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Critics hit out as BBC's new flagship politics show sparks fresh storm
‘I think it made Laura Kuenssberg look stupid… I think it is absurd’: Critics hit out as BBC’s new flagship politics show sparks fresh storm after comedian Joe Lycett mocks Liz Truss
- Liz Truss appeared on Laura Kuenssberg’s Sunday show to talk about her plans
- But the interview was overshadowed by Joe Lycett who sarcastically applauded
- A senior Tory source called for the BBC to apologise and said show was ‘absurd’
The BBC was accused of anti-Tory bias again last night after a comedian mocked Liz Truss on its top politics show.
On the eve of her expected election as party leader and prime minister, Miss Truss appeared on Laura Kuenssberg’s new Sunday show to talk about her plans to tackle the cost of living crisis.
But the interview was overshadowed by Joe Lycett who sarcastically applauded and cheered her, before ridiculing her promises to help families with energy bills. A senior Tory source called for the BBC to apologise, saying the show had been ‘absurd’.
The controversy came after Miss Truss and Boris Johnson were subjected to a series of crass insults on the BBC’s Have I Got News for You programme on Friday night.
On the eve of her expected election as party leader and prime minister, Miss Truss appeared on Laura Kuenssberg’s new Sunday show to talk about her plans to tackle the cost of living crisis
The two incidents show the scale of the task facing Deborah Turness as the corporation’s new chief executive of news and current affairs. The former ITN boss has orders to make impartiality a priority.
Today Miss Truss is widely expected to be confirmed as the winner of the contest to succeed Mr Johnson. The result will be announced at 12.30pm before the winner heads to see the Queen in Balmoral tomorrow to be confirmed as prime minister.
She told the Daily Mail it was time to ‘stop talking Britain down’ and promised tax cuts within a month and an energy bills plan within a week. The BBC row came as:
- The PM-in-waiting admitted she faced a ‘difficult’ in-tray but warned against predictions of a ‘sort of Armageddon scenario’;
- She pointedly did not dismiss the idea of freezing energy bills at a potential mammoth cost of £100billion;
- Mr Johnson’s former chief-of-staff Lord Udny-Lister said the Prime Minister could yet make a comeback;
- Rishi Sunak did not rule out returning to California at some point if he loses the leadership contest, as expected.
Laura Kuenssberg’s interview with Miss Truss was meant to be the highlight of her debut Sunday show, which has seen her become the permanent replacement for Andrew Marr in that slot.
As the Foreign Secretary made her way off set following a 20-minute grilling, Lycett whooped and cheered, shouting ‘fantastic, Liz’ before going on to sarcastically claim he was ‘actually very Right-wing and I loved it’.
He mockingly said her answers left him ‘reassured’ before going on to claim ‘haters’ would say the Tories were ‘at the dregs of what they’ve got available’ and that Truss was the ‘backwash of the available MPs’. His comments went unchallenged by Miss Kuenssberg or others on the panel.
The interview was overshadowed by Joe Lycett who sarcastically applauded and cheered her, before ridiculing her promises to help families with energy bills. A senior Tory source called for the BBC to apologise, saying the show had been ‘absurd’
Lycett was flanked by Labour frontbencher Emily Thornberry and former Downing Street aide Cleo Watson.
Miss Thornberry was said by Miss Kuenssberg to be ‘smirking in the corner’ at the comedian’s behaviour.
Lycett, 34, had telegraphed his feelings on Twitter the previous night, saying he was ‘really excited to be on this new version of Would I Lie To You’.
The BBC’s decision to invite him on to the first episode of the important new show, sparked consternation and bemusement last night.
A senior Tory party source said: ‘That’s supposed to be a serious political programme. I think it made Laura Kuenssberg look stupid … I think it is absurd.
‘How could that possibly be the right thing for the BBC to do. If I was the BBC I would issue an apology and say we got it wrong, we made a mistake and we will go back to being a serious political programme.’
