 Okay, good morning all. I want to talk to you today about a women's March which was which took place in Hartlepool at the weekend. I'm having a few technical problems with this this morning quite an eye in. It's not doing what I wanted to do. Anyway, I was supposed to speak at this and in the end it turned out that I had to go to something really, really important. Not that that wasn't important, it was, but I do have a job to do and in the end I wasn't able to go to this women's March, but I do want to say to the young woman that organised it, well done, by all accounts it went well. Let me read to you from the Hartlepool mail on it. It says that people, let me go to the start, the All Inclusive March took place on Saturday afternoon. I don't know what they mean by All Inclusive March. Saturday afternoon in a bid to make the streets safer for everyone. It was organised by a young woman by the name of L.Darty and I hope I'm pronouncing her name, she's ELE and she's 18 and she said the March which was the first one she's ever organised was well attended with both men and women coming to show their support. It was held at the Victory Square War Memorial and started with a speech by L about violence against women. Now, I see, I noticed that labour councillors were present at the event and on social media wishing L well and congratulations and what have you which she thoroughly deserves and have nothing but respect for her for doing it. But I've got to say this, I've got to say this labour coming out to a women's safety march. See this is what politicians do. They show up to protests, they make a speech, they say how awful all of this is then they go back to their elected seats in the elected chambers and do and say nothing at all. In fact, quite the opposite. We are going to do something about the epidemic of rape and sexual assault. We need to put the blame where it lies. Now, there are several places the blame lies. It lies obviously with abusers and rapists themselves but it lies with the political elite who do nothing about it. That's where it lies. And to have that same political elite opportunistically taking occasions to go to a protest, to make a speech and then to go back and do nothing at all about it. That's the problem. And if we're going to allow labour and the Tories to get away with this, to take these opportunities, to turn up and make speeches and never hold them to account then this is just going to carry on and on and on. And it is the political and the financial elite which are to blame for this. But labour in particular, the Tories are no better but a lot of the crimes that are committed, if we look in specific areas which I'm going to look at and with Telford coming up in a few days' time, it's almost always in labour areas. So a labour councillor turns up to show support, knowing full well that the labour party has its hands, its hands are absolutely filthy in all of this, filthy. It is a, it is known fact, it is a known fact that labour facilitated and continues to facilitate and will continue to facilitate the gang rape of girls in this country. And then they'll wonder why it is so unsafe. Across this country for years, for decades, labour has gone out of its way to cover up for rape gangs. And that's worse than ignoring it. That's worse than doing nothing. Doing nothing is morally reprehensible. But to actively cover up for it, which labour has done, is criminal and unforgivable. And we know they do it, we know they continue to do it. And we know they will continue to do it. Now if you are in or around or can make it to Telford this Saturday afternoon, it's going to blow your mind what you're going to find out. The, the depths that this reaches to, the level of corruption, the level of cover up, the labour party and its own people are involved in this. And yet, they can turn up to protests, pretend they care, and then go back and do and say nothing at all about it. I looked at this last week. I want to quickly mention it again. This is a, this is a local magazine. It had a special five page pull out, as you can see here, on mental health services in this town, not a single one for victims of rape and sexual assault, not a single one, a whole list of them, and not a single one. Now I intend to try and put that right. I intend to start, and I'm serious about this, I'm going to put in place a just such a centre in this town. In the next, I'll start on it. We'll get the bones of it together as soon as possible. But what people need, genuinely need to realise is that it is the political elite that is responsible for this. It is. And no amount of new footpaths, which is something that has happened here in Hartlepool, is going to change it. No amount. And if you look at what the rape statistics in this country, in the last few decades, only one in 60 is charged. Now I'm not talking about convicted, and I know that reasonable doubt, and I know that it's very difficult in a, he said she said situation. And that's partly the reason, because rape is a crime that usually takes place in private, it's partly the reason that conviction rates are so low. But I'm not even talking about conviction, I'm talking about charge. Only one in 60 is charged. I watched a documentary yesterday, Ross Kemp in South Africa. And South Africa, as you might know, is what they call it. It's got the highest rape figures in the world. It's known as the rape capital of the world. Sweden is second, by the way. And it never used to be. But I don't know what happened to Sweden to turn it into the second highest rape rates in the world behind South Africa. Can you have a guess at what might have happened to transform Sweden so radically? Immigration. Just in case we're wondering. Anyway, I was watching this, and Ross Kemp was sitting with this woman who works in this area in South Africa, British woman. And she was saying to him, you know, only 6% are actually brought to justice. And he's shaking his head and saying, isn't that awful? It's the same here. We are basically on a par in terms of police action on these crimes. We are on a par with South Africa. The world's rape capital. And all of this has happened in the last few decades. What's changed? Who is ultimately responsible for this? The elite, political elite. In having to think about this this morning and thinking about this charity that I want to start. I've had, it was this morning, had a quick look at a channel for documentary on this. It was Dispatchers on Davos. Now, Davos is where the global elite meet the world economic form, things like that. This is where they meet. And these