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Season 2003

Season 2012

  • S2012E01 27th January 2012

    • January 27, 2012
    • BBC Two

    Presented by Andrew Neil with guests Daniel Finkelstein of the Times and Laurie Penny of the New Statesman.

  • S2012E02 24th February 2012

    • February 24, 2012
    • BBC Two

    Presenter Andrew Neil is joined in the studio by Nick Watt of the Guardian and Peter Oborne of the Daily Telegraph. Bob Stewart MP and Dr Mousab Azzawi of the Syrian Network for Human Rights discuss Syria; Conservative MPs Matthew Hancock and Peter Bone talk about the Conservative 'away-day'; and Adrian Ramsay, Deputy Leader of the Green Party, talks live from their spring conference in Liverpool.

  • S2012E03 6th March 2012

    • March 6, 2012
    • BBC Two

    Jo Coburn with the latest political news, interviews and debate. Alain de Botton discusses whether Britain is still a Christian country and the Conservative party's Mark Pritchard explains why he resigned as deputy chairman of the Conservative Party International Office.

Season 2014

  • S2014E01 2014-10-03

    • October 3, 2014
    • BBC Two

    With Owen Jones

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Death of Margaret Thatcher

    • April 10, 2013
    • BBC Two

    Andrew Neil is joined by Ken Livingstone, former leader of the Greater London Council, and former health minister Edwina Currie for a special Daily Politics programme following the death of Baroness Thatcher.

  • SPECIAL 0x2 The Budget - 2010

    • June 22, 2010
    • BBC Two

    The June 2010 United Kingdom Budget was delivered by George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, to the House of Commons in his budget speech that commenced at about 12.30 p.m on Tuesday 22 June 2010 (just 90 days after the previous budget speech).[1] It was the first budget of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition formed after the general election of May 2010. The government dubbed it an "emergency budget", and stated that its purpose was to reduce the national debt accumulated under the Labour government. In his budget speech Osborne quoted data and forecasts made by the independent Office for Budget Responsibility that was formed by the coalition soon after they took up office.[2] The preceding budget of the Labour Party in March was only partly enacted due to the calling of the election.