For 300 years, the Conservative Party has been one of the most powerful forces in British politics. But it could soon be extinct, destroyed and replaced by the rising power of Reform. Cambridge professor and Reform adviser James Orr is in Phoenix for Amfest and joins the show to discuss the fate of Britain. Plus, he reacts to the testimony of Todd Nettleton about persecuted Christians around the world, from Nigeria to Syria to India. Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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All right, welcome to our two of the Charlie Kirk Show.
I'm Andrew Colvett.
Blake Neff's to my left.
Defected.
Switched sides on the table.
And the reason being is that in studio we have the great Dr. James Orr.
It's a pleasure to have you, sir.
Great to be with you, Andrew.
Great to be with you, Blake.
Well, it's always a treat.
You know, some of my best, most favorite last memories with Charlie, you happen to be a part of as well.
And so that is really close to my heart, and I know to yours as well.
And I'm glad we had that time.
And then you came back afterwards, and I know you've made some trips to Phoenix, and you're going to be joining us for Amfest.
So I think we're all excited.
You're actually going to be moderating some discussions.
So I believe.
I've only just found this out maybe a few days ago.
I'm really excited for that.
We volunteered you for a second.
I think I've got three debates to moderate.
That's amazing.
Including some pretty neuralgic, difficult topics.
I think there's one on God.
You don't get harder than that.
There's one on Israel.
And I think they thought, well, who are we going to give the hospital pass to?
Let's send it to the Brit.
Who cares if he plays up?
Yeah, exactly.
It's not like you have your own reputation to worry about here, Dr. Orr.
You, of course, are very active with reform in the UK.
How things are going over there?
Things are going extremely well.
In fact, in many ways, there isn't really a historical precedent for how well Reform UK is doing.
Well, what we're witnessing is really the emergence for the first time in the history of British politics, a new party of the right that is credible, that has increasingly very strong popular support.
I think we've been leading at about 160 polls, poll after poll.
We've made some amazing incursions electorally back in May, swept the local elections.
Looks like we're going to do extremely well in Wales and in Scotland.
So the energy is extraordinary.
At the moment, we're sometimes polling higher than the combined polling of the Labour Party and the Conservative Party, the two historic parties.
I want to highlight that, that they've had a few different parties towards the left end of the politics.
They used to have the Liberals, and they're still around, but they're small, and they got replaced by Labour.
But the Conservatives and before them, the Tories, they're older than America.
There was a, I believe it was a Tory prime minister when the American Revolution broke out.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And they've been the party of government, typically, in Britain for 300 years.
And it might all go down in flames.
Well, and, you know, are we still a first question?
What's the animating factor?
Well, I think for the One very important animating factor is a negative one, namely just the routine betrayal and incompetence of successive Labour and Tory governments over certainly over the last 25 years.
Over the Tory period, you know, the Conservatives let in their last Parliament, from sort of 2019 to 2024, more legal and illegal migrants than we've seen in our history.
Why?
Well, all sorts of complicated reasons behind it, but I think part of the problem was a belief in the dogma of the Treasury that the British economy will collapse if we don't keep the Ponzi scheme going, if we don't keep bringing in hundreds of thousands, indeed millions of people to help prop up the economy and do the jobs that Brits don't want to do.
It's the same old story.
Well, it's so appalling just because you did the Biden wave, except they call it Boris wave there, and it was, I think, higher than Biden's level of immigration when you adjust for the size of the country.
And with a right-wing government, they've had only right-of-center governments in the UK until Starmer from 2010 to last year, and they did the full open border spiel from the right.
That's exactly right.
And so I think that's the first thing that's really driving support for us because reform has been very, very clear on migration from the very beginning.
It's very clear on the fiscal suicide of net zero and the need to get some energy independence and energy sovereignty.
It's been very clear on questions of free speech.
We had the passing of the Online Safety Act just a few months ago.
And this is really a censorship charter using the wedge of trying to get some statutory protection for children online.
But folded into that enormous piece of legislation was effectively measures and tools that equip Ofcom, our media regulator, with enormous powers to censor.
And even Substack is now having to censor certain articles to comply with the legislation.
I think even X announced today that they just said some of our material is going to have to be taken down in Europe.
And you have to watch out for what you post because we're falling, but we can't defy these laws just yet.
The European Union is developing its own kind of censorship charter that is even more draconian.
And it's extraordinary what's happening.
