Off Air... with Jane and Fi - "The lady's not for turning...UP!"
Episode Date: October 17, 2022Jane and Fi review the day's big political news which forced them to throw out their entire show and start again.They are joined by Times Radio chief political commentator, Lucy Fisher, and Red Box po...dcast host Matt Chorley live from the press gallery in Westminster to discuss the infamous governmental U-turn.Also, were Jane's daughter's student digs as horrific as she feared and will Fi become the recipient of the key to the town of Slough?If you want to contact the show to ask a question and get involved in the conversation then please email us: janeandfi@times.radioTimes Radio Producer: Rosie CutlerPodcast Executive Producer: Ben Mitchell Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello and welcome to Off Air with me, Jane Garvey.
And me, Fee Glover.
And we are fresh from our brand new Times Radio show, but we just cannot be contained by two hours of live broadcasting.
So we've kept the microphones on, grabbed a cuppa and are ready to say what we really think, unencumbered and off air.
Well, it's another working week in our increasingly frantic lives.
Welcome aboard.
It's lovely to have you here with us for another edition of Off Air with me, Jane Garvey.
And me, Fee Glover.
Do you like that? I'm trying to be a bit more professional.
I was just laughing because it's ever so, ever so.
Hello and welcome to Geography A-Levels.
I'm sitting upright. I've got a decent supportive bra on.
I'm really trying to get with the plan.
Oh, no, it definitely worked for me.
Thank you very much.
It roused me from my stupor.
And yet you appear to be taking the piss.
I can't understand it.
I'm not taking the piss.
Both of us are in a slight stupor only because we've had to,
we basically had to watch television for the last hour of the programme because we were following
the Chancellor's mini statement in the House of Commons and an urgent question as well,
what I shall now refer to forever as a UQ. A UQ as Penny Mordaunt referred to it,
a UQ which was new to us wasn't it? much so. But I feel down with the cool kids now.
No, we know that.
I mean, there's a lot of suspicion that Penny Mordaunt
won't have been all that reluctant to take centre stage
in the House of Commons this afternoon.
Do you think that might be the case?
Well, she definitely gave a bravura performance
and seemed very, very certain and very steady on her feet.
And we will not be the only people to comment on the fact
that Liz Truss looked like a haunted woman when she came into the chamber and sat down, said
nothing, but was just by Jeremy Hunt's side when he made his statement. Yeah, it was deeply awkward.
And I know people are now saying that the worst possible emotion you can associate with a prime
minister is sympathy. It just isn't good for them. And I
have to say this afternoon, that was what I felt towards her. Not a political statement, but just,
oh, who'd be her? You have to feel a bit of that, don't you?
Yes. And I do take that point, though, that once you've gone into sympathy, it's too close an
emotion to be feeling for any person who is actually in charge of some massive planks of
your life really big ones yeah yeah so we had a very nice chat with uh lucy fisher who we'd not
met before because we are the new girls at school here at times radio yes and she is times radio's
chief political commentator uh she really knows her onions so um let's go and listen to what Lucy had to say to us about what was likely
to unfold in the Commons. Well, at 3.30, the Labour Party has tabled an urgent question
calling on the Prime Minister to come to the floor of the Commons and explain the replacement
of her Chancellor, given the current economic situation. Interestingly, the Prime Minister,
Liz Truss, has decided not to accept that invitation herself, or that summons almost, to the Commons floor.
Instead, she'll be fielding Penny Mordaunt, the Commons leader, to answer that question.
So I think a pretty weak decision not to face the music herself, and indeed possibly giving an advantage to Penny Mordaunt,
who many people consider to be on manoeuvres at the moment and probably up for the idea of showing off her own credentials against Keir Starmer.
Mr Speaker, with apologies to the Leader of the Opposition and the House,
the PM is detained on urgent business.
If I were Liz Truss, and I wouldn't want to be Liz Truss, I've got to be honest,
I think I'd try and take the earliest possible opportunity to be seen, get it over with.
