Avsnitt

  • The trade war is escalating. The world’s two biggest economies - the USA and China - are now going head to head on tariffs, with Donald Trump threatening Xi Jinping with an extra 50% tariff if China doesn’t withdraw its own 34% counter-tariff, which itself was a reciprocal response to Trump’s original tariff set out last week.


    Amid fears of a global recession, Camilla and Kamal are joined in the studio by former Tory leader and eminent China-hawk Iain Duncan Smith, who says the President is right to take on Beijing with the world having turned a blind eye for too long. He also explains how Chinese soldiers have been caught fighting for Russia in Ukraine. 


    Plus, Prince Harry is back in the UK, this time to take on the Home Office, as he arrives at the High Court to argue the case for taxpayer-funded security whenever he is in the country. We get the latest from our deputy royal editor Victoria Ward, who’s inside the court. And Camilla reviews Meghan Markle’s new podcast “Confessions of a Female Founder” - warning, it’s not pretty.


    Producers: Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • As Donald Trump’s tariff plans sent markets around the world into absolute chaos, Wall Street and the US braced themselves for a plunge in stocks. But as expected, Trump doubled down, urging them to stop panic selling and defending his tariffs which he said are “bringing in billions of dollars a week” for the country. 


    We hear that Keir Starmer has to stay after he spoke in the West Midlands about his plan to respond to the tariffs and how he’ll protect British jobs and businesses.


    Kamal and Camilla ask if there’s trouble brewing in the White House already as cracks in Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s relationship appeared with Musk taking aim at some of Trump’s most trusted advisors.


    And The Telegraph’s Tim Stanley joins us to defend his latest column on Trump’s tariff tactics as he asked if the President may actually be on to something, despite the reaction across the world.


    Read:

    What Trump’s tariffs mean for your money - James Baxter-Derrington


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Will Lewis

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • With the health secretary Wes Streeting banning puberty blocker drugs for children and President Trump barring trans women from women’s sports, is the tide turning on the transgender debate? Perhaps, but it hasn’t come without a fight, often from women who have been de-platformed, sacked and abused for challenging the orthodoxy.


    Julie Bindel and Helen Joyce are two such women, who have been labelled Nazis and bigots for championing female spaces and sex-based rights. Kamal and Camilla sat down with the journalists and feminist campaigners at Oxford Literary Festival for a conversation about trans ideology, toxic masculinity, and the harmful influence of adult film stars Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips.


    Producers: Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Valerie Browne

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • So it’s finally happened. Donald Trump took to the White House Rose Garden on Wednesday night to announce his grand tariff plan on what he’d dubbed “Liberation Day”.


    The end result was the UK being slapped with a 10pc tax on all exports to the US. It’s not good news for the economy, but we have avoided the much heavier tariffs imposed on the likes of the EU and China.


    Kamal and Camilla ask former Business Secretary and ardent Leaver Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg whether we can thank Brexit for sparing the UK from the worst of the new regime, and if we will now realise the full potential of leaving Europe.


    They also assess how well Keir Starmer comes out of it all. For all of his bending the knee to Trump, the Prime Minister has come away with exactly the same outcome on tariffs as Taliban-led Afghanistan. Can he still salvage a trade deal, or is retaliatory action on the cards?


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Valerie Browne

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • It’s Liberation Day! But what does Donald Trump's plan for sweeping tariffs mean for the rest of the world?


    The UK hopes to carve out an exemption, with Keir Starmer’s negotiators even offering last-minute concessions. And the stakes are high – the OBR has warned that tariffs could wipe out the Government’s fiscal wiggle room.


    Kamal and Camilla assess the prime minister’s response to the saga and ask if he has the political skill to reach a trade deal.


    Later, Kamal speaks to Brian Glenn, the White House correspondent who shot to fame when he challenged President Zelensky on his choice of outfit in the Oval Office. He explains the motivation behind Trump’s tariff plan - and his own state of mind during that now-infamous showdown.


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor/Studio Director: James England

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • It’s the eve of Donald Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’, when the president’s new global tariffs regime risks wiping out Labour’s capacity to balance the books. 


