Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4 - The News Quiz - 21st October
Episode Date: November 18, 2022Andy Zaltzman quizzes the week’s news....
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Hello.
I have in my hand
my script for this week's news quiz.
Injure the shredder.
There were some really, really nice jokes in there, like this bit,
about how losing one of your three most senior cabinet colleagues
inside 50 days of taking office might look unfortunate,
but losing two looks like carelessness.
Back in the shredder.
A very amusing illustrated comic strip about
Liz Truss fighting off an alien invasion with her
bare hands.
And a lettuce.
That lettuce
was a worthy winner. Anyway,
on with the news quiz.
Hello, I am Andy Zaltzman, and let me first profoundly thank
the soon-to-be former Prime Minister for learning from how inconvenient it was
when she sacked her Chancellor on a Friday by resigning on a Thursday,
before we recorded this show.
See, it is possible to learn from our mistakes.
This week, using the magic of the internet, we have a global panel
who we were hoping would be
able to shed some light on what else is going
on in the world, because we thought, you know, end of
October, quiet week, party conferences
finished, nothing major usually going on
in the UK. Instead, they're here
to reflect on how the world is viewing Chaos
UK, to help give us an
outside perspective on our current political
rumple-stilt skinnery. So please welcome
representing France and the continent of
Europe, it's Celia AB.
Representing
Australia and the entire
southern hemisphere, Alice Fraser.
For
India and the entire continent of
Asia, it's Anu Valpal.
And
representing Scotland, the UK
and the British Empire,
or Gibraltar, basically, plus the rest of the known universe,
from The Times, it's Alex Massey.
And our first question can go to you, Alex, on behalf of Team GB.
You are a seasoned observer of the nefarious swamp
that is democratic politics.
For 45 points, one for each day Liz Truss lasted as Prime Minister.
Your challenge is to explain this week
in terms that can be understood by children
as well as adult political correspondents concerned goldfish
and people who spent the last few years locked in a shed
screaming, how have we come to this? Go.
Well, 45 days means that she eclipses George Canning's record
as the shortest serving prime minister
in British political history. He served for 119 days and was only forced from office by
no longer being alive. Surely that's cheating, isn't it? I think so. Whereas Truss obviously
has managed to sort of blow up her own administration, digging a £60 billion pit of fiscal doom
from which it proved impossible to
escape. And so you have sort of unfunded tax cuts, a mini run on the pound, guilt yield soaring,
which prompted a pension fund crisis and an emergency intervention from the Bank of England.
And as the waters were rising, the ship was sinking. Truss boldly suggested that this was
the plan all along. On Thursday, outside Dining Street, she said,
I came into office at a time of great economic instability, which is obviously true,
although unaccountably, she forgot to add, and then I made it much worse.
You know, as a general rule, it's normally pretty bad when the rate of inflation is higher than a prime minister's approval rating.
So that's basically why on Thursday, Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee,
fulfilled his ceremonial role as the herald of final tidings and went to Downing Street to tell the embattled prime minister that her time was up.
And, you know, people complain that politicians never honour their promises,
but I think Truss is a rare exception in as much as she actually delivered.
She said she was going to move fast and break things.
I think even the harshest observer would have to acknowledge
that she delivered on that promise.
Alice, you are on the east coast of Australia. You're basically almost as far away from Westminster as it's geographically possible
to be without leaving the planet. How have you seen this chaos unfolding from the other side
of the world? I mean, it is astonishing. Liz Truss was always out of her depth, but now she
was like towards the end, she looked so far out of her depth, but now she was like towards the end.
She looked so far out of her depth that all the fish around her were creepy ones.
You know what I mean? Like just too many teeth, a lantern over their head.
If you see one that looks like Jacob Rees-Mogg, turn back.
She exploded her prime ministerial zeppelin over something that we all assumed was the lowest bar she would have to clear this week, which was the fracking bill.
And it was so chaotic for a while, it looked like she didn't even vote on it.
And then they're all stabbing each other in the back, like the murder of Julius Caesar,
except they're all wearing Julius Caesar masks and some of them are stabbing themselves.
It's me, Brute.
As somebody who has to follow UK politics for professional reasons,
I still find it almost entirely baffling.
But the one thing that was clear is none of them can be trusted with anything.
Celia is a French person living in the UK.
Sum it up on behalf of the entire continent of Europe.
It's like, do you remember that laser scene in Mission Impossible
where Tom Cruise enters it?