are people who will talk about make speeches about injustices in the world and terrible treatment of women around the world. Under cover at these Davos meetings, a reporter found a warning being given out to women who are at the at a conference there that they shouldn't go out alone at night. Be careful of the CEOs, the leaders of the big business elite around the world. Because if anything happens, and I quote them, if anything happens, who they're going to believe you are them. This was also a place where at conferences, many, many seats at speeches and events taken up by prostitutes, because the elite were bringing prostitutes along with them and warning, warning women, stay away from the CEOs, because if anything happens, they're going to believe them and not you. We have, there's a problem here. There is a problem here. And it is the political elite that is responsible for it. That political elite, if we continue to allow them to, will do nothing to change it. So let me tell you what for Britain would do to change things. First of all, we need to expose the Labour Party. And we will go some way in doing that this Saturday in Talford. We need to stop mass immigration from societies where this sort of treatment is not even frowned upon. Now, I want to say something, to make something very clear. When we talk about grooming gangs, and there's a reason I talk about grooming gangs as much as I do, partly because in Britain, it is all so preventable. I talk about these specifically, because it is also preventable. Every society is going to have problems, but some of them you can easily prevent. We are not only not preventing it, we're expanding it. And this is why it's so important. Now, people in politics, particularly in the elite, will pay lip service to the grooming gang problem. They will say, this is awful, something must be done. They will then lie about the identity of the men who make up grooming gangs. They will say it's an Asian problem. And in doing so, commit a racial slur, which is deeply unfair to Hindus, to Sikhs, and to other groups from Asia. These are not Asians, they are Muslims. And the reason it is so important to point this out is because the immigration continues. Until we say who is behind these grooming gangs, we will not stop the immigration. That's the point. That is the crucial point. We are ignoring the makeup of the grooming gangs while allowing the borders to stay open to men of the same religious identity as the grooming gangs. So what you're doing is inviting more and more of these grooming gangs. This is two and two is four stuff. That's why it's so important to make clear that these gangs are Muslims. There's point number one, stop this immigration. Point number two, and this is what for Britain would do, end all racial and religious based policing. After the murder of Stephen Lawrence, the MacPherson Inquiry, which was an inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence, called for, and this is really not the start of the rot, but it hugely accelerated a downhill spiral. It called for colorblind policing to be abolished. You had a separated society into white people bad, non-white people good. And for anyone who isn't white and who commits a crime, then there'll be some economic reasons. There'll be marginalized, there'll be economically disadvantaged, etc, etc, etc. You now have a situation where white people get longer sentences just for being white than non-white people do. You now have a situation where young Muslim men found guilty. So remember that the conviction rate is almost non-existent, found guilty of raping underage girls and then given non-custodial sentences because in their culture they didn't realize this was wrong. That is abhorrent and that is something that for Britain would bring to an end. So stop the immigration, bring racialized policing to an end, deport anyone reasonably suspected of involvement in grooming gangs, deport them. This is not the same as not putting them on trial. This is not the same as not giving people a fair trial. There is no reason to keep these men in this country, none, none. They are here as a privilege, that privilege can be revoked if it is reasonably suspected that they are involved in grooming gangs. Throw them out, throw them out. Japan, during the main the 2015 migrant crisis when modern a million went to Germany, a tiny number. Japan accepted a tiny number. I'm talking about a couple of dozen here and a Japanese woman was swiftly gang raped by a group among this tiny number and Japan threw them all out. All of them. That's how it's done. That is how it's done. But another problem, another problem and a huge, huge problem is ridiculous sentences. Ridiculous. A couple of years if that. Rapists, pedophiles get a couple of years in prison if that. They can be given long sentences like the Rochdale gang and be out a few years later and then allowed to stay in the country. Allowed, I mean staying in the country is bad enough but staying in the country at the taxpayer's expense. Legal aid fees to these, I'm going to say it, scumbags. Legal aid fees run to millions of pounds. Meanwhile there's nothing at all for the victims. Surely that should be in reverse. The system is sick. There is no justice and that is largely and partly why this continues. Whose fault is it? It's the fault of the political elite. It's the fault of the Labour Party and the Conservative Party. So the sheer, sheer goal of them to turn out. Now I also am aware that whenever my name is associated with anything, someone jumps up and down and says racist and I know that there were concerns about me being at this thing in Hartlepool last week because I might say something racist and I, you know, you know deep down you know that it's the Labour lot jumping up and down and not wanting me to be heard. This week I will join Tommy Robinson in Talford. Both myself and Tommy Robinson have done more to highlight the lack of safety and why there is a lack of safety for young girls in this country than Labour have ever done. Labour cover it up, myself and Tommy and others expose it. That's why they don't want us around. That's why they shout screams of racism at us. It is absolutely nauseating, really, really, really tough to take. But it's also why it's so important that we are in this fight, that we are in this battle. So once again, if you can make it to Talford this Saturday, please do. Tommy Robinson will has spent a good chunk of time exposing the links between the Labour Party and grooming gangs. Why the grooming gangs get away with it? And you must see this. You must