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Tory minister's broadband shows him up

by on31 August 2022


It just had enough 

A UK Tory minister's broadband appeared to have had enough of him telling the world how superior British broadband was and showed the world how pants it really was -- live.

Broadband minister Matt Warman was wittering on about how wonderful the broadband connections were in the UK thanks to his government spending a fortune providing "gigabit-capable broadband."

He had just got to the point where he was talking about the “huge progress” in rolling out hyper-fast, gigabit-capable broadband across the UK when his own broadband connection packed in.

The unfortunately timed technical hitch prompted LBC’s Nick Ferrari to remark: “This is handy as you’re the broadband minister. You can’t hear me, can you? That is sensational and the picture’s frozen.

“So there we go, we’ve got the Government banging on about however many billion pounds’ worth it is of … gigabit and he can’t take the question.

“You can’t hear me but I’ll be polite, Matt Warman, minister for digital, culture, media and sport, talking about the progress of broadband and the line collapses, but thank you for your time.”

Earlier in the exchange, Warman said the proportion of people accessing gigabit-capable broadband has risen from nine to 70 per cent in the last three years.

He said: “That is huge progress at a pace that was way above what we were hoping for when we set those targets in 2019, so really good news, but of course, there are still 30 per cent of people that we are working as fast as we possibly can to get to – and that pace shows that we’re going to get to them as quickly as we possibly can.”

Asked if the whole of the UK was connected, he replied: “Well, in some form, all bar the most remote properties are connected to broadband of some sort and satellite can mop up the rest, but there is a lot of work to do.

“I’m not pretending anything else, but as I say, the pace that’s got us to where we are today is a huge sign of intent and the things that are to come… The vast majority of the … progress that we’re announcing today is coming from the private sector.”

 

Last modified on 31 August 2022
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