Rob Burley, a former BBC editor of live political programmes, said: ‘Memo: Don’t put comedians on Question Time or any other serious political show. It’s not the time for that nonsense any more.’ BBC director-general Tim Davie is set to be grilled over the slurs when he faces the Commons culture committee this week.
Yesterday’s Mail on Sunday told how Have I Got News For You dedicated its entire half hour on Friday to belittling the outgoing PM, including the use of the c-word.
Tory backbencher Lee Anderson, who last year said he ripped up his TV licence in protest at the BBC’s Princess Diana scandal, said: ‘Leopards do not change their spots, and it would appear that now the BBC can no longer use public money to attack Boris they have now turned their sights on to Liz Truss.’
Former minister Sir John Hayes said: ‘I’ve been a reluctant advocate of defunding the BBC, hoping it would return to what it was, but it seems those days are gone. It is so nakedly biased now.’
However Lycett drew praise on Twitter, including from fellow comic Nish Kumar, writer Jay Rayner and Labour MP Jess Phillips.
Senior sources at the BBC’s news division defended the new show saying the programme needed ‘levity’ and there would be ‘people of all views over time’.
They added: ‘It’s important that impartiality isn’t seen as balance in one show. That’s not the objective now and never was. You show me a launch programme that gets every tiny detail right on day one.’
Liz Truss vows to unveil £100billion cost of living plan: Foreign secretary set to announce mammoth support package – including freezing energy bills for millions of homes – if she becomes Tory leader tomorrow
- Liz Truss promises to unveil plan to help millions of families with energy bills
- One option being considered is an energy bills freeze for families and businesses
- The mammoth package of support could be worth more than £100 billion
By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor for the Daily Mail
Liz Truss has vowed to unveil a £100billion cost of living plan which could include including freezing energy bills for millions of homes — if she becomes Tory leader.
The Foreign Secretary, who is widely expected to be announced as the new Tory leader this afternoon, promised to unveil a plan to help millions of families with soaring energy bills in her first week as prime minister.
It is understood the mammoth package of support could be worth more than £100 billion – putting it on the same scale as the Covid furlough scheme.
Among the options being considered is a freeze on energy bills for both families and businesses.
The Foreign Secretary, who is widely expected to be announced as the new Tory leader this afternoon, promised to unveil a plan to help millions of families with soaring energy bills in her first week as prime minister
Miss Truss last night pledged ‘rapid action’ to get households through the winter and tackle the ‘root cause’ of the crisis.
‘I have a bold plan to see Britain through difficult times and get us out the other side stronger,’ she told the Daily Mail. ‘If I am elected prime minister, I will work tirelessly to deliver for the people of Britain.’
She told BBC One that help would be announced within her first week, if she is elected.
It is understood that £100 billion could be spent on a two-year-long gas and electricity price freeze, to be financed from Treasury underwritten loans.
The Telegraph reported that this idea has been ‘extremely actively explored’ and discussed ‘quite a lot’ by the Truss campaign.
And Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng, who may become chancellor under a Truss government, is reportedly ‘very open’ to the idea.
Energy sources have told The Times that it was ‘the only conversation that anyone was having with the government’.
Other senior Tories being considered for cabinet roles have been told ‘in no uncertain terms’ to not criticise the idea, the newspaper also reported.
‘Plans are reasonably well advanced and involve not just civil servants but also ministers lined up for jobs by Truss,’ a source told the paper.
There are also plans for a ‘council of economic advisers’, tasked with the crisis facing Britain, the front-runner said.
This could include Gerard Lyons, an economist who previously advised Boris Johnson when he was the mayor of London.
However the fine detail, including those eligible, the duration and taxpayer contribution, are being debated.
Miss Truss last night pledged ‘rapid action’ to get households through the winter and tackle the ‘root cause’ of the crisis. ‘I have a bold plan to see Britain through difficult times and get us out the other side stronger,’ she told the Daily Mail
It may introduce a price cap to keep costs lower for Brits, while reimbursing energy suppliers.
