PodParley PodParley

Back to national lockdown

UK prime minister Boris Johnson put England into its third lockdown this week, as the new strain of coronavirus risked the health service being overwhelmed. How long will it last and why does everything now rely on vaccine roll out? Plus, we discuss Mr...

An episode of the Political Fix podcast, hosted by Financial Times, titled "Back to national lockdown" was published on January 9, 2021 and runs 32 minutes.

January 9, 2021 ·32m · Political Fix

0:00 / 0:00

UK prime minister Boris Johnson put England into its third lockdown this week, as the new strain of coronavirus risked the health service being overwhelmed. How long will it last and why does everything now rely on vaccine roll out? Plus, we discuss Mr Johnson's political struggles with the latest restrictions, the chaos around schools reopening and closing again and whether the local elections in May will become a Covid referendum. Presented by Sebastian Payne, with Sarah Neville, Clive Cookson, George Parker and Robert Shrimsley. Produced by Anna Dedhar and Josh de la Mare. The sound engineer was Breen Turner and editor Aimee Keane. Review clips: Downing Street, Parliament, Sky News.Further reading:-Covid reached UK in three waves from southern Europe, study shows-MPs back England’s third coronavirus lockdown-Rightwing sceptics helped deepen the UK’s Covid crisis-Teacher assessments to replace GCSEs and A-levels in England-Boris Johnson’s abrupt lockdown shift driven by bleak Covid data-Read the latest on UK politics-Follow @Seb Payne and @George Parker Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

UK prime minister Boris Johnson put England into its third lockdown this week, as the new strain of coronavirus risked the health service being overwhelmed. How long will it last and why does everything now rely on vaccine roll out? Plus, we discuss Mr Johnson's political struggles with the latest restrictions, the chaos around schools reopening and closing again and whether the local elections in May will become a Covid referendum. Presented by Sebastian Payne, with Sarah Neville, Clive Cookson, George Parker and Robert Shrimsley. Produced by Anna Dedhar and Josh de la Mare. The sound engineer was Breen Turner and editor Aimee Keane. Review clips: Downing Street, Parliament, Sky News.

Further reading:

-Covid reached UK in three waves from southern Europe, study shows

-MPs back England’s third coronavirus lockdown

-Rightwing sceptics helped deepen the UK’s Covid crisis

-Teacher assessments to replace GCSEs and A-levels in England

-Boris Johnson’s abrupt lockdown shift driven by bleak Covid data

-Read the latest on UK politics

-Follow @Seb Payne and @George Parker


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Extreme Mortman C-SPAN Original political stories inspired by current events. A weekly fix for political junkies combining compelling clips from the C-SPAN archives (iconic and obscure), history, trivia – and often a healthy helping of comedy. The Dominic Carter Show 77 WABC Dominic Carter has often been described as one of the best political reporters in New York today. A fixture in the industry for the last 35 years, working in television news, and at WABC Radio. Dominic has received numerous awards, and has traveled the globe on assignment. To Israel, the Persian Gulf, Japan, and Somalia. Dominic can be heard on WABC Radio Monday-Friday 12-1AM, Sunday 11PM-12AM. Armando Iannucci: Westminster Reimagined | a New Statesman podcast The New Statesman Politics is broken. How do we fix it?Armando Iannucci and Anoosh Chakelian meet policy makers, activists, special guests and actual, real-life *people* impacted by political failures to ask: can politics be different?Armando Iannucci is the renowned satirist, broadcaster, writer and director behind hit shows including Veep, The Thick of It, and The Day Today. He was the co-creator of the long-running comedy character Alan Partridge. His movies include In The Loop (2009), The Death of Stalin (2017), and The Personal History of David Copperfield (2020). He's a regular contributor to the New Statesman magazine.Anoosh Chakelian is Britain Editor of the New Statesman and host of the award-winning New Statesman Podcast. She's one of the UK's leading political and social affairs journalists, specialising in the impact political decisions have on people and services around the country. She's a regular commentator on TV and radio, including Politics Live and What if Kids Could Change the World? WHRO Public Media Sometimes children say it best. Unafraid to say what they mean directly and unapologetically, most children will tell you exactly what they are thinking if you ask them. And sometimes they are wise beyond their years. Hampton Roads teacher and award-winning author, Lydia Netzer, found this out recently when she set out to get some answers from local children. After an exhaustive past few years of political rhetoric from politicians and pundits on “what will fix America,” Netzer decided to ask local children a question: “What would you do to change the world in 2017?”
URL copied to clipboard!