    Starmer is saying the US-UK trade talks are “well advanced” and has rejected any “knee-jerk” response from the Government, but has admitted that British exports will be hit by the new taxes. 


    Despite all this, the Prime Minister continues to tell us that he plans to put more money in our pockets, promising millions of Britons a pay rise. 


    Kamal and Camilla are live from Conservative HQ, where in a major speech Kemi Badenoch hit out at Labour’s “jobs tax” and accused them of a “fundamental breach of trust.” She also warned against any retaliation to Trump's tariffs, which she says would “just make everyone poorer”. 


    They discuss this and more with shadow chancellor Mel Stride, who has claimed families will be £3500 worse off by the end of this Parliament.


    Producers: Georgia Coan, Lilian Fawcett and Will Lewis

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: James Simmons

    Video Editor/Camera Operator: James England

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • The “two-tier” justice row has reared its ugly head again, as it emerges judges and magistrates are being told to prioritise bail for ethnic minorities as they are at higher risk of being remanded into custody.


    It comes after the Sentencing Council refused a request from Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood for it to rethink other new instructions, which come into effect from tomorrow, that require judges to consider an offender's background before deciding to impose a custodial sentence.


    Kamal and Camilla speak to shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick about the ongoing ‘two tier” justice row, as well Prime Minister Keir Starmer trumpeting his government having deported 24,000 illegal immigrants.


    They also speak to The Telegraph’s Paris Correspondent, Henry Samuel, after Marine Le Pen was found guilty of embezzlement and banned from running for public office for five years, meaning she would not be able to run in the 2027 French presidential election. They ask what the future looks like for Le Pen and whether her National Rally protege Jordan Bardella is the right person to take the battle to Emmanuel Macron.


    Producers: Georgia Coan, Lilian Fawcett and Will Lewis

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: James England

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • It's the day of Reform's big local election campaign launch in Birmingham. 10,000 people are expected to attend a Trump-style rally at the city's arena, with Reform themselves describing it as “the biggest ever launch rally in modern British political history”.


    And with new IPSOS polling showing that Nigel Farage tops the polling for British favoured next Prime Minister with 28pc - can he capitalise on his own popularity ratings and the less than impressive numbers for Kemi Badenoch (18pc) and lead the right to victory?


    The local elections will be his first test, and Kamal and Camilla assess the state of the nation as the other main parties get ready to join Reform in launching their campaigns.


    They also speak to former Reform deputy leader Ben Habib, a man who was forced out by Farage when he became leader, about whether the party is capable of sticking together and if he could be tempted to form a new party with fellow ex-Reform MP Rupert Lowe.


    Producers: Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: Valerie Browne

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • Within hours of the Spring Statement yesterday, the Government was left scrambling to negotiate with the US as President Trump introduced a whopping 25% tariff on all car imports - including from Britain.


    The news comes during a busy time for the White House, which is already dealing with the fall out from those leaked Signal messages. So, as the shock of his second election victory subsides and the world settles in for another tumultuous four years, how do we live with President Trump?


    Cleo Watson and Tim Stanley are joined by Emily Jashinsky, D.C. correspondent for UnHerd magazine, to unpack the latest news from across the pond. 


    Plus, Kamal is at a major leadership event in Cornwall, speaking to Kemi Badenoch about Trump’s latest tariffs, as she warns of a possible trade war and the impact of net zero.


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: Valerie Browne

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • Rachel Reeves has delivered her plans for the UK economy during her Spring Statement in the House of Commons today, pledging to “secure Britain’s future.”


    Indeed, in a stark warning, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) signalled that Labour's overhaul of workers' rights will have “material” and probably negative impacts on the economy, and it looks likely that the Chancellor risks being forced into more tax rises with her plans.


    Camilla is live from Westminster, reacting to today's announcements with Labour MP and Mission Champion for Economic Growth Dan Tomlinson and Shadow Secretary of State for Business and Trade Andrew Griffith.


    Plus, Reform UK's Richard Tice reacts to the statement and the latest developments with the Rupert Lowe feud.


