Dan Wootton Outspoken - BRITISH CIVIL WAR COMING AS ANDREW BRIDGEN EXPOSES DEEP STATE PLOT TO BAN ELECTIONS & KILL RIVALS

Episode Date: May 25, 2026

Ex-Tory MP Andrew Bridgen sits down with Dan for an explosive uncancelled interview as he makes shock claims including that the UK is the most corrupt country in the world, Farage’s plane crash inci...dent was a threat, Boris faked near-death from covid and there is a plot to ban elections in Britain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 No spin, no bias, no censorship. I'm Dan Wooden. This is a special edition of Outspoken on Who Really Runs Britain. Why is our entire political establishment corrupted by a deep state and mainstream media that are always complicit in covering up the truth? Today, one man who knows up close how dark forces will do anything possible to silence, and destroy those who try to expose what's really going on, as the former Conservative MP, Andrew Bridgen, whose campaign saw him thrust out of polite society as he dropped truth bomb after truth bomb, joins me to reveal all for the entire show.
Starting point is 00:00:49 As a result of the special uncannselled interview, there will be no Greatest Britain or Union Jackass to date, but the Royal Uncanceled After Show continues as normal over on subsets. after our main show, www. www. outspoken. Live is the address. But now, let's go. Andrew Bridgen, it's a big question,
Starting point is 00:01:13 but it's one so many people want to know. Who is really running Britain? Well, it's certainly not the politicians that are put in front of our screens for public consumption. And you know that? Absolutely 100%. And any... And any person on the outside can know that when they realize that it's not just our politicians,
Starting point is 00:01:41 but it's politicians around the world. So often the world ends up in lockstep, doesn't it? And as we know, whenever it's in lockstep, it's never good for the people. Whether that's the COVID countermeasures, whether it's net zero, whether it's support for various wars, whether it's the preparation now for any, energy lockdowns which are coming. Which are coming. Whether we like it or not, no matter who we elect.
Starting point is 00:02:10 And most people seem completely oblivious to the fact that in a few weeks time, if the Straits of Hormuz are not opened, we're going to be suffering worldwide energy shortages. Life just moves on. Everyone's looking at what's probably going on with Kea Starmer or some of it and the travails of the Labour government, which is just pure pantomime and theatre to amuse the masses. Or distract the masses. Distract the masses.
Starting point is 00:02:41 Give them something to think about, give them something to laugh about, give them something to poke fun at, while the master plan continues. And whether Stama is replaced in due course, and obviously he's expirate, he's approaching very quickly, whether it's going to be Andy Burnham returning to Westminster to take over the mantle, or whether it's Wes Streeting or David Lammy. I mean, all that is, there'll be no change to the policies,
Starting point is 00:03:11 because really there was no change to the policies from when Rishi Sunak was the prime minister. All you're doing is actually changing the human shield for those policies. So Slippery Stama hasn't really been in charge. He's been in power, but not making the decisions. He's been in office but not in power. Got it. And Rishi Sunak was the same. And Andrew, for people who don't know, you were a very popular conservative MP from 2010 until 2024.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Tell me if I'm wrong, but always comfortable majorities? Well, I was never in the club, Dan, so I had to fund my own election campaign. I was 84th target seat in 2010. And nobody wanted to be the candidate for the Conservative Party in Northwestern, because it wasn't a winnable seat. And it was getting no support from central office. I at the time was a very successful businessman in the constituency, and with a group of other local business people, we took over the council in 2007, and I went for MP in North Westchester, which was the poorest constituency in Leicestershire.
Starting point is 00:04:19 what the party were quite happy for me to be election fodder what they didn't reckon for was the fact that I was going to put the work in go around canvas the constituency three times get 73% canvas returns before 2010 and win with the second biggest swing against Labour in those elections I mean Cameron had told me in 2008 David Cameron the former Prime Minister when he was only leader of the opposition that my constituency was a dump
Starting point is 00:04:52 and that I wouldn't be an MP why he told you that yeah in front of constituents he said it was a dump yeah he said he'd been I said well why what do you base that and he said I've been to Colville in 2005
Starting point is 00:05:07 during the election campaign with Michael Howard what a dump and so I told him it's fair to say we didn't have a good relationship and so I told him if that's how you feel I will win the seat and I don't need your help
Starting point is 00:05:24 and be honest if that's what you feel about North West Lesher you probably better never come here again and he can be a man of his word because he never came again and that suited all of us and 12 years later from the unwinnable seat
Starting point is 00:05:39 I'd led Brexit for the East Midlands 61% North West Lesheria leave against the Conservative Party the Labour Party the Lib Dems everybody. By the 19 election, Northwesternshire was the wealthiest constituency in Leicestershire. So you did a great job.
Starting point is 00:05:57 And with the councillors, yes, which we put in place. It had been Labour-held council basically since 83. We took over in 2000. We instigated the longest council tax freeze in the UK history. 16 years, we never put the council tax up. Highest economic growth in the country,
Starting point is 00:06:12 from a low base. 1.2 jobs for everyone of work. working age in the constituency with the new businesses we bought in. Only part of Leicestershire with above average UK household incomes. We bought in, remember the building beautiful project? We developed that. In 2010, in Northwest Leicestershire, we pushed that to the government. It took 10 years from to adopt it.
Starting point is 00:06:39 We'd been doing it for 10 years. 800 new houses here. We kept the house prices 30% below UK averages. So we were in the sweet spot. And it was the happiest place to live in the Midlands. And why this matters is because, from my research, but again, correct me if I'm wrong, at every single election, you steadily increased your majority in this previously unwinnable seat. Former coal mining area, yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:06 To the point where you won, I think, very nearly 60% of the vote in your last. Well, a bit more, 63% of the vote. Incredible. And then you fall out with the Conservative Party. Then you fall out with the deep state. Then you fall out with the people who have really forced us to go through these horrible harms over the course of COVID. And your vote crashes from over 60% to 3.2% of the vote. It didn't.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And your suggestion is that that that was. part of the deep state attempting to shut you up. Can't you finish you off? The deep state, through their agents, offered me money not to stand. They didn't want to have to fix the election. That was the last resort. Because that's risky. That's a risky game. So yeah, I was intimidated not to stand. I was offered inducements not to stand. And, you know, I will take you through a few of the anomalies, shall we say, around the election in Northwest Leicestershire in 2024. So about, about, you know, I will take you through a few of the anomalies, So about 18 months before when I'm independent and I've told them I'm standing,
Starting point is 00:08:19 the whole elections department at the local authority, Northwesternshire District Council, they all resigned on a Friday and were replaced by a whole new team. How often does that ever happen? I rang the chief exec up who was also new and said to her, what's going on, Alison, the whole election. I've heard the whole election department has resigned. And she said it was the right time for them to move on, Andrew.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Right time for who? I don't think it was right. So we did that. That happened. They left the new elections department in the old council buildings after the rest of the council had vacated, unsupervised for many, many months before the election. That was extremely dubious.
