BOX SET: 6 Minute English - 'Politics' English mega-class! 30 minutes of new vocabulary!

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2024-03-31 ・ BBC Learning English


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BOX SET: 6 Minute English - 'Politics' English mega-class! 30 minutes of new vocabulary!

143,433 views ・ 2024-03-31

BBC Learning English


Fare doppio clic sui sottotitoli in inglese per riprodurre il video. I sottotitoli tradotti sono tradotti automaticamente.

00:00
6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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Hello. This is 6 Minute English. I'm Neil.
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And I'm Sam.
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Sam, do you remember the first time you voted?
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Hmm, no, I don't, but I remember being very keen to do it.
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It would have been the first election after my 18th birthday.
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So, over the many, many, many years since then -
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Ah, not so much with the ' manys', if you don't mind, Neil!
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OK, in the very, very few years since then -
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Yeah, that's more like it!
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In the years since then, have your political views changed very much?
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I think my political views are a lot better informed now.
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I think the decisions I make
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are based on a better understanding of the political situation,
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but I still generally agree with the same things I did when I was younger, I think.
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There is a belief that, as we get older,
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we become more right-wing in our political views and opinions.
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Is this true and if so, why?
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We'll be finding out a little bit more about this, but first, a question.
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What was the first UK general election in which 18-year-olds could vote?
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Was it a) 1929? b) 1950? Or c) 1970?
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So, what do you reckon then Sam?
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Well, they were all before my time.
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I'm going to say 1950 — that sounds about right.
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It was the decade in which teenagers were invented, after all!
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OK. Well, I will reveal the answer later in the programme.
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James Tilley is a professor of politics at the University of Oxford.
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He appeared recently on BBC Radio 4's programme Analysis
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and was asked why, if it is true, do we become more right-wing as we get older?
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What does he think?
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The question whether age affects our political views is a tricky one.
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I think probably the most plausible explanation
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is that people just generally become a bit more resistant to change as they get older
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and I think also that they tend to perhaps become less idealistic.
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So, what reasons does he give?
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Well, he talks about what he thinks are the most plausible explanations.
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'Plausible' is an adjective
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which means something is 'believable, it's reasonable and it makes sense'.
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And what are the plausible explanations?
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Well, he says that generally, as we get older,
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we like to have more stability in our lives, we don't like change,
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in fact, we're 'resistant' to change.
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That means we're 'against' change.
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When we are younger, we might like the idea of revolution,
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we might be very 'idealistic'.
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This means, for example, we might think
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that 'we can and should change the world to make things better'.
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This would cause big changes in the world which, when we are older
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and more settled in our lives, do not seem like such a good idea.
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Let's listen again.
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The question whether age affects our political views is a tricky one.
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I think probably the most plausible explanation
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is that people just generally become a bit more resistant to change as they get older
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and I think also that they tend to perhaps become less idealistic.
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Professor Tilley goes on to explain more about why being resistant to change
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might lead people to support more right-wing policies.
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So, if parties on the right represent a platform
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which is perhaps more favourable to the status quo,
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it's perhaps more about pragmatism than it is about idealism,
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then that might be more attractive to older people than younger people.
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So, what is seen as the appeal of moving to the right?
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Political parties have a particular 'set of policies'.
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This is sometimes known as their 'platform'.
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Professor Tilley says that if their platforms support the status quo,
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they might be more attractive to older people.
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'The status quo' is a Latin phrase we use in English
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to refer to 'the situation as it is now' — that is, 'one that is not going to change'.
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Traditionally, it's parties of the centre right
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that seem to be more supportive of the status quo.
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So, as we get older, he says our political views are less about 'idealism'
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and more about 'pragmatism'.
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'Pragmatism' is 'being practical and realistic
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about what can be achieved and how it can be achieved'.
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But of course this doesn't apply to everyone
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and just because people seem to move more to the right as they get older
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doesn't mean that they completely change their politics.
