 I don't respect you brothers and sisters at all, I'll be escorted by the right honourable David Davis MP, former deputy leader of the Conservative Party, I don't know why he would do that if he thought I was the kind of man you're clearly implying that I am. David Davis is one of the great parliamentarians of today and this age, and I'll be taking my seat in the House of Commons and speaking for the people of Rochdale, that's what I was elected to do. And what is your message both sides? My message to Geir Starmer is that the skids are under you in scores of labour seats up and down the country, because you've lost the trust, you've lost the confidence of millions of your traditional loyal people. You keep referring to the Prime Minister as if that's supposed to impress me. The Prime Minister is a rather diminutive, diminished and degraded politician. He made a party political statement. I don't care about Rishi Sunak's attitude. What I care about is that the returning officer, a man of unimpeachable integrity, I'm sure you'll agree, declared a free and fair election and me as the winner, and Rishi Sunak as one of the crushed two big parties in the state. That's all that matters to me. Are you going to keep repeating the same questions to me because I have other people to talk to? So let's make this the last one, shall we? That's five times you've said that. The returning officer declared it last night you were there as a free and fair election and me as the winner. You're going to have to just suck it up. I won. You know what it is? I'm not angry with George. We're wrestling with our politicians with these disgusting, dog-wisled politics. We've heard from them and this week and the term has been emphasised by George. George, what's going on with the media process? How did you experience that? Do you know what deprivation and suffering is? When will you die? When did you survive? What do you know about what's happening in Rochdale? Rochdale because they've been prived and there's no software and they don't have any money. And George wants to stand up for them and say that we stand up for them. I think you should know that. You just point off here, right? You're not going on what you're called, nothing else. And now you're walking off, you don't see the truth. You would say that, wouldn't you? Just like Richard Schoenach would say. I got 10,000 votes more than this candidate got. You've got to say something. But you know in future that Labour will put some more of it. Are you a Labour press officer? When you asked me that very question just a few hours ago, nearly hours of this one, I gave you my answer. I don't have a different answer now. George, try. I'm not sure if the wisdom is coming to us. George, you're here to celebrate your victory tonight with your support. You get crushed it. Welcome. We're welcome here. We're welcome to come and try and invalidate the election. The election's over and I won it. You won't have to get used to that. I assure you that's not what I mean. If you don't mind what your map is, you've talked about this company majority. But it was such a long turnout. It was such a long turnout. Why do you say that? It's exactly the same number as in the last election. It was higher than the most violent. Your premise is false. Can you constantly say that you represent all of the people? Of course I don't. I represent the people who voted for me, and I'll try to do my best for all the others. Your main message was to try and to achieve a success. What would you do? It wasn't my main message. That's another false premise. What was your literature? I'm not all of my literature. If you've looked to all of my literature, you know that that premise is false. It was a very strong part of your campaign. A strong part of my campaign. Genocide usually is something that occupies people's interests. The odd two at least. Have you made promises to Rochdale that you can't keep? I'm really not sure what I'm doing here. This is my victory party. What do you mean promises I can't keep? Why don't you judge whether I kept them at the end of my term? This isn't really a huge victory party. We consider that Labour really worked hard. Here as a Labour press officer, roll them out. Why are you shilling for them? But it's not the same. It's not the same kind of election. Is this the BBC? Am I paying for this? The people made the noise. Am I paying the licence fee for this? People made the noise. So whenever we talk about this election, Labour weren't there. What's your point? This isn't a normal party. It's not my fault that Labour wasn't there. You may think it was not a normal party election, but I won it. And I'm going to Parliament online, and you're going to have to get used to it. Do you expect that when the general election comes around, you'll be here on the end of this week? Absolutely. Yes! That's on the way! Even in a country like Britain, for all its imperial forces, most people, essentially, are on the side of the victims and not the perpetrator. A dozen television cameras, which seems to indicate that people are interested for good or ill in what I have to say. You said it was gate-crashed. They weren't invited. You're kind of breaking up, but let me answer that question. I hope probably. I can only do my best. I would never be a Palestinian, so hello. And it's a promise I'll make until my final breath. But I did it last night. I've got about 10,000 votes. In fact, I've got more than the Labour Conservative Liberal Democrat and Reform candidate put together. So there was a pumping majority for my stats. And there are people like me who will stand against it all over this country. Some will stand for my party, the workers' party of Britain. Many will stand as independence, including many significant figures. Like Andrew Feinstein, for example. A former South African member of the ANC. A child of Holocaust survivors. He's standing against Ustama himself. A very, very substantial man from independence. Many stand against Labour for our country. Of course, millions of traditional Labour supporters have been completely disgusted by Starmer's unequivocal. His work without qualification. His work supported all of Israel. Congratulations! Thank you very much. Nature of tonight's proceedings have become slightly confused. Most people thought they were coming here to our victory party. The division cameras have turned up to question the result of the elections. We suck it up. We want a pumping majority in Rishi Sunak's works outside Downing Street in a melodramatic pantomime just a few minutes ago. No matter who is alarmed about it, the