The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #1417 Aired: 2026-05-13 Duration: 01:26:07 === Trusting Local Campaigns (14:59) === [00:00:00] Hello, and welcome to the podcast of the Load Seaters, episode 1417 for Wednesday, the 13th of May, 2026. [00:00:08] I'm your host, Luca, joined today by Firas, Nate, and campaigns director of Restore Britain, Charlie Downs. [00:00:17] Much to the chagrin of the conspiracy, you know, of Great Western Rail trying to keep you from here. [00:00:24] They fear this podcast happening. [00:00:26] They do, they do, and they're right to. [00:00:27] But they failed, and here you are. [00:00:29] So we're glad to have you with us. [00:00:31] And today we're going to be talking to Charlie, first and foremost. [00:00:34] About the fantastic win of Great Yarmouth First over in the recent council elections. [00:00:41] We're then going to be talking all about the global compact for migration and America, the Trump administration's take on it, I suppose. [00:00:51] And then we're going to be talking about why Starmer is right about the Labour Party. [00:00:56] He has nothing but contempt for them, and I think it's justified. [00:00:59] He's literally me. [00:01:00] Not based. [00:01:02] Bay Starmer, our guy. [00:01:05] All right. [00:01:05] So before we crack on with the show, just to let you know, if you go over to the merch store on the main website, you can get to celebrate over a hundred episodes of Breakfast with Bo, the nation's darling of breakfast television. [00:01:20] You can now get 10% off our wonderful merch for Breakfast with Bo, as with these fantastic mugs. [00:01:27] If you get them, it goes through 10% off at the main checkout. [00:01:31] With all of that said, shall we begin to discuss what a fantastic time it was last weekend to see So many people coming out, right? [00:01:40] The days and days of campaigning, just watching the streets. [00:01:43] Well, I mean, honestly, Charlie, some of the footage that I was seeing of the queues going along as well was genuinely remarkable, unprecedented in my lifetime. [00:01:54] So, on the ground for you, and you were there as well, Nate, weren't you? [00:01:57] So, how did you find it? [00:01:59] Oh, my goodness. [00:01:59] I mean, what a week it was. [00:02:01] What a couple of months it's been, in fact, because this has been in the works for a long time, as many will know. [00:02:05] Great Yarmouth First was the local party in Great Yarmouth, essentially a local arm of Restored Britain. [00:02:11] Uh, but it was set up before we launched Restore Britain as a party, because it was always our intention to stand in Great Yarmouth as it is Rupert's constituency. [00:02:18] Uh, and he's done a huge amount of work for that constituency, uh, and felt it was only right to, uh, try to, uh, represent them at the council level. [00:02:26] So Great Yarmouth First was, is a project that's been in the works for a long time. [00:02:30] And what this essentially shows our success in the recent local elections is that you can run an uncompromising, patriotic, anti-establishment campaign and absolutely clear up. [00:02:42] Because yes, we had a lot of volunteers come from You know, all over the nation, some coming from as far as Aberdeen, Cornwall, and, you know, everywhere else. [00:02:52] But really, the winning message here was local people who haven't been involved in politics before, getting involved in politics, who've lived in the area, who live in the actual wards, the constituencies that they seek to represent, who know it like the back of their hand and who just want to do right by it, who are not getting into politics for fame or status or money, but purely because they are looking at the way their town has been governed, you know, for a very long time and thinking, I could do a better job. [00:03:16] Than these clowns. [00:03:17] I've got experience in business. [00:03:18] I know the people in the area. [00:03:20] I love the area because it is my home. [00:03:22] And therefore, I'm going to do something about it. [00:03:23] And that formula, which we intend to roll out across the entire country, is an absolute winner. [00:03:28] Yeah, absolutely. [00:03:29] And it seems to have been, as you say, a total success story. [00:03:32] I mean, as Rupert was pointing out here, history made. [00:03:35] We won 10 out of 10 seats with overwhelming majorities in every single one. [00:03:41] Great Yarmouth first, then we restore Britain a very special day. [00:03:46] And it certainly seems to have been that. [00:03:48] And here we have, of course, the fine gentlemen who've put themselves forward to be patriots and representatives of their community, just getting to the work of dealing with the ordinary details, right? [00:03:59] Of just, you know, the council roles that they actually have the power over and that can hopefully bring enormous benefit to the lives of the local constituents who've been so let down by everything before. [00:04:11] I mean, we were joking that Great Yarmouth First is both the name of the party and also the name of Restore Britain's electoral strategy. [00:04:17] Yes. [00:04:17] Great Yarmouth First, and then we restore Britain. [00:04:20] So, yes, these guys have hit the ground running. [00:04:22] They've already started doing good work for their constituents. [00:04:25] They are engaging in an investigation into trading standards in Great Yarmouth around vape shops and Turkish barbers, which, as with every town in this country, are a huge issue. [00:04:36] Spending a lot of time all over the constituency, it's such an interesting place, Great Yarmouth, because it's kind of a microcosm of the country. [00:04:42] Because there are the leafy rural parts, which are very nice, very well to do, there are the urban parts, which are still clinging on and still have a sense of local pride about them. [00:04:52] But then there's the odd street, which has been Utterly UKified, if you want. [00:04:57] One called King Street has become infamous because Rupert did a video about it. [00:05:00] And I, for my sins, spent a huge amount of time in that particular neighborhood. [00:05:05] And look, for the English people living there, they all know what time it is. [00:05:08] They know that something's got to give. [00:05:10] But it really is like walking down the street of another country. [00:05:13] And Great Yarmouth has not even been that majorly affected by mass immigration. [00:05:17] I mean, like everywhere. [00:05:18] From what I understand, the county of Norfolk itself has only just started to feel this filtering. [00:05:24] This is the point. [00:05:24] I mean, it's on the outer reaches of the country. [00:05:27] It's the kind of place that. [00:05:28] You know, you wouldn't ever pass through. [00:05:29] If you're going there, you're going there. [00:05:30] You're never going to pass through Great Yarmouth. [00:05:32] And so a huge amount of it is kind of untouched by the nonsense of modern Britain. [00:05:38] But that's not to say that it has been completely untouched because, you know, plenty of it has been. [00:05:42] And the people in those areas know what's coming. [00:05:45] And of course, everyone there can see what's happening in the rest of the country. [00:05:48] And so they want to take a stand against that happening in their town. [00:05:51] And these lads are leading the charge on that. [00:05:54] I mean, it's a remarkable thing, isn't it, as well? [00:05:56] Because, as you say, the idea of campaigning. [00:05:59] You know, based on this exact formula and rolling it out across the country. [00:06:03] And, you know, these gentlemen will be looking into the vape shops and the Turkish barbs and all of these sorts of things. [00:06:08] It's like, but these things have become so ubiquitous across the entire country. [00:06:14] It's like, okay, but why did the Labour councils never feel a need to get involved with this? [00:06:19] Why did the Conservative councillors or the Lib Dems, right? [00:06:22] Because it affects them every bit as much as yet. [00:06:27] There's another story there, which is that. [00:06:30] When you see the pattern of immigration, it is always about taking over a couple of streets and essentially terraforming them. [00:06:37] Yeah, it's about establishing its own sort of enclave. [00:06:41] Exactly. [00:06:41] And then establishing roots and then branching out. [00:06:44] Exactly. [00:06:45] Meaning that the idea is not integration or assimilation, the idea is taking over and changing the nature of the place. [00:06:53] And the second thing is, I did a segment recently, 97% of all counselors believe, of all trading standards workers, Believe that there is organized crime in their patch. [00:07:07] It's obvious. [00:07:07] In their territory. [00:07:08] It's obvious in Great Yarmouth as well, because these places stick out like a sore thumb in what is otherwise a fairly homogenous British constituency. [00:07:16] So people are extra aware of it as against somewhere like, I don't know, Slough. [00:07:19] So the two are going together the terraforming, essentially, and the establishment of organized crime networks. [00:07:27] And they aren't in any way separated or separable. [00:07:32] Because it is a package, it comes with a certain culture, it comes with a certain set of beliefs, it comes with a certain viewpoint that believes, well, actually, you're very weak for letting me in. [00:07:42] I'm going to exploit it and take advantage of it. [00:07:44] And just on this, I mean, it does have to be said as much as immigration is obviously an issue that affects the entire country, and it was an issue that came up on the doors in Great Yarmouth a great deal because everyone's aware of it and everyone is afraid of what is coming. [00:07:57] Reform, for example, who, as you can see on this graph, we absolutely trounced in this constituency, they campaigned in Great Yarmouth on issues like illegal immigration. [00:08:08] Now, illegal immigration is not really that much of an issue in Great Yarmouth. [00:08:11] It's a national issue, and people feel very incensed. [00:08:14] by what they see on the television. [00:08:16] But actually, at the local level, it's not really, it's not really a factor. [00:08:19] And it shows you, uh, what a difference actually understanding the local situation can make. [00:08:24] Because our candidates, now councillors, were campaigning on the issues, uh, that local people actually care about because they themselves live in the area. [00:08:31] So it's things like you talked about the conservatives and labor essentially kind of leaving these places behind and governing them badly. [00:08:37] Yes, the immigration and the demographic side of it is part of that. [00:08:40] Yes, the high streets being infested with these fronts for organized crime. [00:08:44] Are part of it. [00:08:45] But actually, it's also things like house building without the relevant infrastructure being put in place. [00:08:50] I mean, that's a huge issue in Great Yarmouth. [00:08:52] It's an issue in lots of places. [00:08:54] The roads, the public services are absolutely overwhelmed by the number of people that are flowing in because as a result of these new housing developments. [00:09:01] And it's also things like the quality of roads, potholes. [00:09:04] I mean, it's such a cliche, but potholes and bins. [00:09:06] That is what wins you local elections because that's what actually affects people day to day. [00:09:09] But that's also solely, primarily, what people believe their council tax is being spent on. [00:09:15] Are my bins being collected? [00:09:17] Are the lights being put on? [00:09:18] And are the potholes being filled? [00:09:20] Yes. [00:09:21] Obviously, it goes broadly outside from there. [00:09:24] But even if people can't do those fundamental basics, and that's what, if a council can't do it, and that's what people expect, then, I mean, that's the main crux of a lot of people's interest. [00:09:35] And this is the point the formula of combining genuinely understanding local areas and putting people forward from those local areas to represent them at the council level is incredibly powerful, coupled with our patriotic. [00:09:48] National agenda. [00:09:49] Because it's the combination of those two. [00:09:51] Looking like David Brenton. [00:09:52] Yes. [00:09:54] It's the combination of those two that I think is going to win us, possibly, the election in 2029. [00:09:59] Because nobody else is doing this. [00:10:00] Nobody else is speaking in frank terms about what's happening to the country at the national level, about the fact that the political class in its entirety, the political and media establishment, needs to be not bargained with, not reasoned with, not conserved or reformed, but destroyed, wiped out, right? [00:10:15] Cleared