 I would like to introduce our next distinguished guest, Mr Allan Gibbons, who is a local community independent councillor, LCI group leader on Liverpool City Council and Transform EC member. Right, good morning, ladies and gentlemen, salam aleikum, shalom aleikum, and peace be upon you. Our group is three councillors in Liverpool and we predate the crisis in Gaza, but we give absolute solidarity to the people of Gaza. All of our leaflets are published in colours that should be very familiar to you and are encapsulated on that flag. Our split from Labourism started last May. o ran ychydig i'r ffordd o'r Laiifarcha'r Gwyrdd yn 8. Byddwn ni yn rhaid i'r gweithio o'r pryd yn ddau 11.7 miliwn i gyd o'r bobl i'r cyflwyllus nhw i ddweud o'r perd mwrwyr o'r gweithio'r pryd yn ei ddodig i ddodig i gweithio'r ddau o'r rheron yn y cyflwyllus nhw i gweithio'r gweithio sydd yn ddweud i'r bwysig o'r cyflwyllus nhw i gweithio'r hefyd a Chlemyntatley the powers I used to have built councils, something shameful that I have ever done in any of that. Now that division that we had, the first time that we had to take a political act Our first political act as new councillors, socialist councillors who had broken with austerity was to go and stand on a picket line outside your revision which was happening in Liverpool yn ei gwybod ynghylch ar gyfer y rhai Palestinian a oed i gael eu cwestiynau hirio'r coradwyneu. Y dyfodol yw'r gweithio'r gwith yn dwy i weld yn dweud, mae ada three o ddweudio'r ddweud cyhoedd ychydig y gallwn y maeddaeth ar gyfer ddreifydd yma. Mae hoffi oherwydd wnaeth â'r lle yn llawer o dechrau ar gyfer y ddalion, sy'n meddwl oedd yn sefydlu'n ceisio'r armraeth, oedd dwych fearsu oeddynt y cwmpaenau yn dwy'n meddwl i'r Gweithio Idolau, diwethaf yn ymweld i'r syniad wrth ymweld i bwyllgor wef hyn o'r lleio yn Gweithio, sy'n cyhoedd o'r fanyl o'r parlay. Rhaid i'n gwrs, ym mwynhau yn cyflwr i'r mewn cyngor, ac yn ni'n bobl fel datblyg yn eisteddam i'r Llywyddas Fyffredig, oherwydd i mi'n gweithio rhai o'r lleio usugiau, rydyn ni'n gweithio gennyn ei hwyl gyngor, yn byw'r ddweud. Felly wedi bod yn teulu ar y ddechrau'r rhagion ar y dda ar y llefwyr. Mae'r rhanau ar y llwydd sy'n gyfnod i'r ddechrau'r ddweud. Felly yma'r dda sy'n gwybod i'n gwybod, yn y cysylltu'n gweithio, mae'n gydag amddangos. yn ymgyrch. Mae'n gweithio'r march i'r Iraq, ond yn Liverpool rwy'n gweithio'r rwy'n gweithio'r modd yn ymgyrch. Rwy'n gweithio'n gweithio'r march i 22 ymgyrch ar y y cyfnod Llyfrgell. Rwy'n gweithio'r 100. Rwy'n gweithio'r troi genesidol, yn ymgyrch ar y cyfnod Llyfrgell, o'i ddau unig, a'r Unig ystafell, os ymgyrch ar yr unig ymgyrch, rydych chi wedi gael i'r wyf. Rwy'n cyfnod y troi genesidol, rydych chi'n gobeithio'r gyffinodau. Rwy'n gweithio'r gwahn o'r panesidol ar y cyfnod Llyfrgell, rydych chi'n gobeithio'r gwahn o'i ddau. Rwy'n gweithio, na ddweud am gael i gyngor, yw ddigonwyd yw y coleg yma. Onw'n eich cyfrwyr yn ysgolwyr sy'n hoffi yn ysgolwyr yw'r cyfrwyr o'r llwyddiadiau. Rwy'n ddweud o'r ffordd 4 o 5 yw mwasgwyr yw'r tanfyrdd. Mae tanfyrdd yn 98.4% phall yw ffordd. Mae'r ddweud o'r cyfrwyr yn ysgolwyr yw'r dweud o'r cyfrwyr. Rwy'n credu rwy'n meddwl i'w Rhyw i'w Siwydd. Rwy'n meddwl i'w sgwrs drwy'r gynhyrchu i'w Roma. Rwy'n meddwl i wneud i ddiwylliannol, gwnewch i'r ffordd i fi'r cyffea i gwylltio i'r roi sy'n gweithio. Rwy'n meddwl i ddim yn ymweld, oherwydd i'r rhaid i ddim yn y ddwyng amser, oherwydd i'r meddwl i'w pob i ddiwyllus i'r hir. I've not had a single resident say that I am on the wrong side of the Palestine. Now this is vital and how do you maintain that? This I think has got to be part of the thread of this conference. We make sure that we are on every picket line that we can, standing up for working people. Our politics can't be trapped into the council chamber. Anybody who's gone through select committees and council chambers know it's a deadening and frustrating experience. We have 61 Labour councillors to contend with. When we try to put through a motion on what we suspect is corruption related to a company called Beautiful Ideas to their Shame, every single one of the Labour councillors voted down an independent inquiry. That included people who dared to call themselves Corbynites in the early days. People I had shared platforms with. We make sure that every time there is a campaign to defend working people, we stand with them. So there's a petrochemical plant in the constituency of our parliamentary candidate, Sam Gost, called Violia, which processes the same chemicals that exploded at Flixborough in 1974 and killed 28 people. We are involved in the campaign. The Labour Party voted to process the application and make it