British politics is seriously interesting.
The other day we seen K Star resign as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
Now we see him in Prime Minister’s Questions of course as he’s going to be the prime minister until uh the Labor leadership election is won.
Obviously Andy Burnham takes over.
And today he did Prime Minister’s Questions and to be fair, the leader of the opposition sort of went in on, you know, asking questions about how everything failed, you know, holding people to account, the front benches, people in the cabinet, etc., etc.
But Kirstma, like they always do, makes out everything’s okay.

He was just forced to resign cuz his MPs don’t trust him, right? They don’t want him as the leader anymore.
But he’s here gaslighting that he’s been a success, that everything’s going well.
It just weird.
It’s like pantomine this prime minister’s questions, isn’t it? It really is.
I don’t get it.
But guys, either way, he throws a tantrum at times.
Uh arguments erupt and yeah, can you really trust this guy here, Kirstma? Let’s have a watch of it.
But first, hit like and subscribe for more.
Thank you, Mr.
Speaker.
And can I associate uh this side of the house with the prime minister’s remarks on the horrific train crash, the attacks in Edinburgh, and of course, Armed Forces Week.
I want to start by congratulating the prime minister.
He’s the other party leader who won a bi-election last week.
Although I think I’m much happier with my new MP than he is [laughter] with his.
Two weeks ago, Mr.
Speaker, two weeks ago, the prime minister told the House that the government was funding defense and everything was under control.
The very next day, the defense secretary resigned, saying the prime minister was unable and the Treasury unwilling to fund the defense of our country.
What changed? Mr.
Speaker, she references the bi-election.
I’m very pleased with our new member of Parliament.
Um, can I can I also uh say to her in Gordon and Denton the tourist got 1.
9% of the vote.
Can I congratulate her because in Makerfield they got 2.
2% of the vote.
Ju just edging past Count Binface.
She says they’re winning everywhere.
At that rate, it’ll take them 500 years to get back into power.
Mr.
Speaker, meanwhile, back on these benches, we’ve delivered the biggest sustained boost to defense spending since the 1980s.
That’s 270 billion pounds over this parliament.
That, Mr.
Speaker, is a record.
The defense investment plan um will take that even higher.
That’s about facing the point future.
We’ll finalize the plan with the defense secretary and we’ll have it published before the NATO summit.
Mr.
Speaker, I think the prime minister forgot to mention that in Abodine South, we got 50% and he says that he’s funding defense.
The truth is he wouldn’t be in this mess if his chancellor had found money for the defense investment plan.
The prime minister gave her the second most important job in Britain.
She was the first female chancellor.
She lives next door to him but wouldn’t even come out to stand by him during his resignation speech.
She was too busy she was too busy getting ready for a selfie with the new leader.
Yeah.
Does the prime minister feel let down by his chancellor? This is the chancellor who ended austerity inflicted on our country for 14 long years.
This is the chancellor who got the economy growing.
Mr.
Speaker, she doesn’t normally want to talk about the economy.
That’s because in the first quarter of this year, the UK had the fastest growing economy in the G7.
Our growth was upgraded by the IMF and the OECD.
Last week, unemployment was down.
Inflation was better than better.
That is because with this chance, we have the right economic plan and we can weather the global storms in the war that she wanted to jump into.
Not.
Mr.
Speaker, they’re cheering so loudly.
If it’s all going so fine, why is he resigning? The fact is, she did let him down.
She’s the one who snatched the winter fuel payments.
She’s the one who announced a disastrous budget that killed economic growth.
And because of her, once again, a Labour prime minister is leaving office with unemployment higher than when he came in.
But the chancellor isn’t the only person who let him down.
The energy secretary is putting up bills and killing jobs.
He was Yeah, he’s not here, is he? He was a failed Labour leader, rejected by the electorate, brought back from the wilderness by this man, and when the going got tough, he jumped into bed with the mayor of Manchester.
Yeah.
It’s not the first time he’s betrayed someone close to him, is it? Yeah.
But does the prime minister think Does the prime minister think Does the prime minister think that this treachery should be rewarded by being appointed chancellor? Mr.
Speaker, the chancer and I picked up our party six years ago from the worst defeat since 1935.
We turned it around and we made it face the country.
And we won a landslide general election, giving them the biggest drubbing in their history.
Thanks to this chancellor, we’ve delivered the fastest fall in NHS waiting list for 17 years.
With the money for new rights for renters and working people, and we’re lifting half a million children out of poverty, Mr.