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Let's hear Professor Tilley again.
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So, if parties on the right represent a platform
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which is perhaps more favourable to the status quo,
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it's perhaps more about 'pragmatism' than it is about 'idealism',
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then that might be more attractive to older people than younger people.
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Right, let's get the answer to our question.
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What was the first UK general election in which 18-year-olds could vote?
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Was it a) 1929? b) 1950? Or c) 1970?
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Sam, what did you say?
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I thought it was 1950.
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Well, you're wrong, I'm afraid. The correct answer is 1970.
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18-year-olds have been allowed to vote in the UK since 1969
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and the first general election after then was in 1970.
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So, a bit later than you thought, Sam,
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but congratulations to anyone who did get that right.
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OK, let's remind ourselves of our vocabulary.
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Yes, first we had 'plausible',
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an adjective that means 'believable' or 'possible'.
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Being 'resistant' to something
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means you are 'against it and don't want it to happen'.
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If you are 'idealistic',
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you have 'a clear and simple moral view of how things should be'.
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This contrasts with one of our other words, 'pragmatism'.
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This noun is 'the idea of being realistic and practical about what can be achieved'.
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A 'platform' can describe
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'the policies and ideas of a political party or politician'.
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And 'the status quo' is 'the unchanging situation as it is now'.
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OK, thank you, Sam. That's all from us in this programme.
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Do join us again and, if you can't wait, you can find lots more
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BBC Learning English online, on social media and on our app.
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— Goodbye. — Bye.
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6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice.
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And I'm Neil.
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The BBC's 100 Women season is back this week.
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It will explore women's stories of defiance
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and it will include stories of women who inspired us
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and that's what we're going to talk about today.
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And which woman has inspired you, Alice?
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Oh, well, I have many female 'role models'
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and this means 'people looked to by others as examples to be followed'.
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But I must say I have a great admiration for the 'suffragettes'.
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Ah, 'the women who fought for the right to vote in the UK'.
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Yes, I think they were very brave.
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Yes, so do I. Let's see how much you know about it, Neil.
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This is today's quiz question for you.
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Which was the first country to give all women
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the right to vote in public elections?
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Was it a) Finland? b) New Zealand? Or c) the United States?
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Hmm, I'm going to say a) Finland.
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Well, we'll see if you were right or not later on in the show.
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Here in Britain, women's groups 'lobbied' —
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or 'tried to persuade' — Parliament for decades
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before eventually winning the right for all women to vote in 1928.
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So, why did it take so long?
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Because Parliament didn't see votes for women as a priority.
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Then, 30% of men still didn't have the vote either
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and politicians felt they needed to address this
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before thinking about 'the woman question', as it was known.
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The thing is, without the power to vote, it's hard to influence public policy.
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Politicians are worried about losing popularity with the 'electorate' —
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that's 'the people who are allowed to vote'.
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Women had to find a voice and the suffragette movement gave them a voice.
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There were several activists in this movement,
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but perhaps the most famous was Emmeline Pankhurst.
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Emmeline Pankhurst campaigned fearlessly for women's rights for all women —
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aristocratic ladies, factory workers, conservatives, socialists.
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Let's listen to Julia Bush, author of Women Against The Vote,
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talking more about this suffragette leader.
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Well, she was a very charismatic leader,
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one of the great women of the 19th century,
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and she had a deep compassion for the plight of women
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and in particular she was fired
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by the inequalities that women experienced at that time.
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It wasn't just about the parliamentary vote, the suffragette movement,
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it was, she in particular wanted wider reforms for women,
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an improvement in women's status and position.
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Author Julia Bush. She talks about the plight of women.
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'Plight' means 'a bad situation'.
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Women did have a really hard time back then, especially working-class women,
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and they had little hope of improving their lives
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because they had no public voice.
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So, that's what Julia Bush means when she says Mrs Pankhurst wanted wider reforms —
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access to better schools for women,
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to university, to better paid jobs and professional careers.