Starting point is 00:09:01 The returning officer banned TV cameras from my count. I had two independent filmmakers who had come around in the canvassing with me. They knew I was well placed to win. and they wanted to be there to film it on the night. And the returning officer said, no, we don't want anybody filming the count. When we got to the count at our new £26 million sports and leisure centre
Starting point is 00:09:25 from the economic growth we delivered, the returning officer, who is not unaccustomed to public speaking, she was shaking. And at 10 o'clock she stood up, hold the microphone and said, I need to, in a quavering voice, I need to announce that it's going to take a very long time to bring the ballot boxes in tonight.
Starting point is 00:09:47 We might not get on to the count till two in the morning. That's four hours. Ballot boxes are always in. The previous five elections and two big referendums, ballot boxes were in 35 minutes. My seat had got a little bit smaller, gone down from 120 square miles to 100 square miles, so they should have been in them faster.
Starting point is 00:10:04 And when the ballot boxes came in, we didn't see the seals broken on them. They were opened supposedly in the middle of the square, away from anybody. and when the votes came out I'd got about 3% of the votes now interesting there was a ballot box that came in
Starting point is 00:10:20 which they couldn't verify because they have to verify the number of ballots of the right number that were given out in the polling station this box had a number more than were in the ballots were given out in the polling station can anyone explain
Starting point is 00:10:36 my presumption is that they had taken the ballot boxes from the polling stations they'd open them they'd taken my votes out They had to put votes back in to make the numbers right. And in one of them they'd put too many in. They'd made a mistake. Wow.
Starting point is 00:10:52 Now why this really matters? Well, another thing is, Dan, is that two days after that, and I was in shock, is that I was told by a contact who said that Ipsos Morrie had pulled the exit poll in Northwest, Lassashire, two weeks before the election as well. because you couldn't have an exit poll, could you? I mean, when I voted, I voted for myself on polling day in North West Leicestershire, there were five people in the queue behind me.
Starting point is 00:11:21 By the time I got in my car in the car park, having voted for me, two of the people in the queue behind me had already come and told me they voted for me. So I knew I got half of that queue. That means that the next 94 people who came in, nobody voted for me. Well, when I walk around Northwest West Leicester, where I still live, it's my home, it's been my home for most of my life, people tell me they voted for me. So you believe you were taken out, and why this matters, of course, is because it does suggest that the idea that we have democracy in the United Kingdom anymore is just a mirage.
Starting point is 00:11:56 Looking back now, the referendum, they fix the referendum. They didn't fix it. Yes, they didn't fix it enough. What do you mean by that? I had a conversation, a complaint with Craig Oliver, who was David Cameron's, political advisor, chief political advisor, just before the referendum, they'd seconded another 80
Starting point is 00:12:26 very senior civil servants onto the Remain campaign. And I went to see him and I said, look, this is not right. They're supposed to be impartial. And you just keep seconding hundreds and hundreds of senior civil servants onto the Remain campaign. And he turned around to me, Dan, and he said in no one's certain to him,
Starting point is 00:12:44 he said, Andrew, I'm telling you now, he said that everybody who works for the, the government in the country is on the Remain campaign. Well, that means your returning officers as well. They're all government employees. When I saw the turnout in Northwest Leicestershire, I knew we'd won, and I'd told Boris the day before we'd won, that when he was up with me in Ash Biddle-Azouche on Eve of Pole, the turnout in Northwest Escher for the referendum was almost 80%.
Starting point is 00:13:12 80%. So I didn't, as soon as the first box was opened, I could see it was 60% leave. I got in the car and left. I left my staff to monitor that count. They caught the returning officer slipping bundles of leave votes onto the remain table. And of course it's always a mistake, isn't it? What happens if you don't? And that could have happened at every single count.
Starting point is 00:13:39 And every vote counted. So they couldn't change the vote that we'd voted to leave in Northwesternet, but every vote counted. And they were putting votes for leave, bundles for leave, on the vote. for the Remain table. And they didn't do it enough. There was no plan for us in Parliament. That was not a possibility that we were going to vote to leave.
Starting point is 00:14:00 And that's why we had that absolute meltdown in Parliament. And you would have thought, after having voted to leave, you would have ended up with a leave supporting Prime Minister, but we ended up with Theresa May, didn't we? So democracy was thwarted. The people wanted to leave the European Union. I think it was considerably higher percentage than 52-48. It certainly was in Northwest, Leicester, it was 61-39.
Starting point is 00:14:25 In the East Midlands that I was running, it was 59-41. That was the official. I think it was more than that. But we were never allowed to have it because we never really had. We only had the bad bits of Brexit because the people who run the world didn't want us to leave. And now, with our Prime Minister Keir Starmour and whoever will replace him in due course, we're going to move closer to the EU without having a vote. And so who are
Starting point is 00:14:51 these people, when you say the people running the world, who is making this decision to subvert British democracy in your view? Well, when you give private companies the ability to create money by being a privately owned central
Starting point is 00:15:07 bank, create money and charge interest for it, I mean, you're giving huge amounts of power because unfortunately most people are corruptible. They can be bought and if money has no value because you can create it from nothing, then you can buy a lot of people. And so you've got, you know, the Rothschilds, the Rockefellers,
Starting point is 00:15:29 probably the 13 original banking families, huge wealth, huge wealth. And they have the ability to buy our politicians. They've bought politicians around the world. And it's not just politics and the means. that are corrupted. I mean, we possibly have the most corrupt country in the world in the UK. And some people will be shocked by that statement. Really? Honestly.
Starting point is 00:15:57 You believe the UK is more corrupt than Ukraine, for example? It's overt corruption there. Ours is more, far more subtle and it is very top down. So all of our institutions, not all the apples in all the barrels of our institutions are rotten, but all the apples at the top of all the barrels are rotten and any apple that wishes to rise to the top has to be willing to rot and if you're not willing to rot you can't go to the top
Starting point is 00:16:25 why was I never made a minister I was only ever offered one ministerial role and that was that was before before Brexit Gavin Williamson on behalf of my good friend David Cameron Prime Minister he came to see me and said I could be a minister if I campaigned to remain
Starting point is 00:16:44 and I just sounded him So they tried to buy you. Yeah, and I said, well, what job? As if I was going to. And he said, immigration minister. I said, oh, immigration minister with no control over immigration. I said, David Cameron really does hate me, doesn't it? And not for one minute am I going to be campaigning to remain.
