absolutely
00:49:04clear
00:49:05single market and the customs union
00:49:07are not up for negotiation
00:49:09with the Labour Party, Paul.
00:49:11They're not.
00:49:11We've made that categorically clear.
00:49:14That's going to mean that he changed his mind
00:49:16from when he was pro-single market.
00:49:18Well we all have, haven't we?
00:49:21We all have.
00:49:22The Brexit deal
00:49:24Brexit's done.
00:49:26Brexit's done.
00:49:27It's caused
00:49:29huge amounts of damage
00:49:31to UK trade
00:49:32and what we have to do now
00:49:34is go and get the 2019 oven ready deal
00:49:37after it maps me out of the oven
00:49:39and try and get it to work
00:49:41and work properly.
00:49:43We have to
00:49:44and the first thing we need to do
00:49:46is improve our relationships
00:49:48with our European partners
00:49:50but no
00:49:51there's no renegotiation.
00:49:52The deal's done.
00:49:53We're out of Europe.
00:49:55What we need to do now
00:49:56is make the arrangements better
00:49:58to improve trade
00:50:00between the United Kingdom and Europe.
00:50:03Catherine, I think it'll probably get you an answer
00:50:05on whether you'd be proud to re-gain access
00:50:07to the single market
00:50:08but can I ask you
00:50:08are you proud of the way Brexit has been done?
00:50:12So I'll just pick up the very last
00:50:14of what Paul's just said actually.
00:50:15So we're not going back into Europe.
00:50:18We're not going to join the customs union.
00:50:19We're not going to join the single market
00:50:20to Labour's position
00:50:21but we need to make the rules work better.
00:50:23So what that means ladies and gentlemen
00:50:25is that we will align
00:50:26if we can rotate across the European Union
00:50:29without having a seat around the table
00:50:30to actually influence any of those rules.
00:50:33Now, I just want to correct a few
00:50:37perhaps not as many people
00:50:40who've got a business and science background
00:50:42like I have.
00:50:46We have grown more
00:50:48than all of the rest of European economies
00:50:50since 2010 in the UK.
00:50:52We are now the second in the world
00:50:55for greenfield foreign direct investment
00:50:58with a just overtake of China.
00:51:00It's only the USA first.
00:51:01What does that mean?
00:51:02That means people coming from other countries
00:51:04to invest money to build factories etc
00:51:06and build new stuff that they want to do.
00:51:11What we've chosen to do post Brexit
00:51:13is we have made deals
00:51:15with the parts of the world
00:51:17that are growing like topsy.
00:51:19The European Union is a relatively stagnant market.
00:51:22Now they are my friends.
00:51:23I've also worked in Europe
00:51:26on collaborative projects
00:51:27and I certainly don't see Brexit
00:51:29as a rejection of my European identity at all.
00:51:33And I think we are demonstrating
00:51:35with things like the AUKUS deal
00:51:37where we're bringing in Japan, America, Australia
00:51:40that there is a world and a future out there
00:51:42that can replicate those partnerships
00:51:44whilst keeping strong relationships
00:51:46with the Italians, the Germans etc
00:51:48on the tempest and typhoon in BAE.
00:51:52So I don't think we should get
00:51:54into a council of despair.
00:51:56I was the trade envoy
00:51:58selling the UK out in Mozambique in Africa
00:52:01so you see work out there.
00:52:02I can speak a tiny bit of the local language.
00:52:05Be proud of Britain
00:52:06because they're bloody proud of us.
00:52:08They're desperate to do business with us.
00:52:10They're all growing
00:52:11when you look at the demographics
00:52:13of the African continent.
00:52:14Something silly like 60% of their population
00:52:17is under 30.
00:52:18These people are our friends.
00:52:19They're open to trading with us.
00:52:21We can maintain our friendly relationships
00:52:23with Europe
00:52:24and salvage 4,000 to the world.
00:52:27You wanted to come back on something
00:52:28just really briefly
00:52:29and then I realised you wanted to bring it up.
00:52:30Yeah, Catherine quoted there
00:52:33the growth figures since 2010
00:52:35and I urge you all to go
00:52:38and look at Sky's economist, Ed Conway.
00:52:42There's one commodity
00:52:45that UK PLC trades
00:52:47that has distorted our GDP figures hugely
00:52:51and that's gold, ladies and gentlemen.
00:52:54Gold.
00:52:54We trade gold in this country
00:52:57through the UK
00:52:58and that is hugely distorting our GDP figures.
00:53:02The reason I know
00:53:04that businesses in South Ribble
00:53:07are hugely struggling
00:53:08with the current Brexit deal
00:53:10is because they've told us
00:53:12and there's a numerous UK SMEs, Paul,
00:53:15who can no longer trade
00:53:16or afford to trade with Europe
00:53:18because the terms of the deal
00:53:20have been agreed by Mr Johnson.
00:53:22Thank you.
00:53:23Andy, you wanted to clarify
00:53:25one particular thing.
00:53:26Gordon Brown sold the rock and roll.
00:53:30We came out of Europe
00:53:32and there's thousands and thousands
00:53:34and thousands of EU regulations
00:53:36still hamstringing British business.
00:53:39Why?
00:53:41And you talked about the relationship
00:53:43with the European countries.
00:53:46We've got a Commonwealth.
00:53:47That's the growing part of the world.
00:53:49Europe is bombing.
00:53:51The German economy is bombing.
00:53:53The French economy is bombing.
00:53:55Why do we want to be in a bombing market?
00:53:57Why do we not want to get out there
00:53:59and trade with the parts of the world
00:54:01that you just said are growing like Topsy?
00:54:05That's what we want to be doing.
00:54:06We want to be sitting around
00:54:07on our backsides trading with Macron
00:54:10or whoever follows him.
00:54:13We'd like some of the regulations kicked out.
00:54:16Gold is a bit of a sensitive issue, I guess.
00:54:21Okay, we'll leave Brexit
00:54:23hanging on that note, I think,
00:54:25and move on to matters
00:54:26that Brexit doesn't affect Lancashire,
00:54:28but matters really very close to home.
00:54:30I have a question here
00:54:31asking what the candidates will do
00:54:33to ensure that South Ribble
00:54:34and Lancashire as a whole
00:54:35get an equal status
00:54:37compared to Greater Manchester
00:54:38and Merseyside.
00:54:40Angie, we'll come to you first on that one.
00:54:43This is referring to devolution.
00:54:48Well, I mean, we debated this
00:54:50in the South Ribble council chamber
00:54:53and we concluded that
00:54:55there were more disadvantages
00:54:58to devolution and having a corporate mayor
00:55:03than the individual top authorities
00:55:06having their own leaders,
00:55:08making their own decisions
00:55:09with their own budgets
00:55:11about what happens in our communities
00:55:13and what we spend the money on.
00:55:16So I'm against the BICMA model
00:55:21and I would prefer us
00:55:22to have the district councils
00:55:25with the local people
00:55:26from the community
00:55:27who are elected members
00:55:28to decide what they do
00:55:30about the budgets
00:55:32that we have to spend.
00:55:34That's the model that's been pursued
00:55:36in the deal that Lancashire spoke to.
00:55:37Are you quite content with that deal?
00:55:41The current deal,
00:55:42the one that we've just negotiated recently?
00:55:44Yes, yeah.
00:55:45No, I'm not.
00:55:46I don't think it's good for Lancashire
00:55:48to have that deal.
00:55:49I think we should stick
00:55:51to the 12 district boroughs
00:55:54having the autonomy
00:55:56to decide what to do with budgets
00:55:58and what the local people want
00:56:00in those different areas.
00:56:02Thanks.
00:56:03We'll come to you with that deal
00:56:05that I was just referencing there too.
00:56:07Ange, the strength and weakness
00:56:09is on the real goods of you.
00:56:11Well, I've been vocal
00:56:12in my opposition to it
00:56:14and one, there's a number of good reasons
00:56:16for me, Mr Sunak calling the elections.
00:56:19The fact that that didn't make its way
00:56:21through Parliament.
00:56:23What I want to see,
00:56:24and this is what I've said
00:56:25at the council
00:56:27and at the election leaders
00:56:28numerous times,
00:56:30is a full-on tier three
00:56:31elected mayor combined authority
00:56:33for Lancashire
00:56:34just the same as we have
00:56:36in Liverpool, Paul
00:56:37and in Manchester.
00:56:39That will bring huge,
00:56:41huge amounts of investment
00:56:42into our county
00:56:44and Ange, just to clarify something,
00:56:46a combined authority
00:56:47doesn't take over
00:56:49any of the districts
00:56:50of council's functions.
00:56:53They still stay there
00:56:55and that would enable us
00:56:56to keep the two-tier system as well, Paul
00:56:59and the identity that we have
00:57:00in Lancashire
00:57:01but we need an elected mayor
00:57:04for Lancashire
00:57:05with all the tier three powers
00:57:07that go with it
00:57:08and the huge investment
00:57:09and that is singularly,
00:57:11singularly,
00:57:13the best opportunity
00:57:14that this county has
00:57:15and South Ribble has
00:57:17to deal with the huge infrastructure
00:57:18transport challenges
00:57:19that we face
00:57:21and you only need to look
00:57:22at what they're doing in Manchester
00:57:23and look what they're doing in Liverpool
00:57:26to evidence that.
