"Everybody knew beforehand that it will not work but we still let it happen as a society and I cannot believe that. One is now gone and the other one struggles still. It's incredible", Klopp said.
"We have to find a system where we can bring people in the position to solve all our problems [who] are the best possible people and not the most funny or the weirdest haircut or whatever. There are people out there definitely, we just have to give them a platform", he said.
The German manager is not shy about expressing his political stance. Last summer, he blasted the government of Boris Johnson for the handling of the coronavirus pandemic, in particular for the belated decision to require members of the public to wear masks indoors.
"From a personal point of view, I don't understand why we started wearing face masks in closed areas on 15 June when five or six weeks ago all the other countries were doing it. You can argue about whether it makes sense to wear them, but all countries who started wearing face masks earlier have smaller casualty numbers than here in England. That's the truth", Klopp said.
"When I go to the petrol station in England, I am the only one wearing a face mask and I'm the only one with gloves – I feel like an alien. I will not stop doing that until someone tells me it's over", he said last June.
Most recently, the Conservative Party was accused of awarding peerages in exchange for massive donations and the mishandling of the Owen Paterson scandal.