Politics Without The Boring Bits The Times
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- ニュース
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Join Matt Chorley as he guides you through what really matters in British politics. Formerly the Red Box podcast, he brings together the best interviews, smartest analysis and funniest panel discussions from his Times Radio show, Politics Without The Boring Bits.
Listen live on DAB, smart speaker or app 10am-1pm Monday to Friday. If you like what you hear, then read more at http://www.thetimes.co.uk/
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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If Timmy Mallett Ruled The World
Children's TV legend Timmy Mallett tells Matt what he would do if he ruled the world, including using sleep as an energy source.
Plus: Lara Spirit continues her A-Z of Parliament, this week looking at "O" for "opposition days". -
Losing Is Becoming A Habit
After a difficult set of election results for the Conservatives, including a by-election defeat in Blackpool South, Matt looks at what they mean for the parties and for Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer as elections expert John Curtice says that losing is the government's "habit".
Plus: Columnists India Knight and James Marriott discuss why neither of them voted, whether they sympathise with Boris Johnson who forgot his ID at the polling booth, and what it means for politics that young people are becoming more religious.
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Hello From The Other Side: Thatcher's Rise To Power
In half a century just three opposition leaders have become prime minister. 45 years after Margaret Thatcher arrived in Downing Street, Matt hears from the people who knew her best - including Conservative colleagues Ken Clarke, Jonathan Aitken, and David Howell, aide turned author Michael Dobbs, her biographer Charles Moore, and her daughter Carol Thatcher.
Plus: Manveen Rana and Matthew Parris discuss the SNP's leadership struggles, is noise in the Commons a good thing, and whether you should trust attractive politicians.
The Columnists: (01:00)
The Big Thing: (22:27)
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PMQs: Stop Banging The Furniture
Tim Shipman and Kait Borsay join Matt Chorley to pause and unpack the action from the Commons chamber as Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak clash over pensions and how to fund them, and one Tory gets a ticking-off from the Speaker.
Plus: Columnists Alice Thomson and Robert Crampton discuss the violence on American University campuses, whether sports stars make good politicians and the policing of domestic violence.
Columnists (02:30)
PMQs Unpacked (23:05)
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Inside The Plot To Bring Down Sunak
For months a group of Tory plotters have been saying that the local elections will be pivotal to their efforts to remove Rishi Sunak from office. So as the moment of truth nears, can the plot succeed, or are the plotters themselves divided?
Plus: After an MSP accidentally (and briefly) enters the race to replace Humza Yousaf, we look at the shotest ever leadership campaigns.
Short Leadership Campaigns: (05:06)
The Big Thing: (12:25)
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The Exit Interviews: Caroline Lucas
Matt sits down with MPs leaving Parliament at the next election to find out about their highs and lows, their best and worst bosses, and the lessons they've learned from politics.
Caroline Lucas - the only Green MP - tells Matt about her reasons for standing down and what's wrong with Westminster - including MPs cowering in the toilet to hide from their party whips.
Plus: As Humza Yousaf resigns, Times Scottish Political Editor Kieran Andrews tells us where the SNP goes next.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
カスタマーレビュー
Always Entertaining and Interesting
A great way to stay on top of UK politics and also hear interesting ideas and views from a range of journalists and guests. Sometimes it can be a little silly but always makes the listener stop and think about big ideas and trends in politics.
Great for the ex-pat Brit
Great for the ex-pat Brit wanting to keep up with Brexit and everything else. A few funny moments.
Thank goodness!
Recommended by a mate whose judgement I have to question, I was a bit loathe to even start listening but having been bored silly by all the run-of-the-mill podcasts on UK politics, Matt Choroku and crowd are so refreshing. It’s a great analysis of what is going on and whether and why developments are important (or not), and nobody takes it all too seriously. Please, please bring Matthew Paris on more often. He had me smiling laughing out loud on the subway to work - you should have seen the baffled faces around me searching for who had broken the compulsory silence!