00:57:27So that's what I would be championing
00:57:28and promoting
00:57:29if I'm elected your MP.
00:57:31Thank you.
00:57:31Catherine, the deal that
00:57:33your Conservative government
00:57:34has struck with Lancashire,
00:57:35it's second rate really, isn't it?
00:57:37£20 million,
00:57:38it's not the vast amount
00:57:39of £30 million a year
00:57:41over 30 years
00:57:41that places like Manchester
00:57:43and Liverpool got
00:57:44when they first signed up
00:57:45to the evolution.
00:57:48Ladies and gentlemen,
00:57:49your lone candidate has just said
00:57:50would you like another tier
00:57:51of local government?
00:57:53Right, because Manchester
00:57:55has a mayor
00:57:56and it has a unitary authority.
00:57:58Here, we've got
00:57:59borough, county council
00:58:01and then he wants
00:58:02to add a mayor on top of that.
00:58:04I think what this country needs
00:58:05is less of people
00:58:07like on this table,
00:58:08not more of us.
00:58:10What we do need, however,
00:58:12is to be masters
00:58:13of our own destiny
00:58:14because for too long
00:58:16civil servants in Westminster
00:58:18have been making decisions for us
00:58:19and frankly, they're rubbish.
00:58:20I remember having a conversation
00:58:22when I was advocating
00:58:23for a scout mayor join
00:58:25where somebody was saying,
00:58:26oh, we'll just do this policy,
00:58:27I'll only put 2p on a litre of petrol.
00:58:30I'm like, I'm sorry, what?
00:58:31Do you know how far my dad will drive
00:58:33to get a 2p less on a litre of petrol?
00:58:36And so I said to the bloke,
00:58:37how did you get to work today?
00:58:39And he got on one of those
00:58:40fancy foldy Brompton bikes
00:58:42and he got on the tube
00:58:43and then he got on the bus
00:58:44and had fantastic
00:58:45transport infrastructure
00:58:46and then he was coming
00:58:47to advocate for a policy.
00:58:48Don't panic, ladies and gentlemen,
00:58:49it's not happening.
00:58:51What we need is to stop
00:58:53that kind of centralised thinking
00:58:54by giving Lancashire more power.
00:58:56If I felt that we could get a deal
00:59:00that would take out
00:59:01a layer of local government,
00:59:02I would consider
00:59:03an elected mayor or model.
00:59:04But the truth is,
00:59:05is the Tories have a reputation
00:59:07of fighting like rats in a sack
00:59:09in Lancashire.
00:59:09The Labour Party definitely
00:59:11fight like rats in a sack in Lancashire
00:59:13and it's rearranging vectors
00:59:15on the Titanic.
00:59:16What we need is our own infrastructure,
00:59:19our own transport budgets,
00:59:20our own powers,
00:59:21our own free ports
00:59:23and that tier two deal
00:59:25was good enough.
00:59:25It was not too hot
00:59:27and it was not too cold
00:59:28and the money associated with it
00:59:29was a start.
00:59:31And I have to be honest and say
00:59:32some of the things that were being said
00:59:34about that deal
00:59:35and how it was inadequate
00:59:36was letting down our communities.
00:59:39We need our voice.
00:59:40Manchester and Liverpool
00:59:41are taking over
00:59:43and that devolution deal
00:59:44was the one we could get
00:59:46so it was the one
00:59:47I was really happy to take.
00:59:48And don't believe me,
00:59:49believe the Labour leader
00:59:50of Blackburn with Darwin
00:59:52and the Labour leader of Blackpool.
00:59:53It was a great deal
00:59:55and if the Conservatives are re-elected
00:59:57we will push it through.
00:59:59Andy, would you like to see that deal
01:00:01that has been secured
01:00:02before the election got finalised?
01:00:03Excuse me.
01:00:04We see many people
01:00:06that are supporting reform.
01:00:08Previously supported the Conservatives
01:00:10so you wouldn't be surprised
01:00:12to hear me say
01:00:13that actually I want
01:00:15smaller state interference
01:00:17and big government interference around
01:00:20than having more tiers
01:00:22that have to be, you know,
01:00:25accessed to get anything done.
01:00:27It strikes me that
01:00:31the environment of Manchester
01:00:32and the environment of Liverpool
01:00:34is very different
01:00:35to the environment of Heston
01:00:37or of Maudsley
01:00:38or of Longton and Hutton.
01:00:41We need to look and start
01:00:44from the top down
01:00:45but also from the bottom up
01:00:47and figure out what's good
01:00:48for local communities,
01:00:50figure out what's good
01:00:51for bigger communities
01:00:53and I think Lancashire's all right.
01:00:54You know, there's that big billboard
01:00:56that says, it's a beautiful picture
01:00:58and it says Lancashire.
01:01:00It's a bit like Yorkshire.
01:01:02Only nicer.
01:01:04And that's what I think
01:01:04we want to fight for.
01:01:05I think we want to fight
01:01:06for Lancashire.
01:01:07I think we want to fight
01:01:08for our local communities
01:01:09and I don't think we need a big name.
01:01:11I think thank you very much
01:01:12indeed for that.
01:01:13The last of our themed questions
01:01:16before we have a few quick fire ones
01:01:17and then open it up to
01:01:19to our patient audience here
01:01:21and the question from
01:01:23somebody who may or may not
01:01:24turned up in the audience tonight
01:01:26is do the candidates recognise
01:01:27that there are two sexes,
01:01:29male and female
01:01:30and that the law should recognise
01:01:31that there are situations
01:01:32where this matters
01:01:33and if elected,
01:01:34will you stand up specifically
01:01:36for single sex services
01:01:38and support,
01:01:40Catherine, some of your role?
01:01:43Yes.
01:01:44So I've been
01:01:45as part of a cross-party
01:01:47parliamentary group
01:01:49called Sex Matters
01:01:49down in the House of Commons
01:01:51working with my force,
01:01:52Dr Neil Hanvey
01:01:53from the ALGA party.
01:01:55Now, just to be really clear,
01:01:57this is not about being mean
01:01:58to somebody that identifies
01:02:00in a different body
01:02:01to the one with which
01:02:02nature has gifted them.
01:02:04This is, I want to make sure
01:02:05that everybody is proud to be
01:02:08whoever they are in this country
01:02:09but it is about women's rights
01:02:11and there are certain areas
01:02:13where women feel
01:02:14extremely vulnerable
01:02:16with biologically-attached
01:02:18men with gangly bits
01:02:20and I think science has
01:02:22proceeded to the point
01:02:23where it's relatively easy
01:02:25to be able to separate out people
01:02:27to allow women to have
01:02:28their own spaces,
01:02:30to allow trans people
01:02:31to have their own spaces
01:02:33and I wholeheartedly support,
01:02:36in fact, if I just may have
01:02:37a break out of immodesty.
01:02:40I've actually been working
01:02:41with Kami Bazanok
01:02:42to help define biological sex
01:02:44as part of my biology degree
01:02:46and to make sure
01:02:47that it's not just XXXY
01:02:49but actually that it includes
01:02:51certain breakouts
01:02:52for the lovely variation
01:02:55of nature that we have.
01:02:57I don't want to see
01:02:59biologically-attached men
01:03:00in women's prisons
01:03:02or in women's refugees
01:03:03and we have to change the law
01:03:05to allow for those spaces
01:03:06then I will do so.
01:03:08Kathleen, thank you.
01:03:08Paul, on this one,
01:03:09recognise there are two sexes
01:03:12and that single-sex spaces matter
01:03:13in certain circumstances.
01:03:15In certain circumstances,
01:03:16yes they do
01:03:17but this is being utilised, Paul.
01:03:20This is one of those gotcha moments
01:03:22that the media has been using
01:03:25over the months now
01:03:26against a certain element
01:03:27of our community
01:03:29and I'm hoping that
01:03:31post the election
01:03:32things can calm down somewhat.
01:03:34I am absolutely confident
01:03:35that the current legislation
01:03:37that is in place
01:03:38is fit for purpose
01:03:40and as a community
01:03:41and as people
01:03:43we need to respect one another
01:03:45and respect one another's views
01:03:48and we must represent
01:03:50all of our community.
01:03:51We need to take the politics
01:03:53out of this,
01:03:54show some respect.
01:03:55Yes, there are some changes
01:03:57that are needed
01:03:57and some tweaks
01:03:59but come on,
01:03:59let's show some respect here
01:04:01and take it out of politics
01:04:03and deal with it appropriately.
01:04:06Thank you, Paul
01:04:06and your thoughts
01:04:07on single-sex spaces?
01:04:11Thanks.
01:04:12Single-sex spaces
01:04:15and women's rights
01:04:16are critical for me.
01:04:17The current legislation
01:04:18is actually ambiguous
01:04:20and it actually needs strengthening
01:04:22and making clear
01:04:23because it's being interpreted
01:04:25by other parties
01:04:26to exploit this situation
01:04:29where women can't have
01:04:31single-sex places
01:04:33to go to
01:04:34and they should be
01:04:35and we're all aware
01:04:36of the situation
01:04:37that happened up in Scotland
01:04:38in prison
01:04:39where the gentleman,
01:04:42the man who was identified
01:04:44as a woman
01:04:45actually raped a woman in prison
01:04:47and this cannot be acceptable
01:04:50but let me make this
01:04:51absolutely clear.