possible for that plant to expand. This is a disgrace. In other words, wherever working people's lives are affected, whether it is potholes, whether it is poor pay, whether it is bad housing. I've got residents in my ward who have had water running down the walls. Mushrooms growing. We all know about the little lad in Rochdale who died because of mould and they're being asked to pay £900. They are subjected to section 21 evictions. We have to stand with people who face those conditions. We have to tell them, as Sam says on this leaflet, the money spent killing children in Gaza should be spent on our local community instead. In that way, the politics and the conditions of ordinary working class people's lives and the struggle for decency and solidarity internationally can stand together like two hands. That is what we've got to fight for. To be honest, we have very modest claims, as the great Irish socialist James Conley said. We have a very simple demand. We want the world. Now this conference has got to be the start of that. The last thing I'll say is it's got to be principles. In principle, we want to see the liberation of Palestine. Sometimes you do have to make concessions. I'll give you an example. We are massively outnumbered by the Labour Party and we are outnumbered 14-3 by the Lib Dems on Liverpool City Council. Three Greens, three Liberals. We wanted to get a ceasefire motion through on the council. How do you do that when they were so reluctant? We had to make a concession that in the motion we couldn't argue with the idea of a two-state solution. I'll tell you bluntly, since 1967, I have wanted a one-state, secular state for Palestinian Bedouin and you're alive. But at least we were able to drag some of the old establishment red and blue and yellow Tories screaming into an act of solidarity with the Palestinian people. That matters. You don't make sacrifices on principle. You do find ways to make the cogs of society term. We have recently written to all of the other political groups on Liverpool City Council to say that we should disinvest from the arms industry. Because of Palestine, because of Yemen, only one group has replied to me to say no because they thought you need arms to fight Putin's Russia. Even the Greens have not yet replied and I've written to them four times. Solidarity actually means taking a stand, not when it's popular but when it's unpopular. It means you've got to show some guts. So we want unity in this conference and I think there's a number of principles. One has got to be Palestine. One has got to be opposition to cuts and to austerity. And I think one has got to be absolute solidarity with all our communities in the United Kingdom. With the migrant community, with the settled communities. And I tell you what, if anybody ever tries to smear migrant communities or to talk about stopping small boats, I am not with you. I am not with you. My family came from Ireland in the wake of unhought and more the great starvation of the Irish people, which was a political act of the British ruling class. It wasn't a spontaneous failure of a crop. And I believe that if capital can move anywhere in the world, Labour has the right to move anywhere in the world as well. And anybody who tries to whip up anti-migrant feeling is not my brother, not my sister. So basically we've got a growing movement and we should thank the people who set up the various activities. We had a great conference in London. I'm sure we're going to have a great conference today. We've got emerging groups of significant numbers all over the country. And it is not going to be easy to win. It's not going to be easy to win. There's still the legacy, a place like Liverpool, where people think that the Labour Party is the party that gave them social reforms under Wilson. He did lots of horrible things as well I should say. They think it's something to do with the party that established the welfare state, mass council housing, public ownership and the NHS under Atley and Bevan. I'll tell you what they're not. Take one look at West Street in good luck to Leanne Mohammed at getting rid of this slimy backstabber. And the way we're going to win is by firm principle on international solidarity, opposition to cuts, opposition to austerity, standing with working-class people wherever they fight, because in the end of the day we don't just want, ultimately I think we do need a new political party with grope our way towards it mighty mud, bit like the Labour Party did, bit like the Communist Party did from various constituent parts. Who knows? We don't need people telling us my way or the highway. It's got to emerge from below and has got to look at each other with respect and