While Ms Truss’ campaign team declined to comment on the matter, they did not deny the speculated freeze.
The Foreign Secretary said that she would not go into any detail on the support as it would be ‘the wrong thing to do now’, however she reassured Brits that she is ‘absolutely determined to sort out this issue’, the Times reported.
Ms Truss also insisted she will ‘not let anyone talk this great country down’.
‘I will do everything in my power to make sure everyone, no matter where they are from, has the opportunity to go as far as their talent and hard work takes them.’
At 12.30pm today, bookies’ favourite Miss Truss will find out if she has defeated Rishi Sunak when the result of the leadership contest is revealed in Westminster.
Miss Truss yesterday promised to act ‘immediately’ to tackle the energy crisis, but would not offer any details of the support struggling households can expect.
The Foreign Secretary, who denied she was being ‘coy’, said she wanted to reassure voters that help is coming but indicated they would need to wait for a few days to find out exactly what the support might look like.
In an interview with the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme, Miss Truss said: ‘I will act if I’m elected as prime minister. I will act immediately on bills and on energy supply because I think those two things go hand in hand.’
Miss Truss appeared to brush off dire warnings about the future as she insisted the country had ‘been through worse’.
Miss Kuenssberg also grilled Miss Truss on the Bank of England, the NHS, and comparisons with Margaret Thatcher. Here, we look at the views of the politician who is expected to become the country’s 56th prime minister tomorrow.
WE’RE NOT FACING ARMAGEDDON
Miss Truss admitted she faced a ‘difficult’ in-tray packed with tricky issues if she wins the keys to No 10, but warned against predictions of an ‘Armageddon scenario’.
She said: ‘I think we face some very, very serious challenges. We have the appalling war in Ukraine, perpetrated by Putin. We still have the aftermath of Covid, which was a massive economic shock, and we’re also facing a severe energy crisis as well. I’m under no illusions about how difficult it is.
‘But as a country we have faced tough challenges before, and we’ve got through those challenges, and I’m absolutely confident we have the wherewithal, the ability, to be able to deal with these challenges.
‘I don’t think, you know, we should be predicting a sort of Armageddon scenario. I think we are in a good position to deal with what are very tough challenges.’
I’LL TACKLE ENERGY CRISIS IMMEDIATELY
Families and businesses will be told what help they can expect with their energy bills during Miss Truss’s first week as prime minister, she promised yesterday. Wider plans for the economy, including tax cuts, will follow in a Budget or financial statement within the first month.
Miss Truss said she understood ‘people are worried’ and she wanted to ‘reassure’ them, but she declined to give details.
‘I will act if elected as prime minister, within one week,’ she said. ‘What I can’t do… is tell you exactly what that announcement would be… Before you have been elected as prime minister you don’t have all the wherewithal to get the things done. So, this is why it will take a week to sort out, you know, the precise plans and make sure we are able announce them.
‘But what I want to be very clear about with the public is I understand that this is a huge problem. And I understand people are worried and I want to reassure people that I am absolutely determined to sort out this issue.’
Miss Truss declined to say if she would adopt Labour’s plan to freeze the energy price cap.
Families and businesses will be told what help they can expect with their energy bills during Miss Truss’s first week as prime minister, she promised yesterday
REVERSING NATIONAL INSURANCE HIKE ‘FAIR’
Miss Truss insisted her plan to reverse the rise in national insurance was ‘fair’ despite it benefiting most higher earners. The Foreign Secretary said ‘growing the economy benefits everybody’ and it is ‘wrong’ to look at everything through the ‘lens of redistribution’.
Miss Kuenssberg put it to her that reversing the national insurance rise, which was introduced in April, would see the poorest stand to gain about £7 while the wealthiest could gain nearly £2,000.