out. [00:10:17] And replaced by patriots, replaced by people who really care about the country and who are going to put British interests first, who are not going to be in hock to foreign lobbies, who are not going to represent the interests of client groups in the country, who are not going to engage in policies like mass immigration and net zero, all of which is destroying the country and making life very difficult for ordinary people. [00:10:38] You couple that with local campaigns that actually address local issues, and I think you're on to a winner. [00:10:43] And also, it is all of those things, but it's also the fact that a party could come along and say that it has every intention of dealing with those things. [00:10:54] But the question is can the voters trust it? [00:10:57] And I think that what we're seeing by the vitality behind Great Yarmouth First, behind Restore Britain, is that we're actually seeing that this is something that voters can trust. [00:11:07] This is something that actually, because it's going to take several years. [00:11:11] You know, if an election comes in 2029, there's three years there of preparation, and people want to know that those labours that they're putting forward in those three years are actually when the time comes, when power is achieved, when influence can finally be had. [00:11:27] They want to know they're not going to get betrayed, that they're not going to get sold out, that this isn't just the latest version of Blue. [00:11:34] And it's all. [00:11:36] And that, in large part, is why that number is so high. [00:11:38] Yes. [00:11:38] Because the people of Great Yarmouth know Rupert, they know what he's done for the local constituency, all of the work that he's put in, and they trust him. [00:11:45] And likewise, the nation, as they get to know Rupert Lowe, is beginning to trust him because they can see that he puts his money where his mouth is, quite literally. [00:11:52] I mean, he doesn't take a salary as an MP, he donates his salary to charity because he's only in this game because he wants to fix the country. [00:12:00] It's a total antithesis of someone like Zach Polanski, where the more he's put into the limelight, the more he speaks, the less popular he becomes. [00:12:07] Actually, with Rupert, the more he speaks, the more he's made visible, the more the power. [00:12:12] Rises and the more confidence in the country will grow to show that someone is voicing their concerns. [00:12:18] And you obviously sent me through all of these statistics, and they are just phenomenal. [00:12:23] It's stark. [00:12:24] I mean, Steve is such a good bloke, and his majority was the largest. [00:12:27] I mean, he won 51% of the vote. [00:12:29] Of all the votes. [00:12:30] Steve Grimmer, one party state in Yarmouth North. [00:12:34] But I just wanted to, yeah, kind of flick through these just because they do show the magnitude of the victory that we achieved here. [00:12:42] I mean, look at these numbers 46%. [00:12:45] You could have halved. [00:12:46] Michael's vote share and he still would have won. [00:12:48] Yeah. [00:12:48] You know, it's unbelievable. [00:12:49] Add the Tories and reform together and they still couldn't. [00:12:53] Yeah. [00:12:53] It's 50% from Kevin Huggins, John Wedden, 43%. [00:12:59] Yeah. [00:12:59] And this is across every, as you say, every. [00:13:01] Same story everywhere. [00:13:02] Yeah. [00:13:02] District of Great Yarmouth. [00:13:03] Yeah. [00:13:04] It's really inspiring. [00:13:05] Yeah. [00:13:06] But it does highlight that people want a level of authenticity. [00:13:11] And if you have Zia Youssef around you, you cannot, for all of your efforts, appear in any way authentic. [00:13:18] If you have Leila Cunningham or Nadim Zahawi. [00:13:20] Yeah. [00:13:21] You're not going to appear authentic. [00:13:23] Yes. [00:13:23] And that's the issue. [00:13:26] Reform is casting itself as a national party or as a nationalist party. [00:13:32] It just doesn't. [00:13:34] Yeah. [00:13:35] The message doesn't carry. [00:13:36] Yeah. [00:13:36] Well, they like to parachute people in, and you're not going to understand the granular details of a small constituency. [00:13:43] You're just not going to have a grasp on it. [00:13:45] But this is the point. [00:13:46] It should not be this complicated. [00:13:48] Who could have predicted that parachuting SW1 Westminster bubble Matt Goodwin into Gorton and Denton? [00:13:54] Would end badly. [00:13:55] I mean, anybody with a brain. [00:13:57] Everyone but Matt Goodwin. [00:13:58] Yeah. [00:13:58] Really? [00:13:59] You know, like how difficult is it to just pick, like, identify a local person who knows the area like the back of their head, who wants to do right by it, who's not getting involved because they want all the, you know, the glitz and the glamour of the politician lifestyle, who just wants to fix the place they live, the place that they're from? [00:14:13] I mean, you know, it shouldn't be this difficult, but apparently all the other parties struggle to find these people. [00:14:17] Well, that reeks of the old status quo, which hopefully we're going to wipe the floor with, which is just career politicians, right? [00:14:24] Like, these people just want to fix where they live. [00:14:26] Yeah. [00:14:27] They're not really in it. [00:14:28] To try and make money, to progress up the flagpole, so to speak. [00:14:32] But we have been swamped with ex legal professions, lawyers, just professional politicians, basically, career politicians. [00:14:42] And yeah, I mean, this harkens back to an age of politics which we once had. [00:14:48] Yes, yeah. [00:14:48] And if we carry on through these graphs here, we'll come to one. [00:14:52] I mean, again, same story. [00:14:53] You can see it's just the same everywhere. [00:14:55] I mean, that one, by the way, Barry's one, I look at that and I think that is what. === Solving Money Laundering (08:23) === [00:14:59] The national vote shares may look like at the 2029 election. [00:15:03] Well, we're still going to give it a go, aren't we? [00:15:05] Indeed. [00:15:06] And if we carry on, we'll come to one. [00:15:07] There we go. [00:15:08] So, this is the most interesting part of this whole story for me, right? [00:15:12] It is the fact that at this election in Great Yarmouth, we were able to activate a huge number of people who did not vote in the previous elections in this constituency, which was in 2021. [00:15:24] So, a huge number of people who feel disaffected, who feel disenfranchised, not represented by the political establishment. [00:15:31] They took the effort to come out to vote. [00:15:33] On the 7th of May for us, because they looked at Rupert, they looked at Great Yarmouth First, they looked at Restore Britain and thought, finally, there is a party that I can actually get behind. [00:15:42] And I've got the percentages here, actually. [00:15:44] So you'll notice that not all of the constituencies are listed here, and that's because some of them didn't exist in 2021. [00:15:49] So for the ones that did exist, in Braden, you had a voter turnout increase of 70.5%. [00:15:55] In Gorston, 50%. [00:15:57] Lothingland, 69.1%. [00:15:59] Magdalen, 42.7%. [00:16:01] Yarmouth, Nelson, and Southtown, 87.9%. [00:16:04] I mean, you can see on there, it's nearly double. [00:16:06] What it was at the previous elections. [00:16:09] Yarmouth, North and Central, 41.2%, and a total voter turnout increase of 61.4%. [00:16:16] I mean, it's just unbelievable. [00:16:17] It's unprecedented. [00:16:18] And that's also very achievable on a national scale because people keep banging on about you're going to still vote. [00:16:23] No, you're not entitled to anyone's vote for starters. [00:16:25] So, you know, no one can say, well, that's my Tory vote and that's not how it works. [00:16:29] No. [00:16:30] But it's, well, that seems to be the argument. [00:16:32] They seem to be making it so frustrating. [00:16:34] Yes. [00:16:35] But it's also the, The wealth of people that have just gone, politics does not work for me anymore. [00:16:43] I'm not going to get involved. [00:16:45] But we saw them all come out. [00:16:47] That was the Brexit vote, right? [00:16:49] That was also Boris Johnson's vote. [00:16:52] People lending him the vote, which is true. [00:16:54] That is what they did. [00:16:56] So this is more than achievable on a national scale. [00:16:59] I think it's fantastic. [00:17:00] And this is the thing the actual act of voting is not difficult because most people, when we were going around Great Yarmouth, the polling stations, Half a mile up the road. [00:17:09] All you have to do is get that person out of their house to the polling station and put an X in your box. [00:17:14] And then they can go to the pub. [00:17:15] Yeah, exactly. [00:17:15] You've just got to incentivize them to do that very small, low effort task. [00:17:20] What will make people want to do that? [00:17:22] And that's the thing. [00:17:23] That is such a low effort thing, but barely anyone wants to do it anymore because politicians have betrayed them consistently, time after time after time. [00:17:32] So actually, it's just a little bit of authenticity and people believing that you are authentic. [00:17:37] Ultimately, our view is that we're not chasing votes. [00:17:39] We're not in the business of like. [00:17:40] You know, trying to barter with the general public for their votes or trying to buy votes off of people. [00:17:45] If you agree with our agenda, vote for us. [00:17:47] It's as simple as that. [00:17:48] Absolutely. [00:17:48] And the message is clear and it's obviously cut through. [00:17:52] But then it goes beyond that as well, because as Marwan points out here, that interesting in Norfolk, Rupert Lowe's party has stopped reform winning an overall control of the council itself. [00:18:03] And so actually, this actually sets up Great Yarmouth First and Restore Britain to be kingmakers in that county, which is a very powerful tool. [00:18:13] And it means that if. [00:18:15] Reform UK want to play their tricks and pander to the Nadim Zahawi interests of the party. [00:18:21] If they want to go down the Lila Cunningham messaging route, then fortunately, now these patriotic men will actually be there to say, no, no, no, you're not getting away with that. [00:18:32] By all means, work cooperatively where it is in the interests of the local people. [00:18:38] But having that ultimate decision making power is going to be very important, actually, for the Yeah, well, John Weedon, who's the leader of the Great Yarmouth First group on Norfolk Council now, one of our recently elected councillors, was interviewed by the BBC a couple of days ago. [00:18:56] And he made the point that, look, do we want to work with people that try and get their political opponents, people that criticise them, put into prison? [00:19:03] Not hugely, but if they share our vision and if they share our goals, then we'll work with anyone. [00:19:08] Well, it's like these councillors didn't obviously try to do that, did they? [00:19:13] And so, you know, they, from their own point of view, were probably. [00:19:16] Long looking to just represent Reform UK in their constituency because they saw that as the thing on the horizon now that was best to work for them. [00:19:24] And obviously, as we know as well from a segment I did earlier this week, the chances are that reform UK councillors tend to be a little bit spicier than the leadership as well, to put it mildly. [00:19:39] So, you know, I'm sure there is plenty of cooperation there. [00:19:47] The other point to make is that that's pretty much the precedent that Rupert set with the rape gang inquiry. [00:19:52] Yes. [00:19:53] It was intended to allow all parties to do the right thing. [00:19:57] Yeah. [00:19:57] If you want to do the right thing, do the right thing. [00:19:59] It's your opportunity. [00:20:00] Exactly. [00:20:02] It is a simple and very effective message because you're asking them to be responsible. [00:20:08] And as you were saying about here, the fact that now there's going to be an investigation, hopefully, into the vape shops as well, which, you know, just. [00:20:16] And the other thing as well, it's like, okay, that is a real issue. [00:20:19] But think of all the second order consequences that just come from a small thing like that. [00:20:24] The amount of ease that people will feel in their local communities now, knowing that they don't have these criminals just hiding. [00:20:32] Behind the obvious open secret. [00:20:35] Everyone knows what's going on. [00:20:36] Everyone knows the malfeasance. [00:20:38] And so to actually be able to just get the microscope and go, yeah, okay, we're focusing in on this now. [00:20:45] We're going to solve this problem that people