01:04:53If somebody identifies
01:04:55as a woman
01:04:57who's born as a man
01:04:59then that is the prerogative
01:05:01for anybody to identify
01:05:03how they wish.
01:05:05That is the environment
01:05:09of the country
01:05:10that we live in.
01:05:11The democracy,
01:05:12the freedom,
01:05:13the freedom of expression
01:05:14and the freedom to follow
01:05:15a religion or not
01:05:17but I will absolutely fight
01:05:19to make sure
01:05:20that single-sex women
01:05:24always have a safe place to go.
01:05:27Thank you.
01:05:29Thank you and Andy
01:05:30finally to you.
01:05:32I always thought that
01:05:34there were people
01:05:35who had XX chromosomes
01:05:36and people who had XY chromosomes
01:05:39and that one's a lady
01:05:40and one's a man
01:05:41and I'm pretty much of that opinion.
01:05:44Now as Andy says
01:05:46if people want to
01:05:47do what they want to do
01:05:49that's fine
01:05:50but if they're going into
01:05:52ladies changing rooms
01:05:53and I'm talking about men
01:05:54who want to identify
01:05:57as a woman
01:05:59if they're going into
01:06:00women's changing rooms
01:06:01and putting them under threat
01:06:02or making them concerned
01:06:03or whatever
01:06:04then they shouldn't be allowed to do it
01:06:06and if they're doing it in schools
01:06:07they shouldn't be allowed to do it.
01:06:08Andy thank you.
01:06:10A few quick final ones
01:06:12before then we open it up
01:06:13to the floor
01:06:14but put the emphasis
01:06:15on the word quick here
01:06:17so if you wouldn't mind
01:06:17even just do a couple of sentences
01:06:20some light-hearted ones
01:06:22some more serious
01:06:23this one particularly interesting
01:06:25are there any issues
01:06:26which you all agree on
01:06:28and why?
01:06:29and why is it so difficult
01:06:30in certain things
01:06:31to see progress being made
01:06:33in British politics?
01:06:34Paul start with you.
01:06:38I'll stay sat down
01:06:38because I'm sure there is
01:06:40and that's one of the things
01:06:41that I want to see in parliament
01:06:42after this election
01:06:43is where we can agree
01:06:44we need to agree
01:06:45because it's to the benefit of us all
01:06:47I suggest one area
01:06:48we do agree on is Ukraine.
01:06:51Catherine.
01:06:52The NHS shouldn't be a political football
01:06:54and Lancashire is better than Yorkshire.
01:06:57Andy.
01:07:00There are a lot of issues
01:07:02that need to be taken out
01:07:03of party politics
01:07:04this five-year term
01:07:06where you're yo-yoing
01:07:07between one decision
01:07:08against another
01:07:09one opinion against another
01:07:10we should identify those
01:07:12those long-term decisions
01:07:13that need to be made
01:07:15and get cross-party agreement on it.
01:07:17And that's it.
01:07:18Yeah I think
01:07:19well if you look at the parliament structure
01:07:21there are cross-party committees
01:07:23which is great to come up with solutions
01:07:25for the needs of our country.
01:07:28So and I actually believe
01:07:30that the one cross-party issue
01:07:33that all parties support
01:07:35is that we do have
01:07:37a cost of living crisis in this country
01:07:39and we need to put measures in place
01:07:42to provide support
01:07:44for those individuals
01:07:46who are in need.
01:07:49And I think there has
01:07:51certainly been evidence of that
01:07:52by the Conservative government
01:07:54and I think the rest of us
01:07:55all of us agree
01:07:58that cost of living crisis
01:07:59is critical.
01:08:02And if you want to keep the mic
01:08:04I will go to you first
01:08:05for the next one.
01:08:06The question actually asks
01:08:08for a list of priorities
01:08:09top three priorities
01:08:10for Southern Rimmel
01:08:11but I've been around long enough to know
01:08:12it's not wise to ask a politician
01:08:14for a list because
01:08:15they'll probably give you one
01:08:15even if you don't ask for it.
01:08:17Can we just start with one top priority
01:08:20for South Rimmel, just the one.
01:08:22My top priority for South Rimmel
01:08:25would be to put measures in place
01:08:26to address the cost of living crisis
01:08:28for the poorest and most vulnerable people
01:08:31living in our community
01:08:33in South Rimmel.
01:08:34Thank you, come back down the line Eddie.
01:08:37I think we need a Member of Parliament
01:08:39who's going to work with
01:08:40South Rimmel Borough Council
01:08:42understand in detail
01:08:44what's going on around the council
01:08:46and around the borough
01:08:47and then decide
01:08:48what's going to be prioritised.
01:08:50Paul, I agree with Andy.
01:08:59Sorry, I thought we had to
01:09:01call parties on those things.
01:09:02Sorry, I forgot the question.
01:09:08We need a new hospital
01:09:09and we need safe streets
01:09:10more police officers
01:09:11more doctors
01:09:11more nurses
01:09:12and more investment.
01:09:14Catherine, keep the microphone
01:09:16your favourite thing about South Rimmel.
01:09:18The people.
01:09:19Paul?
01:09:22Yeah, the community are wonderful.
01:09:25I think it's just a fat place
01:09:26the way it really is.
01:09:28And then...
01:09:30I agree with everything
01:09:31the last three have said.
01:09:33And the very last one.
01:09:35I agree with Nick.
01:09:38Proving that the public
01:09:39has the best questions
01:09:40when it comes to this kind of thing.
01:09:42Have any of you ever
01:09:43placed a bet unwisely?
01:09:46And I can't imagine
01:09:47why that wouldn't come up.
01:09:49But it's not the matter
01:09:50it's on the review board I'm afraid.
01:09:51So yeah, away you go.
01:09:52I've placed unwise bets
01:09:54on barrel football
01:09:56but I've never placed a political bet
01:09:58nor would I.
01:10:00Catherine?
01:10:01Yeah, right, I haven't either.
01:10:02What part of it was I?
01:10:05Andy?
01:10:07I've only ever bet on myself
01:10:08but it was interesting
01:10:09I was in the pub last night
01:10:10and there were two blokes
01:10:12called William Hill.
01:10:14What are the odds on that?
01:10:16I don't know.
01:10:20I have never been tempted
01:10:22to place any bets
01:10:25on the dates of
01:10:26when a general election would be.
01:10:28But believe it or not
01:10:29I did...
01:10:30I had heard rumours
01:10:31from a rave with souls
01:10:32that the election
01:10:33was going to be in July.
01:10:34So I'm just glad
01:10:35I didn't place a bet.
01:10:37The only time I have betted
01:10:39is actually
01:10:41on the Grand National
01:10:42but I don't do that anymore
01:10:43because of
01:10:45animal welfare
01:10:46so that's my bit.
01:10:48Thank you to all of you for that
01:10:50and now at the moment
01:10:51we've all been waiting for
01:10:53which is opening the floor up to you
01:10:54to ask your questions.
01:10:56My boss is very kindly
01:10:57going to give you the mic out.
01:11:00Can I ask all those
01:11:00who want to ask a question
01:11:01to put their hand up please?
01:11:07Thank you all the candidates.
01:11:10I have supported
01:11:12the Conservative Party
01:11:13since I was a teenager
01:11:17but at the moment
01:11:18I'm undecided
01:11:20so could you give me a reason
01:11:21why I should vote you?
01:11:37Because ultimately
01:11:38I think what attracts you
01:11:38to the Conservatives
01:11:39is still true.
01:11:41We believe in security.
01:11:43We believe that
01:11:43you're better off
01:11:45spending your money
01:11:47and you know how to do it best.
01:11:48We believe that
01:11:50taxpayers' money
01:11:51should be spent efficiently.
01:11:52We believe in the rights
01:11:53of the human individual
01:11:55and I would say that
01:11:58what you've got here
01:11:59as your Conservative representative
01:12:01is a fact-tied
01:12:02northern ankle biter
01:12:03that's going to go and shout
01:12:04for sales rule
01:12:05down in London
01:12:06and there's a track record of doing so.
01:12:11Thanks.
01:12:12Mr Sunak has said
01:12:14I don't do negative politics
01:12:17but there's certain times
01:12:18I'm just going to have to make
01:12:19my reference to that.
01:12:21Mr Sunak says
01:12:22don't look back
01:12:23the last 14 years
01:12:24look to the future.
01:12:27Yes look to the future
01:12:28but you've got to base
01:12:29your judgment on history.
01:12:32We're always told that
01:12:33history defines decision making
01:12:35and we've got to end this chaos
01:12:38because it's caused untold damage
01:12:40to our country.
01:12:42What I'd like you to vote for me
01:12:43is I have a track record
01:12:44of public service.
01:12:46I've served in the British Army
01:12:47for 15 years.
01:12:48I've been a councillor
01:12:50on South Ribble Borough Council
01:12:51for 17 years.
01:12:53I've led the council here
01:12:55for five through the pandemic.
01:12:58My actions speak
01:12:59for what I think of South Ribble.
