 Good evening everyone. I love watching the... I really must stop being distracted by these comments on the side. But I love watching how people want to be the first, which I think is really funny. Who was it tonight? Crypto Chris Card was first tonight. Thank you Crypto. Good evening. Thank you all very much for joining me. It's at the time of the week again. And what a weekend we've had. A fantastic weekend. We put this to hundreds of... hundreds of houses in Telford. And I've had quite a few responses actually from people on contacting me. Through social media and what have you. So quite a successful day. And I want to thank everyone who came along to do that leafletting. Not the coldest day in the world, but also it's a hard work, a hard slog. And speaking of leafletting, my Hartlepool campaign begins. It's that time of year again. And here we go again. When you go into this, as some of you will know, of course, when you go into this election time period, it becomes... it's almost like being in a different zone for a time. I was liking it to heading up to a massive exam or something where you're in a different zone. And everything becomes about that. And after the election, after the election, after the election, everyone, you just become... it just becomes a different time. But it started. My first leaflet is on its way. And I have to thank Miriam and Craig for doing such amazing leaflets for me. And such amazing leaflets full stop. They do all of these. They're amazing. But my first leaflet, I will be starting to put it out next week. And I'll be calling on members and supporters and activists in both in the northeast and further afield to help me. A really, really important one, this one, really important, as they all are. But I'm going to give this a really strong push. So, like I say, next week, I'll be putting out my first leaflet for this year's campaign. And I'll be calling on people between now and the 5th of May, which is the big day, election day. Also, on Saturday, I spoke to and did a interview, which I've been trying to do for some time. I've wanted to do for some time, but technology has continually let us down. But good in this instance, because it was so nice to sit down and do this chat in person. That's with Goss Hales. And you'll know Goss, he gave a wonderful, wonderful speech. Two years running actually at our conference. His life story is incredible. So we sat down after we'd done leafleting on Saturday and we spoke and had a genuinely emotional... I was choked up having this discussion with Goss, I really was. Genuinely emotional conversation and of course we recorded it. And it will be, I've literally just sent it over to Ed and we're going to put that out on Friday night. So keep an eye out for that on Friday. Other things going on, the Colston, the Edward Colston statue team has met. We met a week before last, just that they're about. And we'll be meeting again tomorrow night for some updates. I did mention this to you last week, but I'll mention it again. The 9th of April, put that in your diary. And I will, we're having another meeting tomorrow night, as I say, to catch up on things. And then we'll talk about what the plans are, which will be basically an anti-Black Lives Matter protest, as well as a call for justice. This should not, this statue should never have been pulled down. And they certainly should not have been cleared of it in court for political reasons. So if you want to join us on the Colston statue team for want for a better name, please give Sharon a shout and Sharon will let me know. And that's always, as always at inquiriesatforbritten.uk. Okay, I know that a lot, two things I want to cover tonight. One of them I was asked about last week, which I said I'd come back to, which is the Northern Ireland protocol. But before we get on to that, I know that there is a massive event or events going on in the world at the moment. And I know, I think actually, have I just seen a question come in about it? I have. You won't be surprised to learn that I'm talking about the Russia and Ukraine situation. Now, let me tell you what I know and what I don't know. I know that this is a very complex issue. I know there are, as with pretty much all wars, various different things going on at once. Various parties involved, various agendas. And as was said on a video I watched today. Well, as someone said, which I found interesting, no good guys and no bad guys. This is what I know. I know that this is complicated, the historic issues here. There are issues, long standing issues between the West, NATO and Russia. The expansion of NATO East, for example, this goes back right to agreements that were made. Not necessarily written agreements, but understanding is going back right to the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Soviet Union. It's a long and complicated matter, that much I know. Something else I know is that the press, the Western press and Western politicians are telling us very, very clearly. Trust this guy, don't trust this guy. You know who I don't trust? The media. I don't trust the media and I don't trust our politicians. And with good reason. Remember, this is the same media who not so long ago were telling us that someone who had been hit by a boss had died of Covid. And we know we're lying for a great length of time. We know lie and from personal experience, we in for Britain know that the press lie. And that they are making this a simple matter, a very black and white matter. War is rarely a black and white matter. So I know that I don't trust that. I don't trust the press. I don't trust our politicians. And I think that is probably