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And it was a big challenge to be heard.
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June Purvis, Emeritus Professor of Women's and Gender History
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at the University of Portsmouth, here in the UK,
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talks about how the suffragettes started to 'raise their profile' —
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or 'get noticed' — with deeds, not words.
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You have women interrupting theatre plays,
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getting thrown out of church services for interrupting,
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getting thrown out of Lyons' Corner House for standing up on chairs
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and having little impromptu meetings.
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But militancy also takes on other forms.
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It takes on forms of direct action, which start with large demonstrations
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when women will not be turned back by the police
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and then it moves on in, in other forms as well to criminal damage.
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So, women started to interrupt public events to talk about their right to vote.
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An 'impromptu' meeting is one that 'hasn't been planned'.
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Lyons' Corner House was a chain of teashops popular at the time.
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You can imagine that women suddenly standing up on chairs
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and addressing the public would have been quite shocking in those days!
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Indeed! The suffragettes started small with teashop talks,
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but they began to take more 'militant' — or 'aggressive' — direct action.
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And 'direct action' means 'using demonstrations, strikes'.
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The suffragettes chained themselves to railings, broke shop windows.
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It was quite a struggle,
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and there was no way of delaying the decision to give women the right to vote.
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In 1914, war broke out in Europe
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and, with the men away fighting, many women ran their homes,
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cared for children and relatives, managed money, and often had a job as well.
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So, when the war ended in 1918,
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women had proved how capable they were in so many ways.
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To deny them the right to vote now seemed ridiculous.
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Although it took another ten years
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before all women were given the vote on equal terms to men.
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But come on, Alice, it must be time to hear the answer to today's quiz question.
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I asked which was the first country
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to give all women the right to vote in public elections?
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Was it a) Finland? b) New Zealand? Or c) the United States?
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And I said Finland.
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Mm, well, no, sorry, Neil. It was b) New Zealand.
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In 1893, New Zealand became the first country
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to give all adult women the right to vote in national elections.
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Now, shall we remind ourselves of the words we learned today?
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Yes. They were 'role models',
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'suffragettes',
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'lobbied',
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'electorate', 'plight',
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'raised their profile',
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'impromptu',
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'militant',
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'direct action'.
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That's the end of today's 6 Minute English
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and we would like to invite you to follow the special programmes and events
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on the 100 Women season, which will be on till December the 9th.
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It's produced and created by the BBC's 29 language services.
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Check the BBC website in your language
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and you can also join the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag 100women.
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Enjoy the programmes.
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— Goodbye! — Bye!
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6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Rob.
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And I'm Neil, hello.
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Hello, Neil! Today, we're talking about voting.
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Now, I'm sure it's something you've done, Neil?
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Of course and earlier this year we had a general election in the UK where I voted
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and I'd feel guilty if I didn't exercise my right to vote.
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Now a 'right' in this case means somebody's 'legal claim' to vote.
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In a 'general election', we 'vote for a government that runs the whole country',
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but we also have local and European elections too sometimes.
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Yes, but voting in the UK is 'optional', so you 'don't have to do it',
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whereas in some countries voting is compulsory —
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and 'compulsory' means something that you 'have to do'.
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So, if you were in Australia,
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where the government passed a law that made voting compulsory,
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you would have had to pay a fine of $20 for not voting.
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And that's because the Australian government
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believes that voting is a duty and not just a right.
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A 'duty' means 'something you have a responsibility to do'.
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And it's your duty, Rob, to ask me today's quiz question!
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Yes, sir! OK, so can you tell me what is a constituency?
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Is it a) the people who live in and vote in a particular area?
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b) the politicians who make and change the laws of a country?
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Or c) a town or district that has its own government?
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Well, I'm no expert on politics, but I'm going to go for c),
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that's a town or district that has its own government.
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OK. Well, we'll find out later on in the show whether you're right or wrong.