people of Rochdale have spoken. They are sending me to Parliament on Monday. I was lucky or unlucky, maybe you were or weren't. To watch the diminished degraded and soon to be the party, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, question not just our election victory, but more significantly question the right of the British people peacefully to protest against the slaughter in Gaza. He deliberately tried to conflate protests and demonstrations of hundreds of thousands of people. Most of them are not Muslims, by the way. We tried to make it a Muslim thing, but it isn't a Muslim thing. Hundreds of thousands of British people all over this country throughout the last four and a half months have been demonstrating their revulsion at the slaughter in Gaza and the support for it from the British government, the British labour opposition, and the vast majority of the British media. Hundreds of thousands have marched, but millions share their revulsion. So, if you've come here to shill for little Rishi Sunak or Konke Kiir Starmer, you've come to the wrong place, you see, because both of these parties were comprehensively defeated here in Gaza. There are more votes than Labour, Conservative, Liberal, Reform, put together. That's the nature of our victory. And people are going to have to come to terms with it because I'm not the kind of man who's easily intimidated. I'm not intimidated by hostile journalists and broadcasters. I'm not intimidated by cameras being pointed in my face. I'm afraid only of God, you see. I'm afraid only of God. And you will not trick me or force me into retreating from the platform on which I stood and for which I now have a mandate that I will take into the House of Commons on Monday. I'm not Jeremy Corbyn, you see. I don't turn the other cheek. If you slap me, I'll slap you back. I'm more sick today, figure, than me. Maybe that's why we lost. But I didn't lose. I won. And we intend to follow up that victory with further victories. And they begin 12 weeks from now. I promised the people of Rothstein that we would try to clean the town hall clock. It was a Glasgow phrase, actually. I now realise because a lady said to me, are you sure it's awfully high? I meant it metaphorically. We're going to clean the town hall clock. We're going to clean out the town hall from the corrupt and incompetent Labour councillors in this time. They covered up the grooming scandal. They got it, the town centre. They placed a virtual demolition order on the seven sisters. They took away the markets. They allowed them to take away the maternity facilities, the A&E facilities, even the lock-up. It turns out, not only can you not be born in Rothstein, not only can you not die in Rothstein, you can't even be locked up in Rothstein. You get taken to a jail in some other town. Well, that's not acceptable, you see. And if I'd been the Member of Parliament, that would never have happened. At least it would only have happened over my dead body. Because that's the kind of Member of Parliament I intend to be. We intend to clean the town hall clock with our allies in the Rothstein Community Alliance, and I hope with Mr Tully. I mean, no wonder Rishi Sunak is alarmed about the election yesterday. He got whipped not just by me, but by an independent candidate. There'll be another hard-backed election result. But I hope that Mr Tully, whom I again congratulate for his splendid performance coming in second with the more votes than Labour, more votes than the Conservatives. And I hope that Mr Tully will join us in a grand alliance all over this bar so that we can completely defeat, eliminate at the ballot box on May the 2nd every single Rochdale councillor up for re-election. There'll be a new proof that will sweep the town hall clean. And many people are already coming forward saying they would like to be candidates. Amongst you there are others who would like to be candidates. Please let us know with your CV when your case for you being the candidate. And I believe we're going to do it, you know. The momentum that we've got. And in other parts of the constituency, the momentum that David Tully has got. Between both of us, we could really sweep these people away out of the town hall and having those Rochdale needs it. And if we do it, and then that momentum, we hope will take us all the way to victory in the general election here when it comes, and whenever it comes. What we did yesterday is catching. That's why the politicians are so afraid of it. That's why their shills in the media are so hysterical about it. Because they know if what happened here happens elsewhere also, then big changes can be expected in British politics. I believe there are hundreds of constituencies where independent candidates and workers' party candidates can compete, will compete, will defeat particularly Labour, will defeat Labour, or cause the defeat of Labour. And thus change the whole arithmetic of the forthcoming general election. I said last night that Keir Starmer paid a price and will pay a price for deliberately as a matter of deliberate policy. Kicking in the teeth, the most intense sacred feelings are the millions of Labour's traditional supporters. You can't kick people in the teeth and expect them to vote for you, at least if someone credible stands up against you and asks people to vote for you instead. And I believe that that's what will happen. I just told Al Jazeera on a live link there to Doha that let's take just one constituency. There's a man called Andrew Feinstein in London who is the son of Holocaust survivors who introduced the first bill in the Free South African Parliament about Holocaust commemoration. He was a member of parliament in South Africa. He was in Nelson Mandela's government. He was in Nelson Mandela's party and he's standing against Keir Starmer in Islid do Nol. Now, wouldn't it be a good thing if Andrew Feinstein was swept into the House of Commons just for the people that the independence workers' candidates and other smaller parties will be putting up at the general election? No wonder they're worried. No wonder Starmer's worried. No wonder Sunak is alarmed because a new political power was born here yesterday in Rocksdale. We are wave of Rocksdale pioneers. We intend to pilot a Rocksdale revival and I'm glad, proud, that all of you are going to be a part of it. We'll make change here starting on May 2. Then going on to the general election and then four or five years after that. I'm like Cristiano Ronaldo, you see. I'm reaching the end of my career but I'm ready to sign a five-year contract with a rich guy from Islid do Nol.