the sanest thing to acknowledge. This is complicated, this is historical. And when the press and Western politicians are all on the same side and presenting you with a simple picture, don't trust it and I don't. I'm hearing as well that people, images and videos from different wars, from different... We do not know we're so saturated with information that you have to take a great deal of it with a pinch of salt. Something else I know is that I wish, really, really wish that our leaders and indeed our people were as animated and as concerned about the problems in our country as they are the problems in other countries. And you can see the inconsistency, you can see the hypocrisy, everywhere. We have Western leaders now talking about democratic rights and civil rights and national sovereignty. What about our civil rights and national sovereignty? They talk about other countries' borders while our own borders are leaking like a silk. I'm just waiting, actually, for that clown in Canada who actually said, he actually said, they won't, we can't tolerate authoritarianism. Justin Trudeau talking about authoritarianism in Russia. Is he joking? Is he joking? I'm not sure he has much of a sense of humor, but if he has, it's not really an appropriate joke. The right to protest in Russia. You just know. But you've got all this bleeding from Western leaders about democratic rights, about national sovereignty, about borders. Well, none of this seems to apply here. Where is the concern for the democratic rights and the national sovereignty and the borders here? This is what really gets me wound up about all this. To hear Western leaders bleeding on about democracy in other countries while our own collapses. And to see the concern from people I'm not saying to be clear. I'm not saying we shouldn't care about what happens in the rest of the world. I'm not saying we shouldn't care about people caught in the midst of war. You'd have to have a heart of stone not to care. And I'm not saying either that we should disengage from allies and friends. We should have allies and friends. What I'm saying is that our own country has incredible issues to face, very dangerous difficult issues to face. And that I wish our leaders about other countries and is concerned about our democratic rights as they are about others. And I do want to respond while we're on this issue. I knew this one would come in. Okay, I found it. What do you think of the latest announcement to allow Ukrainian refugees? A hundred thousand Ukrainians will be able to seek refuge in the UK. I sort of think here we go again. It's a very difficult one. I don't personally, I don't particularly want hundreds of thousands more people coming here. I really don't. We are struggling to help our own people. Am I pleased at the idea of a hundred thousand Ukrainians coming here? No, I'm not. Do I understand that people will flee from that country? Yes. Do I understand the compassion and do I approve of the compassion and wanting to help these people? Absolutely. Am I pleased at the notion of it? No. No, I'm not. And someone has just put up, Jason O'Brien has just put in the comments, Boris invited Hong Kong here too. Yes, you've got to have. There's only one side that I am always on and that is Britain's side. I don't mean Boris Johnson and the shower of crocs in Parliament. I mean the British people. Now once again, do I feel compassion for the UK? Yes, I do. I just wish we cared as much about the British people. And again, as Stu Frost has just put into the comments, South African farmers will not welcome. To put this issue forward because it's almost 20 past. And don't worry, I'm not ducking out of this at all. What I am going to do is I have asked Eddie Butler. Who caught my eye on Facebook when he posted some very interesting comments on the Russia Ukraine situation. He is very knowledgeable on the topic and the history of it and has made some very interesting comments on Facebook. And upon seeing those, I asked Eddie if he would record a discussion on this issue with me from an objective standpoint. And that's essentially how I see it objectively. So I've asked Eddie if he will talk to me and we will record a discussion Wednesday about this. So we will do a full hour long say discussion on this on Wednesday and I will post it to our YouTube channel on Wednesday night. So we'll leave this discussion for the moment and we will have a full chat about it. Again, from an objective standpoint, let's look at the history objectively. The parties involved objectively and try to make it a bit clearer, trying to wade through some of the mud here. So look out for that. I will post that on Wednesday night. So let's move on from this topic for the moment. And I do want to talk about the I'll get back to questions, but I do want to talk about the Northern Ireland protocol briefly before getting back to some questions. OK, so it was I was asked this question last week about certain parties suggesting that Brexit will be scrapped altogether. Will they ever stop because of the Northern Ireland protocol? And I do actually think that this may become more of an issue as we go on. Also, and one of the reasons why I want to have a look at it is it's an example of the politics that was being played by the Conservatives at the time of the Brexit negotiations. They made a mess of it in many respects, but in one respect they made a mess of it here regarding Northern Ireland. But so eager was Boris Johnson to win the general election on the back of his mantra, get Brexit done. That anything essentially was pushed throughable by him in order to get that general election on the basis of getting