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Now it's time to hear what a truly young person has to say about compulsory voting.
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— Oh, right, unlike me you mean? — Mm-hm.
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Well, here's Michael Yip, who is a student at Warwick University
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and therefore much younger than me.
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A lot of the people that I speak to just say "I don't care"
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or "I don't really know what's going on" and in this way...
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Another reason why I'm quite cautious about this is because it could sort of
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engender this sort of slapdash attitude towards politics
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where, you know, it's sort of seen as, you know,
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being conscripted for national service.
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You just want to get it over and done with.
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So, Michael says he is cautious about the idea of introducing compulsory voting.
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So, why is that, Neil?
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He thinks forcing young people to vote will 'engender' — or 'give rise to' —
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a slapdash attitude.
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Now, what does 'slapdash' mean, Rob?
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Mm, it's a good word, isn't it? It means 'doing something quickly and carelessly'.
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14:50
Oh, you'd never do that, would you, Rob?
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Now, Michael compares compulsory voting to national service.
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'National service' is 'compulsory government service'
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that usually means military service and is also known as 'conscription'.
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15:05
So when it's something you haven't chosen to do,
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15:08
or which you actively don't want to do —
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it's a case of getting it 'over and done with'.
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15:13
And that means
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15:14
'finishing something difficult or unpleasant as quickly as possible'.
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15:18
Mm, young people might just 'pick a political party out of a hat' —
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15:22
which means to 'choose randomly' — rather than making an informed choice.
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15:27
So, some people think that politicians need to improve political education.
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15:33
Now, let's listen to broadcaster and writer Rick Edwards talking about this.
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If you said to politicians,
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"Right, 3.3 million first-time voters are definitely going to vote",
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then they will have to speak to them
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and they will have to make an effort to go to where they are
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15:48
and I think that's the change that it would create.
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15:51
So, compulsory voting would mean a responsibility for the politicians too.
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15:56
That's right. They need to engage and educate young people.
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16:00
Otherwise, reluctant voters may deliberately 'spoil',
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16:03
or 'waste', their votes.
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16:05
The government could also include a 'none of the above' option on the ballot paper.
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16:10
Can you explain a bit more about that, Rob?
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16:12
Well, it means you 'tick this option if you don't want to vote
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16:16
'for any of the listed political parties'.
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16:18
An interesting idea.
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16:20
Well, my option for now is to get the answer to the quiz question.
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16:24
OK, well, I asked what is a constituency?
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16:28
Is it a) the people who live in and vote in a particular area?
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16:32
b) the politicians who make and change the laws of a country?
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16:35
Or c) a town or district that has its own government?
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And I said c) a town or district that has its own government.
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16:43
Ah, well, you ticked the wrong box, Neil.
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16:46
The answer is a) the people who live in and vote in a particular area.
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16:51
Now, did you know the UK is currently divided into 650 areas,
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16:56
called Parliamentary constituencies,
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16:58
each of which is represented by one MP in the House of Commons?
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17:03
And each constituency can have a different area.
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The largest is Ross, Skye and Lochaber in Scotland
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measuring approximately 12,000 square kilometres.
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17:14
The smallest constituency is Islington North in London,
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17:17
measuring a little over seven square kilometres.
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17:22
Now, can we hear today's words again please, Neil?
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17:24
OK. We heard 'right',
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17:29
'general election',
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17:33
'compulsory',
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17:35
'duty',
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17:38
'engender',
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17:41
'slapdash',
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17:44
'national service',
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17:47
'conscription',
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17:49
'over and done with',
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17:52
'pick a political party out of a hat',
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17:57
'spoil'.
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18:00
Splendid! Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English.
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I hope it got your vote!
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You can hear more programmes at BBC Learning English.com.
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18:09
Please join us again soon.
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18:10
— Bye-bye. — Goodbye.
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18:12
6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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18:17
Hello. This is 6 Minute English, I'm Sam.
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18:20
And I'm Georgina.