develop something new. But most of all it's got to be a movement of working people from below. We don't want opportunities from above. We don't want anybody taking a ride off our backs in our communities, of our communities to transform the world. Let's do it. Thank you very much. Our next distinguished guest, Mr Michael Lavelette, is an emeritus professor in social policy at Liverpool Hope University. A former respect councillor for 11 years, he regularly visits and leads student field trips to the West Bank. He's the author of over 30 books, including two on Palestine, one is Voices from the West Bank 2010, and the other is Palestinian Cultures of Resistance 2021. Please welcome Mr Lavelette. Brothers and sisters, comrades and friends, Asalaam aleikum. I want to start off by thinking about where we are in the movement around Gaza. For eight per six months we have watched unfold in our television screens a genocide. There is absolutely nobody who can tell us that they have not been aware of the horror that has been inflicted on the people of Gaza. There is not a single person who can tell us that they are not aware that 15,000 children have been murdered. There is nobody who is not aware of the fact that mosques, churches, hospitals, schools and housing districts have been bombed to smithereens. As that horror has unfolded, our political parties, the main political parties in this country have said absolutely nothing. They have said nothing and yet if you look at the opinion polls, consistently around about 68% of the population of this country have been in favour of an immediate ceasefire. We are not the minority, we are part of the huge majority in favour of a ceasefire. If you look at the most recent opinion polls, 58% of the population of Britain are for a ban on arms sales to Israel. We are not the minority, we are part of the majority on this issue. And yet the three main political parties continue to stand with Israel despite the horror it is infecting in Gaza. And despite the fact that it is trying to provoke a wider war in the Middle East with Iran, with Lebanon, in Syria and Yemen. They are putting our world in the most precarious position. And if you listened to Joe Biden yesterday, if that war happens, America quite clearly will stand with Israel and Israel is bringing our world to our most dangerous precipice. And yet our parties say absolutely nothing. It has been up to people like you and me to take the question of Palestine onto the streets and into the political mainstream. If you think about it back on the 7th of November, they tried to say that we were all anti-Semitic extremists. They tried to stop every single one of our marches. And on the 12 occasions in which we have gone to London, they have tried to criminalise us, marginalise us and tell us that we should not be on the streets. Remember Suella Braverman, she said that we should not march, that it was a point of principle for her. She would not let us march on the 11th of November. We marched, we are still here, she's gone. The movement for Palestine has been remarkable in terms of its scale and its breadth. Week after week there are demonstrations in towns and cities across this country. And those national demonstrations in London have been of an immense size that we have not seen since 2003 and they run up to the war in Iraq. And in November, when there was a ceasefire motion that went through the House of Commons, the main parties whipped their members to vote against that. And from that point, our movement said very clearly, no ceasefire, no vote. Those people who have refused and who refused to vote for a ceasefire could not take for granted our votes at the general election when it came. So no ceasefire, no vote and I promise from each and every one of us that Palestine would be on the ballot paper come the general election. And now what we are saying up and down this country is groups of people coming together to form independence to challenge the main political parties. I will want to say something about independence because when I was growing up, if somebody stood as an independent, it usually meant that they were a Tory in disguise. But that's not what we mean by independence today. Those independence are independent of the main political parties and independent of the political establishment and independent of their continuing support for the horrors of genocide and the state of Israel. But we're not independent. We are part and parcel of this movement. We have been from this movement, we've been on the streets with this movement, we continue to be part of this movement and we're accountable to this movement. This is part of us forming our new organisations, taking