Brexit done. To me, this is one of the places where they made a mess and didn't really care that they'd made a mess because getting it through was all that mattered in time for a general election. What has happened recently is that a Minister, a Forest Minister in fact, resigned in early February in protest against the Northern Ireland protocol. And as I say, I don't think this is going away anytime soon. The implications for this could actually be very serious. We know how despite years of relative peace in Northern Ireland, we know that it is still very, very sensitive. And could, peace there, could, to me, still quite fragile, could be dramatically actually affected by this. So First Minister Paul Given resigned on the 3rd of February as part of the Democratic Unionist Party, the DUP, protest against the protocol. His resignation, it says here, comes a day after one of his party's ministers ordered checks to be halted at Northern Ireland's port. So what is the Northern Ireland protocol? It essentially puts, instead of putting a, because the UK was coming out of the EU, to put it simply, the checks on goods going to and fro between an EU country, i.e. the Irish Republic, and a non-EU country, i.e. the United Kingdom, including Northern Ireland, checks on goods costing the border. In order to avoid that those checks being made within the island, of Ireland, they are instead made down the Irish Sea. So this has effectively, and this is where the serious implications for peace in Northern Ireland come in, what it has effectively done is taken Northern Ireland further away from Great Britain and driven a something of a rift, not a rift, rift is completely the wrong word actually, a divide, a divide down the Irish Sea and taking Northern Ireland into a different set of rules and regulations from the rest of the UK, upsetting Unionists in Northern Ireland, and understandably so. So to just give you a little briefly, the protocol allows lorries to deliver goods without having paperwork and goods checked when they cross the border from Northern Ireland into the Republic of Ireland to try and get around the problem the UK and the EU negotiated the Northern Ireland protocol, which is now part of international law. Now the UK wants to change this. It says here, despite signing up to the agreement in 2019, the UK government now says the protocol represented a huge compromise by the UK and has accused the EU of applying it too rigidly. The UK is calling for changes which include getting rid of checks and paperwork between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, ensuring that goods that remain in Northern Ireland only need to meet British standards without also needing to comply with EU law and removing the role of the European Commission and the European Court of Justice in overseeing how the protocol works. Because part of this agreement also, not just about checks and what have you in the island of Ireland, was that rules and regulations of the EU applied to Northern Ireland which don't apply to Great Britain. It is a mess, a mess. But the UK government agreed to it and now is saying you are applying it too rigidly. So a potential rift and potential problem, and this time the rift is the right word, that could be coming, is the invoking of Article 16. This is a set of three paragraphs in the protocol that allows either side to suspend any part of the agreement that causes economic, societal or environmental difficulties. Liz Tross says, I want a negotiated solution, but if we have to use legitimate provisions including in Article 16, I am willing to do it. Okay, the EU in response has said that they are proposing an 80% reduction in checks on food products arriving in Northern Ireland, reducing the customs information firms need to provide, passing legislation to allow the trade in medicines between GB and Northern Ireland to continue and relaxing rules, so that certain meats could still be sent across the area. So in a nutshell, let me post this here so you can read it in a bit more detail yourself. Let me post it in the comments. In a nutshell, it's a mess. And the Tory government knew it would be a mess. But they agreed with anyway. And now they're trying to pull back and they're seeing perhaps what a mess they've made. And this is a serious mess because this serious mess could have implications for peace in Northern Ireland. I've posted that article, have a look at it yourself. You'll see even just from reading the article that it's messy and it's not the only messy in the withdrawal agreement from the EU. And it's not the only messy either that is likely to come back and bite us in the backside. I expect more of it in the future. Okay, what I want to talk to you about tonight. I wanted to talk to you about standing for election and to address some crucial point. And to address some concerns. Why are we standing for election? The first question, I want to start that with a question of my own. To contemplate for you to contemplate. If you are contemplating standing for election for us and please, please do contemplate it. Why do we stand for election in the first place? Question, where is the power? Who are the decision makers? Who is it that in the face of COVID introduced lockdowns? For just one tiny example, who is it that is allowing our borders to leak like a sieve? Who is in charge? Where does the book stop? And it's a really important question. It stops with our elected representatives. That's where the power, the decision makers are. The real power, of course, is with the people because we put them there. And we give them our mandate to make decisions on our behalf. And those