Starting point is 00:17:03 My constituents want to leave and we're going to be leaving. So you've got, it's politics, certainly. The media, certainly. But also also, also. the police, senior police, the judiciary, yeah, big business. And once they've tied all those off, I mean, when you say, well, I want to expose something, you've got nowhere to go, have you? We now know that Operation Tala was in operation during the pandemic
Starting point is 00:17:36 so that the police had orders that they were not to investigate any reported crimes relating to the pandemic response. That's lockdowns, masking, social distancing, the vaccines or anything that went on in the old people's homes with the vulnerable elderly and madazlam and morphine, those crimes have never been investigated. And that was authorised from the very top of this country. I mean, that's a breach of the policing code. It's a breach of all the oaths that the police make to investigate crime.
Starting point is 00:18:08 So basically, a little bit like the Epstein Island, where it would appear that there's unwritten rules that if you're very rich and very powerful, you can get away with crimes, appalling crimes, without any comebacks. And I don't think that's the sort of society I want to live in. And I don't think it's a society most people want to live in. But that is a little indication of the society we are actually living in. It's terrifying. And look, there's a lot I want to pick up on. But first, because you mentioned immigration and the fact that you were offered this immigration minister role, in 2019. you endorsed Boris Johnson
Starting point is 00:18:47 to become leader of the Conservative Party. Of course, you were also one of the first to turn on Boris Johnson. After Partygate came out and we realised it was a complete con. That was because in North West Leicester, the happiest place to live in the Midlands, six weeks before the pandemic started,
Starting point is 00:19:08 suicide rate during lockdowns had gone up to more people committing suicide in a month than we normally had in a year. And I wrote to the government and said we can't carry on like this. My people are killing themselves. Despair. And the government wrote back to me
Starting point is 00:19:21 and I asked questions in the chamber. They said there's no link between lockdowns and suicide rate. But then, Dan, we ended up with a million under 25s on waiting lists for mental health support after the lockdowns. And I pushed the government after that so many times to say, look, it's a huge mistake.
Starting point is 00:19:36 Promise the people you'll never do it again. And of course they won't because we're probably heading into energy lockdowns next month. Who runs the world? The people with the most money run the world and a lot of power through companies like Black Rock. When you've got corporations,
Starting point is 00:20:00 transnational corporations, who've got more power than sovereign nations. I mean, we're in Dodge East Territory. I mean, I'm absolutely convinced that when Larry Fink says, you know, he rings up Starma or Sunak or whoever is prime minister and says, I want a meeting, or Bill Gates. I mean, he just flies in. It doesn't matter whether it's the red party in or the blue party,
Starting point is 00:20:21 and it's all in the uni party. And Bill gets his meeting. Including during the pandemic, he was constantly flying. Well, I also take great exception at the BBC, allowing him to go on and promote his vaccines. They have a no advertising policy. But they did take £55 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates. It's extraordinary.
Starting point is 00:20:41 Foundation. With Boris specifically, I just want to tackle this issue because it's obviously become probably the number one hot button political issue in part behind of the rise of Restore Britain, which obviously we're going to talk about later in the show. But it's this idea that Boris allowed as Prime Minister a wave of immigration and invasion of our country, Andrew, so overwhelming, it actually changes the face of Britain forever, which, by the way, is already changing out of all control. That was directly against what he had promised the British people, directly against what he had promised people like you as one of his supporters and a Brexiteer,
Starting point is 00:21:33 who in part was saying Brexit is going to allow us to control our borders, allow us to control immigration rates? What happened with the Boris wave? Who was forcing him to do that? Why did he give into those forces? And why is this still not being properly tackled? Well, Boris has to say masters that all our other prime ministers have. And he gave into there? Well, he has no choice. I'm absolutely convinced that you, that the higher up the greasy poll you want to get in politics. I mean, I've been in politics, I was in politics long enough to work out what was going on, and you get on in the game of politics by doing what your party wants, and that's bought and paid for, not what your constituents want.
Starting point is 00:22:18 And if you're willing to stand up for your constituents, you're going to be very, very unpopular in Parliament. And without borders, as we've said many times, and we've rehearsed that argument, you have no country. What are the globalist forces seeking to do there? want to destroy national identity. And it's not, again, it's not just in the UK, is it? And you've got different colour supposedly left or right-wing parties across Europe,
Starting point is 00:22:48 but the same thing's happening with immigration, same thing's happening in Australia and New Zealand, same thing's happening in Canada, same thing was happening in the United States of America. Since the pandemic and the vaccine rollout, if we've had more deaths in the UK than we've had births, far more,
Starting point is 00:23:12 and that's going to continue. So, I mean, to an extent, the excess deaths that we've seen since the pandemic, and if we did have a real pandemic and you had the vulnerable elderly died early, then sometime after a pandemic incident, you've got to have a period of time.
Starting point is 00:23:30 If someone died a year or six months before they would have done because of an incident like the pandemic, they can't die when they might have done. So you should have a period of time when you have less than expected deaths. Dan, we've never had that. And all the countries who roll the vaccines out haven't had it either. In fact, Australia and us and a few other countries have now changed their, rebased their expected deaths
Starting point is 00:23:53 to try and remove some of the excess deaths. It doesn't change any of the deaths, same number of deaths. It's pretty obvious what's going on. So that's being masked by immigration. I just wanted to show you this headline on this column that Boris Johnson recently wrote because he seems to be embracing this, Andrew. And I can't, for the life of me, work out why,
Starting point is 00:24:17 but I know that you will know. He wrote this column the other day, and he posted this on X. Falling birth rates aren't a disaster. They're the best bit of global news in a long time. So is Boris Johnson part of the deal? population agenda. I don't think he is personally, giving the number of children he's got by the number of women.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Exactly. Hibagra. But actually, we support what he's doing in terms of the birthright. But if you speak to his father, Stanley, I mean, he's a Malthusian eugenicist. Yes. For everyone else, but he can have as many children as he wants. And he's very, very keen on net zero as long as he can still fly. To China.
Starting point is 00:25:01 Multiple times a year. Multiple times of year. In first class. And go to his villa in Greece. Yes. I mean, the rank hypocrisy. But, I mean, that's it. If these people think they are in the useless eliters class,
Starting point is 00:25:15 and the rules don't apply for them, just like those very powerful and rich people who committed horrible crimes against children, 10,000 of which are on video, which the American Department of Justice have got, are not prosecuted. The Epstein files. Yes, that's unacceptable.
