David, Helen and Chris Brooke have one more go at making sense of the tangled web that is British politics. Can Johnson really survive, and even if he does, can his brand ever recover? Is this a scandal, is it a crisis, or is it something else entirely? Does history offer any guide to what comes next? Plus we explore what might be the really big lessons from the last two years of Covid-dominated politics.
Talking Points:
It’s obvious why Boris is a problem, but it’s not clear who would replace him.
Boris won’t go voluntarily. But can he survive?
In 2015, Ed Miliband was leading in the headline polls. But there were signs of weakness.
The politics of scandal are different from the politics of crisis.
This particular scandal is bound up in Johnson’s appeal.
Were the pandemic years a dress rehearsal for the politics of climate change?
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
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Q & A with Helen and David: Trump and Everything Else
Q & A With Helen and David: UK Politics and the Union
Q & A with Helen and David: Geopolitics
Ed Miliband's Big Ideas
Covid-Union-Labour-Brexit-Climate
Why Constitutions Matter
England, Their England
Niall Ferguson on Catastrophe
Election Fallout
Michael Lewis on the Pandemic
After Merkel, What?
Union at the Crossroads
Wales, England and the Future of the UK
Adam Curtis
How's Biden Doing
Technopopulism
The Tragic Choices of Climate Change
Sunakonomics
Northern Ireland: Past, Present, Future
What Does Jeremy Think?
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