Well, I think that's right. Otherwise, it just shifts all the attention to Wednesday
Prime Minister's questions, the tension, the pressure grows. And I think there are many Tory
MPs who want to hear from her directly. She's going to be addressing some of them, the 100 or
so odd MPs in the One Nation group of moderates later today
to try and assuage some of their fears.
And Jeremy Hunt will also be on the floor of the Commons
after Penny Morden taking questions about the statement he released at 11am.
So the idea of her sitting next to Jeremy Hunt
as he gives the statement this afternoon, it couldn't happen, could it?
Or should it have happened?
Let's see, let's see. So she Or should it have happened? Let's see.
So she still might appear for that?
It's possible.
I mean, things are moving at warp speed these days.
It's unclear.
Anything could happen, really.
She may want to take that decision.
I think it would be quite surprising,
given that she's not going to appear on the floor
to answer the urgent question from Labour.
But people do want to see her out and about. That is part of the jigsaw that is now missing for many Tory MPs, even though the markets
appear to, in these early days, be assuaged by the Chancellor's statement today.
Does anybody, has anybody in your living memory recovered from this kind of focus on their
failures?
I just can't think of any analogue for someone who has campaigned on a set of policies
and had to enact such a huge U-turn in such a short period of time. So I don't think there's
been a sort of a set of failures so big that's happened so quickly that we can really compare
this to. And that's why MPs I've been talking to in the wake of Hunt's statement, you know,
I've been asking them, look, it looks like the pound's up a bit against the dollar
since he spoke, you know, the cost of government borrowing appears to be going down slightly.
You know, has he steadied the ship enough for her to stagger on for some weeks more?
Many of those MPs who are kind of growing more concerned over the weekend haven't had their
confidence restored. Many of them are saying to me they don't think she'll last the week.
It's just extraordinary.
She's been in power for just over 40 days
and this is the conversation that's happening.
Thank you, Mr Speaker,
and thank you to the Right Honourable Member for Portsmouth North
for answering the question put to the Prime Minister.
I guess under this Tory government,
everybody gets to be Prime Minister. I guess under this Tory government,
everybody gets to be Prime Minister for 15 minutes.
Do you think Tory members will ever vote on who their leader is again?
Certainly not in the short term if the MPs have their way.
So that's about the rules being changed, isn't it? So that they wouldn't have to go back to the party to ask again.
They would be able to make a quicker decision.
Yes, I think the feeling now is that put to the membership, the membership made the wrong
decision this summer. They were offered fool's gold, as one MP described it to me. And they sort
of fell for it, this idea of brilliant tax cuts that would leave them with more money in their
pocket, but also catalyse this big growth spurt in the economy. None of that is now going ahead. And many MPs
think that they need to wrest back control, which of course, it used to be the case. It used to be
that MPs decided the leader. It's only a relatively recent innovation in the party that it's put to
the membership. Lucy, thank you very much indeed. I think you're hot footing it down to Westminster.
Bit of a nerdy question. How long does it take?
I can get from this floor to the Commons in 12 minutes.
Wow. If the tubes align.
Go to it.
That's amazing.
I think Lucy gets to go in the special entrance
out of the tube station.
Maybe I do.
Oh, gosh.
Never met anyone who can.
So now it's time for leaders to lead.
Yeah.
But where is the Prime Minister?
Hiding away, dodging questions, scared of her own shadow.
The lady's not for turning up.
Now, I think Matt Chorley of Times Radio fame is living his best life
and he joins us from the Commons now.
So, your assessment.
First of all any
idea on the urgent business that's keeping liz truss away from parliament no so far that's a
piece of information that penny board has not seen fit to share uh with the house i've just literally
just nipped out the press gallery as i was watching it all in real time because that's how i like to
spend my afternoon um i'll be honest it it's quite thin on the Tory benches.
There's lots of green leather on show.
Not many people have turned up.
Quite a lot of people have turned up.
I know for a fact I think the fire minister should go
because they've probably told me as much.
And there was a lot of looking very busy,
sucking on pens and scribbling through phones.
It's a very peculiar atmosphere.
I think Penny Maud is doing a,
making a reasonable fist of a pretty bad job.
