'Favours for chums', and the football debacle

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has accused the prime minister of sleaze after allegations that friends can text him seeking special treatment. Is lobbying worse today? Plus, we discuss the collapse of the plan by big football clubs to form a European Super League, and whether politicians should get more involved in the regulation of the game. Presented by George Parker, with Robert Shrimsley, Helen Thomas, Murad Ahmed and special guest Steve Parish, chair of Crystal Palace Football Club. Produced by Anna Dedhar and Josh de la Mare. The sound engineer was Breen Turner. Review clips: Parliament TV, News pool, Arsenal press officeRead more on FT.com:-Boris Johnson is not the man to clean up British public life-Dyson texts seem low-level sleaze but still raise lobbying questions-Closing the ‘revolving door’ would weaken government further-Dyson moves residency back to UK as text dispute refuses to die down-‘It was utter chaos’: the inside story of football’s Super League own goal-Super League would break football’s essential promise-Super League: European politicians give US sports model a good kicking Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Om Podcasten

The Financial Times takes you into the corridors of power to unwrap, analyse and debate British politics with a regular lineup of FT correspondents and informed commentators. New episodes available every Friday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.