meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
TALKING POLITICS

Covid-Union-Labour-Brexit-Climate

TALKING POLITICS

Catherine Carr

News, News & Politics

4.72.5K Ratings

🗓️ 10 June 2021

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week David and Helen take stock of the state of British politics, looking at how the big themes of the last year fit together. They try to join the dots between the pandemic and the fraying of the Union, the weakness of the Labour party and the fraught politics of climate change, along with the lingering impact of Brexit on everything. We are also looking for your questions on these topics too - please let us know what you would like David and Helen to discuss next: https://www.talkingpoliticspodcast.com/contact


Talking Points: 


Incumbents, under the conditions of vaccine politics, have done well. 

  • The next phase will be about the economy, but we aren’t out of the vaccine stage yet.
  • When an inquiry happens, there will be some tough questions about the British state.
  • If the economic recovery goes well, there will be space for critical reflection. But if recovery stalls or is skewed, that will be the main focus.


The Northern Ireland question may pose a real challenge to the politics of the Union.

  • This may be the government’s number one problem right now.
  • The UK government is extremely constrained. 
  • The EU has invested a lot of its credibility in defending the single market.  
  • The perverse consequence of Brexit is that it embroiled the EU into the politics of Northern Ireland.


Is the First Past the Post system propping up a moribund Labour Party?

  • The electoral system works to Labour’s favour when compared to continental centre-left parties.
  • But the thing that Labour has to deal with that is unique is the Union question.
  • Labour has always struggled to win a majority of seats in England.


In 2020, Britain and the EU diverged on the question of China. 

  • Biden wants to bring the EU toward the American position. And the EU has moved a bit already.
  • This might dilute the advantage that Johnson thought he might gain with the Biden admin by being tough on China.


The geopolitics of climate change are bound up in the EU/US position on China.

  • Merkel has been inclined to treat China as more serious about climate change.
  • Johnson wants to put Britain at the head of ‘green finance.’
  • Climate change is not currently an electorally contested issue in Britain. But that might not be true for much longer.


Mentioned in this Episode: 


Further Learning: 


And as ever, recommended reading curated by our friends at the LRB can be found here: lrb.co.uk/talking


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

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, my name's David Brunsman and this is Talking Politics. Today I'm talking with Helen

0:15.2

Thompson and we are going to try and do an audit of the current state of British politics.

0:23.9

Talking politics is brought to you in partnership with the London Review of Books,

0:28.5

a literary magazine full of politics and a political magazine full of literature.

0:34.1

Listeners can subscribe at a special rate of just one pound an issue by using the URL

0:40.3

LRB.me.

0:42.0

That's LRB.m.me slash talk.

0:51.1

Helen, I asked you what you thought we should focus on for this conversation.

0:58.0

And you gave me a list of five things.

0:59.7

And I'm just going to read this list out because we're going to try and do all five if we can.

1:04.6

So you thought that the key themes for us to discuss in trying to work out what's going on in British politics are the pandemic, the

1:12.2

state of the union, Labour's deep weakness, geopolitics including post-Brexit geopolitics and

1:19.9

climate change. And in a way, I think those are the five things that we've been talking about

1:24.5

pretty much throughout the whole of the last year, trying to make sense of

1:28.4

them. And it's a good moment to try and pull them together with your help. But I also wanted to say

1:33.1

that we would love to get questions from people listening about any of these themes. So before we take

1:39.1

the summer break, which we are going to do this year, Helen and I would love to try and answer some of your

1:44.6

questions about these big themes we've been talking about over the past year. Like everyone,

1:49.8

we've been trapped in our own little bubble, and we would love to hear more from you. We'll tell

1:54.6

you at the end about how you can get these questions to us. And then Helen and I will do at least

1:59.8

two Q&A sessions where we will try and answer as many

2:03.5

of these questions as we can. They may not all be on these five themes, but these five themes

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Catherine Carr, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Catherine Carr and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.