01:13:00I'm embedded in the community
01:13:02I know the community
01:13:04and I've always put
01:13:05the community first interests at heart.
01:13:08Well thank you very much.
01:13:12There aren't many people in here
01:13:13we've got a massive majority
01:13:14at the last election
01:13:15and I've been a Conservative
01:13:17voter all my life
01:13:18but I feel that
01:13:19the current Conservative government
01:13:21there are some great people
01:13:22in the Conservative party
01:13:23but the current Conservative government
01:13:24has let us down badly.
01:13:26That's why I wouldn't vote for Conservative.
01:13:29I think if you remember
01:13:30the last Labour chancellor
01:13:32was it Liam Byrne?
01:13:34He left a little note
01:13:35for the incoming chancellor
01:13:38that said that no money left mate.
01:13:40That's going to happen again.
01:13:42I'm not being negative
01:13:43I'm being realistic.
01:13:45We're not going to get into power this time
01:13:47but you're just going to watch next time.
01:13:49So give us a chance
01:13:50and give us a chance
01:13:51to get in the people's faces
01:13:53and put real greats
01:13:55back in Great Britain.
01:13:58Hi thanks.
01:13:59So I'm already a community campaigner
01:14:02as a borough councillor
01:14:03elected borough councillor
01:14:04for Penrhytham.
01:14:06I care passionately about my community
01:14:11and if you elect me as your mayor
01:14:13you will not get a Westminster party parrot.
01:14:17I will be there to scrutinise the government
01:14:19whoever the government is
01:14:21and ensure that the residents of South Ribble
01:14:24get the best outcome for their issues
01:14:26and I will fight on their behalf.
01:14:28Thank you.
01:14:35Can I just broaden out slightly.
01:14:38Both parties talk about what they're going to do.
01:14:40They talk about improving housing
01:14:43once your house is being built.
01:14:44They talk about improving the health service
01:14:46putting more resources in
01:14:48but what they don't and what they've missed out
01:14:50is the basic fact
01:14:51that we've not trained enough doctors
01:14:54nurses, builders, electricians over the years
01:14:57and on every single issue
01:14:59we've failed to deliver
01:15:01on providing that resource.
01:15:03We've got the most qualified baristas in the world
01:15:06because of Labour Party policy years ago
01:15:08to encourage people to go to university
01:15:10so you get people who come away with a degree
01:15:13but their prospect of getting a decent job
01:15:15is pretty minimal.
01:15:16We've got a housing situation
01:15:18where the multiplier when I bought a house
01:15:21was something like three times my income.
01:15:23The multiplier now is a massive number
01:15:27which makes it totally unviable.
01:15:29What are you going to do to try and change this thing
01:15:31and you talk about
01:15:32I'm sorry I don't know what the age profile in this room is
01:15:35but I bet it's a bit older than it should be.
01:15:38There's an awful lot of young people
01:15:40who are dissatisfied and disgruntled
01:15:42with the way in which politics
01:15:43just doesn't address their needs.
01:15:46I don't care if you tax pensioners
01:15:48I wish you would.
01:15:49I wish some people would turn around and say
01:15:50tax us more
01:15:51we've got away with murder for so long
01:15:53and yet we are imposing such restrictions
01:15:56on the young whose prospects are so low.
01:15:59So what on earth are you going to do
01:16:02to improve that situation in real time?
01:16:12Specifically on housing
01:16:14we need I mentioned this in the answer previously sir
01:16:17we need local authorities to build
01:16:20mass building of affordable high standard.
01:16:25There's plenty of builders.
01:16:27There are plenty of builders.
01:16:28The other thing we need to do
01:16:30to address your issue about trades
01:16:32I was at Runshaw College the other day
01:16:35and I don't know if everyone's aware here
01:16:37but coming this September
01:16:39the current government is ditching BTECs
01:16:43the most important vocational qualification
01:16:47that our young people have
01:16:49to enable them to learn a trade.
01:16:52So we need to make sure we repeal
01:16:54I don't know what you're laughing about Catherine
01:16:56it's a really really important issue
01:16:59vocational training for our young people.
01:17:04That's what trains your joiners
01:17:06it's what trains your bricklayers
01:17:08and we need to maintain those qualifications
01:17:11so local authorities must be empowered
01:17:14by the incoming government
01:17:16to build a raft of affordable high quality housing
01:17:21up and down the country.
01:17:26Thank you and thanks for your question
01:17:30housing and the NHS are massive issues
01:17:32that affect our generation
01:17:35our younger generation.
01:17:36I think if I turn to your point about housing
01:17:38the first thing I'd say
01:17:40is that the housing laws
01:17:43need to be totally overhauled.
01:17:46I think at the moment
01:17:47we build about 250 houses a year
01:17:50in the UK in England
01:17:52and the Liberal Democrat party
01:17:57want to shift that up to 380,000
01:17:59but with a commitment
01:18:00to build 150,000 affordable homes
01:18:04and the way we'll do that
01:18:05is by changing legislation
01:18:07because at the moment
01:18:08all the power sits with the developers
01:18:10and not the local authorities.
01:18:13So that's something that needs to be changed
01:18:16and we need to stop developers
01:18:17from land banking as well.
01:18:19Sorry what was the other question?
01:18:22You've missed the point
01:18:22about where the builders are going to come from
01:18:24because do they exist?
01:18:25Well again I think a failing of us
01:18:29leaving the European market
01:18:32has led to that
01:18:32because we had lots of people
01:18:34coming into the country
01:18:36from Poland and these other places
01:18:39who were builders coming in
01:18:41and contributing to our construction industry
01:18:43and now we've left the EU
01:18:45a lot of those people have left.
01:18:49A bloke who's in the know told me
01:18:51I can't confirm this
01:18:53but a bloke who told me
01:18:54who's in the know told me
01:18:55the other day
01:18:56that in this country
01:18:57there are 58,000 brickies.
01:19:00How are we going to build all these houses
01:19:01with just 58,000 brickies?
01:19:03You can't.
01:19:05You're going to need to join the EU yeah.
01:19:09Do you mind if I just carry on please?
01:19:13So where are we going to get the brickies?
01:19:17I think I'm right in saying
01:19:18we make nurses get degrees now.
01:19:21I think we're right in saying
01:19:22we make police people get degrees now.
01:19:25Half of these don't need degrees
01:19:26and there's everyone on the beat
01:19:28and on the ward
01:19:29and learning from people
01:19:30learning from really good nurses.
01:19:33It's just
01:19:34all these magic numbers
01:19:36come from somewhere.
01:19:37I've no idea where they come from
01:19:39but you've got to get down to brass tacks
01:19:40and figure out who can do what
01:19:42where they can do it
01:19:43and when they can do it
01:19:44and you can't build all those houses
01:19:45if you haven't got people that can lay bricks.
01:19:53Andy's correct.
01:19:55You don't need a degree
01:19:56to be a policeman or a nurse
01:19:57and that's why we got rid of it.
01:19:59The gentleman is correct.
01:20:01We need more training places.
01:20:02The reason as Paul references
01:20:04yes we are stopping BTECs
01:20:06that don't line across with T levels.
01:20:08Why are we doing it?
01:20:09Because people were spending
01:20:11our children were spending a load of time
01:20:13getting a qualification
01:20:14that was totally meaningless.
01:20:16I've got three million pounds
01:20:18for the Buttermere building
01:20:19which is a STEM building
01:20:21at Runshaw College
01:20:22which allows people to do
01:20:23not only T levels but aligned trains
01:20:26and the other thing
01:20:27that that investment is allowing for
01:20:28is people to do boot camps and cross-train.
01:20:30It's not just about what decisions you make
01:20:33up to 18 and 21.
01:20:35If you mention the barista
01:20:37that's maybe not fair
01:20:38but let's say for example
01:20:39that barista wants to become a bricklayer
01:20:41or a computer engineer.
01:20:43This Conservative government
01:20:44has put in place
01:20:46both the mechanism
01:20:47and the opportunity for them to retrain
01:20:49if they can go to boot camps
01:20:51to get a hand
01:20:52or we've created this thing
01:20:53called the lifetime skills guarantee
01:20:54which will give them up to £6,000
01:20:56to get a degree
01:20:57because we recognise
01:20:58you can't just suddenly turn a job off
01:21:01if you're trying to look after somebody.
01:21:03With pointless A levels, pointless degrees
01:21:06we've created T levels
01:21:07we've invested in the colleges to deliver it
01:21:09and the final point is
01:21:11right now there is still a slightly
01:21:15socialist whiff
01:21:16to the way our further education colleges
01:21:18work at the moment
01:21:19because we would love
01:21:22to train more gas engineers
01:21:23and more brickies within South Liverpool
01:21:25but at the moment that's done at Preston College
01:21:27so if I'm re-elected as your MP
01:21:29the next thing I will be doing
01:21:30is getting practical training places
01:21:33that closes that gap
01:21:34between 16 and 21.
01:21:41From the back
01:21:4426, 5 to 16 year olds
01:21:46have got mental health problems
01:21:48in this country
01:21:49and that rises to 1 in 4
01:21:51for 17 to 19 year olds.