have had an issue with for so long. [00:20:48] And it's these sorts of actions that will hopefully, you know, gain that snowball of the trust all the way up till 2029. [00:20:56] And this is the point where we're going to use the, you know, the power that our counselors in. [00:21:03] Norfolk have access to, which, you know, they're a small, they're a minority group on Norfolk County Council. [00:21:07] So it is, you know, ultimately they can't just swoop into Great Yarmouth and say, all right, you're closed, you're closed, you're getting deported. [00:21:13] You know, we can't do that. [00:21:15] But what we can do, we're going to make full use of, which is things like this. [00:21:18] Yeah. [00:21:19] And also, think of whose money is being laundered here. [00:21:22] Yeah. [00:21:23] The money that's being laundered in these shops is going through all of the drug gangs. [00:21:26] Yeah. [00:21:27] And probably the grooming gangs. [00:21:29] Bad down. [00:21:29] Yeah. [00:21:30] So there is this intersection here with just basic public order and basic security. [00:21:35] And the fact that they have a way of laundering their money. [00:21:39] It also really matters because it's political complacency on a national scale that everyone knows is going on. [00:21:45] And it is just sheer complacency. [00:21:47] No one cares. [00:21:48] They just turn a blind eye to it. [00:21:49] So, naturally, seeing someone at the very least go, oh, yeah, that thing that everyone knows, yeah, we'll have a look at that. [00:21:55] Exactly. [00:21:55] That does, it matters. [00:21:57] I should just say, you made a point there first, which is really important. [00:21:59] So, we will have updates on the Red Gang Inquiry in the very near future. [00:22:03] You know, I've been reading through the report that we put together, and it's as harrowing as it was. [00:22:09] The first time round. [00:22:10] But the fact, like, this is not like a network, this is just a brief aside, but it's an important point. [00:22:14] It's not a network of kind of siloed, you know, gangs in individual towns. [00:22:18] It is one network across the nation, which is interlinked with organized crime, the arms trade, the drug trade, and all the rest of it. [00:22:25] And so, yes, it's entirely likely, highly likely, I would say, that vape shops, even in towns like Great Yarmouth, where, as far as we know, I believe, this kind of thing has not gone on, certainly not at the scale it has in places like Birmingham or elsewhere, even there, The money that has changed hands for access to the children that these grooming gangs have been trafficking in is being laundered on the high streets, you know, and it's just unbelievable. [00:22:49] And so that's as good a reason as any to come down with the hammer of the law on it. [00:22:53] It's a moral scourge and it's been allowed to fester for decades and decades now by the establishment. [00:23:00] And so is it any surprise when people finally feel like they have a party in place that's going to do something about it? [00:23:08] And so the next steps, it seems, it says, as Rupert says here, we're very confident that we can win the new East North. [00:23:13] At Council outright next year, along with many others, and preparations for that are already being started. [00:23:19] And of course, as well, the fact that it is, you know, history has been made. === Revolutionizing British Politics (03:37) === [00:23:23] We won 10 out of 10 seats, overwhelming majorities. [00:23:25] And as I say, Great Yarmouth first, and then Restore Britain. [00:23:29] Do you have anything else in terms of. [00:23:31] Yeah. [00:23:31] Well, I mean, Restore Britain is just spreading like a fire across the nation. [00:23:35] Branches everywhere. [00:23:36] Yeah. [00:23:37] Yeah. [00:23:37] Begins in Great Yarmouth. [00:23:38] And then as we move forward, as by elections come up and indeed local elections next year and ultimately the general election in 2029, I think you're going to see the entire map of the UK slowly turn into that lovely navy blue colour. [00:23:51] Well, we're certainly doing our damnedest to make it happen, aren't we? [00:23:55] Yes. [00:23:55] And I should say, reiterate, as always, join Restore Britain, £20 a year. [00:24:00] I often say that at the peak of Corbyn's leadership of the Labour Party, they had 600,000 members. [00:24:05] And I refuse to believe that there are not half a million more people out there in the country who are currently not members of Restore Britain, who believe in our message, our mission, our agenda, who for just £20 a year, that's all it is, could join us and make us the biggest party in British politics, possibly ever, possibly in history. [00:24:19] Yeah. [00:24:21] Gaining everywhere the confidence of people who haven't historically voted before. [00:24:26] Because, you know, as Carl has brought up in the past in our local branch meetings in Swindon, it's like some people who were being spoke to when we were handing out leaflets at the pub, one of the chaps did it of his own initiative. [00:24:38] It was just like, yeah, people like, oh, we thought it was too late to save the country. [00:24:43] And there is such a tragedy in the fact that those just good, honest Englishmen and women have been reduced to that mental state. [00:24:52] The abuse that they have had to suffer. [00:24:54] At the hands of the established. [00:24:55] The constant demoralization. [00:24:57] Yes. [00:24:57] The constant demoralization. [00:24:59] This is why faith is so important, but that's a different conversation. [00:25:02] But now, finally, you know, there are reasons to be optimistic. [00:25:06] Indeed. [00:25:08] All right. [00:25:09] I'll just quickly go through Rumble Rants where I can actually see them. [00:25:13] So we've got for $5, Chaddy304 says completed the first draft of my second novel a few minutes ago. [00:25:21] Wow. [00:25:22] Just felt like sharing the good news. [00:25:23] Also, we had our first Restore Britain meeting this Friday for Wigan and Lee Branch. [00:25:28] Well, congratulations on, uh, redrafting the novel. [00:25:31] And, you know, I hope those branch meetings continue to grow. [00:25:34] That's wonderful news. [00:25:36] Uh, Sigilstone says, Firas, do you have, uh, a cross on you? [00:25:40] Uh, preferably a silver one. [00:25:41] Can you hold it up to Luca? [00:25:43] I have a wooden one and a golden one. [00:25:45] Are we implying that I'm, is the lighting making me look vampiric again? [00:25:49] It does do that sometimes. [00:25:51] Uh, Cookie Boy for $2 says, 77% right wing vote where Restore stood. [00:25:57] Around 46% in the rest of the country shows how Restore was. [00:26:05] Mine actually is silver as well. [00:26:07] Oh, be gone. [00:26:12] I might just go watch some Hammer Horrors later, I think. [00:26:16] Yes, showing how Restore were pulling in a lot of non voters. [00:26:19] Absolutely. [00:26:21] Bald Eagle 1787 says, Glad to see Restore realizing they need to focus local first and then move on to the national scale. [00:26:29] Too many parties have changed, focused national, and then just Demand local support for them when it should be the other way around. [00:26:37] Yeah, absolutely. [00:26:38] Rupert's spoken about plenty of times, I think even on this show, about the combination of the bottom up and the top down at the same time. [00:26:46] You know, the local issues and the national issues, which are different. [00:26:48] They're often interlinked, obviously. [00:26:49] Yes. [00:26:50] But really deeply understanding both, that is the formula for winning. [00:26:53] And again, like, it amazes me that that's somehow like rocket science. [00:26:56] Revolutionizing British politics. [00:26:58] Just really. [00:26:58] Remembering the things that they've all forgotten. === Destabilizing Countries for Migration (15:57) === [00:27:00] Yeah. [00:27:01] Just. [00:27:02] Bald Eagle also says The question I have. [00:27:05] Is how many reform councillors are going to move to, I assume he means restore, over the next couple of years? [00:27:11] It seems that many reform councillors would fit restore better. [00:27:15] Plenty want to. [00:27:15] Yeah. [00:27:16] And although one thing I will just say with that as well is I'm glad to see that there is some entryism going on and it's not just doing what reform we're doing and just taking anyone who wanted to. [00:27:27] Oh, nice. [00:27:27] You know, we've refused, I mean, you know, we're not going to put out the actual numbers and the individuals, but the number of people that have wanted to join us that we've told to, you know, sex and travel is very high. [00:27:37] Well, that's very reassuring. [00:27:39] Yeah. [00:27:39] He says he meant restore. [00:27:41] And he also says, I restore having a party conference this year. [00:27:45] No, so not this year. [00:27:46] Our view is that the money and resources and time that we. [00:27:49] Would spend doing a kind of glitz and glamour party conference like Reform do would be better spent on campaigning. [00:27:55] Yeah. [00:27:56] Oh, it's gone well so far. [00:27:58] Yeah, exactly. [00:27:59] Yeah, no, I think it makes sense. [00:28:00] All right. [00:28:01] Over to you, Nate. [00:28:02] All right. [00:28:02] I'm going to black pill, but also white pill a little bit. [00:28:05] I'm going to talk about the global. [00:28:07] Is that a grey pill? [00:28:09] Yeah. [00:28:09] Well, one of them. [00:28:10] We're going to talk about the global compact for migration, basically, and how remigration is inevitable. [00:28:16] So that's encouraging. [00:28:18] Yeah. [00:28:19] Yeah. [00:28:19] Yeah, it is encouraging. [00:28:20] At the very least, for the time being, remigration is inevitable. [00:28:24] This popped up on my X feed, and I was like, huh, interesting. [00:28:28] Let's have a look at this. [00:28:30] So, Global Compact for Migration. [00:28:33] This is something that the UN has. [00:28:34] Has anyone ever heard of it? [00:28:36] He has. [00:28:37] Fair answer. [00:28:38] He's a man of culture. [00:28:39] Yeah. [00:28:40] I've heard the title. [00:28:41] I know what that entails. [00:28:42] Well, let's get into some black pulling then, shall we? [00:28:45] So, what is it? [00:28:46] Well, Global Compact. [00:28:47] Global Compact for Migration is the first ever UN global agreement on a common approach to international migration. [00:28:53] In all its dimensions, the global compact is non legally binding, although you'd be remiss to believe that it is. [00:28:59] It is grounded in values of state sovereignty, responsibility sharing, non discrimination, and human rights. [00:29:07] Love that. [00:29:08] And recognizes that a cooperative approach is needed to optimize the overall benefits of migration. [00:29:13] Anyone feel in those benefits? [00:29:15] Great food, apparently, I'm told. [00:29:16] Piers Morgan says. [00:29:18] You hear like slop, he's like a pig, so that makes sense. [00:29:21] Slurrying. [00:29:22] No, I've not really experienced any of these benefits myself. [00:29:25] I can't. [00:29:25] No. [00:29:27] No, I think the decades long open door policy and the argument for economic growth probably well and truly been put to bed now, hasn't it? [00:29:37] Yeah. [00:29:38] Yeah. [00:29:38] It's untenable. [00:29:39] Yeah. [00:29:40] So the idea that depressing wages brings prosperity is on the face of it unhinged. [00:29:47] Yeah. [00:29:47] Well, yeah, of course it is. [00:29:48] The idea that. [00:29:49] Well, for us. [00:29:51] Sorry, it's for us. [00:29:52] Depressing wages for us. [00:29:53] Well, really. [00:29:54] Not for some. [00:29:55] Well, yes. [00:29:56] Those wages for other people. [00:29:57] That's important. [00:29:58] That's very important. [00:30:00] It was Zahawi who was arguing for the importance of remittances to Somalia. [00:30:04] Of course it was. [00:30:06] Reform UK. [00:30:06] Leading figure, Nadim Zahawi. [00:30:08] Just check. [00:30:08] Faced right wing populist insurgent. [00:30:11] It's an Iraqi, isn't it? [00:30:12] Man of the people. [00:30:13] He's a Kurdish Iraqi. [00:30:14] There you go. [00:30:15] That matters, I guess. [00:30:18] It really does in ways. [00:30:19] I wasn't going to be lying to you. [00:30:21] I was being serious. [00:30:22] That does actually matter. [00:30:24] So that's just a quick overview. [00:30:25] Basically, there are 23 objectives on this. [00:30:29] Can I just say, like, the idea of an international agreement on migration is like that could be based, where it's just like the entirety of Europe saying, no. [00:30:36] The Western world. [00:30:37] No more. [00:30:37] No thanks. [00:30:38] Yeah. [00:30:38] But that's not what this is, I'm assuming. [00:30:40] Unfortunately, it's not. [00:30:41] So there are 23 objectives for safe, orderly, and regular