And so we're very committed to getting free speech right if we ever got into power.
And it's quite straightforward to do it.
There's just a few provisions in a few acts here and there that need to be amended or clarified or simply repealed.
And that could have an enormous downstream effect on the culture of freedom movement.
You guys are so lucky.
In Britain, they just have supremacy of parliament.
They can essentially just, if you have a majority, you can pass any law you want on anything.
But I want to, on the free speech thing, can you talk about the Islamophobia definition?
That's been going on in the past couple of days.
That's another concern.
Yeah, so this has been a long-running debate in the public square over the last few years in Britain, and there's been a big push on the left and now with the Labour Party, which has an enormous majority in the House of Commons, to effectively legislate a definition and protect, or rather, protect anyone who feels themselves to be a victim of Islamophobia.
And so there's been a lot of back and forth.
And actually, Parliament has been working very well.
There's been excellent Tory MPs who've been getting up and pointing out just what an incursion on freedom of speech and freedom of religion this definition would be.
Because effectively, what they're trying to do is to elide sort of beliefs with identity.
And And so the thought is that to be a Muslim is to have a particular identity rather than to have that identity in virtue of subscribing to a set of beliefs, beliefs that plainly can be criticized in any free democracy and indeed and should be criticized, should be open to criticism.
But so the government's backed down is trying to tweak the definition and now it's something like anti-Muslim, anti-Muslim hatred or anti-Muslim, yeah, I think it's anti-Muslim hatred.
And the problem with that is it just, you know, it just bakes in the problem.
Do they have anti-white hatred?
They, technically, yes.
Technically, yes.
I mean, there is all of this sort of exists under the equality legislation, but this would be a special provision.
It would be a special protection, which, well, they're trying to say by shifting to anti-Muslim hate as opposed to Islamophobia, we've kind of solved the problem.
But we don't.
Because, again, the assumption is there that somehow to be a Muslim is to be a member of a race or to be a member of an ethnic group, which plainly you're not.
You're a Muslim.
Just if you can do the Shahada three times or whatever it might be, the three of us could become Muslims in the next half hour.
It's completely nothing to do with our ethnicity or race.
I'm looking at the latest draft definition, and it includes as something that would be banned the prejudicial stereotyping and racialization of Muslims to stir up hatred against them.
That just strikes me as an incredibly broad thing.
Stereotyping of Muslims.
To say there's a common trait that a lot of Muslims have.
Well, I think that what you would have to say to speak to a trait that a lot of Muslims have is you'd have to pick out some doctrinal commitment, some belief that should be contestable in a free democracy.
There's nothing distinctive, ethnically or racially distinctive about being Muslim.
As we said, it's simply whether or not you sign up to a belief system.
And so what it's doing is it's protecting that belief system, protecting the identity that you have in virtue of signing up to the belief system.
It's an ideological belief, and then you say you can't stereotype a belief system.
Well, what is it then?
Well, yeah, but what about genital mutilation of young girls?
That tends to be something that happens in Muslim African nations.
What about the grooming gangs that tend to be centralized within a particular immigrant group that happen to be Muslims?
So then all this stuff, all of a sudden these get very sticky, these topics.
Absolutely right.
I mean, what's interesting about that is that ironically, this legislation could make people think that criticism about grooming gangs or criticism about female genital mutilation is something somehow a widespread shared Islamic belief.
But it's not.
It's actually, certainly the grooming gangs come from a very particular area of Pakistan and FGM is localized in parts of sub-Saharan Africa.
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So tell us, establish yourself, your bona fides.
What do you do?
Who are you?
Well, my main job and vocation is in academia.
So I'm an associate professor of philosophy and religion at Cambridge in England, where I teach undergraduates.
I teach graduate students, PhD students.
So I love doing that.
But I have another day job now where I'm as senior advisor to Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, and we are all expecting our next prime minister.
2029?
Well, 2029 is the latest that the election can be called, and I'm not sure the country can last that long, but it's possible that the government will fall before that.
We're very good at getting rid of prime ministers.
Getting rid of governments is a lot harder.
Yeah, okay.
Turkeys don't vote for Christmas, which you have to vote for the government to fall.
Even if they hate the head turkey, we do turkey at Christmas too, but it's more of a Thanksgiving.
I don't know.
Anyways.
All right, no Stradamus or when would you predict that we're actually going to be able to vote again?
Is it in the UK?
Is it going to be 2029 or you predict before?