decisions are then applied to us. But the decision makers in our lives, and it's no minor matter, these people have the power of life and death over us. They really do. They have the power to determine our quality of life. That's how important it is. Life and death, literally life and death. So why accept years and years of it we've had of complete mismanagement? Bad, bad decisions made by these decision makers. And we, the people, are the ones who suffer when they make those bad decisions. Our elected representatives, whether we like it or not, are extremely powerful. And they dictate our lives to us. Why don't you want a bit of that power yourself? Take control of your own life. Take your country and its destiny into your own hands. Trust yourself with your power in your hands. And not theirs. That's the key. We protest against government decisions, vital, crucial, always do it. But ultimately, why are we protesting? We're protesting because we want those decision makers to make different decisions. We don't like the decisions they've been making. I say, take the power and make those decisions yourself. Take back your country. They're clearly incompetent. They clearly don't care about you. So stand up and take back your country. Elections are a peaceful and effective response to government mismanagement. The alternative, what? War? Civil disobedience? Civil disobedience, not a bad thing. I'm not, certainly not against it. But they can, those in power, can use force against you if you exercise civil disobedience. If enough of us did it, perhaps they wouldn't. But they can. They have the power to lock you in a little concrete room and lock the door behind you. Leave you there. That's how powerful they are. That's what they have over you. So while there are many ways of protesting against them, the best way of all is to take their power off them and run your country yourself. That is how important it is. That's why we stand for election. That's why we formed this political party in the first place. To take back our power and to really take it back. It's difficult and it's a long journey. Now, enjoying the journey and I think this journey needs to be fun. And one thing I certainly want to do from here on out is make sure we have a lot more fun because it can get very dark, especially when you are swimming against the tide. And you will hear people. I hear it all the time. She loses every election. She sounds like, well, so what? So what? I never expected to dart out of the gates straight into power. That would be absurd. It's a journey. But it's a journey with friends, with allies, with people who, you know, especially in our party, and actually I'm talking about our party. People who are brave and principled and who do this out of love and passion. That's what you get along the way. That's what your journey is filled with. Incredible, incredible people. The kind of people you probably wouldn't have become friends with otherwise. So it is a journey and we will lose elections. Of course we will. That's all part of it. It's part of the journey. And on absolutely every time you do it, every time you stand, you learn something. I learn something every time I do it. 100% I learn something. And that's how you ultimately succeed is by not letting it, not letting the insults get you down, by knowing that the journey is about learning and improving and tightening our alliances and our friendships and our strength that we get together, from being together on this journey. That tightens, that strengthens, it solidifies as we go on. But each time, each time we do it, each time we stand, we grow not only in knowledge and experience and expertise, but we use it as a platform. It's a way for us to let the country know that we are here. These things are crucial and on a personal level. It is your method and ability to make your mark on your period of history. We all have short, we're all here for a short time. Make it count. It's an incredible life experience, something few people actually get to experience standing for election. It's exciting. And it is your time, it's your time, it's your time, your chance to make a mark. And if making a mark, if leaving something here, leaving your mark on the world, is something that is important to you, that is a chance to do it. Now, concerns I know people have. The primary one is the press, the rotten, corrupt, lying, scheming, cheating. I could go on, I won't, I could. We go way past eight o'clock just in, I just don't know how awful the press is. And I understand entirely why that is people's primary concern, or at least a leading concern that people have. The press will lie, it's what it does. It will attack you, it's what it does. Prepare for that. It's not as tough, it's not as difficult to deal with, as you might think. Support each other, we're all going through the same thing at the same time. But also, be proud of it. You're not attacked by these people because you're insignificant. You're attacked by them because you are significant. You're attacked by them because what you are saying is true. And they know, supported by millions of people all over the country. And I'll acknowledge this, 100% I'll acknowledge it's probably easier for me to say this now than because I've had so much of it. In a way that other people are probably not used to it. But you get through it, and you get through it together. We get through it together. It's not nearly as it's hard, especially for the first couple of times it happens, but rely on each other, and you'll get through it. And your skin will toughen. Crucially, your skin will toughen. Mine has toughened and toughened and