24 min

Money Talks with Liam Halligan: Suella Braverman on her childhood, small boats policy and UK's future in ECHR Money Talks with Liam Halligan

    • Business

Welcome to Money Talks – a series of interviews with Liam Halligan, Economics and Business Editor of GB News.  
 
In this episode, Liam talks to Home Secretary Suella Braverman. 
 
Braverman was born and raised in London. Her parents emigrated to the UK from Kenya and Mauritius respectively. After studying law at Cambridge, Braverman was a barrister before entering Parliament as MP for the Conservative stronghold of Fareham, Hampshire in 2015. 
  
Braverman moved swiftly through the ministerial ranks, becoming Brexit Minister in 2018 then Attorney General in 2020. And now, as Home Secretary, she holds one of the four Great Offices of State. 
  
In this detailed interview, recorded in the Home Office in late February 2023, Braverman outlines why her childhood made her a Conservative, defends the government’s “small boats” policy and explains why the UK may eventually need to leave the European Convention on Human Rights – while reflecting on why she attracts so many negative headlines.
“I see my job as telling the truth and fixing problems,” she says. “And sometimes, when the truth is uncomfortable, people get upset”. 

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Welcome to Money Talks – a series of interviews with Liam Halligan, Economics and Business Editor of GB News.  
 
In this episode, Liam talks to Home Secretary Suella Braverman. 
 
Braverman was born and raised in London. Her parents emigrated to the UK from Kenya and Mauritius respectively. After studying law at Cambridge, Braverman was a barrister before entering Parliament as MP for the Conservative stronghold of Fareham, Hampshire in 2015. 
  
Braverman moved swiftly through the ministerial ranks, becoming Brexit Minister in 2018 then Attorney General in 2020. And now, as Home Secretary, she holds one of the four Great Offices of State. 
  
In this detailed interview, recorded in the Home Office in late February 2023, Braverman outlines why her childhood made her a Conservative, defends the government’s “small boats” policy and explains why the UK may eventually need to leave the European Convention on Human Rights – while reflecting on why she attracts so many negative headlines.
“I see my job as telling the truth and fixing problems,” she says. “And sometimes, when the truth is uncomfortable, people get upset”. 

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

24 min

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