The Number 10 Podcast

The Number 10 Podcast

The Number 10 Podcast chronicles the life and times of British Prime Ministers and important political events that have lead us to where we are now. With regular fortnightly historical episodes, group discussions, topical debates and interviews; you need look no further for your regular political fix, or to learn something new.

  1. 05/03/2021

    Ireland: 100 years on from Partition (with Ivan Gibbons)

    In this episode, released on the 100 year anniversary of Irish partition, we talk with Ivan Gibbons about the statesmen involved in the decision and whether it was a success. We talk about the implications of partition that are still being felt to this day. Throughout the twentieth century, partition would become the most contested and fought-over issue in Irish politics. But the history of how Ireland came to be divided and why at the time it was seen as the only workable solution, at least by the British, is much less understood. Our view is now clouded by the complex history and struggles of the century that followed, but Partition takes us back to the first decades of the 1900s. Gibbons tells us how the idea of dividing Ireland came about, how it gained acceptance and popular support, about its complex and controversial implementation, and the turmoil of the years that followed. IVAN GIBBONS is a lecturer in Modern Irish and British history specialising in the relationship between the British Labour Party and Ireland. He was lecturer and MA and BA Programme Director in Irish Studies at St Mary’s University. Book link: https://www.hauspublishing.com/history-and-biography/partition-how-and-why-ireland-was-divided-by-ivan-gibbons/ Want to learn more about partition before we reach it? The Hammersmith Irish Cultural Centre has released a number of great lectures that you can watch here: https://irishculturalcentre.co.uk/digital-lecture-series-2021/ Image: (Original Caption) 5/11/1916 – Dublin, Ireland: Easter Rebellion – Photo shows British troops armed with machine guns and rifles behind a moveable barricade composed of household furniture and which could easily be pushed foreward, in a street in the central section of Dublin. (Bettmann/Getty Images)

    1h 21m
  2. 03/23/2021

    Would you want to be Prime Minister? (with Mark Garnett)

    This week we talk to Mark Garnett, senior lecturer at Lancaster University in Politics, about the changing role of the Prime Minister and his new book “The British Prime Minister in an Age of Upheaval”. We talk about the motivations of individuals (duty and public service or ego and money?), the role of devolution and what the role of PM will look like in the future. In this timely book, Mark Garnett provides a bracing reassessment of the role of the British Prime Minister, from Margaret Thatcher’s controversial tenure to Boris Johnson’s attempt to confront a pandemic with a ministerial team created to face the very different challenge of Brexit. Taking a thematic approach, Garnett explores the impact of major political developments and personalities on key aspects of prime ministerial functions as party leader, Cabinet-maker, chief diplomat and electoral talisman. Much of the controversy over the position of Prime Minister, he concludes, arises from a confusion between the occupant’s inescapable political prominence and his or her – often limited – ability to achieve positive policy outcomes. With both David Cameron and Theresa May forced to resign since 2016, the book questions whether the nature of the job has become a deterrent for politicians who are motivated by a desire to serve the British public, opening the way for individuals with much less laudable motivations. Available in all good book stores that are only a brick or a click away. Link to buy here: https://www.wiley.com/en-gb/The+British+Prime+Minister+in+an+Age+of+Upheaval-p-9781509539352 .

    1h 16m
  3. 06/22/2020

    Bonus: The Treaty of Union

    A little treat today, as we read the entirety of the Treaty of Union that bonded Scotland and England together in 1707, off the back of various financial issues that Scotland had suffered (namely the Great Famine and the Darien Scheme failure) . There were 25 articles in total, many covering import and export duties, and others dealing with currencies, flags and ship rights. A brief breakdown of each articles topic: Merging of the two kingdoms, their flags, banners and land.Securing the Protestant line of Succession.Creating on one united Parliament.Joint trade rights for both kingdoms.Ship and vessel rights and registration process.Unifying personal rights to both English and Scottish citizens.Import and Export duties and excise for “exciseable liquor”.Import and Export duties and excise for salt.Tax raising and collection details.Import and export duties and excise for “Stampt paper, Vellom and Parchment”.Import and export duties and excise for windows and lights.Import and export duties and excise for “Coals, Culm and Cinders”. Import and export duties and excise for malt. General import and export duties and excise details.Details on trade equality and financial bailing out of the African and Indian Company of Scotland (responsible for the Darien scheme failure).Unification of currency and details on minting facilities.Standardisation of weights and measures.Details on trade and civil liberties in Scotland that will remain unchanged.Preservation of the Scottish court system and process of appointing members. Also details on naval jurisdiction in Scotland.Preservation of inherited offices, land and jurisdictions.Preservation of the Royal Burghs.Details on Scottish representation in the British Parliament- 16 Lords and 45 MPs, as well as the oath of allegiance to be taken. Standardisation of the rights of Scottish lords and MPs to that of their English counterparts.Unification of the great seal, and preservation of the Scottish and English seal until the new one is created.Cancellation of all laws that conflict with the Treaty of Union. Enjoy! Featured image by Châtelain and Gueudeville – Atlas Historique, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26423389

    44 min
5
out of 5
77 Ratings

About

The Number 10 Podcast chronicles the life and times of British Prime Ministers and important political events that have lead us to where we are now. With regular fortnightly historical episodes, group discussions, topical debates and interviews; you need look no further for your regular political fix, or to learn something new.