And, you know, if you're being really cynical,
you might say that someone who turns up
and eats the you-know-what sandwich
of the Prime Minister might get a bit of credit
worth, hypothetically,
there to become a vacancy in Number 10
in the near future. Well, I mean, effectively,
it's the Penny Morden audition show,
isn't it? Exactly. Shortly
followed by the Jeremy Hunt audition show.
But who will go through to judges' houses, Matt?
We'll simply have to wait and see.
That's a big question.
Is there any chance that she rocks up
for Jeremy Hunt's statement?
I think that would be considered discourteous to the House.
It's a bit like saying, you know,
turning up after PE and suddenly you've got much better
in time for your art lesson at school. I think if you're off sick saying you're not you know turning up after pe and suddenly you've got much better uh in time for your art lesson at school i think if you're off sick you're off sick
um so i'd be surprised if maybe she will maybe she will but then you know i think the big thing
that lots of people when i've been around the corridor this afternoon talk to tory mp uh is
they just don't know how liz chuff gets through pmqs on wednesday she's managed to dodge this
and send penny morden but how does she get through pmqs with Wednesday. She's managed to dodge this and send Penny Morden.
But how does she get through PMQs
if Keir Starmer's got any wit about him?
And as you were saying,
the lady's not turning up,
it's quite a good joke.
You know, she stands up at PMQs.
She says, well, who are you?
I'm here to talk to the Prime Minister
who seems to be sitting next to you.
You know, how does she,
literally last week,
she promised no spending cuts
and boasted that her energy package
was going to last two years.
Unlike Labour's, which only lasts six months.
Now hers only lasts six months and they're looking at spending cuts.
It's sort of impossible really for her to sort of get through that without being humiliated.
Maybe she's just a robot who will suck all that up and just keep on ploughing on.
But yeah, it's amazing.
Given that Jeremy Hunt wasn't the most popular candidate
in what two leadership elections that he went through is there something that he has managed
to do over the last 24 hours to gain more popularity within the party does that simply
rest on whether the markets go up and the pound doesn't tank again. Yeah, well, actually, I was talking to a Tory MP earlier who suggested
that actually Jeremy Hunt's ability
to not attract any attention
to himself in the most recent
Tory leadership contest might actually
play to his advantage.
He wasn't in one of the big camps.
There wasn't loads of muds. You know, he was out of the
contest so early, nobody had to throw any mud
at him. So
actually, you know, unlike rishi sumac and
penny morton who are very clearly in different camps and people have said things about each other
and all of that actually him being nobody's first choice might mean that being everybody's eighth
choice might be a way through that he could he could unite but i mean you know nobody around
here that i've spoken to you know talking with a straight face realistically thinks the toy is going to win
the next election they just think that it's it but it's probably worth a go limiting the damage
with someone less okay so let's let's take on board nadine doris um suggestion. Do they fire up the Boris Johnson they've got in the garage there?
I mean, even by what we've seen happen in politics
for the last few years,
the standards of madness
that we've seen,
I think a Boris Johnson comeback
is quite unlikely,
particularly given
what they really need
is somebody, you know,
a bit dull,
which everyone can sort of get behind,
given that he
was so divisive that half of his government uh quit let's remember only about three months ago
um i'm not quite sure what the question is to which boris johnson is the answer other than who
does nadine doris really really like yeah i don't think i get a sense and i don't know this obviously
because i don't have direct links with the man, but something suggests that Boris Johnson might not want to come back at the moment.
There seems to be quite a lot being made about his extensive lucrative deals
that he could be getting from the insurance brokers biannual conference in America.
So perhaps he'll decide his own fate.
Why would he come back to this?
He can forever be the aggrieved one removed in his prime
who would have led the Tories to victory.
Why would anybody want to inherit this
and then lead them to defeat
and then he'd be the guy who lost them the election?
Now he's the guy who won them a big election
and was treated very badly by, you know,
when the herd turds.
You know, yeah.
Are you sometimes the last person to leave
the Houses of Parliament
back of a weekday evening? It has been known. Has it? You know, I'll Are you sometimes the last person to leave the Houses of Parliament out of a weekday evening?
