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Why do Britons feel the country is broken?
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Why do Britons feel the country is broken?
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Well, I just think the way that people are leading our country,
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I just don't think it's right.
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They've got their priorities all wrong.
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Why is the electorate so fractured and impatient?
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I don't think we could be any more patient without politicians, to be honest.
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Over the years, look who we've had for God knows how long and look what they've done.
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Is the UK simply ungovernable?
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Of course it's ungovernable.
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We just need someone with a pair to get back in involved and actually be in control.
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That we believe is credible.
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We start our exploration into British discontent in London.
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A weekend of two protests, characterised as rivals.
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A symptom of polarisation.
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But are the people on these rival marches so different?
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First, the pro-Palestinian protesters.
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The biggest issue in this country is severe wealth inequality.
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Do you think there are people on the other march who have the same problem about wealth inequality that you have?
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100% and they've been tricked to think that it's people coming in boats,
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brown and black people, who are the problem.
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People just tend to blame a lot of problems in government and with this country on immigration.
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Well, it's not.
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I think it's the competency of the government that people need to focus on a bit more.
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Yeah.
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What do you think are the problems within the country?
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Inflation, cost of living, things like that,
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you know what I mean?
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I think also that there is a massive gap between the people in the government body
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and the actual people that are supposed to govern.
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Ali from Chingford in Essex worries his daughter will inherit a less tolerant Britain with growing inequality.
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There used to be a time when post-Second World War there was investment in infrastructure,
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in creation of jobs, in creation of wealth for the everyday person.
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Today the mantra seems to be you'll own nothing,
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be happy with it and that's the end.
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Do you think there'll be people on the other march who will list all those same issues that you've just raised?
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Completely agree, they will be.
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If we're referring to the hate march and they'll refer to us as the hate march,
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this is the part of the problem, right?
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So how have we got this stage where we've got two hate marches with two opposing views on each other,
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but having essentially the same...
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We don't have opposing views.
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Our views are that the everyday man deserves a chance.
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Half a mile away, the Unite the Kingdom march is reaching Parliament Square.
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My son back there, he's a bricklayer.
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He's got no work.
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He has no work.
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It is all Lithuanians in there.
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And, you know, he's got his own little children.
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He's out of work half the time.
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I'm on the bidding for the council.
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How long have you been waiting for?
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Five years.
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Five years.
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Five years.
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So I'm in a house and a subsidence.
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I can show you pictures of my subsidence house.
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And I've got my five children living with me And the council don't want to help me,
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but yeah, you've got these coming over into England They're getting housing benefits everything Like this You're feeling forgotten.
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You're feeling left out.
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Yes Exactly that.
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Yeah left out sounds like the biggest issue for you personally It's housing.
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So why not go on a housing march?
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Where's the help?
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Chelsea is from Sandwell in the West Midlands,
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where a quarter of the population was born outside of the UK.
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And demand for social housing has doubled in three years.
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Nationally, available stock is in decline
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and the average waiting time for council homes with three or more bedrooms is now nearly eight years.
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Of course this is an anti-migrant gathering but would as many people be here if we didn't have a chronic housing shortage?
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Our contract with the government was we'll pay in social contract that we'll look after our own people.
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That's gone now.
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Whatever we're spending money on is not being put back into the communities,
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It's been booted into something else.
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People here will tell you it's immigration,
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that's a small part of it, but everything's went downhill.
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You go to NEN, it's yes,
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N-E, it's a war zone.
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It is, and it wasn't like that when I was a kid.
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On the face of it,
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these two marches couldn't be more different.
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But if you scratch beneath the surface, there are similar themes.
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Disillusionment with government, a sense of injustice,
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a feeling that the country and people's lives are getting worse.
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Whatever flag they march under,
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they feel the government is walking blind.
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Two years ago, I took a parliamentary bench across Britain,
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asking people what mattered in the upcoming election.
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The cost of rent tripled in the last few years.
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Going to a shop and doing like a weekly shop is just so expensive.
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I kind of feel like in a lot of ways I was better off 10 years ago.
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From Cornish beaches to Scottish hills to the waterways of Wales,
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Labour offered a glimmer of hope.
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Very comfy.
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I can see why they nod off in Parliament.
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Probably going to vote Labour and just go for the safe option.
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What makes you think they're safe?
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Safer than Conservatives, I think.
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For decades, the Labour vote in Wales has been as solid
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and dependable as this aqueduct but we've come back here because in just two years the political landscape has changed dramatically.
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The May Welsh Assembly elections were a revolution.
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Plaid Cymru first, reform second, Labour crushed.
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Two years on, returning to the Telford Inn in Clamglochland,
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we find takings are down 30%,
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even though the next nearest pub has closed.
