Sandalwood & Sage: What We're Arguing About This Week

Have Labour's First Two Budgets Been Good For Britain

15 min · 20. apr. 2026
episode Have Labour's First Two Budgets Been Good For Britain cover

Beskrivelse

Is Labour building a sustainable future or just managing its own decline? In this week’s episode of "Sandalwood and Sage: What we are Arguing About This Week", we tackle the big question: Have the Labour Government’s first two budgets actually been good for Britain? Sage argues that Chancellor Rachel Reeves has masterfully pulled the UK back from the brink of a fiscal crisis. By creating over £20 billion in fiscal headroom and committing to a £100 billion public capital programme, Labour is fixing the foundations, saving crumbling public services, and lifting 450,000 children out of poverty. Sandalwood isn't buying it. Highlighting how the UK's income per head is falling behind global peers like Germany and Taiwan, Sandalwood warns that the government is merely redistributing a shrinking economic pie. With the tax burden heading toward a post-war high and business investment stalling, Sandalwood asks a critical question: Are these budgets pouring concrete over the engine room of private enterprise? Hit play to join this compelling clash between state intervention and free-market dynamism!

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Alle episoder

9 episoder

episode Who Are The Greatest Sprinters cover

Who Are The Greatest Sprinters

With an eye on the upcoming European Athletics Championships in Birmingham, Sandalwood and Sage square off to settle the ultimate track and field question: Who are the Greatest Sprinters of all time? Evaluating athletes from different eras on a level playing field—accounting for changing sports science, equipment, and tracks—the debaters start their timeline in 1960. While both agree on the towering presence of Usain Bolt, the male frontrunner, the debate ignites over how to define "greatness." The core conflict hinges on a fascinating philosophical divide: Is the GOAT defined by a career of long-term championship dominance and consistency, or is it simply the person who achieved the fastest, most untouchable terminal velocity in human history? Sandalwood argues that true greatness requires a complete story of global domination over multiple Olympic cycles against the fastest fields, completely free of asterisks or doubts. Sage counters by arguing that in a pure footrace, the stopwatch is the final arbiter of truth, and athletes who fundamentally redefine the physical limits of the sport must be recognized.

I går13 min
episode Who Are The 800 metres GOATs cover

Who Are The 800 metres GOATs

With an eye on the upcoming European Athletics Championships in August 2026, co-hosts Sandalwood and Sage kick off their new GOAT debate series by tackling one of track and field’s ultimate physiological tests: the 800 meters. Acknowledging that comparing athletes across eras is highly subjective due to revolutions in training, tracks, and sports science, the hosts analyze the division between absolute peak dominance and career longevity. Sandalwood advocates for a structured, era-by-era approach to eliminate recency bias, heavily weighting sustained excellence, win streaks, and career longevity over single Olympic moments. Sandalwood values Kipketer's massive 35-race unbeaten streak from 1996 to 1997 and his unique hat-trick of three consecutive World Championship titles. He fiercely defends Mutola’s unmatched 20-year career resilience, with 21 major medals, a 42-race winning streak, and 10 World Titles (including indoors) spanning a decade. Sage approaches the debate through a strict lens of absolute peak performance, championship conversion rates (efficiency), and times that sit entirely outside the normal curve of human physiology. For Sage, true greatness requires winning the biggest prizes at the fastest speeds. David Rudisha’s perfect championship conversion rate is unmatched. She champions Caster Semenya's perfect 5-for-5 gold medal efficiency in major global finals and her incredible raw speed, holding five of the twenty fastest times in history.

1. juli 202615 min
episode Is It Time For Proportional Representation in the UK cover

Is It Time For Proportional Representation in the UK

In this episode, Sandalwood and Sage go head-to-head on one of Britain's most contested constitutional questions: should the first-past-the-post electoral system be replaced with proportional representation? The debate is sharpened by two striking contemporary realities — a government holding a commanding parliamentary majority on the back of less than 30% of the electorate, and elections in which five or six parties are in genuine contention across England, Scotland and Wales. Sandalwood argues that first-past-the-post has become not just unfair but essentially random. In 2019, Boris Johnson's 29% of the electorate delivered 56% of parliamentary seats, while Theresa May's identical vote share in 2017 produced only a minority government. By 2024, Labour's 20% of the electorate delivered 63% of seats — the same share as Blair's landslide — while 21% of votes cast for Reform and the Greens yielded just 9 seats between them. Sage's argument is rooted in the principle that constitutional change carries profound and unpredictable risks. The case for change must be overwhelming — strong enough to withstand a broad range of unintended and undesirable scenarios — before Britain alters arrangements that affect the rights and daily lives of every citizen. Sage insists that representativeness is not the only goal of an electoral system: Britain's system serves two purposes — ensuring laws and taxes are supported by a majority of elected representatives, and delivering an executive capable of governing.

25. juni 202613 min
episode How Deep Will Scotland Go cover

How Deep Will Scotland Go

Could Scotland reach as far as the Quarter-Finals of the 2026 World Cup, or is the Tartan Army heading for familiar heartbreak? With Scotland qualifying for their first World Cup since 1998, the football world is locked in a fierce debate over just how far Steve Clarke's men can go in the newly expanded 48-team tournament. Placed in Group C alongside powerhouse Brazil, an elite Morocco side, and underdogs Haiti, Scotland stands on the precipice of history. Can they finally break their ultimate tournament "hoodoo" and advance past the group stage for the first time ever—or perhaps go even further? In this debate, Sandalwood and Sage go head-to-head, locking horns over Scotland's tactical blueprint, potential knockout opponents, and realistic ceiling.

16. juni 202614 min
episode Does Reform UK Have a Coherent Programme For Government cover

Does Reform UK Have a Coherent Programme For Government

In this episode, Sandalwood and Sage engage in a sharp, constructive debate over the viability of Reform UK’s political and economic platform. Sandalwood argues that Britain is trapped in a cycle of high taxes, economic dependency, and failing public services, framing Reform UK as the only party willing to pursue the radical, structural changes needed to break the status quo. Conversely, Sage challenges the platform on practical and financial grounds, warning that the proposed policies are contradictory, mathematically unviable, and risk triggering market chaos akin to the 2022 mini-budget. While the two clash heavily on the feasibility of the remedies, the debate culminates in surprising areas of consensus: both agree on the diagnosis of Britain's core symptoms, including the unsustainable reliance on foreign NHS staff, the severity of the welfare inactivity crisis, and the damaging nature of frozen tax thresholds on low earners.

9. juni 202614 min