at least six mountaineers were killed and eight others injured when parts of a glacier collapsed, sending snow, ice and rock cascading down the slopes of marmolada. now on bbc news, political thinking with nick robinson. hello and welcome to political thinking. how do we live with a resurgent russia? do we need to confront or cooperate with china? can the uk repair its relations with the eu post brexit? foreign policy matters again. my guest on political thinking this week hopes to be our next foreign secretary, the first labour foreign secretary for many, many years. it s a dramatic change for david lammy, who for years used his powerful voice in the back benches to argue for justice for the people in his constituency in his home of tottenham in north london. david lammy, welcome to political thinking. thank you, nice to be back. when you were last on this programme, you talked to me about how pleased you were to be on the backbenches. i m very satisfied, you said. i feel
when you were last on this programme, you talked to me about how pleased you were to be on the backbenches. i m very satisfied, you said. i feel free, i feel liberated. i mean, at the time, you were making those passionate speeches that you did on grenfell, on windrush and all the rest of it, does that now mean you feel sort of caged? not quite. i loved being on the backbenches, you know, i really did. i loved being in government, to the extent that you actually did something. i suppose i am now in the third act. i don t know how many acts there are going to be. but what would i say this time? i have been in parliament 22 years, i m 50 in a couple of weeks time. so i suppose i ve got to come to terms with the sort of seniority in parliament, and, you know, parliament is generous if you have been there a long time, this is notjust your own party, it is the opposition as well. parliament quite likes specialisms and i ve, you know, there are some issues that i feel i have retur
now on bbc news. nick robinson in conversation with people who influence our political thinking about what has shaped theirs. hello and welcome to political thinking. how do we live with a resurgent russia? do we need to confront or cooperate with china? can the uk repair its relations with the eu post brexit? foreign policy matters again. my guest on political thinking this week hopes to be our next foreign secretary, the first labour foreign secretary for many, many years. it s a dramatic change for david lammy, who for years used his powerful voice in the back benches to argue forjustice for the people in his constituency in his home of tottenham in north london. david lammy, welcome to political thinking. thank you, nice to be back. when you were last on this programme, you talked to me about how pleased you were to be on the backbenches. i m very satisfied, you said. i feel free, i feel liberated. i mean, at the time, you were making those passionate speeches that you di
you told the extraordinary story of being a boy from tottenham whose world was a couple of kind of n postcodes in north london, suddenly finding yourself at a choral school, as a choral scholar in peterborough, taking the train for the first time. are you saying, in a sense, what civic national service could do is take people out of their environments and introduce them to very different people and very different places? absolutely. now, because i believe in and encounter culture. i grew up poor, black, literally never went much beyond the n15 postcode in tottenham, and it was only because i went to choral school in peterborough that i came across middle england. i was exposed to a different life. i didn t realise at the time that if i had just gone three miles up the road to enfield, it would it wouldn t have been that different, but i got on a city train, i went for voice trials, it was
could do is take people out of their environments and introduce them to very different people and very different places? absolutely. now, because i believe in an encounter culture. i grew up poor, black, literally never went much beyond the n15 postcode in tottenham, and it was only because i went to choral school in peterborough that i came across middle england. i was exposed to a different life. i didn t realise at the time that if i had just gone three miles up the road to enfield, it would it wouldn t have been that different, but i got on a city train, i went for voice trials, it was the era of aled jones, i became a chorister. and i m. i m hugely struck that you can be growing up in cleethorpes and if you don t go to university,