01:21:54What are you going to do
01:21:56about this pandemic, epidemic
01:21:59whatever you want to call it
01:22:00of mental health issues
01:22:03across the country
01:22:05and especially in South Liverpool
01:22:07where parents and their children
01:22:09are waiting 2, 3, 5
01:22:13and even 7 years
01:22:15for CAMHS support
01:22:17CAMHS being children
01:22:18and adolescent mental health services
01:22:20what are you going to do about it?
01:22:27I think it is such an important question
01:22:30so there is some
01:22:31COVID has really done a number
01:22:34on a lot of our young people's
01:22:36mental health
01:22:37and so I've actually spent
01:22:38about the last year
01:22:40thinking quite hard about them
01:22:41and it comes into three buckets
01:22:43I think the first one
01:22:44is about understanding
01:22:46medically and scientifically
01:22:48in the long term
01:22:49what the root causes
01:22:50of these things are
01:22:51because as you rightly allude
01:22:52it's an increasing trend
01:22:54and I think there is some risk
01:22:56that because we don't understand
01:22:58the underlying root causes
01:22:59of what causes auditory
01:23:01hallucinations for example
01:23:02and psychosis
01:23:03that we don't have effective treatment
01:23:05you speak to the medical professionals
01:23:06and the doctors
01:23:08and they'll often say
01:23:08well we'll just try you
01:23:09on the different drugs
01:23:10to see if that can work
01:23:11I don't think it's acceptable
01:23:13with all of these advances
01:23:14in modern medicine
01:23:15that we guess with something
01:23:17as important as someone's mental health
01:23:19so if I'm re-elected
01:23:20and I was actually doing it at the time
01:23:22I want to have a charity set up
01:23:25which looks into research
01:23:27for the biological causes
01:23:28of mental health
01:23:29very much like breast cancer research
01:23:31was 40 years ago
01:23:32because it is out there
01:23:34and they are biological phenomena
01:23:36having said that
01:23:37there is at the moment
01:23:39because there's that kind of slight
01:23:40lack of understanding
01:23:41about what is truly disease
01:23:44and what is perhaps
01:23:46the normal ups and downs of life
01:23:47there's a very jagged edge
01:23:49and we're really struggling
01:23:50to empower individual professionals
01:23:52in CAMHS for example
01:23:54to say yes you have got a condition
01:23:56and we will need to either medicalise
01:23:58or help in a different way
01:23:59versus like that's a terrible
01:24:01you know let's start with some CBT
01:24:04or some conversational choices
01:24:06and the system is getting overloaded
01:24:08if you imagine a bell chart
01:24:11you know of 100 people
01:24:13in the population
01:24:14historically the line was
01:24:16you were poorly
01:24:17the line was here on the graph
01:24:19and what's happening is
01:24:20the line is coming further
01:24:21and further along
01:24:22which involves more people
01:24:23and we've got a system
01:24:24that's set up for a very narrow
01:24:27description of a mental health issue
01:24:29and that needs to align across
01:24:32so I think the most important thing
01:24:34is how to make sure
01:24:35that we can help people
01:24:37so you'll have heard talk about
01:24:39helping people with mental health conditions
01:24:41through DWP
01:24:42and helping make sure
01:24:43that they're getting access
01:24:44to the right...
01:24:45The question wasn't about people
01:24:47it was about children
01:24:48and young people
01:24:50the adult mental health problem
01:24:52but to be fair
01:24:58there's a biological cause
01:24:59of mental health
01:25:00that will be the same
01:25:01with children and adults
01:25:04and actually that's why
01:25:06I'm focusing in on
01:25:07using the power of science
01:25:08and specifically AI
01:25:10to help us have confidence
01:25:12in how we treat and support
01:25:13our children
01:25:13and I don't assume it's
01:25:14involved enough
01:25:23I don't want a charity
01:25:25establishing to deal with this
01:25:26I want the government
01:25:27to deal with this
01:25:28and first things first
01:25:33there has to be a recognition
01:25:37by the government
01:25:38that this is a very real
01:25:40and prevalent issue
01:25:42because it is
01:25:43it really is
01:25:45and once we recognise
01:25:46that it's a real issue
01:25:48we then need to put
01:25:49pastoral support
01:25:51into the schools
01:25:53and the education establishments
01:25:56now
01:25:56and it's going to take some investment
01:26:00recognise that there is a real issue
01:26:03get the support in there
01:26:05for these young people
01:26:07and stop this stigma
01:26:09this stigma that
01:26:09this current government has
01:26:11that there's nothing wrong with them
01:26:12because there's no biological effect
01:26:14that's been established
01:26:16because mental health
01:26:17is a very very very challenging issue
01:26:19for a lot of young people
01:26:21they need support
01:26:23they need help
01:26:24and they need recognition
01:26:31I'd just like to pick up
01:26:32on something that Catherine said
01:26:34that you said that Covid caused
01:26:36many of the issues going on here
01:26:39it wasn't Covid
01:26:40it was the decisions
01:26:40your government made
01:26:42about Covid
01:26:43that's caused these problems
01:26:47yeah I agree with you
01:26:50on the other hand
01:26:50I do agree with you
01:26:51that there are
01:26:53medical issues
01:26:54and socialistic issues involved
01:26:57you know that goes from
01:27:00parents to schools
01:27:01parents with the cost of living crisis
01:27:03as Anush says
01:27:04they're under great pressure
01:27:05and that's going to bounce down
01:27:07onto the kids isn't it
01:27:08so this isn't a simple
01:27:10there's not one
01:27:10I'm sorry to you know suggest
01:27:12that there isn't a simple answer to this
01:27:15we've got to get government
01:27:16thinking the right way
01:27:18but we've got to work
01:27:19within our families
01:27:20within the local communities
01:27:22with the schools
01:27:24one size doesn't fit all
01:27:26one size never has fit all
01:27:28so we've got to figure out
01:27:30almost actually
01:27:32yeah definitely
01:27:32on an individual basis
01:27:34and the government can't do that
01:27:36that's got to be at a much lower level
01:27:37that's got to be at a much more
01:27:39local level
01:27:40a much more caring level
01:27:42and let's try and work towards that
01:27:49okay so as far as I'm concerned
01:27:52there is a underfunding
01:27:55and total neglect
01:27:56of children's mental health services
01:27:58in this country
01:28:00and what the Liberal Democrats plan to do
01:28:02to start to address this
01:28:04is we are the only party
01:28:06that suggested
01:28:07that we appoint a cabinet member
01:28:10for children and young people
01:28:13who has a dedicated brief
01:28:15to look at the issues
01:28:17around young children
01:28:19and mental health
01:28:22we'll also put
01:28:23a dedicated professional
01:28:27health professional
01:28:30in every single primary school
01:28:32and every single school
01:28:35in this country
01:28:37so that we have someone there
01:28:39who can help the parents
01:28:41and help the children
01:28:43in the actual school
01:28:45and I think these measures
01:28:48are go in a positive direction
01:28:51to address
01:28:53the terrible mental health issues
01:28:56that our young children have
01:28:58if we don't do this
01:29:00it continues on into the future
01:29:02which then leaves it
01:29:03with the NHS to sort out
01:29:06and therefore as a result of that
01:29:08you get this continuing costs
01:29:10to the whole of people's lives
01:29:11so at the moment
01:29:13what we've got is not working
01:29:18thank you
01:29:19I'd like to ask
01:29:20about national security
01:29:22I don't think it's really cropped up that much
01:29:24in this election
01:29:25certainly not this evening
01:29:28and I think maybe
01:29:29might come to Catherine
01:29:31as a representative
01:29:32of the governing party
01:29:35I'm ex-RAF
01:29:36ex-Border Force
01:29:37and ex-MOD civil servant
01:29:40and I noticed in your plans
01:29:42to spend two and a half percent of GDP
01:29:44on defence
01:29:45there's part of that
01:29:47as an assumption
01:29:47you can put 17,000
01:29:49full-time equivalent jobs
01:29:50at the civil service
01:29:51so very specifically
01:29:54to the tune of 17,000
01:29:56full-time equivalent jobs
01:29:58what do you not want
01:30:00the Ministry of Defence to do
01:30:01in the next five years
01:30:02that it currently does?
01:30:07thank you very much for your question
01:30:08and thank you for your service
01:30:09because it's important
01:30:10I think there's a
01:30:11potentially a slight misunderstanding
01:30:13so the two and a half percent
01:30:15commitment to defence spending
01:30:17is to take the civil service jobs
01:30:19across the whole
01:30:20back to the level they were before COVID
01:30:23so it's not specifically
01:30:26within to the MOD
01:30:29mate I can't hear you
01:30:30I can't hear you
01:30:30there were 72,000
01:30:32across the civil service
01:30:33that includes 17,000
01:30:34from the MOD
01:30:35because it's one of the three
01:30:36biggest departments
01:30:37along with DDVP and HMRC
01:30:39so 17,000 is the equivalent
01:30:42for a part of the MOD
01:30:45and what was your figure
01:30:46in the MOD civil servants
01:30:47before COVID?