the arguments forward to think about how we can progress in the future. So we're independent of the main political parties but we're dependent and built and part of the movement for social change and the movement around Palestine. So our argument was that after November no ceasefire, no vote and Palestine will be on the ballot paper. But our campaigns must be Palestine Plus. General elections are not fought on single issues. So Palestine Plus means of course Palestinians on the ballot paper but we have to relate to all the other issues that affect our communities. And if you think about that for the last 15 years we've had Labour Government, Labour Tory, Lib Dem Coalition and Tory Government and each one of them has implemented austerity cuts, cuts to welfare, cuts to our communities and yet they tell us there's no money for us to adjust those things. But if you think for a minute every time they want to launch a war there's always money for the bombs, there's always money for the aircraft, there's always money to give to Israel or wherever. They have money for war. Well we don't want money for war, we want money for welfare and we want money for ordinary people's needs in this country. So Palestine Plus means yes, Palestine's on the ballot paper but so is our national health service. So are housing conditions. So is the crisis of austerity and the cost of living crisis that ordinary people face on a day to day basis and our candidates must reflect all of that as we go forward with the challenge. And no doubt at some point some Tory or Labour politician will say but where's the money coming from Michael for all these things. So of course no war put the money to welfare that's one argument but let's think about another way that we can raise the money. You see just 15 years ago or 2008 when there was a banking crisis we have been in austerity so every single person in this room in real terms is worse off today than we were in 2008. In terms of our wages and the decline in wages, in terms of the standard of living, in terms of the services and the funding of services each and every one of us is worse off. But there's a group in this country who are not worse off. In 2009 the wealth of the 1000 richest people in this country amounted to £250 billion. Think about that 1000 people £250 billion in 2009. Today that 1000 people's wealth is over £750 billion. So their income, their wealth has increased threefold to £750 billion. Now some of you in here will be from the Muslim community and in the Muslim community every day every year pays the cat. The cat is 7.5% of your wealth. So if we were just to take as a cat payment of those 1000 people that would give us £160 billion more than we spend on the national health service. We are a phenomenally rich country. There are phenomenally wealthy people in this country. Their wealth has increased over the last 10-15 years while our wealth and our share has gone down. And we must stand proudly, squarely behind the campaign that says yes Palestine is on the ballot paper. We are for the liberation of Palestine. We are for the refusal to arm Israel. Yes we are for an end to the cost of living crisis, for funding our national health service, for funding our education system. Yes we are for the end of student debts and for the repayment of those debts to students so that they are not starting off working life with £56,000, £60,000 worth of debt hanging over their necks. Yes we are for the decent pensions. We are living a country where we have some of the worst pensions in Western Europe despite the fact we pay in all our life. And if you want to know where we get the money from we take it from the phenomenally wealthy in this country who have benefited from 40 years of neoliberalism and 40 years of Labour and Tory parties who have been prepared to let the rich get richer while we've all suffered. The time for changes now. Thank you very much Mr Lavelay. Absolutely amazing and such heartfelt emotion. Thank you for that. Our next esteemed guest is Mr Craig Murray who's a parliamentary candidate and has also been a former ambassador. Mr Craig Murray. Thank you. Thank you very much. It's wonderful to be back here in Blackburn and I am deeply honoured to have been asked to stand for parliament again here in Blackburn and Darwin to have been asked by Blackburn's independent candidates, councillors to be asked by the Workers' Party of Great Britain and we are going to give it one hell of a run at getting elected here in Blackburn. I stood for election here in 2005 against Jack Straw and I'm going to talk a bit more about that at the end of this speech. At the start I'd also like to say that we've heard three magnificent speeches