toughened over the years. Other things that people are afraid of is losing friends and family. And this one I know is a serious one and matters a lot to people. I know there are people in our party who have lost friends and family members. That is really tough, and I understand. I really do. I'm lucky. My family are very, very supportive of what I do. So in that regard I'm very lucky. I've lost friends though, many in fact, and it's not easy. But you only really, you only really, you're the only person you have to live with for the rest of your life as yourself. And your integrity and your courage and your passion and what it goes on inside you is the most important thing in your life. And as has just come up in the comments, we're friends in the first place. I mean, that's true. But these things are tough, but life is tough. Life is amazing, but it's also hard. And we are going to go through things. We're going to enter new relationships. We're going to close doors on old relationships. It's a path of life and we're going to have difficulties and we're going to feel bad in our lives. That's part of being a human being. But you have to live with yourself and your own integrity. And that is more important. I think one of the issues, and someone has just, as Graham has just mentioned it on here, it's probably wise, but we're in a really divisive time. And the notion of close friends strongly disagreeing with it, it seems to have disappeared. It's incredible. I mean, I can remember when you had friendships where you really disagreed with each other. And that seems to be gone. And this division between us, the first time I really saw it powerfully was Brexit and families broken down the middle by Brexit. I mean, first of all, you're serving the political elite in this. Nothing they want, nothing they like more than a divided, fractured country at each other's throats. So it serves them very well. But I think we need to make a conscious, we as a country, as a people need to make a conscious effort to try and get back to restoring the notion of friends who disagree and family members who disagree. Not easy, I know, because we've been so damaged. But I know that is one that happens and I know it's a concern. Loss of jobs is another concern. That one I would have to leave to people's own. You'd have to decide yourself. I don't actually, I know very few people. I won't say I don't know anyone. I wanted to maybe a couple more who have either lost their job or been threatened to lose their job because of this, but very few actually have. But if you really feel that you can't, then at the moment, get behind someone who is standing and put all your efforts there. I would, if it were me, I would try and sort of say, when I was always a little, when I was, when I walked in the NHS for example, I was always a little bit rebellious anyway. But if it were me, and I was in that situation, and I feel really lucky that I'm not actually, so I really, really do sympathise. If it were me, I would maybe try and sort it out a little bit. My job situation, my work situation, and I would also look at my legal rights, and I've just given myself, is there a light bulb above my head? I've just given myself an idea. I'm going to, got a contact, a lawyer friend of mine who I know works in employment law. I used to do a bit of employment law back in the day. And immediately from what I do know of employment law, immediately I can, there's absolutely no way that this can be legal. But there are, to sack someone for their political views for example, but we know that there is, the law and order matters very little for a start, and that there are always little ways and means of employers imposing their view on us. So what I'm going to do is put together, let me think, let me come, all right, next week, this is what I'm going to do. I'm going to come back next week with an employment law summary, and I'll write it out into a handy little guide. And I will think about arguments that I would make if I were representing someone who it was sacked for. So that's how I'll do it actually. I'll go back to law school briefly and this is how you should do exams. And you're doing law degree that give you, you are representing so and so, that give you the case. What are you going to do? So exam questions, give you a load of details. You are this person's lawyer. What are you going to do? So that's what I'll do. That's how I'll write it. I'll get to work on that. Okay. Let me go to some questions for the last quarter of an hour. Miriam, it is on my list. It's on my little note. I actually have a little note part here for every live stream, but why not? I'll do it now and then I'll do it again at the end. This weekend, come to Clacton. Please come to Clacton. We are campaigning in Clacton. We are doing some speeches in Clacton, including myself. So if you are in the region and you'd like a nice day out this Saturday, it will be a nice day out, come along to Clacton. If you do want to come along, I'm going to put it in here. I'm going to post in here with it to contact. There we go. Oh, wait, wait, wait. There we go. Tendling at forbritain.uk for details on that. But please do come along. We are doing, we are really campaigning again. And there's lots and lots going on and every weekend something's going on and there are various different rallies coming up which I'll be speaking at. So please do try and make it along to them and give the party what support you can. Tendling at forbritain.uk for details this Saturday in Clacton. Please, please do come along. Right. Michael, good evening, Michael. Donald Trump said if he was still president, this wouldn't