Speaker, the test for every prime minister is handing over the country in better shape than you found it.
I know I can do that.
which is more than can be said for her predecessor, her predecessor’s predecessor, and her predecessor’s predecessor’s predecessor.
Mr.
Speaker, once again, I have to ask, if it’s all so fantastic, why is he resigning? And I think it is very generous of the prime minister to stick by his ministers because they didn’t stick by him.
He can say what he likes, but the people of Abedine gave their verdict.
They give their verdict on his energy secretary by voting conservative.
But uh to be fair, Mr.
Speaker, to be fair, to be fair, they’re not all traitors and deserters.
Some of his cabinet have been loyal.
Loyal and incompetent.
Hands up if you think the education secretary is doing a good job.
Even she doesn’t think she’s doing a [laughter] good job, Mr.
Speaker.
Even she doesn’t think she’s doing a good job.
Just Oh, there.
Oh, someone did.
Someone did.
Just for those for those who raised their hands, the two people who raised their hands yesterday, a poll found that 0% of teachers think the education sector is doing a good job.
0%.
She taxed private schools to pay for more teachers, but the number of teachers has gone down.
It turns out appointing a spiteful class warrior as education secretary was a disaster.
Does the prime minister agree? Does the prime minister agree that he has been let down by her incompetence? Prime the education secretary grew up in poverty.
Yeah, she knows exactly what it means to grow up in poverty.
She was once reluctant to tell her story.
I know her story.
It’s an incredible story of social mobility and success.
I am so proud that she is sitting there and so should everybody in this country who cares about social mobility.
She knows that for poor children, education is absolutely vital and that is why it drives every single priority and value that she has.
I would have thought the party opposite would recognize and understand some of that.
But they’ve fallen so low they don’t.
Mr.Spe Mr.Speaker, the fact is that if she knew so much about poor children, she wouldn’t have given them fewer teachers.
Teacher numbers have gone down.
Teacher numbers have gone down.
It’s amazing.
I’ve never seen this much excitement on the Labour benches.
Yes.
Cheering so loudly while there 400 knives stuck in his back.
Shame on them.
Shame on them.
They don’t like it up them, but they know that what I’m saying is true.
And Mr.
Speaker, there were times there were times when the prime minister tried to do the right thing.
He tried.
He did try to cut welfare.
And who stopped him? those MPs behind him.
In the words of the welfare secretary, his MPs only want to know who they can tax to fund more benefits.
They are not Labor MPs.
They are welfare MPs.
Does the prime minister feel betrayed by the people he got into parliament? Just sorry, Prime Minister, can I just say, let us think about the language we use.
I think that’ll be the first to leave.
Please can I just say think about the language using because when we leave this chamber don’t be surprised when constituents feel they can use the same language against each other.
Let let us show a little bit more decorum and respect to each other.
Thank thank you Mr.
Speaker.
I’ve always tried to do all of this with with as much good grace as I could, but I shall certainly miss these uh exchanges.
I’m very proud of every one of our MPs who were a landslide Labor victory coming from all different backgrounds from all different places across the country.
We inflicted the biggest loss on the Tory party opposite in the history of their party.
We picked up our party.
We turned it around.
We had to address what went wrong.
We turned it around.
We won a landslide victory.
She won’t even address or even talk about their failure after 14 long years.
Mr.Speaker, he is the one who is resigning because of his MPs.
There’s no point trying to distract from it.
And let’s be honest, Mr.Speaker, the prime minister has made many mistakes, otherwise he wouldn’t be going.
But he has also been let down.
I’m only saying what his staff have been briefing.
He has been let down by an energy secretary who is killing industry.
Let down by a chancellor who is killing jobs.
Let down by backbenchers who don’t understand that government is about tough choices.
He turned again and again and again to appease them and now they’ve abandoned him.
And what for a pair of eyelashes and a black t-shirt? Isn’t the truth that whoever is in charge, Mr.
Speaker? Is it the truth that whoever is in charge, the real problem is the Labor Party? Mr.Speaker, two years ago, I walked into number 10 and found a broken economy, broken public services, and broken trust in politics.
Because of our decisions, my decision, the country is moving in the right direction.
and a stronger and a fairer Britain.
Ending austerity.
Investing in our public services.
The fastest fall in NHS waiting lists for 17 years.
More rights for workers.
More rights for renters standing with Ukraine.
Britain’s reputation restored.
And half a million children being lifted out of poverty.
Change promised by a Labor government.
Fought for by a Labor government.
Change delivered by a Labor government.
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