Tensions exploded on Question Time on Thursday (October 30) as Fiona Bruce stepped in to restore order during a heated exchange about illegal immigration and crime in the UK. The BBC debate turned sour after Conservative author Matthew Goodwin listeda series of shocking criminal cases while arguing that Britain's immigration system needed urgent reform.
His comments provoked an angry backlash from Labour's Lisa Nandy, who accused him of being "outrageous" and "trying to create distrust, division and fear." As the row escalated, Fiona was forced to cut across the panellists, telling them to "let each other finish" before reminding them that no one can hear anything they're saying "if you keep talking over each other". She blasted: "Matt wait one second, both of you wait one second," she interupted. "If you talk at the same time no one can hear anything."
 
     Things went from bad to worse for Lisa Nandy as an audience member tore into her during the live debate over migrant hotels.
The Culture Secretary had described the situation as a "disaster" for local communities, citing "far right racists outside protesting" - but her words immediately backfired.
One furious audience member hit back, accusing her of "labelling ordinary people" as extremists. He said: "By 'far right' do you mean the general public? That's my main concern, because you are labelling ordinary old ladies, old gentlemen, everybody as far right. It's trying to villainise people who are quite frankly terrified."
He went on: "You've got hotels, all you can eat buffets... we've welcomed everybody into this country and it's made Britain great. But you are villainising by saying we are far right. Coming from Labour - I grew up very much Labour and I'm struggling to support Labour any more."
Ms Nandy hit back, clarifying that her comments were aimed at "protesters who travelled to Wigan with swastika banners and stood outside the hotels," not ordinary residents voicing concerns.
The fiery exchange didn't end in the studio - it quickly spilled onto social media. Viewers flooded X, formerly Twitter, reacting to the tense debate, with many claiming Lisa Nandy had gone too far in her comments.
One post read: "@lisanandy just said on #BBCQT that people protesting outside hotels are Far Right Racists."
The discussion continued as Lisa Nandy doubled down, arguing that the chaos surrounding migrant hotels stemmed from government failure to deal with asylum cases efficiently.
She said: "The last government effectively gave up on processing asylum claims," calling the situation "an absolute disaster."
Nandy added that the "biggest lesson" to be learned was ensuring claims were handled far more quickly - and that people should be temporarily housed in barracks while their applications were reviewed.
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