But if Liz Truss had entered, slipped on a banana peel immediately,
then tried to stabilise herself on a button that said,
destroy the economy.
I think it's such a slapstick way of doing politics.
I find it so entertaining.
And politics shouldn't be this entertaining
because it's dangerous when it's this fun to watch.
We have a great tradition of slapstick comedy in this country
and it's almost soothing to see it at the very highest level.
Oh, it's... Do you know what?
You can't say anything these days,
but you can mess up the economy spectacularly.
And trust is a terrible victim of cancel culture.
Yeah.
Anu, you're in India, our former imperial partner. Is that the term we're using
now? How are things looking to you? Look, India is sort of like Britain's former Tinder date.
That's decided they were not going to swipe left or right. So just a couple of lessons here.
I think first, no prime minister should ever
take on a lettuce. They are tenacious. They are ridiculously adamant vegetables, and they outlast
a lot of things. And secondly, in the global context, Andy, I don't know if this is all bad.
In 1996, India had a prime minister called Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who became the prime minister of India for 16 days.
He got appointed on a weekend, so 13 working days.
He was an acclaimed poet, and he had written a poem thanking the Indian people for their trust and faith.
Sadly, his inauguration speech and his no-confidence ouster happened on the same day.
So on his 13th day, he turned his inaugural poem into a farewell speech
as someone from australia where we pretty recently went through a phase of what you might call a
political sluttiness uh with our prime minister just turning them over at a rate of knots i would
like to recommend that you make politics more boring because i think this is all the fault of
the idea that politicians should be interesting to the media
because the current pressures on ratings
mean that the media is completely deranged,
paying attention only to the wildly grotesque dopamine hit levels.
And that doesn't really feel compatible with, like, a tax plan.
We've had missing words rounds in this quiz before,
but we're going to do something slightly different this week.
Sally, this question can go to you.
Can you tell me, instead of the missing words,
the unnecessarily included words in the following sentence
uttered by Liz Truss this week?
Which words should have been missing from this?
OK.
I am a fighter, not a quitter.
Three extra words slipped in.
Which words shouldn't have been there?
I mean, she should have just gone, bye-bye!
I think that they should install a cat flap for prime ministers.
Just to make the ins and outs a lot easier for future.
A lot of people are googling shortest British Prime Minister.
And one of the things that are trending now on social media
is that the shortest British Prime Minister was Spencer Percival,
who was five foot four inches tall.
And the relative heights of various British Prime Ministers have been trending,
including the accusation that some people, like Rishi Sunak,
come out much taller than they really are.
And he's apparently five foot five.
In Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday, Keir Starmer quipped about a book
being written about Liz Truss's time as prime minister being out by Christmas
and whether this was the release date or the title.
Now...
LAUGHTER
Alex, at the current rate of political churn,
at which this country is being tumble-dried
by the Conservative Party at the moment,
is it now more likely that she will actually be back in by Christmas?
LAUGHTER
I mean, I think things have reached such...
You can tell the sort of depth of the chaos
and the unprecedented nature of the circumstances
in which we find ourselves
by the fact that Kirstarmer told a joke and people laughed.
I mean, yes, the biography of Liz Truss,
it's actually been finished, I understand,
which is a little unfortunate for the two authors.
And it's titled Out of the Blue,
and it has a new subtitle, and Into the Bin.
Another question.
This can go to Alice on behalf of the Southern Hemisphere.
Numerous political leaders in this country,
including Starman, Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrats,
as well as Nicola Sturgeon and Mark Drakeford,
the First Minister of Scotland and Wales,
and some Conservative MPs,
have all said that Britain needs an immediate what?
I mean, immediate reset button.
I think you just need to find the button on the side
and find the button on the other side and hold them down,
and then we can start again with King Arthur.
I think King Arthur needs a turn.
Don't you?
I feel like, you know, just somebody with a sword,
a medieval mythical king with no idea about running water or Twitter
has to be worth a shot.
Anyone else want to attempt to answer the question?
What do they say Britain needs an immediate what?
I know this is controversial, but I'm going to say it.
I think Britain needs a dragon.
We're really going back to basics here.
Big fan of medieval history.
I always have been.
Nothing restores the credibility of a once powerful kingdom than a fire spewing non-reptile reptile.
You know, so if the pound is below the dollar, that's fine.
But a British person can finally stand up and say,
yeah, but have you seen our British dragon Humphrey?
He will politely set your house on fire
and then apologise profusely.
The correct answer is they all said that Britain needs
an immediate general election.