Well, I mean, the first thing to say is that we've got what Nigel is calling our midterms, which is sort of an American phrase, but we have got a big set of regional, local, devolved elections next May.
So the whole of Wales gets to vote for its local parliament, same in Scotland.
And then there's thousands of seats around Greater London and all around England that are going to be up for grabs.
And we're expecting a turquoise tsunami.
We're expecting Reform UK to do extremely well in all of those elections.
And that will be the last time that the British people get to express their democratic will before the next general election.
The latest that can be constitutionally is the first week of August 2029.
And it could be that Kier Starmer, many people don't think he's going to be Prime Minister for that much longer, but whoever his successor would have until the first week of August 2029.
But it could be that something happens before that.
We're expecting a recession.
We're expecting perhaps a very tight credit squeeze before 2029.
So it's not impossible that we'll be looking at a general election 2027.
I think I'm probably more inclined to say it's going to be 2029.
I think the last hundred years, the British government's fallen maybe once.
When you change prime minister, you don't change the British government.
You just change the leader of the party who's got the majority in parliament.
And it just seems to me, I can't figure out why Labour would call an election just to get killed, to hold power while you have it.
Exactly, as I said earlier, turkeys don't vote for Christmas, even if they hate the head turkey, which they do.
And indeed, the whole of the British left is bland turkey.
Pretty bland, definitely.
But yeah, the whole of the British left now is really cannibalizing itself.
It's splintering off into all kinds of different movements.
We've seen for the first time ever, really, the Green Party now getting well into double digits in the polls.
Could we get green versus reform as unthinkable?
It's not unthinkable.
It's essentially what we have in the United States.
Oh, it's MAGA versus Mamdani.
Right.
Yeah, I mean, so it's very interesting seeing the parallels between somebody like Mandani and Zach Polanski, who is the new leader of the Green Party.
And it's growing very, very fast as a party.
It's easy.
I think you only pay like £5 to get in.
So it would probably be quite easy to do some entryism and maybe hijack the Green Party.
But as far as we're concerned, it's fantastic.
May many flowers on the British left bloom because it's basically fracturing the vote between, you've got the focus on, well, I mean, there are focus on the crescent, you might say.
There's a focus on the rainbow.
There's a focus on the star with the old socialists.
So this is not going to not work out well.
And the cracks are emerging.
The Parliamentary Labour Party is very welfarist, very, very statist.
Starmer tried to get a tiny little haircut, £5 billion off our ballooning £300 billion a year welfare bill, and he couldn't get it through, even though he had a majority in Parliament of about 175 seats.
So, and that's the most, you know, just a very, very tiny, very, very small exercise of kind of restraining our public expenditure.
So, yeah, things are not looking good on that side of British politics.
And on the right, yes, there are supposed, there are also figures popping up.
There's Tommy Robinson's, there's Rupert Lowe's, there's Ben Habibs.
These are interesting figures on the right.
So it's not like we're completely unified, but that's where the energy is.
I think there's a feeling that that's where the policy energy is.
That's where the people are.
It's where the best ideas are fizzing on the right.
So we just discussed with Steve Dace, our last guest, about the recurring Republican problem of elect people to restrict immigration or do other bold things, and they just get these feet of clay in office.
So I suppose one obvious concern is reform wins a landslide, 27 or 29.
Do they have the stones to go through with a big immigration cutback or moratorium or other big sweeping things?
Or is there going to be a lot of, are people going to wuss out at the brink?
Yeah.
Somebody told me, I think it was about a year ago, that the process, there's a name for that process.
What happens to you as you got to go in?
Melonification, melonification, which I think actually in retrospect is probably unfair to Georgia Maloney, who is reputed to have come in with talking tough on migration and then actually folded as soon as she got in.
But actually, I think if you look at her numbers, what she's done, her track record, it's been pretty impressive.
So it's going to be very, very challenging.
We're going to be up against one of the most effective blobs, as it were, as we call it, in England and in the world.
Enormous inertia, huge resistance probably to almost all of our program, despite we're having widespread popular support across all the different parties regaining control of our borders.
So it's going to be extremely difficult.
We're going to be up against the judicial industrial complex, the human rights lawyers.
I'm very fascinated.
That was actually my question about legally what are you guys going to because we Trump gets stopped at every judge, every district judge with a gavel and a robe.
