 My name's David. I'm from Bolton, and I work in highway maintenance. Mum and dad were both Labour voters. That was the majority of my family, so... I've always grown up with the impression that, you know, Labour was the pie for the working month. And going against that would almost be a bitrain, you know, who I was or who the sort of area that came from. I want to be able to have my own business. I want to, you know, be able to work hard and get rewarded for that. And it felt like it was the Conservative party that was really speaking to what I wanted to do where I wanted to be in the next five, ten years. In the EU referendum I voted to leave. Although I do want us to be a part of Europe, I don't really want us to be part of the EU. You know, the feeling like that the Labour party was ignoring our vote when it came to the EU. The Conservative party seems to be giving everyone an evil opportunity. You know, everyone gets given the same chance, and whatever you do with that chance is up to you. And that, to me, is what it should be. When I voted Conservative for the first time, it was something new, something I'd never thought I would do. But really excited. You know, I think that we've given Boris a chance and I want to see how he takes that chance and runs with it and helps people like me in the north. If the Prime Minister were here today, what would you say to him? Thank you, really. Hi. Wow. How are you? I'm good, how are you? Nice to see you. Nice to see you. I've just been... They've been stashing me behind that screen, watching you. How are you? Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. I'm chocked. I can't believe you're here. Anyway... They smuggled me in through some back root. They would feel to have known the vote for once. That's fantastic. It's a dream come true. It's a total dream come true. And so now we're the party that speaks for everywhere. So it's an amazing change. It's amazing. I mean, the thing that I like that you said, I think it was your first speech after winning the election that said you almost treated it as like you'd rented out a vote. You're not going to take that for granted. And that was important for me to hear the first time you've heard that. And I say that every time I meet some of our MPs, I say, you know, this is on line. This is conditional. We have to repay the trust of the electorate. And I think that Brexit's just the beginning. And it's like the curtain up on a new approach to the country and a new way of thinking about our country. And I think what people voted for with Brexit was change. And it's about infrastructure. It's about education, about technology to bring the whole country together. So I think it's about us. We've often felt they ignored. And I think it is time that, you know, that we start looking outside of London and looking at what the whole country is able to do. Definitely. Because if you look at the productivity graphs, right? So London and the Southeast are allegedly incredibly productive. Whereas the North-West, Northeast, you know, it's about half as productive. It's not true. Oh, I think we'd give you a run for your money. Exactly. Exactly. Imagine what would happen for the whole country if you unleashed that potential. Absolutely. That's the big idea. We're all behind you right now. So that's what we're trying to do. No, this is my first time meeting a Prime Minister. I'm glad it was you anyway. Very, very glad to meet you. Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you very much. Hey, folks, I need you to join my team. Become a member of the Conservative Party.