Starting point is 00:25:32 Do you think, Boris, Thomas Johnson nearly died during COVID. I spoke in November. I had three nights I spoke in Spitalfields. And on one of those nights, a very senior NHS doctor came to my talk. And afterwards, he engaged me. And he said that senior people in the NHS know Boris Johnson did not have COVID. He did check into St Thomas's on that day.
Starting point is 00:25:59 He checked himself back out. The ward was sealed. and he returned six days later. It was all pantomime. For what purpose? To scare people into the lockdown measures and the vaccines that were coming. And Boris was part of it.
Starting point is 00:26:14 Absolutely. That's what I believe. And if you... Why? Because that's what he was told to do. And otherwise he would have been removed as Prime Minister. Absolutely. Boris would love that theatre.
Starting point is 00:26:27 He... I mean, Boris plays this buffoon. I he gave a speech when he's foreign secretary to the parliamentary party I think it was at the British Museum I arrived late and somehow rather I ended up backstage behind the curtain instead of being at the front rushing to get into the and Boris was just about to go on stage he's behind the curtain and he didn't know I'm watching him and most of us when we're going to make a broadcast or give a speech you you'd want to make sure your tie was tied in your hair was sorted wouldn't you I saw Boris behind the curtain and Boris bent over,
Starting point is 00:27:05 fluffed his hair up so it was all over the place, like a haystack and he pulled his shirt out so that was hanging out. I saw him walk out through the curtain to the audience. They all laughed. He got them on board before his side. He said it was all a complete act. It was part of his schick. Yes.
Starting point is 00:27:21 And if our Prime Minister, Boris Johnson at the time, was at death door in hospital, do you think that number 10 would have instigated inside the office the restrictions they were placing on everyone else because I know they didn't we know party gate but I mean they weren't masking they weren't socially
Starting point is 00:27:42 distancing they were having drinks parties and and more intimate parties than that in number 10 while my constituents were being locked down losing their businesses and their mental health and well-being and committing suicide parties you're saying six parties yeah there were lots of yes
Starting point is 00:27:59 I mean I but but the killer for me which is when I wrote that full page in the telegraph saying Boris has got to go. That was, I think, the second week in January, 2022 after Partygate, was when I got to a civil servant who quite rightly questioned the policies in number 10 during the lockdowns and wrote an email to his boss saying, don't you think we ought to be socially distancing and masking in the office since we've inflicted on everyone else? and the answer on the email came back
Starting point is 00:28:34 well we've checked out with the scientists and none of it works but since the TV cameras are outside when you leave the building will you please socially distance and mask and then I realised that all those people had been committed suicide in Northwesternshire for nothing
Starting point is 00:28:51 it was all a ruse while that was unforgivable that was unforgivable and if they were committing suicide in those rates in Northwest Leicestershire the happiest place to the live in the Midlands. What was it like elsewhere? So there was no way back from that.
Starting point is 00:29:06 The pure deceit. And during COVID and since, I mean, every institution that is duty bound to protect the public interest has failed. You know, Parliament's failed. Parliaments failed to expose what was really going on, just like it's failing to expose what's going on with net zero, which is inflicting. And the situation we find ourselves in now, if you, You look back.
Starting point is 00:29:35 It's all been planned for us to be in a situation where we're energy dependent on world energy markets with long supply chains. When I was a boy, we were self-sufficient with coal in the UK. We had coal-fired power stations all along the river Trent in the Midlands. And my major conurbation in North Australia is called Coalville. Can you imagine what we did for a living? Yes. And then we went from that, and we shut the pits down in the 90s, early 90s. and we got North soil and gas
Starting point is 00:30:04 and we were self-sufficient with that and then we decided, we've got to go for net zero so we're not going to not do any more drilling up there. You know, I was in the Netherlands, in lockstep again, the Netherlands, only a few weeks ago speaking, and they've got the biggest gas field
Starting point is 00:30:22 in Europe just off their coast. Their government decided to concrete over the wells last year, you know, why Nord Stream was blown up. It was blown up by the West. It wasn't blown up. There's no way the Russians blew up their own pipeline and all they had to do
Starting point is 00:30:37 was switch the gas off. Europe has been placed in a situation of vulnerability. And the Straits of Hormuz are not going to open soon. It's not in Trump's interest to do so if it was his decision. America is self-sufficient. That's why they took over control of Venezuela.
Starting point is 00:30:56 They've got the second biggest oil producer. They've got the biggest oil reserves in the world now under their control, just a few months before they shut the Straits of Formos, it will hurt China. There's 85% of Chinese oil goes through the Straits of Hormuz. I mean, this could trigger the World War. I mean, if you remember the Second World War.
Starting point is 00:31:15 And do you think they want that? They want a war. Yes, the powers that be want a war, they need a war to cover up the lies that they've told the people around the world. They need a war to cover up the money they've stolen from the people around the world, and they need a war to cover up the crimes they've committed against the people around the world. And that would be a major distraction.
Starting point is 00:31:37 It would get people watching the BBC again, wasn't it? Like the BBC. Like COVID did. Exactly. They want that. And, yeah, we can watch their programmes. We'll be programmed, won't we? Well programmed.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Yeah, it suits everybody. And that's in the playbook. And if you look at the globalist's overall plan for, you know, they think there's too many of us on the planet. and they said that, you know, by 2050, the population will be reduced to one billion, and that will be through, and it's very clear, through repeated pandemics, wars, and famine. And they're working on the famine as well, because obviously, the knock-on effect of the energy crisis will be that fertiliser, which is highly energy-intensive,
Starting point is 00:32:21 which has allowed countries to increase their crop yields enormously. It's going to be so expensive that the poor countries are not going to. going to be able to afford it. And what I've been, you know, there's half the world that the super elites can't control very well, but they've got no internet. We can't be surveilled if you've got no internet. They don't have a government infrastructure that's capable of monitoring people. But that's the poor half of the world, Dan.
Starting point is 00:32:50 And what they are going to be very, very susceptible to his famine. And, you know, you'll have noticed that even across the developed world, farmers have been hammered for the last few years. Food production's denigrated. We can always bring it in from somewhere else. Well, well, maybe we can. Maybe can't. There's a campaign against funds.