01:30:49no it's 54,000 at the minute
01:30:52so you're taking 17,000
01:30:53yeah but what was it before COVID
01:30:55because the commitment
01:30:55is to take it back to COVID
01:30:57no and I think
01:30:57that's a really interesting point
01:30:59because the civil service
01:31:02it has got great individuals in it
01:31:04but I think we've alluded to it
01:31:06in the answer to other questions
01:31:07more broadly it's a nightmare
01:31:09I can remember when I was
01:31:10putting IT systems in
01:31:11going into an MOD shed
01:31:13that lost 20 million pounds
01:31:15with the Vulcan windscreens
01:31:16because they'd stored them
01:31:17the wrong way around
01:31:18you know you go to HMRC
01:31:20they're a part of the phones
01:31:22it's because they're working from home
01:31:23the idea that there aren't
01:31:24efficiencies to be had
01:31:25within the civil service community
01:31:28especially seeing as it's swelled
01:31:29significantly post-COVID
01:31:31the birds
01:31:32but what I would say
01:31:33is of all the people here
01:31:34on this table
01:31:35and the parties we represent
01:31:37the Conservatives have got
01:31:38the strongest track record
01:31:39in national security
01:31:40they have developed
01:31:41the orcas deal to make sure
01:31:42we have a nuclear deterrent
01:31:44both now and into the future
01:31:45working with our friends and partners
01:31:47we've committed to two and a half percent
01:31:50of GDP spent
01:31:51and the thing
01:31:52one of the things I'm most proud of
01:31:54as a member of parliament
01:31:55is the front footed support
01:31:56we gave to Ukraine
01:31:58when many countries
01:31:59in the Western world
01:32:00were disseminating
01:32:01a dissembling
01:32:02and saying well maybe
01:32:03we shouldn't worry about Paris
01:32:04and you know
01:32:05some of our European friends and partners
01:32:07had 55 percent of their energy
01:32:09coming from Russia and Ukraine
01:32:11were a lot worried
01:32:12and we said
01:32:13absolutely not
01:32:14this is a question of moral dignity
01:32:20okay I can
01:32:21I shall stop there
01:32:22I'm afraid it's very hard to hear
01:32:24when you heckle them from the back
01:32:26so the specific question I think
01:32:39was how we um
01:32:43is it Jonathan is it yeah
01:32:44Jonathan is it
01:32:45how they're going to increase
01:32:47and spending to 2.5 percent
01:32:51and then but then still cut jobs
01:32:53at the same time
01:32:54so we have a significantly
01:32:57different approach to this
01:32:59the Ministry of Defence
01:33:00I'm an ex-serviceman
01:33:01I know what I'm speaking about
01:33:03you look at the UK forces now
01:33:06they're at the lowest level
01:33:08since the Napoleonic Wars
01:33:10that's fact
01:33:11they've been cut
01:33:12and cut
01:33:13and cut
01:33:14for the last 14 years
01:33:16you no longer
01:33:17have enough ships
01:33:18for the Royal Navy
01:33:19we no longer have enough sailors
01:33:21for the Royal Navy
01:33:22the Conservatives commissioned
01:33:24two huge aircraft carriers
01:33:26but then didn't have any airplanes
01:33:28to fly off
01:33:32you were commissioned
01:33:32two years ago
01:33:33I think I remember
01:33:34that you were in power
01:33:36listen
01:33:37can they not be heckled please
01:33:38can they not be heckled please
01:33:39Catherine
01:33:40thank you
01:33:41they commissioned
01:33:42two aircraft carriers
01:33:44that didn't have any aircraft
01:33:47we are in a chronic situation
01:33:49with our forces
01:33:50and we need that investment
01:33:51we've committed Jonathan
01:33:53to two and a half percent
01:33:55of GDP spent
01:33:57as soon as our economy
01:34:00can afford it
01:34:01so that we don't have to cut
01:34:0317,000 jobs
01:34:05from the MOD to fund it
01:34:07because that is a foolish thing to do
01:34:11we need the civil servants
01:34:13in the Ministry of Defence
01:34:14to support the rebuilding
01:34:16of our forces
01:34:17across the board
01:34:19to bring us back
01:34:20to being the United Kingdom
01:34:21that we were 20 years ago
01:34:24hold on to your question
01:34:28thank you
01:34:29I always thought
01:34:31that the first job
01:34:32of any government
01:34:33is to defend the country
01:34:35and with the depletion
01:34:39of service people
01:34:42with the depletion of equipment
01:34:43that's gone on
01:34:44with this conservative government
01:34:45the one thing they are not doing
01:34:47is defending this country
01:34:48particularly
01:34:49in the pretty anxious moments
01:34:51that we're facing right now
01:34:53with Ukraine
01:34:54with China
01:34:55with Iran
01:34:56with North Korea
01:34:57I don't think we're in a very good place
01:35:00what we would do
01:35:02is as my two colleagues
01:35:04on the right have said
01:35:05is increase
01:35:08defence spending
01:35:09to 2.5% of GDP
01:35:11in three years
01:35:13and then increase it to 3%
01:35:15within the next six years
01:35:18we'd have pay review
01:35:19and increases
01:35:20across the country
01:35:22you know that a private soldier
01:35:24earns less than an Amazon driver
01:35:27that really encourages people
01:35:28to join the services doesn't it
01:35:32we protect the military
01:35:33from civil war
01:35:36we'd have a new ministerial department
01:35:38for veterans
01:35:39to make sure that the people
01:35:40that have come out of military
01:35:43are getting treated properly
01:35:46we try and get
01:35:48it would be hard
01:35:48with the wages at the moment
01:35:50but we try and aim
01:35:51for 30,000 new soldiers
01:35:53and an increase in the service population
01:35:56across the other
01:35:58air force and the royal navy
01:36:00we could give tax incentives
01:36:03to attract investment
01:36:05in military technology
01:36:07and manufacturing
01:36:10we'd have a real good look
01:36:11at defence procurement
01:36:12because I've been in procurement
01:36:13and it's a bag of spanners
01:36:16and we'd help
01:36:19we'd give free education
01:36:20to people leaving the military
01:36:22to help them get back
01:36:24into the world at large
01:36:30Jonathan
01:36:31it's that long
01:36:31since you asked the question
01:36:32I'm not really 100% sure
01:36:34what it is you
01:36:36specifically said
01:36:37but I will try and articulate to you
01:36:40what we at Liverpool Devils want
01:36:42so I actually worked
01:36:44and used to travel down
01:36:45a lot to Abbey Wood
01:36:47in Bristol
01:36:47and deal with the MOD staff there
01:36:50on the Typhoon Programme
01:36:51and they were great people to deal with
01:36:54it's a brilliant complex there
01:36:56one of the things I struggled with though
01:36:58was the procurement strategy
01:37:00and I do think that
01:37:02we need a comprehensive
01:37:03industrial strategy
01:37:06so that our costs are reduced
01:37:09in our procurement
01:37:10and one of those ways of doing that
01:37:12would be to have an industrial strategy
01:37:14shared with our European partner companies
01:37:17who countries
01:37:18who we actually buy
01:37:19a lot of these goods and services from
01:37:22and also design them
01:37:23for instance the Typhoons
01:37:25a four nation collaborative programme
01:37:27if I can turn
01:37:28so I think that's what we need
01:37:30an industrial strategy
01:37:31to reduce costs
01:37:32the other thing is
01:37:33I know that I think at the moment
01:37:35I think you talked
01:37:36did you talk about the Royal Air Force
01:37:38or the Army
01:37:39but anyway
01:37:40if you take the Army as an example
01:37:42I know that we've got around
01:37:4377,000 personnel in the Army
01:37:46as a result of significant
01:37:49cuts from by the Conservative government
01:37:51and one of our ambitions
01:37:53would be to increase
01:37:55the regular Army
01:37:56back up to 100,000
01:37:58to get us somewhere near
01:38:00to being battle ready
01:38:02I'm sorry if that's not
01:38:03particularly answered your question
01:38:04but we are also committed
01:38:08again to spend at least
01:38:09two and a half percent
01:38:10on defence
01:38:17yes
01:38:18so Andy
01:38:19we have got a veterans department
01:38:20we took it out the MOD
01:38:22and put it in the Cabinet Office
01:38:23so I've been serving with Johnny Mercer
01:38:24in the Cabinet Office
01:38:25to achieve the aims that you want
01:38:28to the aims of the Armed Forces
01:38:31I think it's particularly laudable
01:38:32that you should be listening
01:38:33to what Ben Wallace said
01:38:34because he was a great Defence Secretary
01:38:36and he said you can take
01:38:37the troop numbers up
01:38:38but what you end up with
01:38:39is what you had under Labour
01:38:41which is a very hollowed out Army
01:38:42because you've got the men
01:38:43and the bodies
01:38:44or the women and the bodies there
01:38:46but you haven't got the kit
01:38:49and they're not equipped properly
01:38:50to access it
01:38:51you end up having 73,000
01:38:53well felt for fighting troops
01:38:55with 30,000 reservists
01:38:56but I have a final question for Paul
01:38:58which is have you ever met Jonathan
01:39:00before tonight?
01:39:05about
01:39:06I think I saw him last about four years ago
01:39:13no it's fine
01:39:16um
01:39:34it's not about
01:39:36a knee jerk or a gotcha moment
01:39:38I believe that women's rights
01:39:40in this country
01:39:41are under serious threat
01:39:43for the first time
01:39:44probably since the suffragette movement
01:39:46and my question is very specific
01:39:49do you think it's right
01:39:51for a biological male
01:39:53to be on the same ward
01:39:55in the same bay
01:39:57as a woman?