    Producers: Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Camera Operator: Andy Mackenzie

    Video Editor: James Moorhead

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • The Chancellor of the Exchequer will deliver the 2025 Spring Statement in the House of Commons on Tuesday.


    Rachel Reeves' plan is to tell us all the things Labour has achieved so far, but British households and businesses are increasingly pessimistic about the state of the economy. Sluggish growth and ever higher borrowing costs mean cuts, cuts and more cuts are on the way.


    Kamal and Camilla speak to the owner of a hairdressing business who’s already been affected by Rachel Reeves’ autumn budget and is dreading the new rules that come into place next week.


    Plus, we’ll be joined by The Telegraph's Janet Daley for her reaction to Donald Trump’s inner circle accidentally adding a journalist to a group chat discussing top-secret war plans.


    Read: It’s over. America has ceased to be leader of the free world, by Janet Daley


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: James Simmons

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • Several days on from Heathrow's 18-hour shutdown caused by a fire at an electrical substation, the recriminations and the blame-shifting are well underway.


    Thomas Woldbye, Heathrow’s CEO, is taking the brunt of the criticism, after reports at the weekend that he went to bed at 12.30am on Friday morning instead of directly overseeing the airport's response.


    Meanwhile, the boss of the National Grid told the Financial Times that Heathrow could have stayed open with energy from two other substations.


    So who is to blame? And what does it say about Britain's infrastructure that a fire at a substation was enough to close the fourth-busiest airport in the world?


    Plus, five years on from the Covid lockdowns, we speak to a primary school head teacher about the consequences it had on children's development.


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: James Moorhead

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Production support from Will Lewis

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • The far-right activist Tommy Robinson has lost a High Court challenge over the conditions of his imprisonment at HMP Woodhill, with a judge ruling he must stay in isolation for his own safety.


    One man who has argued for Robinson’s release – wrongly labelling him a political prisoner silenced for exposing the brutality of the Pakistani rape gangs – is billionaire X owner Elon Musk.


    So how has Robinson found this new following amongst Trump’s “new right” fan base? How has he repositioned himself as the victim of an establishment conspiracy?  


    In this special edition of the Daily T, Camilla goes to Luton in search of the real Tommy Robinson, asking those who’ve worked with him how he has come to be hailed as a folk hero – and where his motivations truly lie.


    Producer: Georgia Coan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • It’s the show that’s got the whole nation talking.


    The Netflix drama Adolescence - about a young thirteen year old boy who becomes a murder suspect - has opened up a raft of conversations about what our children are up to online.


    Camilla and Kama speak to Michael Conroy, the founder of Men at Work which supports the development of boys and young men, about the problematic role models children see online and what more parents can do.


    Later, they ask John Player, the headteacher of a school in Essex, what his pupils learnt from going phone-free for three weeks. 


    Read: Stephen Graham: ‘The loss of young life. Kids, killed by kids. It gets me emotional’


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Ji-Min Lee

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: James England

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • Well he may have written The Art of the Deal - but so far Donald Trump is finding that trying to do a deal with Vladimir Putin is a somewhat different kettle of fish.


    Just hours after Trump's "very productive" call with his Russian counterpart - Putin continued his attack on Ukraine, including on some energy infrastructure - something Putin had pledged to put an end to immediately in his call.


    With Ukraine responding in kind with drone attacks and the two countries seemingly no nearer to peace, Kamal and Camilla ask - is Vladimir Putin simply laughing at Donald Trump?


    They're also joined in the studio by former Conservative MP Mark Field, whose new book contains fascinating insights into life under three successive Tory Prime Ministers, the contretemps when he manhandled an environmental protestor and his marriage-ending affair with a certain Liz Truss...


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • After weeks of pitch-rolling, Labour has finally unveiled what are probably the Government's most controversial reforms since entering office.


    Liz Kendall, the Work and Pensions Secretary, announced a huge swathe of cuts to the welfare system, including billions of pounds worth of disability benefits.


    Kamal and Camilla talk through the changes and why they've riled up Labour backbenchers, then ask Helen Whately, the shadow work and pensions secretary, what she thinks.