And I can only imagine just knowing the nature somewhat of the English intelligentsia that you're going to be up against a real stiff fight.
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use promo code charlie for a free month of service that's patriotmobile.com slash charlie or call 972 patriot and make the switch today we've got a full house here dr james or blake neff myself and we're about to bring in one more uh joining us now is todd nettleton author of when faith is forbidden uh he's also the voice of the martyrs radio host uh todd welcome to the show thanks so much good to be with you Yeah, honored to be with you.
You're also joined by Dr. James Orr from Cambridge, and this is an issue near and dear to his heart as well.
So we're going to have a fun, well, not a fun, it's a serious and important conversation.
You have been traveling around interviewing persecuted Christians in South Asia.
And I think a lot of people, a lot of discussion right now is about Nigeria.
This is kind of, if you're going to talk about this topic, that's where you're focused on.
But, you know, there are other areas of the world that we need to be aware of where Christians are being persecuted actively right now.
Please tell us about some of your stories out of South Asia.
Yeah, one of the things we heard repeatedly in South Asia was stories of Christians being affected by the anti-conversion laws in India.
So multiple states, now 12 states in India, have passed laws that make it illegal to change your religion and illegal to encourage someone else to change their religion.
So right now in India, there are dozens of pastors in prison under these anti-conversion laws.
And one of the interesting things is the inducement, the idea of inducing someone to change their faith is illegal.
We actually had an interview and we've aired it now on Voice of the Martyrs Radio with a human rights attorney who is talking about if you set up donuts and coffee before your church service, the government can come in and say, hey, that's an illegal inducement.
You're giving donuts and coffee away.
You're tricking people into changing their religion.
That's the kind of silliness that these laws are based on.
Here's the other thing, though.
It is not illegal to reconvert someone to Hinduism.
In fact, an Indian member of parliament just in the last few weeks has presided over what they call a reconversion ceremony, reconverting people back to Hinduism.
They can do that by force.
But if a Christian invites you to church, if the Christian gives you donuts and coffee, that's an illegal inducement to change your religion.
Wow.
So 12 states, I had to look this up.
There's 28 states in India.
So we're at nearly half of the country of India.
It is now illegal.
And I don't know population, you know, what percentage of the population that would make up.
But that is striking, especially for a British, former British-run colony, if you will.
But so when did that start changing?
I'm curious.
When did those laws start passing?
Well, they really took a lot of momentum when Prime Minister Modi, who has come out of this Hindu nationalist movement called the RSS, that is his background.
He's the prime minister of the whole country of India.
And so he has brought that philosophy to the highest levels of the Indian government.
Now, they have talked about a national anti-conversion law.
So far, that has not happened.
But there are individual states where they have passed these anti-conversion laws.
And, you know, when they talk about it, it sounds like a good idea.
Like, hey, we don't want people to be bribed or forced to change their religion.
And I think all of us would say, yeah, that's true.
We don't want that.
But then, like I say, when you get to what the law actually says and some of the laws, there's one state that says, if you want to change your religion, you need to go before a magistrate and say that you're going to change your religion.
And if you want to talk to someone else about changing their religion, what us Christians would call evangelism, you need to go before a magistrate six months before you have that conversation.
And you need to appear and say, hey, in six months, I'm going to talk to my neighbor about coming to church with me.
I just want to get your okay, Mr. Magistrate.
And it's like you read that and you're like, that's ludicrous.
No one could do that.
No one would do that.
Yes, exactly.
So when you have that conversation, then they can come in and say, well, hey, six months ago, you didn't go to the magistrate.
That was illegal.
You're going off to jail.
You've, you know, it kind of makes me think of this story that's kind of percolating, and we haven't talked about it yet, but Rep Mark Warren Walker from North Carolina, he's Trump's nominee for religious freedom, and he's just been waiting for a committee hearing.
So we can't seem to get that through.
He's getting blocked, apparently, by a former political foe.
But these are the types of stories we need to be educated on about why those types of posts are so important within the Trump administration.
Let's kind of keep going around the map here.
So we talked about South Asia.
There's issues in Central Asia, and there's obviously Nigeria.
Highlight the stories that you think our audience needs to hear most.
Well, I think of Nigeria.
Obviously, it's in the news.
Just on Sunday, there was another raid on a church, 13 Christians kidnapped out of their church.
Right now, we don't know.
Was this Boko Haram?
Was this ISIS West Africa province?
Was it just a criminal gang that wants ransom?