01:40:05hi thanks for your question
01:40:07no I don't think it's right
01:40:10we have to look at the cause
01:40:12and it's probably
01:40:14the um
01:40:16again underfunding of the NHS
01:40:19because you can also have
01:40:21women and men in the corridor
01:40:22you can also have them outside
01:40:24in the car park
01:40:26our NHS will always deal with the
01:40:30issues that people come in with
01:40:33but our hospitals don't have
01:40:35the capacity
01:40:36or are not modern enough
01:40:39after they've been crumbling
01:40:41to probably accommodate
01:40:43proper areas
01:40:45for women and for men
01:40:51well in terms of the ideological choice
01:40:54I absolutely prefer
01:40:56that women being treated
01:40:58in wards in hospitals
01:41:00should have their own ward
01:41:14I mean the point is
01:41:15that it's an ideological choice
01:41:18made by the NHS
01:41:19they believe it's correct
01:41:20for self-identified men
01:41:23who actually are male-bodied
01:41:25to be placed on the same
01:41:26in the same room
01:41:28as female patients
01:41:31I don't think it is
01:41:34as a nurse
01:41:35and I worked in the health service
01:41:37for about 30 years
01:41:39as a nurse
01:41:40I'm telling you
01:41:40it's very very dangerous
01:41:43for the men
01:41:44and for women to be in wards
01:41:46and specifically on that point
01:41:48in health care
01:41:49no I don't think it should happen either
01:41:53no I don't believe in wards
01:41:57no I don't
01:41:58and the problem is
01:41:59you've got to change the law
01:42:01to allow for that protection
01:42:03to be put in place
01:42:04and the Labour Party are saying
01:42:05we won't change the law
01:42:06and they are all over the place
01:42:08on this one
01:42:13Hi, yeah it's just a quick one really
01:42:21I think one of the biggest things
01:42:22I'm thinking about
01:42:23that's going to cause change
01:42:24in the next five to ten years
01:42:26is artificial intelligence
01:42:28and how it's going to change
01:42:29our lives completely
01:42:30from the jobs we do
01:42:32or any of our lives
01:42:33and how we socialise
01:42:34all those kinds of things
01:42:36I just wondered why
01:42:37you thought your party
01:42:38was the best place
01:42:40to lead us through that change
01:42:41because I think it's a big change
01:42:42that's coming
01:42:42and I've not heard much about it
01:42:46Fantastic question
01:42:47as a fully paid up science nerd
01:42:49and a member of the
01:42:50Science and Technology Select Committee
01:42:51all the way through Parliament
01:42:53we've done a huge inquiry on AI
01:42:55it's 200 pages
01:42:56if you need a certain language to read
01:42:58you can get it on the Parliament website
01:43:00but the short version is
01:43:01it is a game changer for everything
01:43:03so the teachers came to us and said
01:43:07we can't tell the difference
01:43:08between a 15 year old's essay
01:43:09and an AI's essay
01:43:10we're going to have to go back
01:43:11to doing paper exams
01:43:13with the kids
01:43:14to secure their understanding
01:43:17I speak to biological researchers
01:43:19that are looking into
01:43:20developing new drought resistant crops
01:43:22for Africa
01:43:23and they are using the AI
01:43:24to predict how the DNA proteins are folded
01:43:27they don't actually go and look at the protein
01:43:29because the AI predicts it so accurately
01:43:31it means they're getting a lock and key
01:43:33and then there are
01:43:34so there's technological opportunities
01:43:36but there are also technological threats
01:43:38I've been privileged to some briefing
01:43:40and I'll obviously only share
01:43:41the public part of that
01:43:43which is that
01:43:44if man knows it on the planet right now
01:43:47AI pretty much knows it
01:43:49so for example
01:43:51if you want to mechanically do something
01:43:53that might seek to do someone's harm
01:43:55and you use your AI in a bad way
01:43:57that is possible
01:43:58and that's why
01:43:59whilst it's not the most retail and sexy thing
01:44:02you can say that about quite a lot
01:44:03of what the Conservatives have been doing recently
01:44:06that Bletchley Park AI summit
01:44:08that I was peripherally involved in
01:44:10is really important
01:44:11because we got the world together
01:44:12and said guys
01:44:13can we agree some rules on this
01:44:15just to get some basic timelines in
01:44:17for what we as the Western democracies
01:44:19are willing to do
01:44:20because if AI
01:44:22it's big terminator
01:44:23but smarter and faster
01:44:25and it's not there yet
01:44:26but we need to be as regulators ahead of it
01:44:29so I think it's a fantastic question
01:44:30and I'll happily pick up with you outside
01:44:34I believe so we can get as many questions as we can
01:44:37I know Steph
01:44:39just so everyone's aware
01:44:42fully embrace it
01:44:43but what I would say
01:44:45is that I agree with
01:44:46what Katherine said there
01:44:47but we have to regulate this carefully
01:44:50I'm aware already
01:44:51of developments in serious supercomputing
01:44:54and we need to
01:44:55we've got to be really really careful
01:44:57with the regulations and safeguards around AI
01:45:00but we must embrace it
01:45:02because I think the
01:45:03the lone party manifesto specifically states
01:45:05about the use of AI
01:45:07sorry within diagnosis
01:45:09which can be ultimately instance
01:45:11but yes Steph
01:45:13you do need to embrace it
01:45:14it is ultimately is the future
01:45:17but the safeguards and the regulation
01:45:19are absolutely critical here for all of us
01:45:24I really question whether
01:45:27teachers who think that
01:45:2915 year old SA
01:45:32and an AI SA
01:45:33can't be distinguished between each other
01:45:35no the AI coppers the mistakes
01:45:37it begins with
01:45:38well yeah I know I know I know
01:45:39my partner has this
01:45:41to deal with all the time
01:45:42so but we've got to face facts
01:45:44as everyone said
01:45:45AI is here to stay
01:45:47there's good aspects to it
01:45:48there's some very dangerous aspects to it
01:45:51and it's evolving
01:45:53so we've got to create
01:45:55the government bodies
01:45:57the intelligence in industry
01:45:59in education
01:46:00in the health sector
01:46:02to understand what are the good bits
01:46:03and what are the bad bits
01:46:05and we need
01:46:06from a government perspective
01:46:07to make sure that we're not attacked by
01:46:11foreign AI
01:46:12that can dismantle
01:46:13you know whole aspects of our society
01:46:15in at the drop of a hat
01:46:19yeah it is a good question
01:46:21it's a future that could be
01:46:22quite a frightening world
01:46:24this is a global issue obviously
01:46:26and we do need regulation
01:46:31and protection in place
01:46:34and I think we need to have
01:46:35collaborative agreements
01:46:37with the providers of AI
01:46:40to make sure that the rules
01:46:42and regulations are put in place
01:46:44to protect us
01:46:45I see AI as the granddaughter
01:46:47of social media
01:46:49so you know the Facebook
01:46:51and all and the WhatsApp
01:46:52and all the other powerful
01:46:55technology platforms out there
01:46:58that have already ruined people's lives
01:47:01the child suicide
01:47:04the people you know
01:47:05urban myths going out there
01:47:08and people getting
01:47:10totally the wrong information
01:47:11so that's not being regulated anyway
01:47:14and certainly with AI
01:47:15as I say it's a global issue
01:47:17and I think it's something that
01:47:20we need to get on the agenda
01:47:21of the G18 or G22 agenda
01:47:28because we need to come up
01:47:29with regulation and protection
01:47:31on a global basis
01:47:32because it is pretty frightening
01:47:34what it's capable of
01:47:42now Catherine said
01:47:43that if you ring up the HMRC
01:47:46you don't get a reply
01:47:48she's absolutely right
01:47:49but what she didn't say was why
01:47:52and I'll tell her why
01:47:54it's simply because you cut
01:47:56the number of staff
01:47:58who work in the HMRC
01:48:00and the worst consequence is
01:48:02it's not just that you can't get through
01:48:05the tax gap
01:48:07between the amount of taxes raised
01:48:11and the amount that should be raised
01:48:13based on the incumbent
01:48:15has got wider and wider
01:48:17and if you have solved this problem
01:48:20our tax revenues will increase
01:48:23and our services
01:48:24will not be the mess they're in
01:48:26because they're underfunded
01:48:28it's a consequence of what we've done
01:48:30to the revenue
01:48:38as a Conservative
01:48:38I genuinely believe in something
01:48:40called the Laffer Curve
01:48:41which is you get to a point
01:48:42where you set tax rates such
01:48:45that people stop paying them
01:48:47and we have prioritised
01:48:50in this country
01:48:51reducing tax for the most vulnerable
01:48:53raising the national living wage
01:48:54raising the threshold
01:48:57an average earner on £35,000
01:48:59now pays the lowest tax rate
01:49:01since about the 1970s
01:49:03so we've asked those
01:49:05that are more fortunate in society