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How do you do feel about politics, Georgina?
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18:24
Well, there's a lot around at the moment!
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18:26
Yes, indeed!
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18:28
One thing I would like to see in politics, particularly British politics,
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is more women in Parliament.
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18:33
About 34% of our MPs are women,
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18:36
which is the highest it's ever been, but it's still not close to 50%.
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18:42
In order to be elected though, you first have to stand, don't you?
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18:46
Yes, we use the verb 'stand' when you are 'a candidate someone can vote for'.
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18:51
Women in politics is our topic today.
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18:54
Before we get into it, today's question.
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Which country has the highest percentage of women in its parliament?
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Is it a) Rwanda? b) Sweden? Or c) New Zealand?
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What do you think, Georgina?
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Hmm, I'm not sure.
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I know New Zealand was one of the first countries to allow women to vote
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19:16
and they currently have a female prime minister,
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but I think it's actually an African country, so I'm going to say Rwanda.
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OK. We'll see if you're correct at the end of the programme.
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19:28
There are a number of projects in the UK at the moment,
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19:31
trying to get more women interested in standing for Parliament.
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19:35
One of these is the campaign Sign Up To Stand,
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19:38
from an organisation called 50:50 Parliament.
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19:43
Lucrece Grehoua is someone who has taken up that challenge
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19:46
and is hoping to stand in upcoming elections.
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She was a guest on the BBC radio programme, Woman's Hour.
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19:53
She wasn't always interested in politics, though. How does she describe it?
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19:59
I didn't really see myself in the Houses of Parliament.
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20:02
When we see it on TV, it looks extremely boring, politics looks boring,
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20:06
especially as a young person,
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20:08
and so when I saw that 50:50 Parliament were including women
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20:11
and including young women and including a diverse range of young women,
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20:14
I thought, "Wow, this is really for me and it can be for me".
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20:18
So, I decided to sign up to stand and, ever since I've just been excited
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20:22
at the prospect of me standing for Parliament.
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20:26
So, what was her original feeling about politics?
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20:29
Boring! She thought it was boring, particularly as a young person.
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20:34
In fact, she couldn't 'see herself' as a politician.
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20:37
She couldn't 'imagine herself' doing it.
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20:39
She says that she's now excited at the prospect of standing.
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20:43
What does she mean by that?
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The 'prospect of' something is the 'possibility of' something.
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20:49
So, before, she thought it was boring,
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20:52
now she's excited at the possibility that she could be a Member of Parliament.
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20:57
So, what was it that made her change her mind
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21:00
and think that politics wasn't so boring after all?
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21:03
Here's Lucrece Grehoua again.
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21:07
I think everybody has a politician within them,
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21:09
because we all get angry about something,
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21:12
but unfortunately when we see it, it's all jargon, um, it's not very
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21:17
It's not words that we can understand as, um
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21:20
Even just as a working-class person who hasn't, you know, been to a private school
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21:24
and who's come from a disadvantaged background
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21:27
and so I've realised, you know, politics is for absolutely everybody,
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21:30
it's just the way that you speak about it that has to be tailored to everyone.
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21:35
One of the things she didn't like about politics was the jargon.
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21:39
Well, no-one likes jargon, do they?
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21:41
'Jargon' is 'the very specific language and vocabulary
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21:44
'relating to a particular profession'.
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21:47
Inside the profession, people know what it means,
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21:50
but from outside it can seem very complicated and confusing.
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21:55
Lucrece said she came from a 'disadvantaged background'.
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21:58
This means that when she was growing up,
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22:00
her family 'didn't have very much money'
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22:02
and 'that made life and study very difficult'.
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22:05
But even though, or maybe because, she came from a disadvantaged background
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22:10
she has become interested in politics
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22:12
and thinks that it can be something for everyone,
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22:14
but rather than use jargon you have to tailor the way you speak for everyone.
