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The New Statesman | UK politics and culture

The New Statesman Podcast: Episode Thirty-Six

The New Statesman | UK politics and culture

The New Statesman

News & Politics, Society & Culture, News, Politics

4.41.4K Ratings

🗓️ 13 February 2014

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week's podcast Rafael Behr, Helen Lewis and George Eaton talk Wythenshawe and leadership prospects, Ian Steadman asks why nobody is stating the obvious on climate change, and Laurie Penny describes her experience at Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre.

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Transcript

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0:41.0

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0:46.5

Trains now on Uber. Tees and sees apply check the Uber app. Hello and welcome to the New Statesman podcast I'm deputy editor Helen Lewis and this week I'll be talking to George Eaton and

1:06.8

Raphael Bear about future party leaders.

1:09.0

Raff will also be talking to Ian Stedman about climate change because no one else will and I took to

1:14.0

Laurie Penny about the Yalswood Detention Center. I'm joined by Raphael Bear, our political editor and George Eton, editor of the Staggers, to talk about what else, labour.

1:40.0

We're recording this before the results have come in for the with insurance

1:43.6

sale least by election but we're going to confidently predict aren't we Raff as you did in

1:46.7

your column.

1:47.7

I took a fantastic gamble for the first time I wrote a column entirely presuming the outcome of an election that hadn't

1:55.1

actually been held yet but I did that because I'm so sure that labor will have

1:59.9

held sale at East and Wilenshaw And I say that for two reasons.

2:03.8

Well, I went there and I saw the campaign on the ground

2:07.2

and it seemed entirely obvious that the labor campaign

2:10.7

was much better organized than the nearest rifle, which was the UKIP one, and also

...

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