01:49:06to shoulder quite a large part of the burden
01:49:08so here's a stat for you
01:49:101% of taxpayers pay 29%
01:49:14of the tax in this country
01:49:15and therefore losing them
01:49:18or them making a choice
01:49:20to go and invest and live elsewhere
01:49:23loses us money
01:49:24and when historically
01:49:27you cut tax rates
01:49:28when you cut the tax rate
01:49:30you actually get more money in the revenue
01:49:32so as a Conservative
01:49:34I'll always believe
01:49:35that it's important to be responsible
01:49:36with people's money
01:49:37but that it's also important to make
01:49:40I'm so sorry sir
01:49:41I can't hear you when you're shouting
01:49:50yeah I think what the gentleman was saying
01:49:52was the lack of resource
01:49:57in HM revenue
01:49:58to address the tax claiming
01:50:04or the lack of being able
01:50:06to recover taxes
01:50:07from people who should obtain tax
01:50:10it's another public service
01:50:12that's been cut
01:50:13under this government
01:50:15it's underfunded
01:50:17it doesn't consider
01:50:19you know it's another one
01:50:19of these public service companies
01:50:21where you have to fill a form in
01:50:23a triage
01:50:24for the elderly people
01:50:25of this country
01:50:26that's not good enough
01:50:28and we need more staff
01:50:29in HM revenue
01:50:30because if we can address
01:50:32the shortfall
01:50:33in payment of taxes
01:50:35and the loopholes
01:50:36that are currently available
01:50:37for the very rich
01:50:38then yes we would have
01:50:39more money available
01:50:41to bolster the British economy
01:50:42thank you
01:50:46there's one simple word sir
01:50:48austerity
01:50:49so the heart was pulled
01:50:51from nearly every single
01:50:53public service in 2010
01:50:56when the government
01:50:57the Conservative government
01:50:58Mr Cameron
01:50:59and Mr Ogg was born
01:51:00commenced the journey of austerity
01:51:03and by hell are we paying the price now
01:51:05that's what's caused this
01:51:12I love Catherine's answer
01:51:13that the Conservatives
01:51:16are reducing taxes
01:51:17when we've got the highest tax
01:51:19in 70 years
01:51:22well we've got the highest tax
01:51:25across you know for 70 years
01:51:26it's also quite interesting
01:51:28that in the last year
01:51:29we were talking about
01:51:30rich people spending money
01:51:329,000 millionaires
01:51:34have left this country
01:51:35because they don't believe
01:51:37that the Conservatives
01:51:38are delivering higher taxes
01:51:39but I agree with the gentleman
01:51:42that
01:51:43yeah HMRC
01:51:44is
01:51:46you know
01:51:46it doesn't do the best job
01:51:48can tell you
01:51:48some people it does
01:51:49I've never had a problem with them
01:51:52but might working from home
01:51:55do something about this
01:51:57I don't know
01:51:58just a question
01:52:05if we fund the HMRC
01:52:08and they in return
01:52:11agree to recover the billions
01:52:13in lost taxes
01:52:14that they don't get
01:52:16into the revenue
01:52:17then I think that's a fair deal
01:52:20any other thoughts
01:52:21on the last question
01:52:23okay thank you
01:52:24so we've got some fairly
01:52:25big ticket questions
01:52:26with international
01:52:28national and regional
01:52:31consequences
01:52:33my question is about me
01:52:34and you
01:52:36so over the last five years
01:52:38I've had cause to
01:52:40try and contact
01:52:40two of the candidates
01:52:42on the poll
01:52:43and I've felt ignored
01:52:45throughout
01:52:46what can you say
01:52:48that's going to make me feel
01:52:49that I'm going to be represented
01:52:50on the 5th of July
01:52:56I only picked up the
01:52:58reform seat
01:53:00candidacy
01:53:02about a week and a bit ago
01:53:04I've answered
01:53:07hundreds and hundreds
01:53:08and hundreds of emails
01:53:10texts phone calls
01:53:12and I've got some in here
01:53:13that will support that
01:53:15and I've been thanked
01:53:17innumerable times
01:53:18for just the courtesy
01:53:20of answering a question
01:53:23or responding to somebody
01:53:24so if I get in
01:53:26I'll sit with anyone
01:53:27I'll sit with anyone
01:53:28discussing problems
01:53:29I'll listen to them
01:53:30we might not agree
01:53:32inevitably
01:53:33you know we won't always agree
01:53:35but I want to sit down
01:53:36with the people
01:53:37in this constituency
01:53:38because I think this is personal
01:53:40I think it's really personal
01:53:42and if you want to
01:53:44talk big government
01:53:45talk to the two parties
01:53:47on the right
01:53:48if you want to talk about yourself
01:53:49and what's going on around here
01:53:51and how we can help
01:53:52then talk to me
01:53:57yeah
01:53:59the only thing I would say
01:54:01is that
01:54:02we try and answer
01:54:03all resident queries
01:54:04and the only thing
01:54:06I can think is
01:54:07that we don't have
01:54:09offices
01:54:11during this campaign
01:54:12with manned staff
01:54:15so basically
01:54:16I wouldn't quite say
01:54:17it's me and a dog
01:54:18but we have a very small team
01:54:19in the Liberal Democrats
01:54:21I have received
01:54:2340 odd emails a day
01:54:25from mainly lobby groups
01:54:28and the only way
01:54:29I prioritise that
01:54:31is by answering emails
01:54:33that have actually come
01:54:34from residents
01:54:35with a real issue
01:54:37in the community
01:54:38it is physically impossible
01:54:40for our team
01:54:42to answer
01:54:43all the questions
01:54:44that are piling into
01:54:47my parliamentary email account
01:54:51if we had an office
01:54:52and if we had full-time staff
01:54:55I'm sure my answer to you
01:54:57would be very different
01:54:58thanks
01:55:03thanks
01:55:04I don't know
01:55:04am I supposed to be
01:55:05trying to contact someone?
01:55:06I'm not sure
01:55:07I've been a councillor
01:55:10for 17 years
01:55:11in South Ribble
01:55:12dealing and supporting
01:55:13the community
01:55:14with thousands of issues
01:55:15over that period
01:55:17I've been your council leader
01:55:20in South Ribble
01:55:20for the past five years
01:55:23and through the pandemic
01:55:24dealing with thousands of issues
01:55:27directly for the entire community
01:55:30if I'm elected as your MP
01:55:33I will be here
01:55:34every single week
01:55:35dealing with your issues
01:55:37and you'll have my word on it
01:55:40Catherine finally to you
01:55:41thank you
01:55:42I think it's a very fair question
01:55:43because this question
01:55:44is for the politics
01:55:45because we feel really remote
01:55:46can't we?
01:55:47so since I got elected
01:55:50I moved my office
01:55:52into Leyland
01:55:52because it's got better
01:55:53public transport
01:55:54I meet people
01:55:55and hold surgeries
01:55:56there every Friday
01:55:57I'm hoping that many of you
01:55:58in the room
01:55:59will have a letter from me
01:56:00saying I'm holding a Q&A here
01:56:02come and meet me
01:56:02and talk to me
01:56:04my caseload's been
01:56:05about 30,000 ish
01:56:07probably over to be honest
01:56:09because we don't record all of it
01:56:11within that volume
01:56:12have we copped up
01:56:12on missed emails?
01:56:13yes probably
01:56:14you know I find people
01:56:16that say
01:56:17I wrote to you
01:56:17and you didn't write back
01:56:18and when you chase it through
01:56:20they're sending it
01:56:20to an email address
01:56:21with Catherine as a C
01:56:22rather than a K
01:56:23or there's a reason behind it
01:56:26but I'm guessing you're asking
01:56:29because you want to know
01:56:30whether you have a 24-7
01:56:33on hold
01:56:34ready to act
01:56:35should you ever have a problem
01:56:36can do that
01:56:37am I roughly right?
01:56:39no
01:56:39not really
01:56:40I want to feel recommended
01:56:44I've got a routine
01:56:45to help my issues
01:56:50heard
01:56:50listened
01:56:51and listened to
01:56:52and get my support
01:56:53yeah okay
01:56:54I'm dead conscious
01:56:54the rest of the room
01:56:56won't be able to hear you
01:56:56so forgive us
01:56:57I'm going to cut across you
01:56:59and yeah
01:57:00quite right
01:57:01and long may it continue
01:57:03that MPs are held to account
01:57:06and have chats
01:57:07and are constantly listening
01:57:10like many of the others
01:57:12none of us are MP anymore
01:57:15we're all candidates
01:57:16so I'm probably doing the same
01:57:17as Andrew and Paul
01:57:18which is sitting down
01:57:20and replying to my emails
01:57:21at the computer late at night
01:57:23but so if you want me for anything
01:57:25Catherine at CatherineFletcher.uk
01:57:27Catherine thank you very much indeed
01:57:29and our two hours
01:57:30ladies and gentlemen
01:57:31is up I'm afraid
01:57:32let me thank on your behalf
01:57:34and mine our panel
01:57:35from right to left
01:57:36Ang Turner
01:57:37Andy Hunter
01:57:38Paul Foster
01:57:39and Catherine Fletcher
01:57:40thank you for being a great audience
01:57:42and however you want to do that too
01:57:44and now I'm going to exchange
01:57:45to the past two hours
01:57:47thanks a lot for coming out
01:57:48and giving me great ideas
01:57:49goodbye