Asked if that was fair, Miss Truss said: ‘The people at the top of the income distribution pay more tax. So inevitably when you cut taxes you tend to benefit people who are more likely to pay tax. Of course, there are some people who don’t pay tax at all.
‘But to look at everything through the lens of redistribution, I believe, is wrong because what I am about is about growing the economy. And growing the economy benefits everybody.’
She added: ‘So far, the economic debate for the past 20 years has been dominated by discussions about distribution, and what’s happened is we have had relatively low growth.’
Challenged again on whether the cut would be fair, Miss Truss said: ‘Yes, it is fair. We promised in our manifesto that we would not raise national insurance.
‘I opposed the decision to raise it in Cabinet because it was the wrong decision.’
Miss Truss said she did not resign over the initial policy to increase national insurance because she preferred to stay ‘and fight my corner, because I’m not somebody who quits – I’m somebody who gets the job done’.
BANK OF ENGLAND WILL REMAIN INDEPENDENT
The Bank of England will retain its interest rate-setting powers, even though Miss Truss has promised to look at other systems around the world when assessing whether it has the correct mandate.
She said yesterday: ‘I’m a great believer in the independence of the Bank of England. We need to allow the Bank of England to do that job.
‘I think it was about three decades ago we stopped politicians making decisions about interest rates. So, I’m not going to start saying what interest rates the Bank of England should be.’
Pushed again, she said: ‘I think it would be completely wrong for me as a politician to say what I wanted interest rates to be and to countermand the Bank of England.’
The Bank of England will retain its interest rate-setting powers, even though Miss Truss has promised to look at other systems around the world when assessing whether it has the correct mandate
Miss Truss said she was committed to the current NHS budget and her priorities would be primary care and GP appointments.
When Miss Kuenssberg said that by the next election the NHS will make up more than 40 per cent of day-to-day spending and asked if that can continue, she said: ‘I’m completely committed to the budget we’ve set out for the National Health Service, but we do face real issues on the ground.
‘Difficulty in getting GP appointments, difficulty in getting an NHS dentist, waiting times for ambulances are far too long. So, what I would do is appoint a health secretary who can tackle those issues.’
Asked if the funding was sustainable, Miss Truss said: ‘Well, I think it is a priority for the public and it’s a priority for me to make sure we’re delivering for people.’
Pushed on whether people will get the care they are waiting for, she added: ‘Yes. And what I would ask my health secretary to do is set out a clear plan of how we’re going to achieve that. But I think one of my key priorities would be primary care and GP appointments.’
Miss Truss said she was committed to the current NHS budget and her priorities would be primary care and GP appointments
WHAT YOU SEE IS WHAT YOU GET
Rejecting suggestions of a need for a major shift in presentation from leadership candidate to prime minister, Miss Truss described her style as a politician as ‘what you see is what you get’.
The leadership contender has faced repeated accusations that she is attempting to copy Margaret Thatcher.
The leadership contender has faced repeated accusations that she is attempting to copy Margaret Thatcher
Asked about how she will avoid the same fate as Boris Johnson, Miss Truss said: ‘I will be clear with the public about what we are going to face and there will be challenging circumstances, there’ll be difficult decisions to be made.
‘Not all of those decisions will be popular but I will be honest about what we will have to do.
‘I’m also somebody who is positive. And I’m clear that we can deal with these issues, that Britain has been through worse, frankly, in the past. We have the capability, we have the attitude, and we have the spirit to deal with the challenges.’
The sarcasm and stunts of jeering Joe
Even before the cameras started rolling, Joe Lycett set the tone for his appearance on the BBC’s new flagship politics show, tweeting: ‘Really excited to be on this new version of Would I Lie To You.’
And the 34-year-old stand-up comic continued in this sarcastic vein, as he responded to Tory leadership favourite Liz Truss’s interview by loudly clapping, cheering and shouting ‘Fantastic, Liz’.