and it very seldom happens that I sat there and I think I agreed with every single word every one of the speakers said. I thought they were absolutely fantastic. I won't actually repeat all those points although they were very good. I want to talk about a couple of things in my personal experience that no one else can talk about because it's my experience and give you a few thoughts. I was there in the International Court of Justice in the Hague for the genocide case between South Africa and Israel. I was present in the courtroom. There were only 14 seats in the public gallery. I had to start queuing at two o'clock in the morning in minus seven degrees centigrade in the Hague in February in order to get one of those 14 seats. At 4.30am, still in minus seven degrees centigrade, I was joined in a queue by my friend Jeremy Corbyn who also queued in the early hours of the morning in the freezing cold and Jeremy is even older than I am. So that was a feat, a real feat. And we sat there and we listened to the South Africans on the first day outline the most compelling case. Now it's true there is nobody in the entire world who does not know that genocide is happening in Gaza. It is as plain as your face. Everybody has seen the evidence. There are people who for political reasons seek to deny it, but that doesn't mean they don't know it's happening. Everybody knows it's happening. And the South African lawyers on behalf of South Africa outlined in detail after detail the facts of the genocide over 750,000 homes destroyed, over 10,000 children killed, more by now. The maemings, the deaths in pregnancy, the killings of doctors, of aid workers, of lawyers, of university professors, the incredible percentage of children killed in the conflict, approximately 40% of all the people killed by Israel have been children. That's just not normal in war. War, of course, is not normal, but that's not normal in war. In almost every genuine war, genuine armed conflict, the death date of children killed is between 8% and 10%. I cannot find any example of any conflict in recent history where 40% of those killed has been children. That is the plainest indication this is not a war, this is a genocide, a killing of the people. We listened to this, outlined brilliantly by the South African lawyers, and on the second day we listened to the Israeli lawyers. And it was astonishing to be there. They lied and they lied and they lied. Let me tell you some of the things they said. They said the reason that so many children were killed was that Hamas employs child soldiers. They said that the reason that so many homes were destroyed were these were booby trapped by Hamas or were misfires of Hamas rockets. They said that more aid trucks were now entering Gaza than the volume that used to enter before October 7. And they said that every single hospital in Gaza was a Hamas military base. And those lawyers stood there and said those things. And it occurred to me, everybody in that room, including the people saying those things, knew those things were not true. Everybody knew those are lies, including the lawyers making the lies, including the agents of the Israeli government sitting behind them. And they were telling lie after lie after lie. And the judges knew they were lies. The judges definitely knew they were lies. And they were telling the lies to justify the killing of children, to enable the killing of children to continue. And I sat there and I thought I am in the presence of evil. That was the presence of evil. How anybody can do that, can try to continue a genocide, try to continue the killing of children and try to justify it by standing before the highest court in the world and telling lie after lie. And that is why we are in a situation where there is no two-state solution. Israel is not a genuine political entity. Israel is a terrorist entity spreading evil in the world. On the 16th of October, I was flying back from a WikiLeaks meeting in Reykjavik. And I was detained at Glasgow Airport under the counter-terrorism law. I was detained under the Taylor Act. I was told by the police that I was not entitled to a lawyer under the Taylor Act, that I was not entitled to remain silent. I had to answer all questions. I had to give them my laptop and my mobile phone. And I had to give them all the passwords for my devices. And that failure to do that was in itself an offence under the Taylor Act carrying two years imprisonment. I have never had any connection with violence in my entire life or any connection with terrorism. I am a former British ambassador and a former rector of a university. And here I was being questioned under the Terrorism Act. And I was asked why I supported