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22:20
To 'tailor' something is to 'make it fit',
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22:22
in the same way that a tailor makes clothes fit,
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22:25
you can tailor your language to make it easy for everyone to understand
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22:29
and one way to do that is to cut out the jargon!
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22:33
That's just about all we have time for today,
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22:35
but before we review the vocabulary,
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22:38
it's time to get the answer to today's quiz question.
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22:41
Which country has the highest percentage of women in its parliament?
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22:45
Is it a) Rwanda? b) Sweden? Or c) New Zealand?
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22:50
Georgina, what did you say?
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I made an educated guess of Rwanda.
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22:55
An educated guess and a correct guess. Well done.
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22:58
And well done to everyone else who got that right too!
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23:01
According to 2019 figures, Rwanda's parliament has over 60% women MPs.
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23:07
Go Rwanda!
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23:09
OK, let's remind ourselves of today's vocabulary.
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23:12
Of course.
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23:13
To 'stand' is the verb we use when someone is 'a candidate in an election' —
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23:17
when someone 'stands' for election, you can vote for them.
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23:20
If you can 'see yourself' as something,
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23:22
it means that you can 'imagine yourself' doing that thing.
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23:26
The 'prospect of' something is the 'possibility of' something,
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23:29
so, for example, the prospect of becoming an MP is something that excites Lucrece.
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23:35
Something that we all hate, except when we use it ourselves, is 'jargon' —
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23:40
'words and language that are very specific to a particular job'
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23:43
and which are difficult for people outside that profession to understand.
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23:48
People who 'grow up without enough money and without access to education'
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23:53
can be said to come from a 'disadvantaged background'.
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23:56
And finally, to 'tailor' something
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23:58
is to 'change it to make it suitable for a particular purpose'.
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24:02
So, for example, if you want to make politics accessible for more people,
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24:07
you have to tailor your language and cut out the jargon.
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24:09
Indeed.
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24:11
Well, it's time for us to go now, but do join us again soon. Bye for now.
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24:15
Bye.
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24:16
6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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24:21
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Rob.
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4640
24:26
And I'm Sam.
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24:27
When it comes to US presidential elections,
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24:30
some are more dramatic than others.
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24:33
But few elections have been as controversial as this November's contest
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24:37
between current President Trump and his Democratic rival, Joe Biden.
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24:42
In America, where many votes are cast digitally,
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24:44
there is a risk of cyber-attacks on election day
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24:47
and with so much depending on the result, US election officials are worried.
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24:52
In this programme, we'll be hearing about plans to prevent election cyber-attacks
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24:56
which involve election officials working with a very unusual group of people —
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25:02
volunteer hackers.
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25:04
'Volunteers' are 'people who work willingly, without being paid'.
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25:08
And 'hackers' are 'people who break into computer systems without permission
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25:13
in order to find information or do something illegal'.
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25:16
But cyber-attacks from hackers
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25:18
are not the only threat to fair and democratic elections.
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25:22
In 2000, the presidential race between Al Gore and George W Bush
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5000
25:27
ended in recounts and disputes over missing votes.
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25:31
George Bush became the first modern president to win the election,
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25:35
despite gaining fewer popular votes than his opponent — but how many fewer?
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25:40
That's our quiz question —
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25:42
how many fewer votes did Bush win than Gore
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25:45
in the 2000 American presidential election?
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25:48
Was it a) half a million votes? b) a million votes?
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25:52
Or c) two million votes?
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25:55
I'll say b) a million votes.
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25:57
OK, we'll find out later.
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26:00
Now, the project Sam mentioned, where official administrators
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26:03
team up with expert volunteers to keep the election secure,
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26:07
is called The Election Cyber Surge.
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26:10
The BBC World Service programme, Digital Planet,
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26:13
met up with project organiser Maya Worman
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26:16
to discuss the importance of keeping the election free from interference.
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26:22
Any attempt to manipulate or interfere with election infrastructures —
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26:26
the machines or the information sets
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26:28
that determine who is eligible to vote and where — undermines the right to vote.