It has been known.
Has it?
You know, I'll get the next check.
I'll get the next check.
Or I'll just have one more check.
We'll get the next check.
Whether or not that'll be the same tonight, I'm not sure.
There's a big lack of...
I've seen a few Tory MPs around,
but a lot of them have gone into hiding for some reason.
I can't really work that out.
Well, they're an urgent business.
I did come in to Rishi Sunak earlier,
because he owes me a quiz.
He'd promised to play our quiz and then he bottled it.
And I asked him when would he play the quiz and he said not for a long time,
which I think we can describe as a thinly veiled leadership bid.
So Matt Chorley was our eyes and ears on the ground.
He's just so happy.
He's so happy.
I imagine him actually to almost have a little piece of elastic.
You know when you hang your gloves off when you're kids?
Oh, the mitts.
The mitts, yeah.
You know, one mitten off the end of a long piece of elastic
around the back of the coat.
I think he's basically got that between here and the Houses of Parliament.
So you can just ping down a piece of elastic from Times Radio there
and back again.
I felt very nervy because Lucy Fisher was sitting there talking to us
and we knew she had to be in the House of Commons,
but we're at London Bridge.
For those of you who don't know London, we're at London Bridge.
This is where we're doing the programme and the podcast from.
And she had to get to the House of Commons, which is in Westminster.
And I was really worried for her,
but she seemed as cool as a cucumber about it
and claimed she could do it in, what was it she 12 minutes. 12 minutes. Yep. And she was going to
use this secret entrance, which I vaguely knew about, but that's just for people with press
passes, isn't it? It is, yep. So you don't have to go up onto the street. You can enter the Houses
of Parliament from the tube station. I only know that from a James Bond film. I don't know that
from IRL. It's in Skyfall, isn't it?
I believe it is.
Yeah, because that's what I do think about.
I know it sounds funny and he'll be flattered.
I think about Daniel Craig every time I go down
to the Jubilee line at Westminster.
I bet everybody does.
It's like, you know when you go to Baker Street on the tube?
Yes.
This will be really losing people.
You think about Jerry Rafferty.
I want to be a person of an age
who doesn't start humming Baker Street to themselves when they go through Baker Street.
Baker Street.
Yeah, every single time that's been an earworm for me.
Sorry, what were you singing?
Baker Street.
Okay.
Well, if you say so.
say so.
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We've got some emails, haven't we?
Yeah, we have.
We're very grateful to everybody who's emailed us at janeandfee at times.radio. That's how you get in touch with this off-air podcast.
And who is this from? It is from Jackie. I wanted to comment, she said, on changing jobs in your 50s. Last year, I made a
move into a new job, one that uses my experience and transferable skills, but in a new area of
practice. I found I had seriously underestimated the mental energy such a move would take.
And a year on, I still really miss the confidence that
many years in my previous role gave me. However, meeting new people and doing new things has been
interesting and it was a promotion, so no regrets. For many years, I juggled two jobs, which I found
really was the best of both worlds for me, having two sets of colleagues and a variety of work.
If I had a bad week in either job, I was only there for three days and that really helped.
On a final note, I wonder how you're coping
with the new journey to work after years of broadcasting house.
This is the kind of content we listen for.
Jackie, thank you so much for that.
Jackie would have found it interesting,
your musings on tube stations around London.
Well, there are more musings to come because Jackie,
today I decided,
and I was telling our podcast producer Ben earlier about this,
he did lose the will to live during the anecdote earlier.
He's about to hear it again.
This morning I tried a slightly different public transport route to get here.
And do you know what, Fi?
It wasn't quicker, but it was quieter and I got a seat.
Oh, that's good to know.
Which line did you choose?
Well, I don't because people will be trying to find me there,
so I don't want to give it away.
They really won't, though.
No, there are a variety of ways of getting from my home
in East West Kensington to this part of London town.
And actually, the great thing about London, God, I've got to say,
is the brilliant public transport.
Well.
Except.
Except at night.
Yeah, I'm just going to.
