 So the general election has come and gone, and upon reflection, it couldn't really have gone much better. Certainly from my perspective. The only thing better than what happened at this general election would be a for-Britain government. And I'm not quite ready for that yet. We have been waiting for this. I've been waiting for this. This is what we've wanted. This is what for-Britain has wanted. Stability and clarity. A stable, authoritative Tory government for five years. And I think that's what we're going to get. Boris Johnson swept the board. Congratulations to him. I'm not his biggest fan, but congratulations to him. Fantastic job and took really, really, gave Labour the kicking. It's so richly, richly deserved. There are seats in the North of England that went Tory, which shocked me. I mean, even Tony Blair herself's seat went Tory. So Labour got a kicking. And the British people have really resoundingly said no to Labour and to Corbyn and to that extreme left. Both economics and social progressivism. The British people have said, no, enough. We don't want you people. I suspect there may well be a civil war in Labour now. And I hope there is a civil war in Labour now. And I hope it ends them. And I hope that this is the end of the road for them because they deserve it to be the end of the road. They've completely torn their back on their own heartlands and they deserve to be wiped out for that. You can see the names being floated around for the next Labour leader. Thank God they learned nothing from it. Nothing at all. You've got names like Yvette Cooper. Yvette Cooper? I mean, this is the Blair Balls Brown year. She is just a symbol of that, isn't she? Jess Phillips has thrown her hat in the ring. But I think the force to declare her intention to stand for lead. And it'll be interesting. I mean, I'm very much, very much not a Jess Phillips fan. At least she's not boring. Corbyn is boring as well as being an extreme left nutcase. He is actually quite dull and dreary. And so is John McDonald despite being a dangerous, nasty piece of work. They're quite dull, aren't they? So anyway, we'll probably see a re-emergence of the Tony Blair Labour wing. And it'll probably go to war with the Corbynist wing, which is still very much there and still very powerful. And remember, momentum came along with the express intention and the express purpose of keeping Corbyn in power. And I suspect Corbynites in power. So we'll watch Labour implode now. And we have now got five years of stability minus some great catastrophe, which I don't think there will be. Five years of stability under Boris Johnson now. We didn't stand in this general election and we were right not to. It was the right decision. But let me tell you, we will be standing in the next one. This is where we wanted to clear on. We wanted five years to build to... And we've said what our plan is on this. You know, to me, things start now. The first two years of the existence of this party have been trying to put it into place. Trying to get the machinery in place. And my God, I can tell you it's a tough job. So the machinery is, we've got all our ducks in a row in that regard now. So it's time now for us to start looking towards the next general election where we will be standing candidates. Myself included. And the next five years now is our time to build towards that. And one of the ways we're going to build towards that is winning more council seats. And I have absolutely no doubt in my mind that we're going to win a couple more council seats come May. And then the momentum will be with us. But back to the general election. Labour in trouble. Good. They deserve it. UKIP pretty much... And I don't take... I'm not a person who enjoys other people's suffering actually. That's different from saying people deserve it. Labour deserve it. But it's not something... I don't jump up and down with excitement when someone loses their seat, for example. Politics is a very, very tough game with some big names fell. And UKIP is a casualty of this. UKIP, I think, were pretty much humiliated and wiped out. And I know people don't want to acknowledge it. But it's got to be the end of UKIP. We are entering now a post-Brexit phase. And Boris Johnson's victory is resounding victory. There are several messages in it. One is that we don't want to left. But the other is that people want Brexit done over and done with. They are so, so tired of hearing the word Brexit. Boris stuck to a clear, simple message. Get Brexit done, get Brexit done, get Brexit done. It worked. It was a bit like Donald Trump and his Bill the Wall. It works. Clear, concise messaging works. But people are tired of Brexit. Absolutely tired of Brexit. And UKIP cannot survive in a post-Brexit world. And we are entering that post-Brexit world. Now, it doesn't have anything to offer. What does it have? What is the USP of UKIP now? It simply hasn't got a purpose now. And I don't take joy in that. It's an objective observation. The Brexit party, I mean Nigel Farage, he does not make the same mistakes over and over again. Nigel likes the game. He likes being in politics. He wants to be in politics. He likes being on TV. He likes all of that. And he wants to stay in politics. And I think his idea was to keep standing on a Boris isn't doing Brexit right platform. But the country is sick of Brexit and it won't