They're trying to fundraise, and so they're kidnapping people for ransom.
Right now, we don't know that, but this is happening again and again and again.
And I think at some point you start to ask the question, well, is the Nigerian government incapable of stopping these kinds of attacks, or do they not have the will to stop these kinds of attacks?
And those are valid questions.
Since President Trump named Nigeria as a country of particular concern earlier this year, it's going to be really interesting to see how the State Department plays that out and what tools are brought to bear to help Nigeria.
Again, typically it's not the government of Nigeria that is persecuting Christians.
It is these terrorist groups.
It is Islamists from among the Fulani tribe.
It is other sort of smaller players.
So it's going to be interesting to see how that CPC status plays out and how the State Department sort of acts that out in our relationship with Nigeria.
Well, and one of the more surprising things, I don't know if you've heard this story, Dr. Orr, but Nikki Minaj, of all people, has been helping raise awareness.
You can throw up 262.
She's been, she gave a keynote remark on combating religious violence and the killing of Christians in Nigeria.
She's been working, willing to work with the Trump administration to raise awareness on this.
I mean, this is a, I have to say, I'm not, I've not traditionally been a fan of the rapper known as Nikki Minaj, but I mean, good for her.
How many Christians have been silent?
How many conservatives have been silent about the persecution of the Christian church in Nigeria, the slaughter of Christians?
And then Nikki Minaj comes here and she helps make it a national news story, an international news story.
It already was one, but raising the profile of that story.
Have you seen movement even at Voice of the Martyrs since she's gotten involved?
Oh, it is interesting to have other voices that you weren't expecting.
Bill Maher did the same thing, raising the issue of Nigerian persecution.
So you have Bill Maher and you have Nikki Minaj and you have President Trump all talking about the persecution of Christians in Nigeria.
I don't think any of us would have predicted that at the beginning of this year.
Yeah.
Let's take our sights to Syria.
There's kind of conflicting reports, but I know that Christians are getting targeted in Syria as well.
What can you tell us there?
Well, the Syrian government, the new Syrian government, now almost a year old, a year since the fall of Bashir al-Assad there in Syria, what they have said to the rest of the world is, we want religious freedom.
We want a Syria that is safe for every religion.
We know that there are Syrians who are Christians, and then there are Syrians who are Druze, and there are Syrians who are Muslim, and we want to all live together in peace.
And the rest of the world hears that and we're like, yes, that's great.
We want that too.
What they're saying, though, inside Syria is very different.
And we have had contact with Syrian pastors who have are hearing from the government or hearing from the soldiers.
You Christians, just you wait.
Wait till we get our feet on the ground.
Wait till we get our government established.
Then we're going to take care of you.
So what they're telling the rest of the world, the Syrian government, is not what they're telling Christians living inside Syria.
And Christians there are understandably very concerned.
If you're a father or a mother and you have young children in Syria and you're a Christian right now, you're asking yourself every single day, is it safe for our children?
Is it safe to raise our children here or should we try to go somewhere else?
That's a huge challenge.
And that's just reality of following Christ right now in Syria.
Well, thank you for that update.
And, you know, it occurs to me, and you guys kind of flag this for us, is that during the Christmas season, persecution of Christians actually increases.
So, you know, for our audience listening, what do they need to know about that?
Why is that a thing?
And what can they do to help?
Well, if you hate Christians, if you hate the gospel, what better time to make a statement like that than on the day Christians are celebrating the birth of Christ?
So Christians have been targeted in recent years in Democratic Republic of the Congo, in Bangladesh, in Nigeria, in Egypt.
And so we want Christians here in America, as you gather around the table, as you are with your family, as you're with your loved ones, we hope that you'll remember to pray for Christians who live in hostile areas and restricted nations.
They are at more risk around the Christmas season, more risk around Christian holy days.
And so as we gather together in safety, let's pray for the members of our spiritual family who don't have that safety and just pray that God will protect them during this Christmas season.
Yeah, and we have a URL here as well that I want to make sure we put up.
And it's vom.org slash Charlie, VOM.org slash Charlie.
So if you want to be a voice for religious freedom, if you want to stand with your brothers and sisters in Christ around the globe that are facing persecution and in some cases, genocide, please, please, please, this Christmas season, when they need you the most, consider being a part of what Voice of the Martyrs is doing.
We love this organization.
We love what they're doing.