It's ever so crowded in the evening isn't it yeah
i'm gonna say i'm not sure that everybody has a very good experience of london but in answer to
jackie's question about changing jobs new 50s jackie no word of a lie i was asleep before 9 30
the first three days i was at times radio on thursday i stayed up until gone 10 and then conked out and slept for about 12 hours
so it has a colossal impact on you it does it really does and it's and it is the the tiny things
as well but of course you're never really going to think through when you you know when you think
about changing a job but it uh it took me until today uh to realize that I needed that I need a favourite stall in the toilets.
Do you have one?
Oh, yeah.
Don't go in the same one as you, do I?
No.
Well, I don't know.
Well, not at the same time.
Although some girls do do that.
But I didn't realise last week that's what I was doing.
I was working out which my favourite stall in the ladies' loos are going to be.
But I've got that now, so I've nailed that one down.
Yeah, which radio station is playing in the loos?
Because it's always Madonna or a bit of REO.
It's Virgin.
It's Virgin, is it?
Okay.
Yes, it's very familiar music.
I wonder whether in Chris Evans' private toilet facilities
they're playing Times Radio.
Well, I would hope so.
I would hope so too.
I'd certainly feel happy on the loo listening to Matt Chorley.
Yes.
Well, I think he'd be listening to Stig and Asma, wouldn't he?
Oh, yes, that's true.
Very first thing in the morning.
I've just about got to grips with the lifts.
I don't know anybody's names outside of our own little desk area,
but I'm smiling a lot at people.
And I find that very tiring.
What, being nice?
No, meeting lots of people and trying to remember everything
about them all at the same time.
I like Jackie's idea of having two separate jobs.
Well, you see, I was just about to say Jackie's idea
of two separate sets of colleagues would be my idea of a nightmare.
No, but as she points out, if you were having a bad time in one location,
there was always a chance that the next one or the other one would be better.
And so you didn't agonise over it.
Because for a lot of people, work can become all-encompassing.
And the impact it can have on the rest of their lives,
if it's bad, it's colossal, that impact, isn't it?
No, very much so.
I mean, I think difficult work, colleagues,
can really ruin the rest of your life.
Move on to another email, please.
Stop, Jane.
Rachel says, I'm really enjoying listening to you on live radio.
I wanted to raise one point from a programme last week, though.
I have a question for you to investigate, and we are very happy to do on live radio. I wanted to raise one point from a programme last week though. I have a question for you to investigate and we are very happy to do that, Rachel. Having just had my autumn
Covid booster, I'd like to know why it's possible to purchase a flu vaccine but not a Covid jab.
At 48, my husband has paid for his flu jab but is unable to get a Covid booster. What's the reason
that the public can't buy a COVID booster? Alternatively, are there any
plans for the COVID vaccine availability to be lowered to 40 plus? So we don't know the answers
to those questions, but we will. We've got an aches and pains health section coming up in the
programme, I think tomorrow. Oh, is it tomorrow? I mean, we were honestly thinking of calling that
slot aches and pains. Yeah, because increasingly when i meet my female friends of my
age we do have an aches and pains segment which is usually a bigger segment increasingly bigger
than boasting about our kids achievements so some friends of my mum's who obviously are in their
70s and 80s they've got a timer on how long they're allowed to talk when they meet up about
aches and pains so they've just got a 10 i think it's i think it's grandchildren as
well it's 10 minutes on aches and pains 10 minutes on grandchildren then everyone has to talk about
something else yeah yes showbiz maybe are you going to be very cross about the crown will you
watch it am i going to be cross about the crown uh it's like a national sport isn't it being outraged
by the yes the liberties they take so i think i say to myself, because I know that it is a fictionalised account of events
and I will not let John Major's reputation be tarnished in my memory.
So now I feel free to watch it.
So I think I'll probably be hypocritical, like what most people might be.
And watch every single moment.
Yes.
And then be appalled by it.
Absolutely outraged. You've got to watch every single moment. Yes. And then be appalled by it. Absolutely outraged.
You've got to watch it for work.
I'm amazed that you've already got the download password
and you haven't watched it all already.
No, I was just busy yesterday.