be there to see it and to add your voice to the opposition to it. Just a couple of things I want to, before we go, just a couple of things I want to tell you about in terms of politics here in Hartlepool. And there's an article about, and I'm going to, if you join me on Rumble tonight, we'll go through the latest on COVID, because as you know, we can't do it on YouTube. The new Hartlepool MP, back in May, we had a parliamentary by-election here. And this town, which is almost, well, since it's the actual formation of the constituency, as it is now, has always been Labour. And the people went out this time and thought they'd had enough of Labour and voted in a Tory MP. Stories keep emerging of parties in Downing Street. The latest I've seen is that Boris Johnson had a birthday party. You can see here, I've seen a video clip of him up dancing. Not very well, mind you I can't talk, I'm not exactly Ginger Rogers myself. But up dancing, clearly, with a few drinks down him, up dancing at this party in Downing Street the night before Prince Philip's funeral. Now let's not forget, and I'm not laughing at this because it's funny, it's because it's a bewilderment how they get away with this stuff and why people keep voting them in again. Let's not forget that the next day we had the spectacle of a 90, I think she was 94 at the time, whatever your view on the monarchy, 94 year old woman who'd lost her husband of 70 plus years, sitting alone at his funeral with a face mask over her face. Again, whatever you think of the monarchy, that is horrendous, that is horrendous, absolutely horrendous, one of the saddest sites to see this woman have to sit on her own with a face mask on at the funeral of her husband of 70 plus years. The night before Boris Johnson was partying in Downing Street, no social distancing, no masks, it's disgusting, it is absolutely disgusting. So on that, here's what's in the paper, why Hartlepool MP is keeping quiet on PM's bring your own booze gathering. Mr. Johnson confirmed he attended the gathering, this is the one from the 20th of May, there are a few, confirmed he attended the gathering in Downing Street on 20th of May 2020 while we were in full on lockdown for around 25 minutes to thank groups of staff, Sir Keir Starmer, leader of the Labour Party, give me a break, was among those calling for the PM's resignation urging him to do the decent thing, give me a break, Labour telling people to do the decent thing. Following a request for her response, the office of conservative Hartlepool MP, Jill Mortimer, has stated she does not wish to make any comment on the matter until the investigation into the issue has been concluded. Civil servant Sue Gray has been tasked with leading the inquiry into possible lockdown rule breaking at Downing Street. So she's not going to say anything until the inquiry is over, which in many contexts would be appropriate, but Johnson has admitted himself that he has done this. He apologised to the Queen for having a party the night before she was forced to sit on her own with a mask on her face at her husband's funeral. So he's admitted it and still no comment, no more, we don't know her moral positioning on this because it's party first, morals second, party first, constituents second. Why party first? I understand, as I've said before, there's a balancing act and MPs do have a duty to their party as well. And let me just briefly explain why that is. If a political party stands on a manifesto, it's MPs have a duty to deliver that manifesto in the name of democracy. That's why things like voting whips take place because the party stood on a manifesto. It then needs to get those policies through parliament in order to make them law. If the MPs elected on the back of that manifesto won't vote in parliament to get those policies through, then it is denying the public the manifesto that they voted for. That's why MPs are often obliged to vote along party lines because it's a manifesto pledge and if they don't, they are denying the public that manifesto, that manifesto promise being passed through parliament. However, I still expect a couple of things, even with that balance, I still expect a couple of things for members of parliament. One, I expect them to put their people first, to act in the best interests of those who elect them. And two, I expect a moral backbone. I expect a person of moral stature. I expect a person with some courage. He's admitted it. Let us hear your view on the morality of this. We want to know if you have a moral compass. We want to know what your view is. Morally, ethically, I want to know what your view is on the fact that while the rest of us were locked in our houses, Downing Street, admit to having parties about the inquiry, like I said, sometimes that's appropriate. He's admitting it. But no moral positioning, no strength, no backbone, no inner steel to stand on her own conviction and say what she really thinks. That's what I want from members of parliament. That's what I want from those we elect. I want moral conviction. And the same applies to the rotten Labour Party who'll go along and talk out to speech, talk at rallies and give speeches, and then go back and rejoin and campaign for a party they know, they know, actively covered up the gang and continues to cover up the gang rape of children. We are governed by people with the morals of a rattlesnake. No inner moral conviction can be found among the vast majority of our elected political elite, none. None of this will change if we expect or depend upon the political elite who caused it to somehow have a moral conscience, grow a conscience and bring it to an end. To the young, very admirable young woman who organised this last week, congratulations, but realise something. It is the current political elite that do this. To change it, you have to play your part in bringing about the end of this current political elite. That's it. That's the only answer. And we can do that by not voting for them and voting for someone else, voting for people with morals and with conviction. That's the answer. Thanks everyone for joining me this morning. I'll be back at 8 o'clock tonight on Rumble with a review of COVID, coronavirus, etc. Do join us in Telford this weekend, this Saturday, if you can, please do. It's a very, very important, very important what's going to be exposed and very important that we are there in large numbers to show our disgust at the behaviour of our political elite. See you tonight at 8 o'clock on Rumble. See you back here next week at 10 o'clock. Look after yourselves and thanks again for joining me.