    Plus, Kemi Badenoch gave a speech announcing her opposition to the UK's 2050 net zero target. She seems to be finding her voice, but will it cut through with the public?


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: James Moorhead

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • As Nigel Farage announced 29 councillors had defected to Reform, the message was clear: his party wants to move on from its row with suspended MP Rupert Lowe.


    Farage welcomed his latest recruits in a central London press conference, and with fifteen of those councillors having crossed over from the Conservatives, Kemi Badenoch no doubt has an even bigger headache than before as Reform continue to lead her party in the polls ahead of May's local elections. 


    But the elephant in the room was last week's Reform civil war, after MP Rupert Lowe was suspended from the party over allegations of verbal threats and workplace bullying - allegations he denies. Farage himself addressed the issue in his speech, saying that it had caused "consternation" but that the "upset is very much at the edges"


    Camilla caught up with Nigel Farage after the press conference to ask him whether he was capable of being the next Prime Minister if he can't keep a party of five MP's in check.


    And then once she was reunited with Kamal, they also reflected on the reporting this weekend that Farage had dinner with former Boris Johnson advisor and Brexit architect Dominic Cummings, in order to discuss how the Conservatives and Reform could work together to "unite the right".


    Producers: Georgia Coan and Lilian Fawcett

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

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

  • The Kremlin has said it is “cautiously optimistic” about a ceasefire in Ukraine after a late-night meeting with the US envoy Steve Witkoff. But Putin will need a phone call with President Trump to settle any outstanding issues.


    Kamal and Cleo speak to ally of President Trump, Secretary Robert Wilkie, and Ukraine: The Latest presenter Dom Nicholls who was with the UK Defence Secretary John Healey when he travelled to Paris for the emergency security summit this week.


    And as an exclusive Telegraph poll reveals that Reform is likely to win big in the local elections, we assess the state of play in Westminster - with trouble brewing for the Government. The PM faces a rebellion on welfare cuts next week and there are more economic headwinds for Rachel Reeves with her spring statement fast approaching...


    Read: Reform would win local elections – but Angela Rayner cancelled them


    Producers: Lilian Fawcett and Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • The Prime Minister has pledged to tackle Britain’s “overcautious, flabby state”, admitting that record taxation and spending in recent years have not led to improvement in our front-line services. 


    The first to go in his shake-up is NHS England, which will be abolished to “cut bureaucracy” and bring management of the health service back under the Government. But do the plans really go far enough? 


    Kamal and Camilla are joined by The Telegraph’s resident waste watcher Dia Chakravarty to find out exactly how the government is squandering your hard-earned taxes. 


    And after the family of murdered MP David Amess were denied an inquiry into his death earlier this week, we spoke to his daughter Katie and the family representative Radd Seiger outside Downing Street after a meeting with Sir Keir Starmer and Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, in which some tentative progress was made. 


    Producers: Lilian Fawcett and Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Valerie Brown

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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

  • The ball is in Vladimir Putin’s court today after the US and Ukraine reached a ceasefire proposal at a meeting in Saudi Arabia, in what marked a dramatic change of tone in Washington-Kyiv relations.


    Kyiv said it is ready to accept a US proposal for an immediate 30-day ceasefire. Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky said it was now up to the US to convince Russia.


    So what is Putin’s next move? Kamal and Camilla ask Kremlinologist Emily Ferris about the Russian president’s thinking and whether there is any kind of succession plan in Moscow.


    Elsewhere, in a remarkable development, it transpires that the captain of the Portuguese-flagged ship that crashed into an oil tanker transporting American fuel in the North Sea on Monday was Russian. We ask former Royal Navy Commander Tom Sharpe about this latest twist.


    Producer: Lilian Fawcett and Georgia Coan

    Senior Producer: John Cadigan

    Planning Editor: Venetia Rainey

    Executive Producer: Louisa Wells

    Social Media Producer: Rachel Duffy

    Video Editor: Andy Mackenzie

    Studio Director: Meghan Searle

    Editor: Camilla Tominey

    Original music by Goss Studio

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