migration. [00:30:46] Oh, good. [00:30:47] So they're not even entertaining the concept that there may be, you know, a critical mass by which we say no more. [00:30:54] Well, also, just scanning through the story to try to. [00:30:57] I know. [00:30:57] I want to go through it. [00:30:58] I want to go through it bit by bit. [00:31:00] Can I pick up on a couple of things quickly? [00:31:02] Sure. [00:31:03] Enhance availability and flexibility of pathways for regular migration. [00:31:07] Yeah. [00:31:07] Oh, because there are so many blockages right now. [00:31:09] Exactly. [00:31:11] Well, they've already made it then, I guess, haven't they? [00:31:13] And the beautiful one, ensure that all migrants have proof of legal identity and adequate documentation. [00:31:18] Yeah, I mean, that's nonsense. [00:31:20] But that subtext, global digital ID. [00:31:24] Yeah, well, yeah. [00:31:25] So let's get into it, right? [00:31:26] Because there are 23 of these points. [00:31:28] So collect and utilize accurate and disaggregated data as a basis for evidence based policies. [00:31:36] Presumably excluding crime data. [00:31:37] Presumably, yeah, presumably. [00:31:39] I mean, it's just waffle, presumably, that they have to chuck in there. [00:31:43] Create policy on the basis of evidence, yeah. [00:31:47] Cutting edge, thanks, guys, but not all patriots, not all evidence, yeah. [00:31:53] I mean, you could use this for a basis to say no thanks, yeah, but obviously, this is a problem, isn't it? [00:32:00] When they coach it in the language of human rights and compassion and all of these sorts of things, it's like, yeah, we already know that ideologically you're committed to certain outcomes, and all of the rest of it is just mere window dressing for what you want to do, yeah. [00:32:14] So, why don't Factors by which to facilitate the outcomes that you wish to pursue wholesale, and also, I doubt it's regular migration, say from Africa to China or from Africa to India or from India to Russia. [00:32:29] Right? [00:32:30] It's actually going to be the gullible traitorous. [00:32:32] Oh, no, Putin has signed up to some immigration from India, yeah. [00:32:35] No, he has, yeah. [00:32:36] Same as Ukraine, don't do it, Poot. [00:32:38] I'm still tired to turn back, same as Ukraine. [00:32:41] Can you imagine just side note, side note, yeah, fighting in a horrific war, yeah, and then. [00:32:48] Going back, and your land is just covered in curry houses. [00:32:51] They're not black. [00:32:52] I've seen videos of Indians washing their clothes in Ukrainian clothes. [00:32:55] Saw that. [00:32:55] Saw that. [00:32:56] That's outrageous. [00:32:57] I'm like, guys, could you just put a pause on it for five minutes until you actually settle? [00:33:02] Just, just, don't revert to type. [00:33:05] Just, just, goddamn, just wait. [00:33:08] Just wait. [00:33:09] So, anyway, minimize the adverse drivers and structural factors that compel people to leave their country of origin. [00:33:14] I mean, fair. [00:33:15] You can't do that, though. [00:33:17] Yeah. [00:33:17] You can't. [00:33:18] Oh, stop people being poor. [00:33:19] Is effectively foreign policy. [00:33:22] If you read that as make colonialism greater, that's the other thing. [00:33:27] Yeah, you can. [00:33:28] There is a based way to interpret all of this. [00:33:30] Just saying. [00:33:32] Provide accurate and timely information at all stages of migration. [00:33:35] What does that even mean? [00:33:39] I mean, you talk about global digital ID. [00:33:40] Maybe this is like microchipping to everyone. [00:33:42] Well, yeah, maybe. [00:33:44] Ensure that all migrants have proof of legal identity, adequate documentation. [00:33:49] Enhance availability and flexibility of pathways for regular migration. [00:33:53] Why? [00:33:54] Why? [00:33:54] Yeah. [00:33:55] The assumption here is that migration is just always good. [00:33:58] Yeah, that is it, isn't it? [00:33:59] So we've got this end goal. [00:34:01] We want the West to be globalized. [00:34:03] We want, yeah, that's the outcome. [00:34:06] That's what we want. [00:34:07] So this is what we're going to do. [00:34:09] Every single objective here is to facilitate that as an outcome, which is evil. [00:34:16] There's no other word for it. [00:34:17] It is evil. [00:34:18] It is. [00:34:18] For the good of the planet, I made this point on X. For the good of the planet, the West needs to remain West, you know, Western, white, whatever you want to call it. [00:34:27] It has to remain that. [00:34:28] For the good of the entire planet. [00:34:30] Well, you want everything to look like downtown Mumbai? [00:34:31] Are you mental? [00:34:33] What are you doing? [00:34:34] Well, we worry about the ecosystem, but we want everyone to come here and we're just going to globalise and become this sludgy Mumbai. [00:34:40] Yeah, no thanks. [00:34:41] Canada says hello. [00:34:43] Precisely, right? [00:34:45] So, facilitate fair and ethical recruitment and safeguard conditions that ensure decent work. [00:34:52] So, decent work for the migrants at the expense of the people already living in the European countries, obviously. [00:34:59] Of course. [00:35:00] Of course, yeah, come on now. [00:35:02] This is only, it's human rights for thee, but not for me. [00:35:06] That's the argument that is always being made here. [00:35:08] I'm an idealist, but I thought that work could go to our own people, you know? [00:35:13] Shame on you. [00:35:13] Yeah. [00:35:14] You bigot. [00:35:19] Address and reduce vulnerabilities in migration. [00:35:21] That's safe and legal reads. [00:35:23] That's what that is. [00:35:24] Yeah. [00:35:24] Right. [00:35:24] It's the same as that Shabana Mahmood going, I'm going to clamp down on illegal migration so we can have more safe and legal reads. [00:35:29] Yeah. [00:35:30] Can we not? [00:35:31] That's actually what Trump is doing, to be fair. [00:35:33] Yeah. [00:35:34] I do like to imagine that that's in contradiction to the second point, which is like, The idea of a vulnerability in migration being like, oh no, someone lives in a stable country, which means they might not come to Europe. [00:35:44] Let's destabilize their country to make sure they come here. [00:35:49] Save lives and establish. [00:35:50] You're describing certain Middle Eastern policies, but that's a different conversation for every time. [00:35:55] Save lives and establish coordinated international efforts on missing migrants. [00:36:02] So, is this to do with modern slavery? [00:36:05] What is this to do with? [00:36:07] I mean, I'm all for. [00:36:08] Maybe just don't bring them here and they won't go missing. [00:36:09] How about that? [00:36:10] I'm for international efforts. [00:36:12] Efforts to abolish slavery. [00:36:13] I mean, after all, we did it once, but at the same time, I don't believe that you're going to get the cooperation of the African nations that are actually profiting from them and are now dependent on them. [00:36:25] I know we had that issue last time. [00:36:26] We did have that issue last time. [00:36:28] The Kingdom of Dahomey were not very happy. [00:36:30] The slave king was pretty annoyed. [00:36:33] Strengthen the transnational response to smuggling of migrants, prevent, combat, and eradicate trafficking in persons in the context of international migration. [00:36:41] Is that not exactly the same thing? [00:36:43] I'm not saying that. [00:36:44] Obviously, based, like just send the SAS in to execute people smugglers, is my view. [00:36:48] There was actually an unmasking of one of the main people smugglers or traffickers for illegal migrants recently. [00:36:57] It's like, okay, so you've got to face it then. [00:37:00] Yeah. [00:37:00] Yeah. [00:37:00] Off you pop. [00:37:01] Let's go. [00:37:01] Next. [00:37:02] Yeah. [00:37:02] Come on now. [00:37:03] Chop, chop. [00:37:04] But no, nothing. [00:37:04] Nothing at all. [00:37:06] Manage borders in an integrated, secure, and coordinated manner. [00:37:10] Remember, this is a global compact. [00:37:12] Manage borders in an integrated, secure, and coordinated manner. [00:37:15] That means that you are integrating your border management with Afghanistan's border management. [00:37:21] Again, that's the subtext. [00:37:22] It's the global digitization, right? [00:37:26] That's kind of what I'm reading from that. [00:37:29] Strengthen certainty and predictability in migration procedures for appropriate screening, assessment, and referral. [00:37:35] Use migration detention only as a measure of last resort and work towards alternatives. [00:37:43] Those being. [00:37:45] What? [00:37:46] Well, the Shires are racist. [00:37:47] The Shires are racist. [00:37:49] Everyone knows that the Shires are racist. [00:37:51] That's the implication here, right? [00:37:53] Yeah. [00:37:53] Yeah. [00:37:53] That's what's being said. [00:37:54] How is that even on here? [00:37:56] How did anyone read that and go, ah, sign me up to that? [00:37:59] How is a migration detention centre or just detention in general a last resort? [00:38:05] You don't know who they are. [00:38:06] It's literally like saying, like, use prison as a last resort for criminals. [00:38:10] Just give them a pat on the back first, see if that works. [00:38:12] Yeah, give them a cuddle. [00:38:13] A pep talk. [00:38:14] Yeah. [00:38:15] A hug a hoodie. [00:38:16] Yeah. [00:38:17] Yeah. [00:38:17] A breakfast club. [00:38:18] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:38:19] Table tennis tables, just infinite table tennis tables. [00:38:23] Enhance consular protection, assistance, cooperation throughout the migration cycle. [00:38:27] Again, more globalization. [00:38:29] Provide access to basic services for migrants. [00:38:32] Well, I mean, if it was only basic services. [00:38:34] So kill your economy. [00:38:36] Well, number 15. [00:38:38] I mean, infinite medical care for illegal migrants. [00:38:41] Yeah, I wouldn't say that was basic. [00:38:43] That's a luxury. [00:38:44] That's a luxury where they come from. [00:38:46] That's not a basic service. [00:38:47] Basic, if they would, you can interpret that in many, many different ways. [00:38:51] If they were doing a proper basic service, it would be like just food and water. [00:38:55] Well, what level of food? [00:38:56] Literally what you're given. [00:38:57] Shut up, eat it, that's it, and a bit of water. [00:38:59] We don't need to give them driving lessons. [00:39:01] I keep repeating that. [00:39:02] We don't need to send them down to a local football club, for instance, like where we have been doing. [00:39:06] I mean, this is absurd. [00:39:08] So many absurd things we keep giving to these people that just should not be here. [00:39:11] Bus passes or bicycles, laptops. [00:39:14] Yeah, you name it. [00:39:15] Yeah, yeah, yeah. [00:39:16] But sod everyone else, right? [00:39:17] Empower migrants and societies to realize full inclusion and social cohesion. [00:39:22] That's deeply authoritarian and oppressive, isn't it? [00:39:25] It is unobtainable. [00:39:27] It is unobtainable. [00:39:28] You will never arrive at that. [00:39:31] It's a myth. [00:39:32] They never wanted it. [00:39:33] We never wanted it. [00:39:34] You're forcing it on us. [00:39:35] What do you think is going to happen? [00:39:35] This is the thing. [00:39:36] For the people writing this up, it's like, have you looked out the window? [00:39:40] Have you seen what is going on? [00:39:42] Where they live, it's probably, you know. [00:39:44] Yeah, they've never come across it, have they, really? [00:39:46] Yeah. [00:39:46] Okay. [00:39:46] Have they ever been on the internet? [00:39:49] Have they ever. [00:39:49] Oh, no, no, no. [00:39:50] Wait. [00:39:50] The next one is just the creme de la creme. [00:39:52] Okay. [00:39:52] This one is the most. [00:39:52] Eliminate all forms of discrimination and promote evidence based public discourse that shapes perceptions of migration. [00:39:59] Now, here's a thought. [00:40:00] What if evidence leads to justifiable discrimination? [00:40:04] Sorry. [00:40:05] Got to eliminate. [00:40:05] There's an error there. [00:40:07] It's going to eradicate human nature itself. [00:40:10] Yeah. [00:40:10] It's going to have in group preferences allowed. [00:40:13] Right. [00:40:14] All for some. [00:40:16] It's mental, isn't it? [00:40:17] Genuinely just insane. [00:40:18] What's like discrimination on the basis of competence for a job? [00:40:21] Yeah, I love this one. [00:40:22] Invest in skills development and facilitate mutual recognition of skills. [00:40:26] What skills? [00:40:27] That when somebody comes at you with an Indian university degree, you should not ask questions. [00:40:32] Oh, right. [00:40:32] Knowing full well how much the forgery of qualifications happens all over. [00:40:39] All