And Todd, I just, you know, really, really appreciate you highlighting these areas of the world where we need to be praying.
We should be praying for the persecuted church.
We should be doing what we can to contribute financially, especially right now.
And, you know, final words to you, Todd.
Well, when you come to that website, we'd love to send you a free book that has stories of persecuted Christians.
And this is a way to be inspired all year long as you read the stories of people who would rather go to prison or rather be beaten or rather be killed than deny their faith in Christ.
I think there's great lessons and great inspiration for all of us who are Christians in these stories.
That is vom.org slash Charlie to get involved, help out.
Thank you so much, Todd.
God bless you.
Thank you.
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What is the, I mean, so we're talking about persecution all over sort of the developing world, Asia, Central Asia, Africa, the Middle East, certainly.
What?
What's the state of Christendom in Europe, in the UK?
Well, I guess it's post-Christendom, and you could say maybe the story of Europe in the 20th century, maybe even the 19th century, is how to put Humpty-Dumpty back together again after the fall of Christendom, after the fall of the Holy Roman Empire.
And you could think of even the European Union as an attempt to come up with some sort of secular sequel to Christendom, like a way of trying to, you know, bind Europe together into a sort of single collective entity.
But I remember back in 2004-05, when they were trying to push through a constitution on the EU, there was an attempt made to make reference to just the Christian and Jewish inheritance of Europe as well as the Hellenic and Enlightenment ones.
And there was a huge political battle over it.
And in the end, they said, nope, we're not making any mention of it at all.
So that's the sort of broad context across Europe, you might say.
In Britain itself, you know, there's evidence, I think some evidence that there's been a quiet revival over the last five years, big spikes in Bible buying, big spikes in commitment to God, at least some kind of spirituality.
So there are some interesting signs.
But broadly speaking, the institutional church, the Church of England, has chronically failed Christians in Britain in England for many, many years now on all of the really sort of hot-button political issues.
It's taken aside.
Now, that's not something that the church should really be doing.
It certainly shouldn't be doing it as aggressively as it has been doing it.
I was saying to somebody the other day that actually, you know, the bishops in the House of Lords are voting more often against the Conservative government than the Labour Party.
My friend Ed West calls Britain, he says, we're the world's only left-wing theocracy.
Oh, geez.
That's a bad recipe.
Anyway, so the final segment here, we've only got about two minutes left.
You're going to be at Amfest.
What does a British man do surrounded by tens of thousands of conservative Americans?
Well, actually, you know what?
I've had some practice because I was at Charlie's Memorial.
I managed to make it over in time from England.
And that was, if it's anything like that, I'm really looking forward to Amfest.
And Charlie invited me back in August, and I just assumed that it wouldn't happen.
But it did.
I'm just thrilled to be here.
And I remember saying, what is Amphest?
And he explained to me what it was.
And then I said, well, you want me to speak?
What do you want me to say?
He said, I know exactly what you're going to say.
Don't worry.
I'll tell you exactly what to say.
I'll write your speech for you.
And I never followed up with him.
But I'm just thrilled to be here.
And I hope I can honor him on stage and honor him with the various debates that I'm privileged to be moderating.
So yeah, can't wait.
We don't do that kind of thing in England.
And yet, yet.
Maybe this is something we could bring over.
But yeah, the energy, the momentum, the sense of excitement, the vision that's just holding the movement together is just awe-inspiring.
And it's just great for us to bring back, as I've said before, bring back some Kirk juice to Britain.
Well, and you're going to have Reform Fest, obviously.
That's going to be Brit Fest.
And then you're going to have, and your mentee is going to be there.
He's going to be finishing up.
He's going to be finishing.
He's going to be the final speaker on Sunday.
And of course, I mean JD Vance.
There's a bit of an inside joke.
Well, it's not an inside.
It's been published, but an unfortunate headline about your relationship with JD Vance, Vice President JD Vance, who's amazing.
We're grateful to have him on the Sunday.
It'll be a great, great climax to a fantastic event.
Yeah, it's truly, truly going to be something.
And you'll see the rowdiness and the different ideas and the different factions and facets of the conservative movement.
But this is what it's all about, bringing everybody together.
And let's have the debates, but let's be unified.
And let's kick off our push into 2026 on a high note.
And there's no better way to do that than to remember the incredible legacy of Charlie Kirk.
And so we're looking forward to it.
It's going to be bittersweet, but Charlie would want us to make the most of it.