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26:32
And it puts burdens on voters and it impacts public confidence
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26:36
and, you know, high-profile elections, especially like the one coming up,
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26:39
heighten the types of risks that we're talking about.
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26:43
You can only vote in an election if you are 'eligible' —
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26:46
'qualified by having the necessary requirements' —
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26:49
for example being a US citizen who's aged 18 or over.
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26:53
It's up to each of the 8,000 local jurisdictions around the United States
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4840
26:58
to keep their area free from cyber-attacks and misinformation,
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4560
27:03
risks which have increased because the coming election is so 'high-profile' —
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27:08
'attracting a lot of attention and interest from newspapers and the public'.
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27:12
The Cyber Surge project to put expert volunteers
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27:16
in touch with local officials aims to prevent these risks.
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27:20
It covers everything from making sure administrators
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27:23
are using the latest anti-virus software
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27:26
to more serious threats from troublemakers.
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27:29
Now, that's got me thinking actually, Rob.
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27:32
Suppose I'm a troublemaker who wants to influence the election result,
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27:36
so I sign up as a volunteer and gain access to all kinds of information.
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27:41
How do we know that the volunteers who sign up are trustworthy?
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27:45
That's a good question, Sam,
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27:46
and one that BBC World Service programme Digital Planet put to Maya Worman.
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27:53
The expectation is not that the volunteer
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27:55
will have the keys to the castle, by any means,
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27:57
more that they will have an open dialogue with an election administrator
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28:01
who wants to know more,
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28:02
to explore cybersecurity enhancements in general or specifically.
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28:07
Volunteers are carefully selected
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28:09
according to their experience and skills in 'cybersecurity' —
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28:13
'measures that help organisations and countries
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28:16
keep their computer information safe
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28:18
against crimes and attacks carried out through the internet'.
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28:22
Volunteers share their expert advice by talking with election officials.
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28:27
They won't be given access to sensitive information,
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28:30
so they won't have 'the keys to the castle' —
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28:33
an idiom meaning 'to possess information or knowledge
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2800
28:36
which gives the possessor access to power'.
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28:38
All of which means that the 2020 election result
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28:41
will, hopefully, be accepted by everyone.
504
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28:45
Unlike the situation twenty years ago.
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28:47
Ah, you mean our quiz question, Rob, about the 2000 US presidential election
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28:52
which George W Bush won, despite securing fewer votes than his opponent.
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28:57
I asked you how many fewer votes Bush won than Al Gore that year.
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29:01
And I said b) a million votes.
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29:04
Mm, but, in fact, it was even closer — just a) half a million votes in Florida.
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29:10
Mm.
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29:11
In this programme, we've been looking ahead to the US presidential elections
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29:15
and its 'cybersecurity' —
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29:17
'measures taken to protect countries and their computer information
514
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29:21
against online crimes and attacks'.
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29:24
The Cyber Surge project aims to put officials in touch with 'volunteers' —
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4920
29:29
'people who work for free', who also happen to be expert 'hackers' —
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29:33
'people who break into computer systems without permission'.
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29:37
But the idea isn't to commit election crime,
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2800
29:40
rather to prevent it by making sure
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29:42
only those who are 'eligible', or 'qualified', to vote, do so.
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29:48
The project was set up because the November 2020 election
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3800
29:52
has become so 'high-profile' —
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29:54
'attracting a lot of attention and interest from the public and the media'.
524
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4560
29:59
And of course the volunteers themselves
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30:00
are carefully chosen to be impartial experts who give advice
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30:04
without holding 'the keys to the castle' —
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30:08
an idiom about 'possessing information which gives access to power'.
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30:12
What's certain is that the world will be watching this election,
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30:15
so if you're eligible, remember to vote.
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30:19
And remember to join us again soon. Bye for now!
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Bye-bye!
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6 Minute English.
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From BBC Learning English.
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