universities, not ask any questions. [00:40:41] To say nothing of an Indian driving license. [00:40:45] Yeah. [00:40:46] I almost got crushed by two trucks the other day. [00:40:49] Not one, two. [00:40:50] Yeah. [00:40:52] I'm just glad to have you with us. [00:40:54] Thank you. [00:40:54] Glad you didn't, obviously. [00:40:56] Thank you. [00:40:57] Create conditions for migrants and diasporas to fully contribute to sustainable development in all countries. [00:41:02] We're just not. [00:41:03] Infinite remittances. [00:41:04] Yeah. [00:41:05] Yeah. [00:41:05] That is what that is. [00:41:06] This is what it is. [00:41:07] It's remittances. [00:41:08] Faster, safer, cheaper transfer of remittances. [00:41:11] Come on. [00:41:12] In case you were wondering, wealth transfer, you must facilitate wealth transfer. [00:41:16] Just extraction. [00:41:17] But that is lit. [00:41:18] This is the UN. [00:41:19] Yeah. [00:41:21] Actually, insanity, this is. [00:41:22] I'd love someone to rewrite this list of 23 points using basically the honest language. [00:41:27] Yeah. [00:41:27] You know, challenge accepted. [00:41:29] Yeah. [00:41:29] Go for it. [00:41:30] I didn't have enough time to do it. [00:41:33] I should have done it myself. [00:41:34] Yeah. [00:41:34] Cooperate in facilitating safe and dignified return and readmission, as well as sustainable reintegration. [00:41:41] Is that back to their countries of origin? [00:41:43] If so, strip away everything else. [00:41:44] Just have number 21. [00:41:45] Thank you. [00:41:46] Yeah, I don't. [00:41:47] Yeah, I guess that is that. [00:41:49] Establish mechanisms for the portability of social security entitlements and earned benefits. [00:41:55] So, you get to give them a bank account and send them home? [00:41:59] No, no. [00:41:59] It means if you come in as a social care, whatever it is that Boris Johnson opened up, that means that you should be allowed to receive your pension in Lagos. [00:42:11] Okay, right, right. [00:42:12] Yeah, I guess that is it. [00:42:13] You should be allowed to receive a British pension in Lagos. [00:42:17] Insane. [00:42:19] Insane. [00:42:21] Everyone knows what this is signaling. [00:42:23] Everyone is aware. [00:42:25] Strengthen international cooperation and global partnership for safe, orderly, and regular migration. [00:42:30] So, again, it's just the statement of we want immigrants here. [00:42:34] Here's how we're going to facilitate it and make their lives better. [00:42:37] That's what the EU just signed up to with, I think, Bangladesh and India. [00:42:40] More so what we have now signed up to by working with it. [00:42:44] And that's part of the trade agreement with India. [00:42:46] Yes. [00:42:47] Because there are just so many Europeans bursting to go and work in India. [00:42:51] Of course. [00:42:51] Yeah. [00:42:52] I mean, India just uses their biomass as a bargaining tool. [00:42:55] At all. [00:42:56] Well, they always do. [00:42:56] Moghly is explicit about it. === Facilitating Mass Immigration (09:51) === [00:42:58] Because they do, because they don't want them there. [00:42:59] Migration is always part of Indian trade deals. [00:43:01] And, you know, it's smart. [00:43:02] Like, on their part, you have to give them credit for that. [00:43:04] Yeah, until they come up against someone base and they're like, no thanks. [00:43:07] But I'm not a Hindu nationalist, so I don't want it. [00:43:12] As people may know, India is being considered for our red list as part of Restore Britain policy. [00:43:16] That's encouraging. [00:43:18] Considered? [00:43:19] Well, we're writing the paper at the moment. [00:43:20] All right, all right. [00:43:21] I don't want to rush it. [00:43:22] Don't want to rush it. [00:43:23] Well, anyway, so that's what the global compact is for migration. [00:43:27] Trump said no. [00:43:29] He said no to that. [00:43:31] So thank God. [00:43:33] Brilliant. [00:43:33] Well done. [00:43:34] Congrats. [00:43:35] This is on the department of state or the state department. [00:43:37] Said last week. [00:43:38] The United States refused to participate in the UN's review of the Global Compact on Migration. [00:43:45] The United States objects to the Global Compact on Migration and UN efforts to facilitate replacement migration to the United States and our Western allies. [00:43:54] UN agencies systematically facilitated mass migration into America and Europe, even as citizens of these nations called for restrictions on migration. [00:44:04] Now, the Global Compact's latest report urges nations to expand migration pathways. [00:44:10] And pursue regularization of migrants. [00:44:13] Basically, just infinite flow. [00:44:14] This is the norm. [00:44:15] But nobody's illegal. [00:44:17] Yeah. [00:44:18] Delete your country. [00:44:19] Yeah, yeah. [00:44:20] Delete it. [00:44:20] Yeah, yeah. [00:44:21] UN agencies working with the NGOs they fund established a migration corridor through Central America and to the US border. [00:44:29] As the American people suffered under an unprecedented wave of mass migration, the UN was on the ground pipelining migrants to our southern border. [00:44:38] UN officials greeted migrants along the route. [00:44:41] Through the deadly Darien Gap. [00:44:43] I've seen videos of that, like, there's bodies just all over the place. [00:44:46] It's awful. [00:44:46] Yeah, it's really awful. [00:44:48] When they say deadly, it's genuinely deadly. [00:44:51] UN funded NGOs handed out maps to migrants en route to the US. [00:44:55] Sounded very familiar, isn't it? [00:44:56] It sounded like there's a very similar pattern here, similar to what we get, oh, I don't know, on Calais, maybe, into Dover. [00:45:04] It sounds like a well oiled machine, doesn't it? [00:45:08] Yeah. [00:45:08] Almost like people want it to happen. [00:45:10] And so that's why they're not actually doing anything. [00:45:12] And then they just sort of, you know, gerrymander their way to just continue it, filibustering on migration. [00:45:20] Anyway, after facilitating mass migration to the United States, UN agencies condemned the deportation of illegal immigrants. [00:45:27] Again, very similar to what we get here, but via the ECHR instead. [00:45:32] As Europe endured sustained migratory pressure, UN officials staffed all ends of the Mediterranean migration route from the coast of Libya to the shores of the Aegean to the islands of Greece. [00:45:46] That's interesting, isn't it? [00:45:47] I do like the fact they're calling them out here. [00:45:50] The UN, then UN agencies condemned frontline states who refused to open their borders. [00:45:56] Oh, we get a special mention. [00:45:58] Whilst the United Kingdom faced unprecedented illegal boat crossings, UN agencies condemned plans for deportations. [00:46:06] UN officials lobbied aviation regulators to prevent the deportation of migrants, an appalling violation of the UK's national sovereignty. [00:46:16] Why is the State Department speaking about this, not the British government? [00:46:19] Yeah, right. [00:46:21] Right? [00:46:21] Frustrating, isn't it? [00:46:22] At least someone is on our side. [00:46:26] The Global Compact on Migration claims to support safe migration. [00:46:30] For the citizens of Western nations, mass migration was never safe, which we know. [00:46:36] We have a multitude, a plethora of just the most heinous acts committed on our people. [00:46:43] It's unfathomable. [00:46:45] It's disgusting. [00:46:46] It introduced new security threats, imposed financial strains, and undermined the cohesion of our societies. [00:46:53] And I like that. [00:46:53] I like it. [00:46:55] It's understanding that this is the Western world, it's the Anglosphere, it's not necessarily the Anglosphere, but still Europe as well. [00:47:02] Very specific. [00:47:03] We have a specific culture. [00:47:06] This is not good. [00:47:08] Everyone has rejected this outright. [00:47:11] No one wants any of this. [00:47:12] The United States will not legitimize global compacts that enable mass migration into America or Western nations. [00:47:20] Under President Trump, the State Department will facilitate re migration. [00:47:27] Oh, you love to see it, don't you? [00:47:30] You love to see that word. [00:47:31] Yeah. [00:47:33] It's amazing that this is coming out of the State Department. [00:47:35] Isn't it? [00:47:35] You know, I mean, plenty of people have been hot and cold on the Trump administration, but this is just gold dust. [00:47:39] I mean, that's huge. [00:47:40] Yeah. [00:47:41] That's huge. [00:47:41] It's a seismic moment. [00:47:42] It's a very powerful statement. [00:47:46] I am obviously very cautious about it, given the fact that at the current moment, Trump's administration have not yet been able to deport merely the illegals that have arrived in America in the most recent years. [00:48:00] And, you know, the Biden wave. [00:48:01] Yeah. [00:48:02] And also, as well, just, I mean, I mean, At what point as well does it become about, you know, all those that Reagan let in as well who were illegal and given the amnesty? [00:48:10] But the other thing as well is, um, now if this is the case and this word is now being picked up by Washington, and don't misunderstand me, it's a beautiful word, I love it. [00:48:21] Um, there is a problem that those who are higher up get to define what it means as well. [00:48:28] And for us, remigration is very, very clear. [00:48:30] We know what it means, it's not just about the illegals, it's also about the legals and all those, you know, foreign communities that have. [00:48:37] Been forced on us against our world that have alienated good, honest Europeans up and down their nations, the nations it was their birthright to inherit. [00:48:47] But when you have a state as powerful as this, I would be careful of the language games that they might try to play. [00:48:54] I agree. [00:48:55] I was going to remark on the fact that this is all, it seems, about illegal migration. [00:48:59] It all seems to be couched in that kind of language. [00:49:01] And as you say, obviously the British situation is different to the US situation. [00:49:07] But at Restore Britain, we have quite a clear distinction. [00:49:09] We will. [00:49:10] Mass deportations for illegals, you know, by any means necessary, because these people are criminals who've entered our country illegally or entered legally and then stayed, or entered legally and stayed illegally over said visas and all the rest of it. [00:49:22] But actually, those who've come legally through legal channels over the last at least 30 years are the actual problem because they are the ones that are, as you say, demographically transforming the country, reducing social cohesion in the places that they tend to coalesce. [00:49:38] And it is those people who also need to leave. [00:49:40] And that doesn't mean like kicking in doors and all the rest of it. [00:49:42] But our policy is clear on this, and we're writing the actual paper on it at the moment that if you can't speak English, if you don't work, if you take benefits, if you live in social housing, if you hate our way of life, you're gone, even if you came legally. [00:49:55] And that will apply to millions. [00:49:57] Yes. [00:49:58] And again, it's about the labor you put on it. [00:50:00] Because I mean, I've used the word remigration plenty, and plenty of others on the team and around Restore Britain have. [00:50:07] But reversing mass immigration is the point here. [00:50:09] And when you say about the US government basically being in a position to Give definition to that word. [00:50:16] I do think that we need to do all we can to keep them honest in that regard. [00:50:20] I agree. [00:50:20] Because it's not good enough to just talk about illegal migration. [00:50:23] And what Restore is talking about is legal migration, reversing legal migration. [00:50:28] So not just stopping it where it is, not just net zero, but actually taking active steps to reverse the demographic replacement of our people. [00:50:36] I'd also like to add so the demographic that you were stating, or stipulating, you know, the last 30 years is the second order consequences of that cohort. [00:50:45] It's those second generation immigrants that are undoubtedly, from data, some of the most volatile, violent, and radical people because they are the ones which we see time and time again committing some of these disgusting and depraved acts. [00:50:59] So it's really important to, you know, it's not just them, it's what they have also contributed to society or lack of contribution, anyway. [00:51:08] And yeah, it just says not replacement migration. [00:51:11] And then you can see, you love to see it. [00:51:17] Yeah. [00:51:17] But this is a little bit more vague. [00:51:20] And we talked about