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Are Reform UK a threat to Labour?
Nicholas Harris reports from the new Labour seat of Southport, which was rocked by riots three months ago. There he found anger and resentment towards migrants. A listener asks if Reform UK now pose as much of a threat to Labour as they do to the Conservatives.
Plus Rachel Cunliffe joins Hannah Barnes and Nicholas Harris to answer a listener who asks whether Donald Trump's win is good news for new Leader of the Opposition, Kemi Badenoch.
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Are Jews safe?
32:08|The "evil" mass shooting at Bondi Beach was the latest in a rising number of antisemitic attacks.16 people died in the attack in Sydney, Australia. They were Jews who had gathered to celebrate the first night of Chanukah. Among them, a holocaust survivor and a ten-year old girl.Antisemitic attacks are on the rise. In this year to September, Australia recorded 1654 anti-semitic incidents. That's three times higher than any year before the war in Gaza. Here in the UK, Jews faced over 1,500 attacks in the first half of 2025, according to data from the Community Security Trust. Thatās the second-highest total in the first half of any year on record, and includes the terrorist attack on a synagogue in Manchester in which two people died. In July, a report authored by Lord John Mann & Penny Mordaunt found āwidespread failures to address anti-jewish discrimination in NHS, education, arts and policingā.Ā Oli Dugmore is joined by Rachel Cunliffe and Hannah Barnes to ask: are Jews safe?READ: The Bondi Beach shooting was an attack on Jews.
Is Britain complicit in genocide?
57:42|Journalist Peter Oborne claims both Labour and Conservatives have fallen short on their response to Israel's war in Gaza.--Peter Oborne is a journalist, author and commentator. He was the political editor of The Spectator, a commentator for the Daily Telegraph and now writes for Middle East Eye. A long-time conservative, Oborne joins Oli Dugmore to explain why he believes the Conservative Party have abandoned their principles, and to discuss the role that successive British governments have played - or failed to play - in dealing with genocides around the world. Peter Oborne's book "Complicit: Britain's role in the destruction of Gaza" is out now.
You asked, we listened ... to Liz Truss' podcast
18:33|In this weekās episode of You Ask Us, one listener wonders, is the media infatuated with Zack Polanski?And another challenges our journalists to listen to the Liz Truss podcast.You ask, we deliver.Ā Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Rachel Cunliffe.
Wes Streeting is "pretty frustrated, tbh"
28:42|Wes Streeting denied plotting to oust Keir Starmer.Ailbhe Rea met the Health Secretary to learn what he's really thinking.***Ailbhe writes: Labour is in danger of presenting itself as the āmaintenance department for the countryā, he says. āThe problem with that kind of practical, technocratic approach is that if someone else comes along and says, āWell, Iāve got a maintenance company too, and mineās cheaper,ā why wouldnāt people go, āOK, well, weāll give that maintenance team a tryā?ā He doesnāt name Starmer, but the critique of the Prime Ministerās āpractical, technocraticā leadership is clear.Streeting has denied plotting against the Labour leader. But when we speak, he strikes me as someone planning for what may lie ahead. I meet a cabinet minister ranging beyond his brief, thinking seriously about what his party needs to do to win the next election ā and beginning to outline an alternative to that āmaintenance departmentā approach.***Ailbhe Rea joins Anoosh Chakelian on Daily Politics from the New Statesman to discuss her interview with Wes Streeting, including the behind-the-scenes parts she couldn't reveal in her article.š READ Wes Streeting: "I'm pretty frustrated, to be honest"https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk-politics/2025/12/wes-streeting-im-pretty-frustrated
Natalie Fleet MP: I won't report my rape
41:40|If you are raped in London today, you could be waiting until 2030 for a trial.Ā Justice secretary David Lammy has stated that 60 per cent of rape victims drop their cases whilst waiting for the trial. Rape Crisis estimates 1 in 6 women go to the police.Oli Dugmore is joined by Labour MP Natalie Fleet, who has written for the New Statesman on the fight for justice for victims of rape.
Nigel Farage wants to be American
27:38|Why does the Reform leader spend so much time in the US? Freddie Hayward has been speaking to him to find out.--Winston Churchill had an American mother. Boris Johnson was a dual citizen. But if Nigel Farage makes it to Downing Street, heāll have closer ties to the US than any other British PM.Ā Ā Thatās the argument of our correspondent Freddie Hayward, who joins Oli Dugmore on Daily Politics.He's been speaking to Farage and the MAGA figures he calls friends to find out how the Reform leader hopes to bring Trump tactics to British politics - and rekindle the most "special" of relationships.
Labourās Green attacks are misfiring
41:41|Keir Starmer described Green party policy as ānutsā and ādangerousā in an interview with the Observer yesterday. But is he underestimating one of Labourās biggest threats?And is Starmer alienating a generation of young voters who might run into the arms of Zack Polanski?Rachel Cunliffe is joined by George Eaton and Will Dunn.
How can the UK win back the net zero narrative?
29:22|As the UK grapples with cost of living pressures, geopolitical shocks and a shifting political landscape, the case for net zero remains strong - but the story around it seems to have stalled.How can policymakers, businesses and campaigners reconnect climate action with public priorities such as jobs, growth, energy security and household bills?In this episode host Jon Bernstein is joined by Benj Sykes, UK Country Manager at Ćrsted, Polly Billington, Labour MP and founder of Climate 100, and Daisy Powell-Chandler, Head of Energy and Environment at Public First, to examine the state of the UKās net zero consensus and whatās really driving public attitudes.Their discussion looks at why Westminster debate has become more polarised even as public concern about climate change remains high; whether the language of ānet zeroā helps or hinders; and how to tell a more compelling, place-based story about the energy transition - from local jobs and warmer homes to cleaner transport and revitalised town centres.The panel also explores how to balance upfront investment with cost of living pressures, the case for an energy social tariff, and why decarbonisation should be framed as a national security priority that reduces exposure to volatile fossil fuel markets and future energy price shocks.This New Statesman podcast episode is sponsored by Ćrsted.
Is Labour still Labour?
29:16|Is the Labour Party holding true to its founding principles? Have we lost trust in the police? Are we in a recession?Anoosh Chakelian is joined by Luke OāReilly and Rachel Cunliffe to answer your questions.