Stephen Fry Repurposes Famous Brexit Slogan To Slam 'Insane' Water Pollution In UK

"Our water is our blood stream," the famous writer said.
Writer and comedian Stephen Fry took issue with the state of the UK's water system
Writer and comedian Stephen Fry took issue with the state of the UK's water system
via Associated Press

Writer and comedian Stephen Fry slammed the state of the UK’s water system over the weekend, saying it was clear the country needed to “take back control”.

The environment secretary Steve Reed ruled out temporarily nationalising Thames Water on Sunday but said Labour intends to “clean up our water”.

Speaking on the panel of the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg after Reed, Fry said: “The thing that I picked up on which really matters to me and I think matters to an enormous number of people – the water.

“In the days of Brexit we heard that phrase again and again: Take back control.

“But not to have control of our water always struck me as insane for a country not to have control of its rivers and its lakes and its drinking water.”

Presenter Victoria Derbyshire asked: “So you’re suggesting nationalising them?”

“Yes – before the railways – and it may be a good idea to nationalise them – surely the waterways, “Fry replied.

The comedian added: “Every single river in our country is polluted and contaminated with a mixture of raw sewage and run-off from organic phosphates and you know, it’s appalling. It’s a disgrace and it’s one [which] anyone who actually lives in this country should feel in their deepest hearts, it’s an urgent thing to put right.

“Our water is our blood stream.”

“Not to have control of our water always struck me as insane”

Actor and writer Stephen Fry responds to Environment Secretary Steve Reed’s interview on water pollution and says the water industry should be nationalised
#BBCLauraK https://t.co/DM9e02dghy pic.twitter.com/hqNl2m38Bx

— BBC Politics (@BBCPolitics) July 28, 2024

His comments came after an annual report from the Environment Agency found there was an increase in serious pollution incidents in 2023, creeping up from 44 in 2022 to 47 last year.

It said that Thames Water, Anglian Water, Southern Water and Yorkshire Water were behind 90% of those incidents.

Close

What's Hot