the illegal points there that they were making. [00:51:23] Under President Trump, replacement migration, just replacement migration, will never be the standard. [00:51:30] So, that you can clearly define as legal and illegal at that point. [00:51:34] Yeah. [00:51:35] Well, again, in terms of scale, it can only really mean legal because it is, you know, like illegal migration. [00:51:41] I know we're talking about the US here, but like in Britain, illegal migration is not really replacement migration because the scale is so small. [00:51:48] Yeah. [00:51:48] Tip of the iceberg. [00:51:49] The United States objects to the global compact on migration and UN efforts to facilitate replacement migration, which is just a beautiful thing. [00:51:56] I will say, despite my, you know, caution about all of this as well, and even if the Trump administration is not, Going as far as we perhaps would want it to go for the American people, it is still a good thing to not have the most powerful nation on earth working in cooperation with these international bodies. [00:52:20] This is at least, well, I mean, he defunded the UN recently. [00:52:24] They were going to go bankrupt because they didn't provide the regular funding. [00:52:29] The UN is insisting that this is money that's still owed that the Americans need to pay. [00:52:32] Yeah. [00:52:33] Which is an interesting take on sovereignty. [00:52:35] Yeah, a little bit, isn't it? [00:52:37] And it's just signal boosting, isn't it? [00:52:39] You know, it's moving the Overton window. [00:52:42] Again, even though your points are completely justified to suggest, well, yes, who's defining it, et cetera. [00:52:48] But it still moves the Overton window. === Hope Springs Eternal (08:43) === [00:52:49] It pushes it into the limelight more and more, becomes the norm. [00:52:53] It's part of discourse, which it needs to be. [00:52:56] Push it into the limelight. [00:52:57] Let's speak about it. [00:52:58] Let's talk about it. [00:52:58] Honestly, I am amazed by the rate at which the discourse is moving. [00:53:04] Yeah, I mean, I agree. [00:53:05] I think it's just because. [00:53:06] The second you give people free speech after several decades of policing it. [00:53:09] Yeah. [00:53:10] They're going to say what they actually think. [00:53:11] Well, people have been suffocated of any political outlet. [00:53:14] Yes. [00:53:15] And then, you know, Restore Britain, Great Yarmouth First, things that we do, it gives people a vector. [00:53:21] It's a bit of oxygen. [00:53:22] You can breathe now, you can speak. [00:53:23] I'll tell you something. [00:53:24] And then that's it. [00:53:25] Yeah. [00:53:25] And it all just floods out. [00:53:26] An experience from Great Yarmouth was, you know, knocking on doors of the people that, you know, just canvassing essentially and speaking to people in Great Yarmouth and, like, yeah, sure, it's only one town. [00:53:37] But as I say, it's quite a good microcosm of the country. [00:53:40] Like, so many of the people that I spoke to who said that they were going to vote for us and hopefully. [00:53:44] Did and apparently did, um, are what the mainstream press would call like far right extremists, like their view of what's going on in Britain, uh, their view of what should happen. [00:53:54] Uh, you know, if you think that restore Britain's radical, you know, yeah, yeah. [00:54:00] Um, and then I just want to close with a little commentary from Trump here to uh, Queer Stalin. [00:54:08] Just turn it up a bit, Samson. [00:54:11] They're not allowed to use it, and it's one of the best in the world, among the best oils in the world. [00:54:14] Open up your oil in the North Sea and get tough on immigration. [00:54:17] Should he stay or go? [00:54:17] Europe is being very, very hurt by immigration. [00:54:19] It's all over Europe. [00:54:19] Should he stay or go? [00:54:20] That's up to him. [00:54:21] But I told him from day one, you're going to kill the energy. [00:54:24] You're windmilling your country to death. [00:54:26] Open up the North Sea. [00:54:39] You're windmilling the country to death. [00:54:41] I just saw a report that the actual lifespan of windmills is not 25 years as advertised, but only 10 to 15. [00:54:48] Great. [00:54:49] I can't believe that they don't. [00:54:50] None of them will turn a profit. [00:54:51] Brilliant. [00:54:52] And you still need. [00:54:53] And you still need the subsidies. [00:54:55] Well, you still need fossil fuels to get them to run anyway because they need oiling. [00:54:58] Funnily enough, machinery needs oiling. [00:55:00] So, remigration, it's inevitable. [00:55:05] All right, good team. [00:55:08] I'll quickly dart through some of the rumble rants. [00:55:11] I've got Busted Britain for $5. [00:55:13] Thank you. [00:55:14] Says regarding Restore's upward momentum, have there been discussions or contingencies drawn about the party's approach to a situation where Starmer calls a snap election if he's ousted? [00:55:26] We've talked about that plenty, but I'm not going to reveal what our strategy would be on a public forum. [00:55:30] Smart man. [00:55:31] Okay, that's random. [00:55:32] No, I see it. [00:55:34] I can't read it. [00:55:36] I see it. [00:55:36] I see you, random name. [00:55:38] Logan Pine says the only mass immigration I'll accept is also, yeah, also I love. [00:55:45] Right, okay. [00:55:46] You know what? [00:55:47] He wants a bunch of women to come back, entry. [00:55:49] Anyway, I see the comments. [00:55:51] I can't really read them given the circumstances of being live on air, but with that, we'll move on to your segment. [00:55:58] Yes. [00:56:01] I think Yes Minister is one of those genius shows that is severely underappreciated. [00:56:07] Such a classic. [00:56:09] And because of copyright strikes, I have to read some of the lines of Jim Hacker describing the wonderful bunch who are backbench MPs. [00:56:19] And his wife asks him if backbench MPs aren't actually underpaid. [00:56:23] And he goes, Underpaid? [00:56:26] Being an MP is a vast subsidized ego trip. [00:56:30] It's a job for which you need no qualifications, there are no compulsory hours of work. [00:56:34] No performance standards, you get a warm room and subsidized meals for a bunch of self opinionated windbags and busybodies who suddenly find people taking them seriously because they've got the letters MP after their names. [00:56:49] How can they be underpaid when there are about 200 applicants for every vacancy? [00:56:54] You could fill every seat 20 times over even if they had to pay to do the job. [00:57:00] I'm of the view that Kir Starmer very strongly agrees with this diagnosis. [00:57:06] Sorry, state of our political class, though, as well. [00:57:08] It is what it became. [00:57:10] Horrific state. [00:57:11] It was known in the 80s that this has become the case. [00:57:16] And it's worth reminding people that it is the case because Keir Starmer seems to have gotten the measure of his MPs and decided that that's exactly how he is going to treat them. [00:57:28] I'm going to move it on. [00:57:30] There's a bunch of memes going on, which are brilliant. [00:57:33] For those of you who don't know, this is a copy. [00:57:36] Of the kind of coup in Myanmar where some lady was doing her yoga lessons and accidentally caught a bunch of military vehicles going in to overthrow the government. [00:57:49] There is some expectation that this will happen here. [00:57:55] Hope springs eternal. [00:57:57] Hope springs eternal. [00:57:59] But there are other things that are going on because it seems that West Streeting may or may not have blown. [00:58:08] His chance at unseating Starmer. [00:58:11] It looked like that when I was preparing the segment, but since then he has confirmed that he will be trying to mount a leadership challenge because he visited Starmer for a grand total of 16 minutes. [00:58:24] That was insane. [00:58:26] Before being promptly kicked out. [00:58:28] And some people made the comparison with Margaret Thatcher's visit to Ted Heath, which lasted for again 15 minutes, 10 of which she spent talking to other people because he'd only spoken to her for five. [00:58:39] I mean, you really don't have any social skills if you're going to look at your top threat and treat him with real, real massive disdain and sort of. [00:58:50] I mean, even if the disdain is entirely just. [00:58:53] I agree, but if you were smart, you would try and placate him a little bit. [00:58:58] The distinction is justified because, yes, it seems that West Streeting is going to resign and mount a leadership challenge, but then what do we know about West Streeting? [00:59:06] He's mental. [00:59:08] And not only is he someone who thinks that children should be given basically sterilization drugs because they might be in the wrong body, he's not just that kind of insane. [00:59:20] He also thinks that Tony Blair is a hero. [00:59:24] And supports him basically becoming the grand governor of the Middle East, which under some circumstances I might support as well, but let's see. [00:59:33] You know, I can, I can believe that he's going to do this, right? [00:59:37] Because it's just rumor at the moment, isn't it? [00:59:38] Yes. [00:59:38] He's going to do it. [00:59:39] I can believe he's going to do this because this is the guy that openly said, I'm going to lose my seat at the next election. [00:59:44] Yes. [00:59:45] So it is actually now or never, quite frankly. [00:59:47] Yes, it is. [00:59:48] Maybe, if maybe you wouldn't be losing your seat at the next election, whereas if you hadn't advocated for mass immigration your entire political career and watching them basically turn against you. [00:59:59] I do like, I mean, like, there's a part of Starmer that I do actually really like, and that's that he's dealing with all of these idiots. [01:00:06] Like, in January, when Andy Burnham was like quite openly saying, Yeah, I'm going to run to be an MP and go on and dented and then take on Starmer for the leadership, and Starmer was just like, No, you're not. [01:00:16] Yes. [01:00:17] And it's the same thing. [01:00:18] It's like, when Street has been saying, Yeah, I'm going to challenge Starmer for the leadership, and Starmer just sits there and it's just like, I don't think so, mate. [01:00:25] Fair enough. [01:00:27] You know, as part of his career, he's. [01:00:30] Part of the all parliamentary group for the fourth industrial revolution. [01:00:34] Right. [01:00:35] The idea that was promoted by Klaus Schwab at the time of the World Economic Forum. [01:00:41] Blair as well. [01:00:41] Blair. [01:00:42] And Blair. [01:00:44] He's a big anti Semitism campaigner. [01:00:46] He's on the all party parliamentary group against anti Semitism and was co chair of the. [01:00:53] What's the spectrum of Muslims? [01:00:55] Why is wrong? [01:00:56] How do his constituents feel about that? [01:00:57] How'd you pass that up, Wes? [01:01:00] Come on now. [01:01:02] He was the co chair of the old party parliamentary group on British Jews as well. [01:01:05] Of course he was. [01:01:07] And he gets money from all kinds of private interests. [01:01:12] Of course he does. [01:01:13] The private healthcare sector, some suppliers or potential suppliers to the NHS. [01:01:19] That looks like a corporate interest there, doesn't it? [01:01:22] Almost. [01:01:23] A friend of the working man as a Labour MP. [01:01:25] Yes, yes. [01:01:26] And a bunch of hedge funds to sort of complete the picture. [01:01:29] Because you're not truly a friend of the working man unless you take money from a bunch of hedge funds. === Corporate Interests in Labour (09:54) === [01:01:33] Yeah. [01:01:34] You know. [01:01:35] Of course. [01:01:35] Okay. [01:01:36] Fair enough. [01:01:37] Fair enough. [01:01:39] So, yeah, this is kind of West Streeting, and he makes Keir Starmer look good. [01:01:46] But then the others who are calling on Keir Starmer to resign I mean, one of the most high profile ones was Jess Phillips. [01:01:52] Honestly, just good riddance. [01:01:54] Yeah. [01:01:54] But also, the reason why she left was the actual reason why she said. [01:01:59] No, I know. [01:01:59] What she said was actually insane. [01:02:01] Was insane. [01:02:02] Yeah. [01:02:02] What she said was that we don't have access to everything. [01:02:05] Exactly. [01:02:06] That Keir Starmer could have passed legislation that would have essentially forced all cameras on phones to have some kind of spyware to make sure that there weren't inappropriate underage images of children. [01:02:21] I'm sorry, have you lost your damn mind? [01:02:23] Yeah, I mean, have you lost your damn mind? [01:02:27] Keir Starmer protecting our freedoms. [01:02:29] Yeah, and do you think that it's who do you think the biggest threat to children is the illegal