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Rock & Roll Politics with Steve Richards

Contaminated Blood – Will the familiar lessons ever be learnt?

Rock & Roll Politics with Steve Richards

Podmasters

News, Politics, Society & Culture

4.7909 Ratings

🗓️ 21 May 2024

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A familiar pattern forms again: scandals, cover up, victims struggling to prove the truth and an inquiry that reveals a dysfunctional state. Where does power lie in the UK? And what happens next?

Rock & Roll Politics is live at Kings Place on July 10th

I'm also live at the Edinburgh Festival from Sun Aug 11th with a new show every day. Get tickets here.

Written and presented by Steve Richards

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to rock and roll politics with me, Steve Richards.

0:22.8

Thank you so much for tuning in wherever you are.

0:26.3

And what a day Monday was for British politics.

0:29.4

And indeed, if I could be pathetically parochial for a moment,

0:34.9

for the rock and roll politics cooperative,

0:36.9

because the themes that erupted around the

0:42.1

devastating, illuminating report on contaminated blood are the themes that we explore and focus on

0:51.5

in our different ways every week virtually on this podcast. And here they come

0:57.5

together, not for the first time, as we've discussed many times before. And one of the reasons why

1:05.5

the podcast is a bit delayed is I wanted to have a chance to look at the report. It's huge and constructed

1:13.4

forensically and in a way that makes the whole thing accumulate in an even more devastating

1:20.7

fashion. But as I read it, not all of it, I hasten to add, it's over 2,000 pages. And by the way, it's a vindication of

1:29.6

inquiries. Theresa May announced it, and here it is four or five years later, and is a form

1:37.8

of accountability in itself. We'll have to see whether lessons are learnt because we have been through these rituals before

1:46.9

of inquiries, a deeply serious House of Commons, a Prime Minister responding, and although

1:54.6

there is immediate stuff that then happens, the compensation and so on in this case,

2:00.3

will the wider lessons be learned?

2:03.7

That's what I want to explore for a time in this podcast. There are many lessons, obviously,

2:11.6

and I won't sort of summarise parts of the report because you will have read them or heard them or seen them in the news

2:20.0

bulletins where it has rightly been dominating media coverage. And you can guess what I'm going

2:27.9

to say. Clearly, one of the issues that arises from it is accountability. Who is accountable to whom? A theme that's going to arise throughout

2:39.0

the week when Pauline Vennells finally appears in front of the post office inquiry. Some of you will be

...

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