Let's do a quick vote.
Let's put this to the audience.
Give me a cheer if you want a general election now.
And give me a cheer if you want to wait until
tomorrow.
I mean, Alex,
constitutionally, we keep being told there's no
need to have a general election now because
we don't vote for a Prime Minister
in this country, which explains why
party leaders never feature in election campaign
literature and are barely seen
on the campaign trail. What do you think think from your perspective as a political commentator what are
the arguments for not having a general election given how far we are now from the 2019 election
in terms of political chaos well i mean the boring constitutional argument is that you know that new
prime minister merely needs to command the confidence of the House of Commons, which admittedly is easier said than done in the present circumstances.
So therefore, there's no requirement for a general election,
even if you might think there could be a moral case for there being one.
But of course, since it looks as though a couple of hundred Conservative MPs
might lose their seats if there were a general election,
you can understand the Conservative Party's reluctance to go down the path of a general election.
So all the things that make an election arguably necessary
are also the reasons why it can't happen.
And I guess also, to be fair,
if you read the 2019 Conservative manifesto backwards,
there are hidden messages within,
including we will blast a never-ending milkshake of mayhem
through your letterbox every morning.
I would be so much more interested in whoever the successor
to the leadership of the Tory party is going to be
if it weren't just an interchangeable rogues gallery
of rabid neoliberarian minority elites
with bizarre ideas about how great selfish individualism is
for human progress
and their disproportionately cliquey influence over politics.
Here's a fact.
We've had now as many changes of prime minister in two months
as there were between 1979 and 2007.
I'm tempted to let more and more prime ministers be elected
until we get to 12,
because ultimately we could have a calendar for firefighters.
But instead of pictures of sexy firefighters,
it would be different ways that someone can set fire to the country.
And it could be an advent calendar, but every door is number 10.
I think they need to persuade the Labour Party
to bring back Jeremy Corbyn to make it a fair fight.
Let's just look back a bit on how this all unfolded this week.
Adapting the old when is a door not a door riddle,
can any of you answer when is a vote on fracking not a vote on fracking?
When you lose confidence halfway through.
That's basically correct, yes.
It was extraordinary.
It's Schrodinger's confidence vote.
It was a confidence vote, then it wasn't,
then it was, then it wasn't.
She's made people defend fracking
in some weird, like, suicide pact.
And then she made them show enthusiasm
for something they did not believe in,
like when the singer of a band asks me
to clap for the bass solo.
It was...
And the idea
of her halfway through deciding
that it's not, but that it is, but that it's not, but that it is
reminds me of those lads that say that they could
have gone professional, but they injured their knee.
There's a lot to learn
here about this vote
from the Indian democracy. I heard
that during the anti-fracking vote, there
was some physical jostling,
so a little bit of possible violence going on.
Manhandling and even mogsplaining, people were saying.
Now, my point is this.
What we do if we want a vote to go a certain way
in the Indian democracy is that we lock members of parliament
in a small room and we bribe them and we feed them
till they vote a
certain way. It's kidnap, but it's also snacks. It's a mixture of bribery, kidnap and snacks.
There's a lot the British democracy can learn from the democracy they set up here,
which we now want to return, just like we do with the cricket by ruining it a little bit.
return. Just like we do with the cricket, by ruining it a little bit.
My favourite bit was the will they won't they about the chief whip, where people weren't sure whether Wendy Morton had resigned as the chief whip or if she'd been booted out as the chief
whip or whether chief whip is something that you self-identify as or if you need to whip with the
consent of the whipped. But is it possible that the Tories just feel like the role of a whip is
redundant because they're all busy whipping themselves. Language does evolve and change, doesn't it? And, you know, so a technical
vote on legislation about fracking mutated swiftly to mean should the Prime Minister be instantly
defenestrated? And we always see the evolution of language. For example, the word conservative
until not that long ago did not mean taking a sledgehammer to the family crockery
and glassware cupboard before rolling around in the
shattered remnants muttering, I feel so alive.
The language
changes. Alex,
having seen these extraordinary scenes
from the vote, do you think that in
the year 2022 there might be
better ways of getting MPs to vote
than making them physically
walk into a room?
But everyone was having so much fun.
You know, there's a big case, obviously, for having a more rational system of government
and all of that, but that would ruin programmes like this. You know, an international panel of
guests here and so on, and, you know, the sort of Trusenfreude on displays here, the great joy with which people all around the world are looking at this and so on. and the sort of Trus and Freud are on display here. The great joy
with which people all around the world are looking
at this and so on. I think one has to be
very careful about introducing
ill-thought-out reforms that might lessen
the possibility of something like this happening
again in the future.