After Miss Truss’s grilling on Laura Kuenssberg’s new show yesterday, he mockingly told the presenter – deadpan – that he is ‘actually very Right-wing and I loved it’.
Lycett is known for his playful and sardonic brand of comedy, and is no stranger to a stunt. He once stormed off the set of Channel 4 magazine show Steph’s Packed Lunch during a segment on recycling. It was later revealed to be an act to highlight environmental issues.
And, in his role as presenter of consumer affairs show Got Your Back, Lycett legally changed his name to Hugo Boss to annoy the fashion house, which he accused of bullying smaller businesses.
The Brummie comedian, who hosted the BBC’s Great British Sewing Bee, has been critical of the Government in the past. Introducing a group of athletes during the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony in Birmingham in July, he said: ‘I’m going to do something now that the British Government doesn’t always do, and welcome some foreigners, this time from the region of Asia.’
Team Liz: Who will be key players?
These are the senior Tories expected to form the core of Liz Truss’s first Cabinet.
Kwasi Kwarteng
The Business Secretary is likely to be promoted to Chancellor and have the huge task of keeping the economy afloat and helping households through the cost of living squeeze.
Kwasi Kwarteng
He will replace Nadhim Zahawi, who could move to the Cabinet Office after just two months at the helm of the Treasury.
Mr Kwarteng’s first actions will include reversing the national insurance increase and scrapping a planned rise in corporation tax.
Suella Braverman
She stood against Miss Truss in the leadership contest but her anti-woke stance and opposition to the European Convention on Human Rights is set to see her promoted from Attorney General to Home Secretary.
Suella Braverman
Her main task will be to crack down on Channel crossings by illegal migrants and to make sure those who do reach England are deported to Rwanda, which current Home Secretary Priti Patel has failed to do.
James Cleverly
An early backer of Miss Truss’s candidacy, the Education Secretary is expected to be handed her current role of Foreign Secretary.
James Cleverly
The pair have worked together in the Foreign Office, where he was a junior minister, over the past year and he will keep up her strong support for Ukraine and sanctions on Russia.
Therese Coffey
The Work and Pensions Secretary is a fellow member of the 2010 parliamentary intake whose Suffolk Coastal constituency neighbours Miss Truss’s South West Norfolk seat, and they have long been allies.
The new Prime Minister is expected to make her friend Health Secretary, taking over from Steve Barclay who has made little impression during just a few weeks in the role.
Therese Coffey
She will have to tackle the huge waiting lists that have built up since Covid struck as well as the long delays for ambulances that patients are having to endure.
Ben Wallace
The Defence Secretary is one of the few members of Boris Johnson’s final Cabinet expected to stay in their current role.
Ben Wallace
He had been tipped to run for party leader but said his focus was ‘my current job and keeping this great country safe’.
Miss Truss has pledged to increase defence spending to 3 per cent of GDP.
Jacob Rees-Mogg
Founder of the investment fund Somerset Holdings, his experience is expected to be put to use as the new Business Secretary.
Jacob Rees-Mogg
His focus in the Cabinet Office has been on making the most of Brexit and getting civil servants back into the office, but his new role will include increasing investment in local energy production and tackling soaring prices.
Brandon Lewis
Like Miss Truss, he has been a Norfolk MP since 2010 – but he backed Nadhim Zahawi for the leadership at first.
Brandon Lewis
Mr Lewis, Northern Ireland Secretary for two years, could get his biggest role to date as Justice Secretary.
He would replace Dominic Raab, who is certain to return to the backbenches, and would have to handle the barristers’ strike.
Simon Clarke
As Chief Secretary to the Treasury, he had been expected to back Chancellor Rishi Sunak for the party leadership.
But instead Mr Clarke quickly announced his support for Miss Truss and her plans to cut tax.
Simon Clarke
An MP in the North East where he grew up, he is in line to become Levelling-Up Secretary and will have to deliver on the promises made to voters in the ‘red wall’ constituencies at the last election.
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