Starting point is 00:33:08 Absolutely. And it's sickly. Okay. Now when, and where we've got to now is that people say, well, we can always buy it. Well, maybe we can. But when the crunch comes, every bit of food we don't produce for ourselves that we could in this country, all you're doing is starving someone in a poor country. And when they've got no food, where do you think they're going to start walking?
Starting point is 00:33:28 Absolutely. To what they perceive is the land of milk and honey. Absolutely. And we obviously have a push for a no-bordered society. But we'll come to that in one second because I just want to go back chronologically, you see, because following Boris Johnson, of course, the Conservative Party members did vote for Liz Truss to become Prime Minister. Was she removed because she wouldn't play the same game that Boris Johnson was. prepared to.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Yes. I mean, her economic plans were completely at odds with the plans for the globalists. And so that shows the power, right? Within six weeks, she's out. Well, I would point out, Dan, that John Smith was the leader of the Labour Party. He was well-liked and popular and probably going to win an election. He went to the Bilderberg group meeting and they told him what his economic policy was going to be, they got to be.
Starting point is 00:34:29 He disagreed and said, no, I don't want to do that. but I will come back and tell you what mine is going to be. He didn't become Prime Minister, did he? Do you think he was killed? It was very convenient. And if you read Tony Blair's book, he said, I started thinking, what would happen if anything happened to John Smith?
Starting point is 00:34:49 And then mysteriously, it did. And of course, Blair and Brown agreed with the Bilderbergers and they carried out those plans. You know, there's so much just dropped into plans. I mean, you know, 17 years in opposition, Blair gets in in 97. First thing he does has never in his manifesto. It was never, ever talked about. Most important piece of legislation to go through.
Starting point is 00:35:14 First thing they did, they rushed to do, was to take the death penalty out of the treason act. They're all lawyers. They know exactly what they're doing. And they didn't really want to hang for it. And that's, and then why did Tony Blair? I mean, lots of things looking back now with the, the benefit of hindsight. I know, but this really matters, though.
Starting point is 00:35:35 This really matters because we are just meant to accept that John Smith, as you say, you can go back and look at the polls. Anyone can do this. I mean, he was on course to become prime minister just in the same way that Tony Blair was on course to become prime minister. The Conservative Party, the country was done with the Conservative Party, and obviously the mainstream media was focusing on slea scandals and all of that. But John Smith didn't want to go with the new globalist agenda that Tony Blair did.
Starting point is 00:36:06 And everyone now acknowledges that Tony Blair has changed. I mean, he was a very successful Prime Minister in the sense that he changed Britain to make it unrecognizable to the Britain before 1997. And so your contention is that John Smith may have been taken out. I think it was very convenient that John Smith was replaced by Tony Blair. And you have to either be a conspiracy theorist or you have to be a coincidence theorist. And there's a lot of coincidences, Dan. Why did Tony Blair...
Starting point is 00:36:41 But you know a lot of people will be saying, well, you are a conspiracy theorist. Where's the evidence? John Smith had a history of heart problems. He had a heart attack. He was pretty healthy. He'd lost a lot of weight. He'd had a storming speech the night before. He was in...
Starting point is 00:36:55 In fine fetal. It was convenient. And it suited the agenda for that to happen. Why did Tony Blair make it that, I always thought this was bizarre at the time. Why did Tony Blair force it that police officers and nurses had to get a degree for those jobs? They're not degree jobs.
Starting point is 00:37:14 There need to be degree jobs. That was to get those critical workers in the debt trap of tuition fees so that when they were asked to do things, things which they really, on their moral compass they didn't want to do or felt were wrong, couldn't afford to lose those jobs. So the point being, if you go against the globalist agenda, you're taken out in one way or another. So John Smith, whether he was killed or not, he didn't become a factor. Liz Truss, who did in some ways beat the globalist candidate who was Rishie Sunak.
Starting point is 00:37:47 You can see, well, they hate democracy, though, can't you? Well, of course. Of course, because democracy didn't work because it was the conservative party who chose this trust. have we had since the Brexit vote? How many do you think we're going to have? Never again. Never again. They're never going to allow. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:02 But this is the thing. When people say it's a conspiracy, I guess when I look at the Liz Trust situation, I would say, well, it's there in plain sight. She literally wasn't prepared to do what the globalists wanted economically, and she was literally removed. And Boris would have been removed too, Andrew. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:38:20 He would have been. If he had gone against the COVID hysteria, which let's be honest, he did want to. Now, I know you're very critical of Boris, and so am I, for good reason. But to begin with, his instincts were to go against the hysteria, but he knew that he would have been removed. And for people, again, who say, that's a conspiracy.
Starting point is 00:38:39 Well, I'm sorry, Liz Truss was removed within six weeks. Boris would have been removed within six weeks. Yeah, so, you know, we vote for governments. I think there are questions around the voting system. and the honesty of that. And our leaders are, they're selected, not elected, they have to be compromised. You have to be compromised to get on
Starting point is 00:39:08 because then they can control you. You're not going to be allowed to get on if you're not compromised. And I'm afraid what you've seen is the same bizarre decisions from governments in the so-called developed world around the world, all at the same time in lockstep.
Starting point is 00:39:22 And that indicates to me there's a controlling mind behind all of that. And Stama was always part of this, wasn't he? Because as the Director of Public Prosecutions, there are a whole load of decisions where he was, I would argue,
Starting point is 00:39:38 quite clearly compromised. And then such an, how did such an unlikely politician, Andrew, someone who has no interpersonal communication skills? He has no skills. Who has a very troubled family history, put it that way, and the public still don't know the whole truth about Stama and his family. How on earth did he end up Prime Minister?
Starting point is 00:40:04 Well, because he's very controllable. I mean, I look, obviously, I've known these characters who are on the Labour front bench now for 15 years. Most of them came in, a lot of them came in 2010. Stama didn't. I mean, I've actually still been an MP for longer than Stama has because he didn't come in until 2015. What I can tell you, Dan, is that on the day that, in 2015, that election,
Starting point is 00:40:31 we had Stama arrive in Parliament and was a whole ball in St. Pancras, isn't it, his seat? I can't remember the much-like Labour MP was persuaded to stand down so that Starrma could have this seat. Rishi Sunak arrived. he managed to get William Hayes' old seat somehow or other with family connections. So he was a plant too? Absolutely. And the day that after those 2015 election, the word that went around the members tea room is we've got two future prime ministers here.
Starting point is 00:41:12 Exactly the same in 2017 when Cammy Badenock arrived after that election, she's going to be a future leader of the Conservative Party. Never said she's going to be prime minister. She never will be. that's on day one. How do they know? I mean, these are a lot of coincidences that these people were predicted to be holding great power.