Moving on to another
part of the story in the build-up to Truss's
resignation. Annabelle, you can take
this question. Complete the following not-very-subtle dig
from then Home Secretary Suella Braverman's resignation letter.
Pretending we haven't made mistakes,
carrying on as if everyone can't see that we've made them,
and hoping that things will magically come right is what?
How did she finish that sentence?
The fundamental principle on how to run a country.
I mean, that's what she should have said.
Any other suggestions?
How I make a risotto.
Something worth going to Rwanda for.
The way she finished it was, not serious politics.
And so she quit, stroke, was sacked.
So I think that's quacked. Is that the right term?
That'll do. After a breach of the ministerial code.
She was initially reported to have sent an official document
from the wrong email account.
And how times have changed.
Previously in the Boris Johnson era,
breaching the ministerial code was somewhere between a badge of honour
and an initiation ritual.
Now, somehow it's become a resignation offence.
between a badge of honour and an initiation ritual.
Now, somehow, it's become a resignation offence.
That led to a surprise return for Grant Shapps,
which meant that, briefly, three of the four great officers of state were held by people with monosyllabic surnames,
Truss, Hunt and Shapps,
which at least should save everyone time
when reporting on the next wave of sackings and resignations.
Jeremy Hunt was also back this week as Chancellor of the
Exchequer. Alice, what did Jeremy Hunt say
this week was eye-watering?
Spraying yourself in the
tear ducts with lemon juice so that you can
fake human emotion, was that?
It is nice, though, that
at long last, white men can aspire
to hold some of the great offices of state.
For too long we've been underrepresented, Alex.
That was cuts, wasn't it?
Cuts, yes.
Eye-watering cuts would be necessary.
Any other suggestions before we move on in?
Any other suggestions on how we could possibly improve
the way we do our politics here in the UK?
Yes, during PMQs, they should have a guillotine there,
just as a reminder.
Like, we're not going to use it,
but just a reminder of what we used to do.
I think people are thoroughly unprepared
for the possibility of a normal government
that is merely incompetent
within the standard parameters of uselessness.
If and when we ever reach that stage,
it is just going to blow everybody's mind.
Yes, this is indeed the news
that the Liz Trust government has melted down
faster than a dead zebra's ice cream
before collapsing like a prim Victorian lady
hearing Miriam Margulies talking about
Jeremy Hunt on the Today programme.
Within the last few weeks, we've had
the shortest-serving Prime Minister of all time,
two of the shortest-serving Chancellors of all time,
the shortest-serving Home Secretary, since anyone can be asked to check,
and the smokiest Health Secretary since the days when tobacco was considered one of your five a day.
Who knows what phoenix will now rise from the smouldering political slurry pit
that has been dug for the country over the last few years by the Conservative Party.
For those of you who don't remember Boris Johnson,
who has been tipped as a possible candidate,
and his odds to be next Prime Minister swoop downwards
from about 18 to 1 to 3 to 1 in just minutes on Thursday afternoon.
Which...
It's not pantomime season yet.
You might think that in normal circumstances,
such a candidate would not stand a Snowballs chance in hell,
but normal circumstances no longer exist in this country,
and a lot of people still believe in fireproof Snowballs.
Anyway, at the end of that round,
after Alex scored the maximum 45 points available,
Alex for Team GB has 45
and the rest of the world, Aselia Anuvab
and Alice, have a collective total of 3.
Alex, a chance
to extend your lead now. We're going into a
home or away section
of the quiz now. Alex, are you
going to go home or away?
Home.
Home.
Okay, here we are.
This is on Scotland.
Nicola Sturgeon said earlier this week
that if Scotland becomes independent,
she would do what immediately?
Build a wall along the English border.
It's been tried.
The Scottish government, Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP,
released a new economic prospectus for life after independence.
The last time they did this in 2018,
unkind people, which was everyone who can count,
looked at all the numbers in it
and discovered that it effectively guaranteed
a decade of severe tartan austerity.
So this time, repeating the exercise,
the SNP have found a solution to this problem,
which is simply to omit all the numbers.
So there is no way of proving whether it would be a great success or a failure
as they share the pound in an unofficial capacity
for an unspecified period of time
until such time as a number of unspecified
political, economic and fiscal tests have been passed
and they move to a new currency of unspecified value and stability.