migrants and the Pakistani legal migrants or the phones? [01:02:39] Like, which one is it? [01:02:41] It's an epidemic of phones. [01:02:43] It's really. [01:02:47] It's a phone epidemic. [01:02:48] It's just mad. [01:02:49] And then one of her assistants also resigned to sort of signal that, yeah, they're against Starmer, but whatever. [01:02:55] Another guy who resigned, someone who I've never absolutely heard of, Zubair Ahmad, who is Health Innovation and Safety Minister. [01:03:05] In which country? [01:03:07] Yeah. [01:03:08] You're not going to tell me Britain, are you? [01:03:11] Sorry. [01:03:13] Sorry. [01:03:14] It is what it is. [01:03:15] There were a few names that came out. [01:03:16] The blue dot went. [01:03:17] Are you from Naboo? [01:03:20] Tatooine, perhaps? [01:03:21] Now, what are you doing here? [01:03:23] Go away. [01:03:24] The beauty of it is how, in their resignation letters, these guys try to polish up their CVs and highlight their wonderful achievements under Starmer, but only now, really, there's a problem with them. [01:03:38] Like, this isn't some. [01:03:41] It's not the job interview you think it is. [01:03:44] It's not the kind of job interview that you think it is. [01:03:47] That's the actual point. [01:03:49] And so he's bragging about what he's done with the NHS and how the NHS has become more wonderful under his leadership. [01:03:56] And everybody's going, Who the hell are you? [01:03:58] Has it? [01:03:59] It's like counterpoint. [01:04:00] Starmer doesn't care. [01:04:02] Yeah. [01:04:03] He wants to stay prime minister. [01:04:05] Damn your resignation. [01:04:06] Exactly. [01:04:08] And he tries to be. [01:04:09] As I raise my gaze above the daily work of ministerial life, it is clear to see that whatever the magnitude of individual achievements and progress, what? [01:04:18] They are now being dwarfed and undermined by a lack of values driven leadership at the centre. [01:04:24] That sounds like AI to me. [01:04:27] It's funny. [01:04:28] Yeah. [01:04:28] It's funny, but. [01:04:31] You have the same exact values as Keir Starmer. [01:04:34] You just want him to go faster. [01:04:36] Also, he talks like that as well. [01:04:37] Yes. [01:04:38] Did they really need the recent results to question his values? [01:04:43] To understand that everyone hated queer Stalin. [01:04:46] Yes. [01:04:47] He's the most unpopular prime minister of all time. [01:04:52] It's been that way for a very long time. [01:04:55] The really messed up bit about the values thing is that what sort of began the latest downfall episode of Starmer was the Mandelson files. [01:05:04] Mm hmm. [01:05:06] But Wes Streeting is one of Mandelson's proteges. [01:05:09] Oh, yeah. [01:05:10] And was exchanging love hearts with him on his text messages. [01:05:13] Oh, gosh. [01:05:16] So, really, is this really an upgrade in values? [01:05:22] Nah. [01:05:22] Is this really an upgrade in values, Mr. Zubair Ahmad? [01:05:26] I don't understand. [01:05:29] And then he goes on about how he's worried about his parliamentary seat. [01:05:31] But then you see okay, Starmer is right about these people, and he's right to treat them with contempt. [01:05:39] And here, Dan Hodges explains that after Shabana Mahmoud's people leaked the fact that she's asked Starmer to resign, he decided, F you all, you're going to have to drag me out. [01:05:53] Fair enough. [01:05:55] Solidarity, Kia. [01:05:56] I mean, because he treats them with contempt because they deserve it. [01:06:03] I love how we're all sort of projecting onto Kia Starmer this, like, just like this persona that he's actually like this heroic. [01:06:09] Figure, I'm looking at what's being said. [01:06:11] I was saying to him, I'm looking at what's being said here. [01:06:14] I love it, it's so funny. [01:06:16] And as an example of this content, he told them that look, you can talk to me afterwards if you want me to resign. [01:06:22] And then he said, No, I'm not going to speak to any of you. [01:06:25] Oh, yeah, I'm I'll be. [01:06:27] And then he said, I'm busy for three months. [01:06:29] That was that was the most impressive. [01:06:32] But yeah, sorry, I'm busy for three months, mate. [01:06:34] I'm busy for the next three months, like a subject waiting for an appointment with the monarch. [01:06:39] It's just, I will say this. [01:06:42] I will say this, and I said it earlier, is that this, although it's funny and we're having a laugh about it right now, this can unfortunately really backfire because the public hates this armor with such a magnitude unfathomable, right? [01:07:01] So the longer he stays, when someone eventually replaces him, that may unfortunately be seen very, very beneficial. [01:07:10] Lots of people may look at that and go, that's great, love that. [01:07:12] That will then raise labor in the polls. [01:07:16] Let me comfort you on that concern, if I may. [01:07:19] Well, but the King's speech and the things that they're suggesting they're going to do and push through, which is probably why he's busy for the next three months, would seemingly indicate that no matter what comes after him, people are going to go, Oh, you're so much better. [01:07:32] And that can backfire. [01:07:33] With him having prevented Andy Burnham from running, who is, at the end of the day, I mean, for those of us who forget, Andy Burnham was seen as a bit of a joke and as someone incompetent and unserious. [01:07:45] And then he became mayor of Manchester and somehow. [01:07:48] That made him great. [01:07:50] I don't understand it. [01:07:51] But the other two contenders are essentially, other than Wes Streeting, who was Mandelson's man, Angela Rayner and Ed Miliband. [01:08:03] Now, Angela Rayner, it's a sort of race to the bottom as to who between those two is likely to tank the economy faster. [01:08:15] Because these guys' views on how the economy works are genuinely laughable. [01:08:21] Sorry, I had to just sort of. [01:08:23] I like it. [01:08:23] Yeah. [01:08:24] I mean, we're Starman. [01:08:25] Yeah. [01:08:25] I mean, AL her Starman. [01:08:27] Come on. [01:08:29] One of the things I was just replying to one of Morgoth's bangers from yesterday, and it was just the fact that, you know, everyone's having fun with the memes, making Starmer. [01:08:37] It's like, look, we are making the uncoolest man in Britain look cool in a way that his allies have never been able to achieve, even if it's ironically. [01:08:48] Like, we have just memed him into. [01:08:51] Speaking of Morgoth, right. [01:08:52] This is a banger. [01:08:53] Yeah, this is a banger. [01:08:54] Because that's exactly what it is. [01:08:57] Yeah. [01:08:57] Angela Rayner or Ed Miliband will absolutely destroy the economy, and there is zero chance in hell that the left of the Labour Party will tolerate West Streeting. [01:09:07] They will not tolerate him. [01:09:08] I think they've already said that, haven't they? [01:09:09] They've signal boosted it. [01:09:10] They've pretty much said that they don't want him there and that they are not going to tolerate him. [01:09:16] And Starmer is resorting to some sort of. [01:09:22] The memes. [01:09:23] The memes, they just keep coming. [01:09:26] They just keep coming. [01:09:28] He's resorted to some unorthodox tactics in terms of declaring how much support he has. [01:09:33] Yeah, this was interesting, wasn't it? [01:09:35] I've got loads of mates, honest. [01:09:37] And then they're like, We're mates. [01:09:39] I've only met you once. [01:09:40] What the hell are you? [01:09:43] Why is my name on this list? [01:09:44] What's going on? [01:09:45] It's just like he's resorting to some unorthodox tactics, but that is because he knows. [01:09:51] It's a bold strategy. [01:09:53] Yes. [01:09:53] It's a lie. [01:09:54] It's a lie his way to popularity. [01:09:56] I mean, what? [01:09:57] It is how he got into the theater. [01:09:59] He said he was Corbyn's friend and he said that he was a full on. [01:10:03] A full on supporter of Corbin. [01:10:04] So, you know, I do. [01:10:07] I love the idea of, you know, Starmer reading this and maybe sitting down with this Rupert Huck, who he's, you know, whose name he's written on this list, and he's just going, What are you going to do about it? [01:10:17] And what? [01:10:20] Yeah. [01:10:21] Do you want to remove your name from it? [01:10:23] Yeah. [01:10:23] It reminds me of Egyptian voting jokes, but that's a conversation for another time. [01:10:26] Here's the pen and paper. [01:10:28] Remove it if you want. [01:10:30] Yeah. [01:10:30] There you go. [01:10:31] There you go. [01:10:32] Of Tipex. [01:10:32] Basically, he knows that he has them by, shall we say, the short and curlies. [01:10:39] Because if he calls a general election, they will never be employed again. [01:10:44] They are unemployable people who were shoved into private sector. [01:10:46] So will he, though. [01:10:47] This is the thing. [01:10:49] He will always have a speaking career, though. [01:10:53] As someone who was prime minister for two years, he will always be able to command a couple of hundred thousand grand for every speech that he makes. [01:10:59] Or he'll do what Nick Clegg did. [01:11:01] Exactly. [01:11:01] Disappear to go and work for the Big tech or whatever it is. [01:11:04] There are so many places that they're able to just fail to play into. [01:11:07] I mean, he probably can call in some favors from Patentier, given that he's giving them access to everybody's data and supporting the digital IDs. [01:11:16] So he has other career opportunities. [01:11:21] Rupa Hook might or might not. === Markets Must Fall In Line (05:51) === [01:11:28] I don't know. [01:11:30] I'd toe the line if I were you, my advice. [01:11:33] Essentially, that's what they're being told. [01:11:35] And you could see that really it's total contempt for them, but you could also see that this is a wider European problem. [01:11:43] Yeah, well, yeah, you think? [01:11:44] I mean, none of the leaders of Europe have positive ratings. [01:11:51] It's almost like they're ignoring what everyone wants them to do in favor of some other mandate. [01:11:56] To be fair to Starmer, he's not as bad as Macron or Mertz. [01:12:00] I mean, barely. [01:12:02] But just about. [01:12:04] Just about. [01:12:05] How is Macron still here, man? [01:12:07] It's been so long. [01:12:09] Ah. [01:12:10] How did he get there? [01:12:11] How did he go from being a Lothschild banker to becoming president of France? [01:12:14] I don't get it. [01:12:17] And he's in the Epstein files. [01:12:19] Yeah, and he's in the Epstein files, which is a completely different conversation for another time. [01:12:25] So Keir Starmer might go. [01:12:28] The SNP this afternoon is going to try to force a vote of no confidence. [01:12:31] Tomorrow, West Streeting is going to trigger a leadership contest. [01:12:36] But in a way, he has a Trump card, which is, I'm going to call an early election. [01:12:42] And if he doesn't, and we do end up with Angela Raynor or Ed Miliband, the economy is going to crash. [01:12:52] Let's trust who? [01:12:54] It's going to be a banking crisis of epic proportions. [01:12:58] Because. [01:12:59] Well, we're going to get that anyway. [01:13:01] It has to happen. [01:13:02] It's one of those things that you're like, well, just rip the band aid off. [01:13:04] I'm not an accelerationist, but this is going to happen. [01:13:08] Yes. [01:13:08] It's an unavoidable trajectory. [01:13:10] All we're doing currently is, you know, we're on a sinking ship and we're just. [01:13:15] The rate at which we can sort of chuck some water out is keeping us afloat a little bit. [01:13:18] We're still going down. [01:13:19] Yes. [01:13:20] Yes. [01:13:22] It's like sort of, you know, tossing bucketfuls of water from the Titanic. [01:13:26] Yeah. [01:13:27] There is a hole in the hull and it's not going anywhere. [01:13:30] Angela Rayner and Ed Miliband just say, what if we drop a bomb on the boat? [01:13:33] Maybe that will help. [01:13:36] Creative. [01:13:37] Yeah, we'll get the water out of the boat because that won't be a boat anymore. [01:13:40] The second iceberg has hit the ship. [01:13:44] Yeah. [01:13:45] Swap the engines for a windmill. [01:13:46] Miliband. [01:13:47] That'll help. [01:13:50] I mean, the guilt yields are at historic highs, not since 1998. [01:14:00] It looks like they don't have any way of increasing their spending. [01:14:05] And you know that Miliband and Raynor are both going to try to increase spending and give more welfare and open the doors further to immigration, etc. [01:14:15] I mean, Shabana Mahmoud is going to be better than whoever Miliband or Raynor appoint for the Home Office. [01:14:22] To be fair. [01:14:24] Gosh, I'm just seeing it in my mind's eye like the, you know, the Miliband cabinet, like