have happened. He's right. This happens because Western leaders are weak and won't agree. I agree. I think what would have happened, you know, Trump was the Western leader. The only one with a little bit of something about him, wasn't he? I just call it an inner stale, which he does. And that's one of the reasons I admire him so much is that he has something, there's something about him. He's got an actual personality for a start. He's not reading from a script. He's got some inner stale and he was an effective leader. And yes, he was tough. And he did for a brief period to kind of phrase make America great again. Now America is something of a laughing stock. It's got a president who I'm not even sure he knows he's president at this point. I mean, some of the, frankly, yes, I am interested in that. Give me a shout. Some of the clips and things that you see are now unbelievable of Joe Biden. Unbelievable. I mean, this is the leader of the free world. This is incredible. And it's frightening. And whoever is, and you notice, Kamala Harris is no better. Absolute disaster in the White House. A disaster. So yes, when America weakened, so weakened, the West is weakened. And then you only have to go north of America and see the mess there. And see the mess governing there to no weakness. And then you come to Europe, globalist shells. Each and every, to be fair, to be fair to Europe, we do have some. They're not in power, unfortunately, yet, but we do have some strong patriotic politicians in Europe. I think with Trump gone, I struggle to find one in America on either side of the political divide. But still, if you talk about those who are in power, Europe is also weak and woke. And I saw, you know, I saw this thing going around on Twitter from some senior, President Sr. in our security services, talking about the LGBTQ plus, plus, plus, plus, plus, in the midst of the Russia-Ukraine. And you think to me, you know, and almost every response was, oh, come on, give it a rest. Just give it a rest, take a day off from this. It's, you know, it's, what, to worry about pronouns, I just, we are so, look, I'll tell you, it's communism. That's what it is, it's communism. We are heartlings down the hill to communism in Europe, rapidly, absolutely rapidly. And one thing communism loves to do is destroy truth and objectivity and to bully and intimidate and force people to believe things they know are not true. It's as old as communism itself. So yes, Michael, I agree with you. We are weak, America is weak, and it wouldn't be if they hadn't stolen the election from Donald Trump. I actually think by this, at this rate, it wouldn't have got to this rate. I think I can see Trump and Putin sitting down at a table by now. None of this would be happening. Stu, many nations have sent various weaponry to Ukraine to defend themselves. I believe we are at war with our own government and various other organizations. Yeah, I do. Our government doesn't care about us. We are being abused by our governments. And not just us, all over the Western world, abused by them. In order to defend ourselves, we have to stand up to our own governments. It's so difficult to navigate, to get your head around. If you compare it, for example, if you look at the Second World War, for example, you had a united country under a leader. Now we are fighting an enemy. Now we are a divided country. With leaders who want to weaken us, want to divide us, want us to be frightened, it is a completely different world, a completely different world. So our enemy is, in fact, our own government. Many of us, warning about the invention of the EU Army, got called conspiracy nuts. In effect, this has happened. Would you remove us from this? Absolutely. It's in our manifesto that we would exit any such agreements, which in fact, if not in word, brought us into some sort of European army. And so many of these agreements were made, documents signed. If you look at the manifesto on a defense, you'll see a bit more detail about it. Side after Brexit, which is a particularly nauseating phrase. Personally, I'm sick to death. Fraser also calls himself pure blood. Did David Vunt start that one? It's catching on, if he did. Personally, I'm sick to death of being the dumping ground for the world's so-called refugees. Let them go somewhere more suitable to their needs and culture. Part of our manifesto as well is that the current asylum system needs to be completely scrapped. Anyone can claim asylum at this point. British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said she would absolutely support British nationals who choose to go to Ukraine to help fight speaking to the BBC. She would support UK citizens who chose to answer the call to arms. Should the keyboard warriors cheering this on be encouraged to go? It's a strange one, that one, isn't it? Supporting British nationals who choose to go to Ukraine to help fight. It is a strange one. I suppose it's up to them. But what confuses me about this is can they go and fight? It's very much taking sides, that one. And I know the government has taken a side and the press has taken a side and they're very, very clear about it. But what if somebody wanted to go and fight for Russia? I'm guessing the answer would be somewhat different. It's strange that people would want to go and fight for someone else's country in the first place. But I find it, especially if they have no historic or family connection with that country. I find that strange in the first place. But my guess is that she wouldn't give the same response regarding going to fight for Russia. So where does that end, if you like? People, I suppose, are free to