So, as you can see, it's a pretty comprehensive plan.
Well, the correct answer was establish a currency.
Also, try to make it to the walls of Derby by nightfall,
just for old time's sake.
Qualify for the World Cup.
Celia, home or away?
Home.
What isn't working in France?
Nothing, it's perfect.
No, loads of stuff isn't working there,
but I think that the French are better at being unhappy than the English.
Like, loads of stuff are happening in France.
I think that if you guys took maybe 5% of the French approach to rioting,
everything would be sorted.
If you were 5% less polite, everything would be sorted.
Everything's going wrong in France.
Everyone's rioting.
Everyone's striking.
But it's not...
Do you know what's weird?
I almost feel like a sense of nostalgia.
Like, I remember the first time that I went on the riots. I was 16. I didn't know what's weird i almost feel like a sense of nostalgia like i remember the first time that i i went on the riots i was 16 i didn't know what it was for i just wanted
the day off i honestly think that if if in england you started seeing it as a a lovely day out
maybe two for one on drinks everyone could wear a yorkshire pudding a beret. I think that would... LAUGHTER
It just needs a bit more PR, just a bit of reshuffling.
LAUGHTER
Anuvab, home or away?
Well, given how much we've talked about Empire, Andy,
does it make a difference? It's the same thing, isn't it?
LAUGHTER
The free trade agreement between India and the UK
is on ice at the moment,
and it was hampered by Suella Braverman before she stepped back from being Home Secretary. The free trade agreement between India and the UK is on ice at the moment,
and it was hampered by Suella Braverman before she stepped back from being Home Secretary,
making some comments that have riled India.
She said the largest group of people who overstay are Indian migrants.
Now, is this a valid complaint from Britain,
or do we have to wait until these people have overstayed for, let's say,
based on what happened the other way, 300 odd years?
Well, you know, Indians never overstay their visas, Andy. They never do. Don't tell anyone that I'm currently in Walthamstow Central. Yeah, look, the basis of this trade deal is very simple. The British want to sell lots of whiskey to India.
They want a tariff-free whiskey deal.
Scotch whiskey, single-ball whiskey, biggest market is India.
And I'll tell you, Andy, the only thing scarier than 1.3 billion people
are 1.3 billion drunk people.
Alice, moving on to the southern hemisphere,
of which you are the representative, home or away?
Home, but my home, not your home.
Which unprecedented, once-in-a-millennium thing
is happening for the third time in the past two years
on Australia's east coast?
Massive flooding, Andy.
But, I mean, the biggest news in weather at the moment
isn't the floods or the other floods or the terrible floods
or the damage from the floods.
It's the surprise announcement that's come out
that the Bureau of Meteorology here launched a secret $220,000 rebrand
that changed the logo to a worse logo
and demanded that the media refer to them as the Bureau.
Which makes them sound like a sinister secret society
that controls the weather rather than what they are,
which is an incredibly boring society that reports on the weather.
So has rebranding the Bureau of Meteorology
made the weather better or worse?
I mean, if you're going with correlation rather than causation,
significantly worse.
The final score, Alex Massey, representing Team GB,
has scored 102 points in the best thing that's happened to the country
for some time.
The rest of the world, Celia Abbey, Anuvab Pal and Alice Fraser
have scored a mere 13, so what a win for GB.
If you want to become a cabinet minister,
do please write a manifesto using only words
in this edition of the News Quiz,
or just smear marmalade on a piece of toilet roll
and send it by pigeon to Downing Street.
We will be back next
year to see if we can keep up the remorseless
one Prime Minister per series rate we've
toddled along at over the past two series.
At this rate, by the time we're back
in the new year, hang on, I'll just get my crystal ball out,
the Prime Minister will be one or more
of Clement Attlee, Olympic hurdles champion
Sally Gunn, Lord Vladimir Zelensky.
The national anthem will have been replaced
with Marvin Gaye's What's Going On,
and the reformed S Club will be officially
the biggest political party in the country.
Do tune in to find out if I'm right.
I've been Andy Zaltzman.
Thank you very much for listening.
Goodbye.
Taking part in the news quiz were Anuvad Pal, Alice Fraser, Zaya Ubi and Alex Nassar.
In the chair was Andy Zaltzman and additional material was written by Alice Fraser, Tasha Danraj, Aleri Morgan and Cameron Loxtale.
The producer was Georgia Keating and it was a BBC Studios production.
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