who he's surrounded by. [01:14:31] Oh my gosh. [01:14:32] Not his brother, that's for sure. [01:14:35] It is going to be absolutely horrific. [01:14:40] And everybody in the know in the markets is saying that there is a bond market revolt coming along with a big rise in interest rates, which is on the plus side going to put downward pressure on the housing market. [01:14:56] On the negative side, it is going to increase the prices of absolutely everything and make a lot of people's mortgages unaffordable. [01:15:08] So, you know, let's see. [01:15:12] RBC is warning against this. [01:15:13] Commerce Bank is warning against this. [01:15:16] Royal London Asset Management is saying disaster is coming. [01:15:22] Mizuho is saying it's a disaster. [01:15:23] Pretty much the entirety of the experts of the financial market are saying that really. [01:15:30] Replacing Keir Starmer is going to trigger a bond crisis. [01:15:35] And this might be the only way out, but it's not going to be pretty. [01:15:38] It really isn't going to be pretty. [01:15:40] Because these guys think that the markets will have to fall in line. [01:15:47] The left believes. [01:15:48] I'm going to go and have a meeting with the markets. [01:15:49] Yes, exactly. [01:15:50] Tell them to fall in line. [01:15:51] Exactly. [01:15:54] These people are genuinely retarded. [01:15:56] I'm going to go to the shard and tell the markets what for. [01:16:00] Really give it to them with both barrels. [01:16:02] They're so stupid, aren't they? [01:16:04] They're unbelievable. [01:16:05] I have to read you this line to highlight their stupidity. [01:16:09] If the government introduced progressive policies that do speak to our communities, investors would see that the UK was the best place to be. [01:16:20] No, you moron. [01:16:22] This really crayon. [01:16:23] What? [01:16:24] We'll be bankrupt. [01:16:26] Yeah, so you're going to go to Capitalist HQ and tell the markets to fall in line by promising. [01:16:33] Football pitches in Croydon. [01:16:34] I mean, the only way that they could do this is to compel them to buy British bonds, to change the law, to force them to eat more bonds. [01:16:44] But the kind of inflation that this will trigger will be absolutely catastrophic. [01:16:51] And you will have to raise interest rates to the double digits to be able to cope with it, meaning that the debt will also explode. [01:16:58] And then it's a race does the debt devalue faster than inflation or not? [01:17:05] You end up essentially with a turkey scenario of an endlessly collapsing currency. [01:17:10] You have to fight every year with your employer for a 50% pay rise, but in real terms, it's more like a 5% pay cut. === The Turkey Scenario Economy (02:56) === [01:17:20] This is where these people will take the country. [01:17:22] And Starmer knows that they're idiots, which is why he is treating them with such contempt. [01:17:29] So it's a choice between evil retard and more evil retard. [01:17:36] But in the meantime, Starmer is not letting up because we just had the King's speech today. [01:17:42] And here are some of the commitments more effort to tackle anti Semitism. [01:17:47] That was pretty much at the beginning of the speech. [01:17:49] That's right. [01:17:50] That's definitely the priority right now. [01:17:52] That's the most pressing, definitely. [01:17:55] Anyway, nationalization of British steel, which seems like a decent enough idea. [01:18:00] I'm actually for that. [01:18:01] What's left of the steel? [01:18:02] Yes, exactly. [01:18:03] Like save it, but it needs energy, which has to come from the North Sea. [01:18:08] Yes. [01:18:08] Otherwise, you're just taking on their losses and adding to the government's debts. [01:18:13] Yeah, I made a daily about this that will come out today. [01:18:16] Yeah, fine, nationalize British Steel. [01:18:18] I'm in favor of that because at least then it's not going to be taken advantage of by India's Tata or, you know, Chinese Jinghei and everything. [01:18:25] Yeah, keep it safe, keep it British. [01:18:28] But that in isolation will not be enough. [01:18:31] It also requires, you know, lowering of energy prices as well. [01:18:35] And frankly, they're not willing to touch any of the policies that will actually bring that down. [01:18:40] Exactly. [01:18:41] Because he doubles down on more climate regulation. [01:18:44] Oh, of course he does. [01:18:45] He says he's going to invest in nuclear, but that's a 10 year prospect by which time. [01:18:50] So much is dead. [01:18:51] You have to drill today. [01:18:54] He commits to essentially more foreign aid, more export of feminism, more EU integration, more support for Ukraine. [01:19:03] If only there was a country on the border of Europe with energy abundance that could supply cheap energy stably. [01:19:11] If only that was an option. [01:19:13] I don't know. [01:19:14] And he's going to safeguard civil service impartiality because we all know how impartial the civil service has been. [01:19:20] With Nadim Zahawi cheering Antonia Romeo, was her name? [01:19:24] That's right. [01:19:24] Who is the queen of woke in the civil service? [01:19:27] Dame Antonia Romero to you. [01:19:29] Oh, sorry, I'm a plebeian and I don't know my titles properly. [01:19:33] No, no, please forgive me. [01:19:35] But he could go further. [01:19:39] He could go for proportional representation. [01:19:41] Yeah. [01:19:42] He could pass that. [01:19:43] Yeah. [01:19:44] That's an interesting point. [01:19:46] He could use Labour's weakness against it to double down on his control of it and ensure that he ends up in Parliament as the leader of a party. [01:19:55] That would suit his self interest. [01:19:57] And he could just keep crashing down this course if they don't overthrow him. [01:20:01] So let's see. [01:20:02] It's going to be an interesting couple of days. [01:20:03] But the Starminator has taken the measure of the labor backbenches. [01:20:10] And he's absolutely right. [01:20:12] He's absolutely right about them. [01:20:14] It's just that he's just as bad himself. === Right Versus Left Paradigms (04:40) === [01:20:16] Yeah. [01:20:17] He happens to be the best of an absolutely horrific bunch. [01:20:23] And best is doing a lot of heavy lifting here and is quite relative. [01:20:26] But here we are. [01:20:28] Palmerston. [01:20:33] Used to be a proper country once. [01:20:34] Yeah. [01:20:35] Yeah. [01:20:36] So, for $5, a drunk changing says, Stam holding 24 hour whips. [01:20:44] With the Ukrainians or without? [01:20:48] Yeah, and that's all going on in the piece. [01:20:53] Oh, God. [01:20:54] I have to say this. [01:20:56] Apparently, Vladimir Putin decided to go after Keir Starmer. [01:21:00] And so he sent him a bunch of Ukrainian rent boys to. [01:21:03] Burn a secondhand car that you used to own. [01:21:07] Very likely. [01:21:09] Vladimir Putin, the evil genius, is going to take over Europe. [01:21:12] What is his master plan? [01:21:14] He's going to send some Ukrainian rent boys to burn his secondhand car, which he doesn't own anymore. [01:21:19] Genius! [01:21:20] Not like they've previously poisoned people on our land. [01:21:23] No, no, no. [01:21:24] We're just going to set fire to tangentially related cars. [01:21:27] To a really unpopular man's car. [01:21:32] That will bring down the British government. [01:21:34] That's believable. [01:21:34] It's a 60 chess, man. [01:21:38] Reports of gunfire at number 10. [01:21:40] Rumors say Starmer is in a pile of cocaine when West Streeting attacked with automatic weapons. [01:21:45] Yeah, I mean, honestly, all of the death of Stalin memes in particular have just been so funny. [01:21:52] Incredible. [01:21:52] So, so funny. [01:21:54] I saw West Streeting in a bar in Westminster once. [01:21:57] Oh, yeah. [01:21:57] I was with Harrison Pitt, Lewis Bradbull, and Connor Thompson. [01:22:01] The four of us were just in Abbey. [01:22:02] Okay. [01:22:02] And I don't know if he likes, I'm assuming he doesn't know who we are, but he was a proper looking at us as he walked past us. [01:22:07] We were sort of looking at him like, Hi, Wes. [01:22:09] How are you doing, mate? [01:22:12] Looking forward to your premiership. [01:22:13] Just panicking. [01:22:15] Cookie Boy says Ferris' segment should have come with a trigger warning. [01:22:20] And for $2, Bald Eagle says if the Star Minator does destroy labor and causes a massive rest, massive reset of the system, will he be viewed as a hero or a useful idiot in history? [01:22:33] I'll tell you what, I'll let Bo decide that one when he writes a history of the 21st century. [01:22:39] We'll let that go ahead. [01:22:40] All right. [01:22:41] Video comments, Samson, do we have any? [01:22:46] Yeah, okay then. [01:22:47] I'll just go through a few comments from. [01:22:51] My segment. [01:22:51] We'll do them tomorrow, Chet. [01:22:52] Yep. [01:22:53] Okay. [01:22:53] So, Russian Garbage Human says from this segment look at, look, sorry, look what one more Kurdish aqua massage barber's on the Great Yarmouth High Street. [01:23:08] I'm sure that the market demand is there, right? [01:23:11] Truly. [01:23:11] Yeah. [01:23:12] Clearly. [01:23:12] The voters have definitely endorsed that. [01:23:14] Good to see you there, by the way. [01:23:16] Yes. [01:23:17] C here speaks says, we do, sorry, we have to do all that. [01:23:22] We can ensure that Labour stay in power to 2029 and the law restore retirement to rally. [01:23:28] Well, I think that we need to let Labour collapse totally, utterly. [01:23:32] So there is nothing to rebuild from. [01:23:34] Yeah. [01:23:35] And the same for the Tories for that matter as well. [01:23:38] You know, give them longer to fade into obscurity. [01:23:40] And then, you know, the real fight can come between Restore and the Greens. [01:23:46] And they're going to get steamrolled. [01:23:47] Yeah. [01:23:48] Because they're not as popular as they think they are. [01:23:50] Just on that, I mean, we did some polling recently that had, it was, Reform, like the order of popularity of the parties, reform, the Greens, Labour, Tories, us, and the Lib Dems. [01:24:03] And obviously, it's relative because we're a small party compared to all those other ones. [01:24:06] So we're doing very well in that context. [01:24:08] But I just thought that's sort of three visions of Britain there. [01:24:10] Because you've got reform versus the Greens as kind of right versus left, which is kind of what the paradigm that we're in now is. [01:24:16] Then you've got Labour versus the Tories, which is obviously the previous paradigm. [01:24:19] But then you've got Restore Britain versus the Lib Dems as like the right versus the left. [01:24:23] And it's like visions of based world, like the Lib Dems being like the left wing party. [01:24:28] I would just love to see that. [01:24:29] Yeah. [01:24:30] From your segment, Nate, we've got Jimbo says, Oh, there's definitely benefits to migration, Nate. [01:24:37] We just happen to be paying them. [01:24:39] Oh, yeah. [01:24:40] Paying for them. [01:24:40] Yeah, paying for them. [01:24:42] And AZ Desert Rats says, The UN needs to quit acting as a legislative body. [01:24:47] It was meant to be a peacekeeping body. [01:24:50] It's not exactly keeping a peace now. [01:24:51] It's really terrible at that point as well. [01:24:54] And then do you just want to read something from your. === Three Visions of Britain (01:10) === [01:24:56] Oh, yeah, sure. [01:24:58] Sure. [01:25:00] Let me have a look. [01:25:02] Sophie says, David Lammy, Kier, please, you must step down. [01:25:05] Kier Starmer, I'm afraid I can't do that, Dave. [01:25:08] Yeah, pretty much. [01:25:09] Yeah, exactly. [01:25:11] Exactly. [01:25:12] It really has. [01:25:13] Yeah. [01:25:16] As the big yin said many years ago, the simple desire to be a politician should automatically bar you for life from ever becoming one. [01:25:25] Yes and no. [01:25:26] Yes and no. [01:25:26] If you don't take responsibility, you will be ruled by people like the Labour backbenches. [01:25:31] Mm hmm. [01:25:33] And Michael says, so the king's speech of Charles is the polar opposite of his grandfather's. [01:25:38] Why should we be surprised Charles did support bringing his uncle Edward, the traitor king, back into the royal fold? [01:25:46] That's an interesting point. [01:25:47] Yeah, story for another time. [01:25:48] And an honorable mention saying that you get the award for best dress today, Nate. [01:25:53] So congratulations on that, good sir. [01:25:56] Try, try. [01:25:57] Right. [01:25:57] Well, we hope that you've enjoyed the show, ladies and gentlemen. [01:26:00] Fairass, Nate, Charlie, thank you for joining us all here today. [01:26:04] And we look forward to seeing you on the podcast tomorrow. [01:26:07] Take care.