go and fight for whoever they want. But this has literally just come up and that's exactly what I was thinking. People went to fight for ISIS. Now no, I'm not making comparisons with ISIS and any of the parties involved in this. We were rightly disgusted at that. But yet encouraging, it is encouraging. The words that used are encouraging it. It's a strange one. It's a strange one all around for me personally. And I think it's very much a side taking operation by the UK government. And perhaps in some instances it's okay to take sides. But I'm not sure that this one is quite as cut and dry as the media and press are making it out to be. I say that entirely objectively. Some things are, I mean life is complicated. But many sometimes some things are so profound that they are quite simple. Like ISIS, for example. I don't think this is quite as simple as that. But I'm looking forward to talking about it with Eddie Butler this week and learning a lot about it from him myself. Mark, how did campaigning in Telford go on Saturday? Did it go ahead? It certainly did. And we had a fantastic day. I thoroughly enjoyed it. And I want to say thanks again to everyone who came along. And I have had engagement from people in Telford as a result, which is a result. What if you got into Parliament only to find out that you have managers? Oh dear. That's from maybe the best. Maybe the best. You don't know me. I'm going to tell you that. My only managers would be my constituents and the best interests of this country. I am not your average everyday politician. Graham in my community, the councillors are rubber samples for the local authority. They don't represent the voters. They dictate to cancel policy to them. Absolutely Graham. And that is the case across the board. And what people don't really understand with the voting public out there don't understand is that that's how it works. And one thing that I will do if the people of this ward elect me in May, I will tell them. I will tell them everything. Exactly how it works. Everything. There's nothing. I will hold back. I know for example how they would treat me. I know I'll be treated like some sort of toxic waste. I will tell the voters it's everything that goes on. Because the people deserve to know how this system works. And they will. They will know. And you're right to say that the job of the elected councillors is to go in there and be the representative of the people in the governing system. The elected are supposed to represent the people in that system. So you have the executive, which is the highly paid, unelected chief executive and team. You have the various different branches of local government. And then you have in the mix of all of this, the elected councillors and those elected councillors are supposed to be the voice of the people in the governing process. 99% of the time that is not the case. They are, as you rightly say, rubber stampers. That has to change. I intend to change it here. Kevin will finish up. I'll make this the last one. Kevin says, I believe we got into the EU on a pack of lies. It was a trade deal. It has controlled all aspects of our lives. And we've been on a slippery downhill slope ever since. Absolutely agree with that, Kevin. And even at the time, it subsequently comes to light, doesn't it? That even at the time that going into the European Union, that certain aspects of it were not to be talked about. They knew. The European Union knew from its outset what it intended to do, which was to become a united Europe with, basically a super state, a European super state, and remove the voice of the people from the governing process in Europe. That was always its intention. And in going into this, British politicians of the day knew this. I kept it quiet. We've been governed by corrupt liars for a depressingly long time. Okay, let's finish up there. And very, very finally, this Saturday, Clackton, please come along. Can someone clarify for me? Is it tenderingatforbritain.uk? Presumably it is. Because I keep getting tenderingatforbritain. But tenderingatforbritain.uk, if you want to come along, it starts at half 12 in the town centre. If you're in or about the area, we will be hard to miss. We've got banners and a PA system and all the rest of it. So make your way to Clackton on Saturday and show some support for the party. Because we are back. We are very, very much back. Campaigning and campaigning and campaigning. Okay, Miriam, thank you. Yes, tenderingatforbritain.uk is the email address to get in touch with. If you want more details about something, please do come along. And we'll have a drink and what have you afterwards and socialise and get to know each other. And the journey has to be fun as well. Come along. Thank you very much, everyone, for joining me this evening. I shall be back. So, what have we got on this week? My rumble I'll do on Wednesday. That'll be up Wednesday night. Yes, I'm having this conversation with Eddie Butler on Wednesday. That will also be up Wednesday night. My chat with Goss Hales will go up on YouTube on Friday night. Do not miss that one. We'll be back here next Monday at 8 o'clock live. And my Hightlipple campaign starts next week. And my website, I know it's still a little bit messy, my Hightlipple website. I'm working on it. And we will start to upload various videos, campaign videos onto that as well, next week when the campaign starts. Okay, we will actually stop there. Thank you very much, everyone. Look after yourselves. And I shall see you. Yeah, I'll see you very soon. Take care. And if you're in Clackton on Saturday, I'll see you there. Thanks, everyone. Look after yourselves. Bye-bye.