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Punters drive here for days out,
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less so now with high fuel prices.
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Hello you two.
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Good to see you.
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How are you?
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How are you?
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I'm very well.
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Good to see you.
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What, two years?
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It has been two years, yes.
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Yeah.
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I mean, Labour's been here for, what, 27 years?
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Yeah and all of a sudden you go around the farmers are even putting up these things
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for either Plaid Cymru or reform and it's something
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that we've never seen the whole fact of the insurances going up national insurance who having to pay more for
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that the minimum wage crazy the way we've got to pay a 14 year old the same as a 17
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and a half year old but then the problem also knocks on to the fact
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that 17 year old who's just about to turn 18 says
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wait a minute i've been working for three years why am i earning the same as a 14 year old
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so they're now asking for more money
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so you're now having to put them up to the 18 to 21 bracket
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but then the 21 year old says well wait a minute
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if the 18 year old
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and it's true i've had this this year already i've had
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staff say basically you've got wage inflation yeah we've done our own business
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and that's just one business look at all the businesses we're
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all everyone wants more money all of a sudden yeah
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that doesn't work that way but that's exactly what robert and sarah's staff want.
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With how much everything costs being on the wage
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that we're on I don't think is enough
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because you know you get paid and then your bills come out
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and then you've got like a hundred pound or whatever you're on to live off for the rest of the month.
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Me being 19 I want to go out
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and I want to have a good time with my mates
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but I feel a bit restricted from it because of how much everything costs.
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But Erin and Lana know they're lucky to have a job.
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I know a lot of people that are struggling to get jobs themselves and like with all the,
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especially hospitality businesses, like going bankrupt and closing down.
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New figures show youth unemployment has climbed 16 percent with 729,000 16 to 24 year olds currently looking for work.
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There's fear too that AI will do to jobs what the internet's done to the high street.
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From Wales we've come to the Wirral.
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This is Ellesmere Port, where there's an unsettling sense of decay.
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Canvas homes are erected amongst rusted shutters and glass shopfronts offer nothing.
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This used to be Wilco,
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then closed down and turned to Poundlands.
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Poundlands was only there for a month and it just closed down.
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Back when I was a kid we had everything,
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toy shops, clothes shops, the town was booming.
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Retailers that remain open are often ones thriving on desperation,
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such as Wayne's Porn Shop.
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It's definitely a time I see everyone struggling,
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it's not just one type of character,
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you've got people that you wouldn't expect,
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you know, people that are working full-time jobs,
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multiple jobs, and they're still having to come in just to make ends meet,
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pour on a few bits in just to get by.
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People tend to sell the jewellery.
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We send it off, it gets melted.
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Everyone makes a bit of money,
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helps people out in a tough time.
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But just as our fast-paced shopping habits have turned high streets into ghost towns,
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have we become too fickle and impatient to give our politicians a chance.
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The government relies on indicators such as GDP,
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our economic output, which is actually rising faster than expected.
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But people aren't feeling it here.
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Crime is falling.
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But surveys suggest most people think it's going up.
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And hospital waiting lists are dropping fractionally.
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But that still leaves 7 million people waiting.
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One of them is Heather.
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We're now in Lee, Greater Manchester.
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This trip to get her scooter serviced might be her only day out this week.
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A former carer herself, she's lacking in social care
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and has been on a hospital waiting list over a year now for a new diagnosis.
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It does make things harder.
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Just waiting?
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It's the waiting.
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That's the hardest part, the waiting.
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And they're not knowing, but when you know there's something wrong and you can't put your finger on it,
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and they can't put the finger on it,
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it's like, where do you go next?
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You don't know where to go,
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you just know there's something not right.
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No one's listening.
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How are the government doing?
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They're struggling at a minute,
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I'd say for two reasons.
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First reason is because it's still cleaning up after the Conservatives,
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and the second one is because they're dealing with everything that Trump is putting us through,
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dealing with all that in Iran.
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Yeah.
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So they've not had enough time to figure out what they can do for our country.
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The Health Foundation found those in the wealthiest 10% of areas
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can expect 20 more years of good health than those in the poorest.
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More than half of Lee is in the top 20% of most deprived areas in the UK.
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Time may be running out for the Prime Minister.
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So much of it has already been wasted in British politics.
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We've ended up in Downing Street in Lee.
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The Black Door has seen better days and nobody is battling to live here.
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But if you count up the days of leadership challenges,
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snap elections, six prime ministers swapping in and out of the more famous Downing Street,
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over the last decade we have actually lost more than a year just in contests for number 10.
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The centre ground of politics is crumbling through inaction.
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People want leadership, direction, and their shift from traditional parties isn't just punishment.
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It's a cry for help.
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Jason Farrell, Sky News.

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