 The poll suggests you've just got to punish MPs for when they do bad things. What about that? Well, one of the main forces that's supposed to hold our politicians to account is our press and our media. And there are huge problems with our press and our media. And if I may say so, I'm very, very grateful for being invited here, but this show is the perfect example of it. We're having a discussion about trust in politics, where some of the main panellists have distinguished themselves in their careers through dishonesty. Oh, my goodness. OK. And... Who are we looking at here? It's like inviting Hannibal Lecter to lecture you on vegetarianism. Are you thinking of people...? Who are we thinking of? I'm kidding, to be blunt. OK, so you don't like politicians because you think they don't tell truths? No, but I'm saying that our political media has been snoozing on the job as well. The fact that we can have, you know, all the greatest respect to you, Chikaroman, about you not being called out for the discrepancy in your position of the country should think again on Brexit, but the people of Stretton can't think again on whether or not they want you as an MP, ludicrous. We've got... Oh, God, listen, let me have Chikaroman's response. In fairness to Jeremy, he actually put that point to me and I answered the question. And also, the other thing is... I'm saying you didn't answer that question. I did answer the question. And also, let's also be honest about your position, which is not an independent journalist. You are campaigning Jeremy Corbyn supporting Jonas, so you're not going to like me very much, are you? Listen, I throw my hands up and I say I am partisan, I am left-wing, those are my values. I'm honest about it. But the fact that we can also get a lecture on honesty from Alistair Campbell, when I look at him, the three letters that come to my mind are WMD. Have we all forgotten that? He has left the building, so I can't ask him to come back. We don't, we don't. It's the hypocrisy that we go for. To be honest with you, four days a week, I disagree with the Prime Minister. It's just the way it is, we have a stand-up row and then the other three days we sort it out. The political journalists just report the four days. They say, oh, this relationship's in chaos. Except if they said that all the time, here's the funny thing. It wouldn't be news any longer. It's the fact that they're supposed to be robotically brilliant friends all the time. This is actually where I disagree with both of you. I think that we grossly overstate the adversarial relationship between the pundit class and politicians because the big lie here is that we're set up to have a big old bun fight. We all disagree, we're having a go at each other. In the green room, everyone is trilling and air kissing and how are yous because they're on the same speaker's circus. They all go to the same cocktail parties and fundamentally, they represent the same... What about you? You're part of it too. You're part of the problem. There's a reason for that. Hang on, hang on. I've got to go back to one of the MPs.