Palestine. I was asked why I had attended a demonstration on Palestine in Iceland. And I was asked, actually they asked me what was said on the demonstration for Palestine in Iceland. And I replied, I have no idea. I don't speak Icelandic. But I was asked if I would ever attend more demonstrations on Palestine. And I said I most certainly will. They kept my devices. They told me I was under investigation under the Terrorism Act. And apparently I still am under investigation under the Terrorism Act. And the reason I am under investigation under the Terrorism Act is that I have said as a former senior diplomat, as a former ambassador, I am telling you it is a simple truth in international law that an occupied people had the right of armed resistance. Now I stood here for election against Jack Straw in 2005. And I stood because I'd recently resigned from the foreign office. He used to be my boss. And I'd resigned over the issue of torture and extraordinary rendition where Muslims were being sent, Muslims were being sent all around the world including to Uzbekistan where I was ambassador in order for them to be tortured on behalf of the CIA and with MI6 involvement. And I knew that Jack Straw knew because I had told him personally I'd reported this back to him. And I was told at that time that it was not illegal for Britain to get intelligence from torture. And I also knew because I knew of many of the cases that the majority, the large majority of the Muslims who were being taken around the world and tortured were entirely innocent and were being tortured to get false confessions. I also knew because I used to be the head of the Foreign Office section of the Embargo Surveillance Centre which of my job was 24 hours a day to look at Iraqi weapons procurement. I also knew for a fact that there were no Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and I knew for a fact that Jack Straw and Tony Blair knew that and that the Iraq war was based entirely on lies. And that's why I stood here in Blackburn to tell the people of Blackburn that and to challenge him. And I did that. I came here and we had a three month campaign in which I did that. And since Gaza happened and since I've declared I'm standing here in Blackburn again I have had dozens of people, dozens of people come up to me and tell me how guilty they feel that they didn't vote for me. But they voted for Jack Straw. And what I say to them is this. Do not feel guilty. Jack Straw was known in this community and this community had memories of the time when the Labour Party did stand for working people. And at that time he said I was lying about torture and extraordinary rendition and in early 2005 it hadn't yet been proven. I understand that people believed him and did not believe me. But there is nobody in the whole world now who does not know I was telling the truth about torture and extraordinary rendition. And that Jack Straw was a supporter of the torture of Muslims and their barefaced liar. And I say to you this. Please nobody feel guilty for not voting for me last time. But you'd better vote for me this time because now you know. Now you know about Gaza. Now you know that the Labour Party has not only opposed a ceasefire. The Labour Party still to this day is supporting British arms exports to Israel. All arms exports to Israel must be stopped at a turning point. Yesterday Keir Starmer announced that the Labour Party will increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP. That's a 25% increase in defence spending. Yet they tell us there's no money for an incoming Labour government to improve hospitals or schools. They tell us we need more privatisation in the health service. They tell us that austerity, Tory austerity has to continue. The Labour Party has abandoned the people. It is time for the people to abandon the Labour Party. Thank you very much. Thank you. Our next guest is councillor Suleiman Kona, JP, who has been a Lancashire Magistrate for over 22 years, councillor for over 20 years, a local man and community leader champion. His volunteering skills is beyond anyone. A man who supports all the news agents in the country and he was the national president covering the whole of the UK not long ago. A man who needs no introduction, please welcome Mr Suleiman Kona. Thank you. I don't need to preach anybody about what's been happening over the last 10 years, much more than that. But what I want to touch on is what you need to be doing when you are at the doorstep, the message that you need to be doing. Don't forget that Gaza is still hungry, is still thirsty, is hurting more and more, is bleeding more and more. How long can they carry on? That is the first thing you need to be