work. And they're sick of it. They're not going to listen for another 10 years to Nigel Farage banging on about every detail of Brexit not being right. It's not going to work. So I think that has finally sunk in with him. You don't name your party after a single issue and then say you're not a single issue party. He didn't, you know, Channel 4, I think, and I think everyone loves Channel 4, I know, but they held a, and it might not have been Channel 4, but somebody held a everything but Brexit debate and Nigel Farage didn't go. And I thought there's your opportunity to present yourself as not a single issue party and you don't take it. I mean, this is not great political judgment. So the Brexit party is gone. There is nothing left. And Nigel Farage, I hear he's going to go and work with Donald Trump in America and in next year's campaign. I don't know what he's going to do, but I don't see another party emerging out of Nigel Farage. I think I don't think he muster up the same passion about another issue that he did about the EU or even the same knowledge about another issue that he did about the EU. But the Brexit party is at an end now. Brexit is at an end now, but Boris is going to get this deal through Parliament and the country can move on. It's not the Brexit we all would have wanted, but that's to me, as I've said from the start, the European Union is the real problem here. There's no getting away from it. The only way to get away from it is to bring it down. So the Brexit party, that's that. That's that for Brexit party. We are back. We are back to Tory establishment, better than Labour establishment. And now there's only one emerging, serious emerging party that is anti-establishment and that is for Britain. And I'm hearing talk of people setting up a new party. Well, you know what? Good luck to them. Good luck. Quarterly returns to the Electoral Commission. I'll just leave it there. You need serious, stable, honest, reliable people to make a party get off the ground. It's not a minor job. It's a huge job. It takes a lot of work. It takes a lot of commitment and it takes a lot of money. This is a really tough thing to do and I'm really proud that we've gotten through that infant phase and we're only getting bigger and better. So if people do want to start a party, good luck to them. I'm not going to make for Britain into some anti-Semitic woman-hating, gay-hating throwback party. So if that's what people are looking for, by all means, start your own party. You know, enjoy the hard work. Know that your message won't resonate with the majority of the British public. They want fair. They want reasonable. They don't like extreme politics on any side. So good luck. If that's what you want, go for it. If, however, you want a real party and someone, a party that has actually achieved the enormous... I won't come in these enormous, enormous obstacles of getting the first couple of years under our belt. We are the only now serious anti-establishment party because we made the right decisions. We made sure we weren't aligned with a single particular issue. We made sure that we were clear, consistent, precise and we stuck with our principles. We made sure we behaved correctly. We got all our dotted all our eyes and crossed all our T's. We still make sure we behave lawfully and correctly and do things the right way. I'm managed by Grace of God to get a very fantastic team of people around me who I trust, who are hard-working and reliable and who make sure that all the admin, all the bureaucracy is taken care of. But we've also got the right political message. We've got 50 branches active around the country and the message is right from us. It's just what the country needs. It's tough. It's fair. It's reasonable. It's not actually... Despite the line press, it's not actually an extreme position at all. We are pro-British. We are precise and clear and that's not going to change. And we're not going to start bending our principles. You know what you get with me. I am who I say I am. What you say is what you get. I don't have any hidden agendas. I am quite upfront and I'm not going to change. We're just going to grow and grow and grow from here. And I want to make an appeal now to Brexit Party members and UKIP members to come across. It is the end of the road for Brexit. And I think even Nigel Farage knows that he can't get any more capital out of Brexit. And I don't know what he's going to do, but I think that has finally sunk in. Single issue parties only walk until someone else takes that single issue away from you. It doesn't work. I don't care about a single issue. I care about several issues. And I think there are several serious, profoundly serious problems facing this country, which Boris Johnson, I don't mean to be, you know, to reign on the parade, but I don't believe that Boris Johnson is the answer to these things. The mass immigration will continue under Boris Johnson. He will be politically correct a bit of variety of different things. I guess I'm not his biggest fan. I don't dislike him either. I'm not his biggest fan, although I did find out today that he is a dog lover. And in all honesty, immediately the person goes up in my estimation when I find out they're a dog lover. But we're entering a new era now. Post-Brexit era. We have stability for five years under Boris Johnson. We have a Tory