I find it, because we were away doing one of our book shows
at the weekend.
And so, you know when you've only got one day of the weekend
properly at home?
Because I went from our book show in Harrogate to see my student daughter in the northeast of England.
And I mentioned last week I was going to visit her student property for the first time.
And good news is there wasn't a fork on the floor, like covered in carpet fluff, which was a sight that just revolted me in my older daughter's student property but i can say that the kitchen sink in this establishment was absolutely full of food
what the actual mesh yes nobody had been prepared to take responsibility for it and i said my
daughter and i were on our own in the house i I said, look, just give me the rubber gloves and I'll see to it.
Because I can't really go back to London knowing that this is the ongoing scene in this sink.
But she wouldn't let me because she said everybody else would laugh at her.
But I did, before I left, I'm afraid, I did sweep the kitchen floor.
Oh, good God.
Well, I just couldn't look at it.
I just couldn't look at the bits and the bobs.
Did it slightly squeak when you walked on it?
And it was sticky.
And there were bin bags everywhere.
It just needed one person to take control.
And that person was?
Jane Garvey.
Well, I only made that small gesture of sweeping the kitchen floor.
I wasn't prepared to do anything else.
I don't know what age you get to.
Perhaps some people never get to the age where there's the level of
mess is simply intolerable and you have to act and you don't care that it's not your responsibility
you'll act because you don't want to see it again at what age does that occur well i think it depends
whether you get married or not doesn't it well what i was also going to say was when you've only
got one proper day at home the weekend so, my bloody feet didn't touch the ground.
It was just one long load of washing, sorting.
I'm with you on that.
I did four loads of washing yesterday.
That's what I mean.
Sheets, towels.
Got to get it all tidy for the week.
Got to get my systems in place.
Well, I feel I did.
Now, do you want to read the email that's a compliment to you?
Well, I can do that.
Yes, it's in bold.
Thank you very much for that, Ben.
It's from Mark, who says, I'm loving the new show.
I've listened to Fee Glover since the early evening London local radio show in 1994.
I thought that at that time she had the delivery style of a stand-up comic.
You haven't lost it.
Not for me, anyway.
So that's very kind.
Thank you for digging out that memory.
And I'm going to make you the inaugural member, Mark, of the Slough Cooperative.
Willing to take more. By the way, I was only born in Slough.
Just, you know, just in case they're thinking of giving me the keys to the city.
Then I have to say, I've been here for a while, actually.
You just couldn't be arsed going to the ceremony, could you?
So that's the last thing you want.
So make sure out there in Slough that you have paid full attention and you want to honor
one of your most famous people someone who'd be forever honored to be connected with your borough
now we do love hearing from you i think this is likely to be quite what we call in the trade a
busy news week but nevertheless it was lovely today during the live show to get lots of
interaction from people i mean it always takes a little while to get going when you start a new programme, doesn't it?
It does.
But things were quite lively this afternoon.
We're very, very grateful.
So keep it coming.
You can tweet at Times Radio or you can email us at any time you like.
Jane and Fee at Times.Radio.
We look forward to hearing from you and you can choose the topic.
You don't have to wait for it to come up in our slightly weird middle-aged minds because you might be waiting a long time so anything that you'd like to talk to us about we're very happy
to hear from you and our big guest tomorrow we're both really looking forward to this is elizabeth
day who's a lovely woman she's a little bit of a showbiz pal of both of ours but we won't let that
in any way cloud our judgment or will we uh that's tomorrow on the live radio show and i dare say on
off air as well.
Shuffle papers, go home!
You have been listening to Off Air with Jane Garvey and Fee Glover.
Our Times Radio producer is Rosie Cutler
and the podcast executive producer is Ben Mitchell.
Now you can listen to us on the free Times Radio app
or you can download every episode
from wherever you get your podcasts.
And don't forget that if you like what you heard
and thought, hey, I want to listen to this, but live,
then you can, Monday to Thursday, 3 till 5 on Times Radio.
Embrace the live radio jeopardy.
Thank you for listening and hope you can join us off air very soon.
Goodbye.
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