saying. You must not stop talking about Gaza when you are at the doorstep. That is so, so important because that's one of the things why I left Labour Party and I have no regrets whatsoever. Thank you. You must also remember and be absolutely clear and tell all the senior parties that you saw Gaza and we saw you in the ballot paper. It's absolutely time. People have had enough. It's enough. We need to ditch all the Tories, the Labour, the Lib Dems, all those parties. It's time to say goodbye to you all. And you know what, people will be saying, what is the alternate? What is the alternate? The alternate is what you've been hearing this morning and there'll be much more you'll be hearing this afternoon. Independent is the way forward. That is the key wherever you go. And let's not forget, and this is a message clear to all the residents, being an independent, whether a councillor, whether an MP, whatever. Being independent, it gives you that several benefits, so much unique that no other party would have. You will be speaking to the authorities, to whoever on behalf of the electorate, on behalf of the constituents who elected you. So you know about what they are, you know what they need and that is why you are there to represent them. So don't forget, it is that belief, it is what you do, that is so important to move forward. Absolutely clear, this way you will not be bound by any party, you'll not be guard, you'll not be told not to go to demos, you'll not be told not to go to marches. You are there because you are representing the people of your ward, of your constituents. Can I also remind you, the other message that you need to be telling everyone is absolutely clear. All those people who go to the demos, all those people who go to the marches, they are not antisemitic. They are there for the justice of the Palestinian people. You know what, all along, wherever you were reading, writing, looking the telly, whatever, all the main parties so far have used the diplomatic way to cover Israel on the war crimes. Your message must be clear, enough is enough, absolutely dead on, no more. But you know what, whilst you are saying no more labour, no more Tory's, no more Lib Dems, you need to stand up with each other. It is so important that we all support each other, whether you are travelling from London to Blackburn, whether you are travelling from Scotland to Blackburn, whether you are travelling from Blackburn to South, wherever, we must support each other. So important, this is the time where we need to be supporting each other. There will never be another time to support each other other than this one. I say to several candidates in Blackburn that if you don't get elected this time, you need to stand up and think for yourself why you didn't get elected. People on the doorstep, they are ready to vote for you, independents of course they are, they are ready to vote for you, they just want you to knock that door. So you must knock each and every door, wherever you are in the country, every door must be knocked, knock the door, tell people they are with you. The moment you knock the door, you say you are independent they will tell you straight away they are with you. So the message is clear, where there is Rishi, Keir, Angela, whoever you are out there that look enough is enough, and I start where I begin I say that they sold you, they told you lies after lies after lies, covering up left, right and centre and guess what, we are going to do it, we are going to do it on the ballot paper. That is the way to fight back and it's only way is independent and to fight back. Ladies and gentlemen, my point really is to get the message across, support each other at each and every doorstep, because simply the poster tells you all, no ceasefire, no vote. I say that because how many of them said to you, no ceasefire, no vote. If they did, ask them how they did it, when they did it and how they did it, they didn't. If they did they were just covering up of lies after lies, so no vote for anybody who did not do ceasefire. But your message must be clear, support each other wherever you are, travel if you have to, because if they don't get elected, don't be regretting it tomorrow, blame yourself. The residents, the constituent, they are absolutely waiting for you, knock each and every door. Don't be regretting tomorrow when you lose by 20 votes, 30 votes, no you don't. Each and every one, use your social media, use whatever means you need to do to get to the constituent. That's the important bit, ladies and gentlemen, don't forget, it's time to ditch the lot of them. And this is the time, there will be no better time for you, for me, for all of us to ditch the lot. Thank you.