Starting point is 00:41:32 And I suppose if you say something often enough, people start to believe it, and it became the truth. They were all enacted. Those things were all said the very first day those people, when they didn't even know where to hang their coats. But you allege that Nigel Farage,
Starting point is 00:41:48 who has always been viewed as someone who was fighting, this establishment Andrew, you allege that he is now compromised too? Yes. What's happened? I think he may have come under a lot of pressure.
Starting point is 00:42:07 I think his life was put under pressure at certain stages. He had some very near misincidence, didn't he, with an airplane and his car. And you don't believe that they were I don't know, genuine. an event. It'd be concerning. I've never had the wheels
Starting point is 00:42:23 come off my car going at the roadway. So you think he was targeted? It could well be, but whether he's targeted or whether he's then targeted by saying that, you know, this is not an accident and, you know, we can sort you out
Starting point is 00:42:38 or you can play ball. So the plane crash was almost like a threat? Again, he was lucky to walk away from that. I think he was very lucky. The majority of people involved in a light aircraft crash do not walk away from it. I mean, they are quite dangerous, you know.
Starting point is 00:42:58 Do you think they were trying to kill it? I don't know. I can see why they would want to scare him into compliance. And you now say he has been scared into compliance. Yeah, I think there's a lot of questions, a lot of people. And to be honest, I mean enough, I'm in enough court cases already. I don't want to go too deep, but I mean, there are questions. that numerous people
Starting point is 00:43:23 independently of each other have raised with me regarding the circumstances of Nigel Farage standing down the Brexit Party in 2019 and what he might have got in return for that and you've also suggested that these...
Starting point is 00:43:40 And of course once, if you are, if any individual is corrupted once I mean it's a two-way street you're corrupted, you know? And you think Nigel Farrague, has been. I believe that he's well in the establishment now. And if you look at the way he's rowing back on lots of his policies, I mean, taking in Nadim Zahawai, who he knows he's toxic. He knows he's toxic. I mean, Nigel Farage's many things. He's not stupid. He has political
Starting point is 00:44:09 antenna. Why would you take, would anybody to touch Nadim Zaharvey? We know that the truth about the vaccines is going to come out. Even the Conservative Party admitted to me before they expelled me for life, which I wouldn't go along with, that they were going to cover it up for 20 years. They covered up for the demise for 11. They said, it told me it would be 2043 before people will be told the truth about vaccine harms and the excess deaths. That's unacceptable to me, and they wanted to vaccinate small children. Well, I mean, they have this power and they're very, very confident. Nigel, I believe, has joined the establishment. The fact that he took in in Zahawi tells me that he's not running reform.
Starting point is 00:44:57 Someone told him, you will be taking it. Now, that could be Big Pharma, in which case, obviously, there are going to be huge benefits for reform because they're going to get a lot of money from Big Farmers. I think it's fair to say that while reform have got Nadim Zahawi, the former vaccine minister, at the top table, they're not going to be exposing the truth about the vaccine harms and excess deaths.
Starting point is 00:45:16 And you think someone has compromising material on Nigel Farage? To be honest, they wouldn't let him get to the position of leading any party unless they had that on him. It wouldn't be allowed to happen, which is why Rupert Lowe is getting hammered on all fronts in very many ways that I was hammered when I spoke out about the vaccines three, four years ago.
Starting point is 00:45:44 Well, this is what I was going to ask, of course, because the modus operandi is exactly the same. One of them is one of the corruptions in this country is that all the professions have regulators, independent regulators. They were infiltrated by the World Economic Forum, which is the globalist's sort of marketing arm.
Starting point is 00:46:04 They took money from the, it's called the Regulators Pioneer Fund. So they've been infiltrated. Now, the way of keeping the professions in line is that you just throw everyone out and end their careers who goes against the narrative. That's where you've got the general medical council's been taking license of doctors who said, I think there might be something wrong with these vaccines or the lockdowns
Starting point is 00:46:32 or anything like that. You know, doctors actually have a duty of care. They've got a duty. They have to speak up if they think something's not right and it might be hurting people. They have to do that. Well, they're actually been losing their criticism. David Cartland, only the other week. So many doctors.
Starting point is 00:46:51 Well, the version of that for politics is parliamentary standards. Now, I've got, we've got uncontrovertal evidence that parliamentary standards is completely corrupt. Now, I advise Rupert of this, and they've got him into parliamentary standards. It's a, it's a, it's a kangaroo court. It's not under judicial. And Bridgett Phillips used this against him in Parliament the other day. Absolutely. And she said, oh, a very well-respected baron.
Starting point is 00:47:21 has made this report saying that that that report that barrister was paid for by reform. Didn't say that, did she? And so I want to... So you smear people that way. Yes. And Rupert's getting all of that, all of that. Because he's gone to the High Court
Starting point is 00:47:39 to try and get judicial oversight of the Parliamentary Standard System, which of course the government don't want that. They like having a system where any troublemaker, we can just pin some spurious allegations against him, putting through due process, find him guilty or her guilty, and then smear them in the newspapers. That's what they did to me, and that's what they're trying to do to Rupert. And I want to talk about this, because of course, for people who are not aware of your trajectory, you left the Conservative Party, you initially joined the Reclaim Party, you then were independent,
Starting point is 00:48:13 but now you have thrown your weight very much behind this insurgent new political force on the right, Restore Britain, led by Rupert Lowe. Now, Reform UK did unsuccessfully try to destroy Rupert, as you point out, because it wasn't just by the parliamentary authorities. I mean, they literally reported him to the police, wanted him to be locked up. And spreads absolutely ludicrous smears on him that he got mental health, he got dementia. Yes.
Starting point is 00:48:41 Yep. They want to forget about it. Well, Mohammed Zia Youssef claimed that Rupert had threatened to kill him. Yes. The then-party German reported him. But Rupert's sort of in his late 60s and Mohammed Zia Yusuf's in his late 30s. Correct. Well, I can tell you now that Rupert's been trying to get the statement that caused him to be, his house to be raided and his shotguns taken from their safe by the police.
Starting point is 00:49:10 Obviously, he thinks that the police must have taken a statement from Mohammed Zia Yusuf with what evidence he'd got that Rupert had threatened to kill him. Never been able to get the statement. we're not even sure whether the statement actually exists. I've got, fortunately, came into contact with a very, very good barrister called Chris Newman, the new litigation. He's forced out of his own chambers. He's representing me against Matt Hancock, which we're back in court again, week commencing the 18th of May. And this is the ongoing level action. And for people who don't know, Matt Hancock is obviously the...