government, thank God, and not a Labour one. I happen to think actually that Labour would have banned for Britain had they got to power. Labour is imploding. I predict I've said this for a long, long time. Labour's days are numbered. They really are. They're going to be, they've learned absolutely nothing. They're going to go to war with themselves now. The two, I predict there could well be split coming in the Labour Party. So they're going to need, Labour needs, trouncing, Labour needs to be thrown out by someone. And you can see there are areas, Hartlepool, for example, where the combined vote between the Brexit Party and the Tory Party would have trounced Labour. And what that tells me is that there are more people on our side of politics in Hartlepool, and that's just one seat, than on Labour's side of politics. So people are ready, people are ready to get let go of Labour. We are ready to take Labour's place. We are putting the building blocks in place. We are building a solid foundation that is not a flash in the pan. We are building a foundation for good. We are here to stay. I am committed to this. I'm going to give my life to this. I have a team around me who are as committed as I am. Like I say, we've already got 50 branches up and running. We have an active party. We're going to be standing in May. I want people to think about what seats you want to stand in. January 11th is a meeting that I've talked about before, where we will launch our campaign for May and we will win seats. And our eye is on five years time. This is it now. This is the time we start building, but we need and want experienced people from the Brexit Party and from UKIP to come across. We are just starting out. We are fresh and enthusiastic. And we have lots of jobs that need filling. So if you're interested, do come over. It's hard to walk away. I know how hard it is to walk away. I was in the Labour Party for nearly 10 years. It becomes a huge part of your life. But you've got to... I accepted that I needed to walk away from Labour because my conscience simply wouldn't allow me to stay in it any longer. And there comes a time when you've got to accept that change is here. Change is here. We're entering a new era now. It is the post-Brexit era. And parties identified solely with Brexit will not survive in the post-Brexit era. Forbidden is the only small party to have achieved major party status. And we did that in our first year. And I know that some parties, Democrats and veterans, time, another couple of small parties have formed over the last couple of years. None of them have achieved major party status at the Electoral Commission except us. There's something special here. We have the right policies. We have the right people. We have the right attitude. We have the right plan. We're not going to do this overnight. We have to do it with solid foundations in place and take our time. That's what we're doing. So come over, get on board. This is now the only anti-establishment option. As I say, some people do want to start another party. Like I say, if they want an anti-Semitic, anti-gay, anti-woman, let them have it. Nobody will want it. This is the party that's going to take away Labour's whatever grip it still has, whatever it has left. This is the one that's going to take it away. We're working class people. I come from a working class background. I know it's like to have nothing. I know what it's like to struggle. And I will relate to and communicate with the people who have been abandoned by this progressive open border, despicable, hard left, loony left, progressive Labour Party. It's done. It's over. It's just a matter now of tidying away the rest of the mess. And that's for Britain. That's our job. We are going to do it. I'm going nowhere. This is our fate, our destiny. The stars are aligning for us. Everything is working out for us very, very well indeed. It's going incredibly well. And I'm really, really proud. And I'm really excited about this upcoming five year period. And I'm excited about standing in the parliamentary general election coming up next. We've got a lot of time to prepare. Look, you know, I'm not going to repeat myself over and over again, but get on board. It's over. Brexit, it's over. It's time to move on now. And it's time to go after Labour. Finish it. To put Labour out of its misery. It's time. And I wish Boris Johnson Locke. I don't think he is going to be the answer to many of this country's problems. Like I said, I don't want to reign on the party. I don't want to be the miserable one. But he's not. But however, congratulations to him. Great victory over those not cases on the other side of the house. Big scalps fell. Chukka and Mona fell. Luciana Berger, what a mistake they made. And there's another point, by the way. Anna Subri is gone as well. There's another point. And I don't make this point often enough. Experienced MPs like Anna Subri, Chukka and Mona, Luciana Berger, broke away and formed their own party, Change UK. They couldn't even get a Twitter account. They couldn't even get it going on with their Twitter account. The design was appalling. They had the media behind them. And they couldn't manage to get themselves off the ground at all. So they couldn't. Luciana Berger, Chukka and Mona, Anna Subri, etc. Couldn't do what for Britain have done. Join us with the only answer now.