 What type of government? The children to go to school hungry. What type of government thinks it's okay for people to die in the back and have no hospital beds? We want a school system that is fully funded. We want every child to have full bellies, the shelter that they deserve and we want to return joy and happiness to our classroom. I need to be out here today to fight for a raise. I need to be out here today to fight for manageable workloads and to show the government and universities that we are tired of being ignored. As a complete deficit and a democratic crisis are on their knees. We've got a conservative government who doesn't believe in democracy. We've got a conservative government who says, well, you've got the worst anti trade union legislation. You've got a hit and arbitrary 50% threshold, which none of them have to to get elected. Oh, you've hit the threshold. You're taking strike action up. Right. What we're now going to do is attack your rights even more. But through this type of action, the way to deal with them thresholds, the way to deal with them is to tell them you action in defence of their wages, hungry. What type of government thinks it's okay for beds? What type of government thinks it's okay for people to do more? We're out on strike over pay equality, pay pensions against casualisation, but we're alongside other trade unionists today. Today is a national day for the right to strike. The trade union movement in this country began by fighting to be able to strike. And this government has tried to reverse the gains that have been made for over 200 years in the democratic freedoms that trade unionists have. So that's why today civil servants, teachers, train drivers and university staff here are out together protesting for the right to strike, as well as the demands that they have over the across the living crisis and for a decent fair aid and a fair pay pension. I'm picking today because working conditions for PGRs and for wider staff are becoming untenable. I've been worked towards an academic career for years now and it's looking increasingly like I won't be able to sustain myself within the sector because working conditions is becoming too bad. They thought that they could continue their programme at pay cuts, of funding erosion, of privatisation and guess what? We're going to stand together now and through more disputes and say no, we're not going to be poor anymore. Our schools are going to have funding, our children, our children are going to have what they deserve. Over the past decade, our pay has been cut by 24%. Our per people funding is below 2010 levels. Our schools have been cut to the bone, but we know it's also a deeper expression of anger. We're angry at a narrow curriculum, a ruthless inspectorate in Ofsted and we're angry at seeing rocketing levels of child poverty every day in our classroom. Because we don't just want bread, we want roses too. We want a school system that is fully funded. We want every child to have full bellies, the shelter that they deserve and we want to return joy and happiness to our classroom. So let's stand strong and together with doctors and nurses and railway workers and civil servants and teachers and firefighters, we can build a society where everybody and every child can flourish. I need to be out here today to fight for a raise. I need to be out here today to fight for manageable workloads and to show the government and universities that we are tired of being ignored. We're out here to fight for our right to strike and to prove to UCEA, Rishi Sunak and the entire government and private sector that we are worth more. We provide the labor and we have the power.