Starting point is 00:49:50 former health secretary of the United Kingdom, all during the COVID period. Who smeared me as anti-Semitic, anti-science, anti-vax? Yes. Yeah. In the house, right? In the house and then repeated it without... Which is why you are able to take legal action. What did Bridgett Philipson do to Rupert?
Starting point is 00:50:08 She did it in the house. Exactly. And then tweet... And then tweeted it straight out as well afterwards. Yes. But it's going to be difficult for him to take legal action, isn't it? given that the actual claim was made in the house. Well, same as mine, but if they tweeted,
Starting point is 00:50:25 tweets do not have parliamentary privilege. Do you think Rupert could have a case against Bridget Phillips? Absolutely, he could. But getting into litigation is a bankruptcy trap. And you're presuming that you're going to get a fair hearing. Which you're not. Well, I'll put it this way. Chris Newman's regulator is the Bar Standards Board.
Starting point is 00:50:47 Yeah. He's had multiple complaints, furious complaints against him. He spends half his time fighting to stay as a barrister because he's representing too many high-profile people. Alex Bellfield's another one of his clients. Yes, who is now back behind bars. And I wanted to ask you about that, and we will come to that. So just hold that thought, because I think, first, I just want to talk about Rupert Lowe situation.
Starting point is 00:51:10 Because Rupert's got to be a good guy because the establishment are trying to destroy him. Trying to destroy him. And you've thrown your weight behind Restore, British. How, given everything that you have outlined today, how on earth are Rupert and Restore Britain going to be able to do this, Andrew? Because you have just painted these absolute dark forces attempting to subvert democracy at every turn, attempting to take control of democracy. How can Rupert beat them? This is going to be almost impossible, isn't it? people are waking up to the
Starting point is 00:51:44 the pantomime that's been going on and as time goes on I mean repeatedly the public have voted for reduced migration and what we've got every government of every colour increased migration if you want a demonstration and let's look you know
Starting point is 00:52:01 how many prime ministers have said we're going to smash these people trafficking gangs and with all the power of the state at their disposal MI5, MI6, GCHQ, special branch, the military. How many gangs have been smashed by anybody? None. I mean, I would think anyone with half a brain, you could even infiltrate with a few fake asylum seekers
Starting point is 00:52:25 or find out where the boats were being made and stopped them selling them to people. Nothing. So, I mean, people are slowly waking up, whether it's about migration, whether it's about what happens during COVID and the draconian measures and removal of free speech. Whether it's about the walls that we're being dragged into
Starting point is 00:52:43 and whether it's about the pernicious taxes, which you're actually reducing freedom on everybody. And this is, again, a lockstep across the world. People are waking up. And because of social media, you know, an idea can spread. And we're watching the demise of the so-called mainstream media. Yes. increasing numbers of people know that they're not telling people the truth.
Starting point is 00:53:10 But they're still going to try and do everything to fix that, aren't they? They're going to do everything to try and force social media companies into... Well, they're trying to censor and shut down. But my point is, is that really you think Restore Britain is the last hope to democratically, to democratically save Britain. Or even to pull people together. And yes. Because Elon Musk says we're heading towards a civil war.
Starting point is 00:53:38 I think we're in the last chance saloon at five minutes to closing. Yeah, because Elon Musk says we're heading towards civil war. David Betts, the academics, says actually the civil war has begun. I mean, I guess my question to you, Andrew, given everything that you have said today, can you really tell us that there is going to be a democratic solution here? I would love there to be, and I'll work for it. But I am not convinced that we're going to be able to vote our way out of this down. But I think we should try.
Starting point is 00:54:04 I think it's behold on us to try. Lock people like you up for saying that. The police came to pick me up three weeks ago over a tweet. And what happened? Malicious Communications Act 1988 Section 1, six days and they dropped it. But it shows what they're trying to do. They're trying to ski, you aren't? Because then we come to Alex Belford and we've got this.
Starting point is 00:54:27 Well, there were not 1,900 people retweeted it. So, I mean, you retweet it, you own it. Well, they'd have had to have a pretty big person, wouldn't they? We could have filled three prisons straight away with just... But they don't do that because we've got this... They want to make an example of people. And we've got this image here of you with Alex Belfield, who you have supported the journalist and comedian
Starting point is 00:54:48 who was locked up after Jeremy Vine described him as being the Jimmy Saville of Storkers. And what Jeremy Vine never tells you is that he didn't get alarm and distress. He was... Alex Belfield was found guilty of stalking him without alarm and distress. You wouldn't read that the way that Vine writes it. No.
Starting point is 00:55:10 I actually listened to a hearing. Mr. Daheney was claiming damages for the criminal conviction of Alex Belfield. And I heard that hearing last Wednesday. And new evidence was presented to the court, which actually could actually question the whole conviction
Starting point is 00:55:38 of Alex Bellfield the judge refused didn't even look at the video evidence and gave summary judgment to Mr Dehaney And I've put him back in jail actually
Starting point is 00:55:49 Well it's worse than that Because he's back in jail And under the law As I understand it You have to have committed a crime To go back in for more than a month He's back in for six months they're not giving him his review hearing of his six months until September when he will have done six months.
Starting point is 00:56:08 So even if he's found then that they shouldn't have blocked him up, he can't get the time back, can he? And they've not, the probation service have never disclosed what his claim to have done. I obviously, Alex speaks to me every few times a week. All he was told is that he was put back in prison for having a bad relationship with his probation. probation officer, his 27th probation officer, who had told him, there are no restrictions on where you go, Alex, you can go where you want as long as no one recognizes you, which means he can go nowhere. He was banned from the internet. His income stream was taken away. He wasn't allowed to release his books. No.
Starting point is 00:56:52 He was, originally he was going to have a UK tour and go and perform his comedy routine. Katie Hopkins. Katie Hopkins. He was allowed to put all the deposits on. all these venues and then told a week before the tour started, you can't go and he lost all of that. And is this designed to be a warning shot to others, Andrew? I mean, I look at this picture with you and Alex and Lucy Connolly.
Starting point is 00:57:17 Is all of this about trying to tell others, oh, if you're thinking of starting a YouTube channel, if you're thinking of challenging this narrative, be very careful because you'll lose everything. You will lose everything. You will lose your liberty. will lose your ability to ever make money again. You will lose your ability to ever be on the internet again.
Starting point is 00:57:36 There is no freedom. And that is what they want us to know. They want you to believe that and they want... But isn't it true? It is true. They want us all to self-censor. And I refuse that. Do you worry they're going to try and lock you up?
Starting point is 00:57:51 Oh, they've tried several times. And also, they're trying to bankrupt me. Because obviously, if you're bankrupt, you won't be able to stand for parliament. Why would they be so worried about someone who only got 3%? Indeed. Because presumably you would stand for restore Britain? I would hope to stand for Restore Britain, yes, at the next election. In the same constituency?
Starting point is 00:58:14 Obviously, North West Leicestershire is where I've represented and where people know me. Well, if we have any elections, Dan, because if we head for, if we do go for any sort of civil war, war or insurrection or even we get involved in a major war, which the globalists want us to be at war with Russia. They want a 10-year war, by the way, a proper one, 10-year war. I'm absolutely convinced that whether it's Starrma or his successor, they'll instigate the Civil Contingencies Act, and then we're in martial law, and they have the ability then to delay elections indefinitely.
Starting point is 00:58:58 A lot of people do think they will find a way to delay the next general election. Yes, and again in lockstep, that's not just the government in the UK that that suits. I mean, Macro is deeply unpopular. He would like to stop the elections. Merz, the Chancellor in Germany,
Starting point is 00:59:20 is only relatively recent, you know, a couple of years. But all the polls now that, the AFD are storming away and he'll be out. So there's a triumbrant of the major countries in Europe who would like to have martial law and they're all talking up the possibility of a war with Russia and the slave media are going behind it. I mean, the Russophobia is unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:59:49 Unbelievable. Do you worry that they might try and kill you? They don't like doing that. it would be pretty obvious what had gone on, I think. I think they, if you're in the club and you betray them, they'll kill you. And you were in the club. I was never, I was never in the club, and they never signed me up. They offered me in January 22.
Starting point is 01:00:16 You were an MP, but you didn't take the endorsement. I didn't. And they offered me a bribe in 2022 in January of anything I wanted in the world to sell the people out. And they were so arrogant, they've never had anyone refuse it. they put it in writing to me in a text message and I refused it because that would have meant I'd had to let them deliberately harm small children with the vaccines
Starting point is 01:00:40 and wasn't willing to do that. And you're going to keep speaking out? I'm going to keep speaking out. Yes, of course. You know, supposedly, we live in a country where... Remember, we've had free speech for a very long time. A very, very long time. Well, let's make sure we only reinforce
Starting point is 01:00:58 to people we've still got it by using it. Yeah? Well, I try. I mean, I try. Let's hope this conversation isn't censored. You know, let's hope this conversation isn't shadow banned. Let's hope this conversation isn't used to try and work against us. But unfortunately, we all know what they do. We all know their tactics. And there are loads of tactics that are employed. Well, the power is immense. The ability, the ability to control Matt, to buy scientific research and research. researchers, reputable scientists. I mean, I saw some brilliant, well, it's appalling, appalling data the other day. The most vaccine, it never gets any
Starting point is 01:01:40 coverage. One of the biggest powers of the mainstream media is you decide what's the news and what's not the news. Oh, it's the biggest thing. The story selection. It's the absolutely massive power. And the most vaccinated place in the world during the pandemic
Starting point is 01:01:56 was Waterford in Ireland. I think 98% of the population had at least one jab. Then the figures show that Waterford had the highest rate of COVID in Ireland, followed by the highest rate of excess deaths. And this all came to light because only a few months ago, the World Health Organization then recognised the efforts of Waterford during the pandemic and gave their health authorities an award for their efforts. and that was all in the mainstream media
Starting point is 01:02:29 that Waterford had got this award for their sterling efforts of getting so many people vaccine but you look behind the figures they didn't report they killed the most people and those figures are all there and I realised about the mainstream media
Starting point is 01:02:44 a long time ago Dan because I was the MP who uncovered the post office scandal and in 2014 I'd have all the evidence I went down all the lobby in Parliament to be all those best jobs in journalism are in the lobby
Starting point is 01:02:56 we've got all the representatives of the BBC ITV, the Times, the telegraph, every newspaper I went around them all and I knew them all and I offered them the story and said look here's all the evidence there's the Fujitsu whistleblowers data statement Ron Warmington the forensic
Starting point is 01:03:13 investigator that's his report run this story those convictions of sub-postmasters are unsafe biggest miscarriage of justice in UK history, you'll get an award. They couldn't run it. When I went and they ran it, what, 10 years later? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, ITV,
Starting point is 01:03:32 who I'd been to in 2014 with exactly the same information and the character in there of Michael Rudkin and Susan Rudkin, they were my constituents from Ibstock. Bad news for the government. When I went to them in 2021 and 2022, about the vaccine harms, it was exactly the same response. In fact, worse. It ran away.
Starting point is 01:03:52 So let's see if Wokai TV is doing a drama on it in 20 years time. Hopefully they won't exist. Hopefully they won't exist. If you remember, Nadim Zaharwee was the business minister for a fraction of the time. He played himself in Mr Bates versus the post office. I've often wondered, will he want to play himself in the drama documentary about the vaccine rollout? I think he may be otherwise engaged. Yeah, I don't think so.
Starting point is 01:04:17 Who would play you, Andrew? I don't mind, as long as they're handsome and charismatic. Well, on that note, on a lighter note, after what has been a very dark but important conversation, I'm so glad we were able to happen. But remember that the darker it gets, the closer we are to the end. That's true. And it maybe has to get that dark to wake enough people up. Well, unfortunately, I do believe that.
Starting point is 01:04:40 I think that's how it is. I do believe that. I think things are going to get worse, but there is also darkness before dawn. Andrew Bridgen, thank you so much. Thank you for having me on. Now, we move over to Substack now. for the Royal Uncanceled Aftershow. Come and join us there at www.
Starting point is 01:04:57 www. outspoken. Dot live and we will be back with you every weekday, every weekday, 5pm UK time, midday Eastern, 9am Pacific. Remember to hit subscribe right now on YouTube. Turn on the notification bell. You know they do a lot of dodgy stuff with YouTube as well, Andrew.
Starting point is 01:05:10 People are constantly telling me, I've had to subscribe, Dan, to you three times. Every time I keep being unsubscribed. Just a coincidence. Just a coincidence. So do check, do check, because, you know, these funny business things do go on. And most importantly, I promise to keep fighting for you.
Starting point is 01:05:32 Hey, y'all, it's Kelly Clarkson with Wayfair. Ever order furniture online and wonder what if? Like, what if it doesn't hold up? That sofa was four days old. You should have ordered from Wayfair. With Wayfair, there's no what if. Just style you love and quality you can trust. Visit Wayfair.ca.cair, every style, every home.

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