Dan Wootton Outspoken - KEIR STARMER QUITS AS UK PRIME MINISTER LIVE ON AIR IN DRAMATIC STATEMENT AS HE CALLS THE KING
Episode Date: June 22, 2026Dan Wootton hosts a special live episode of Outspoken as Keir Starmer is expected to QUIT as British Prime Minister. LIKE & SUBSCRIBE for new videos every day: https://youtube.com/@danwoottonoutspoke...n?si=-2BhmEbBSN1fyESS?sub_confirmation=1 ---------- Find the full audio show wherever you get your podcasts: Apple — https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/dan-wootton-outspoken/id1762436723 Spotify — https://open.spotify.com/show/19Ltoneek2MSPL10CpSA1J?si=8f6d84e2db56448c ---------- Follow Dan on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@outspokendan Follow Dan on Twitter: https://x.com/danwootton Follow Dan on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/danwootton/ Follow Dan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/danwootton/?hl=en #DanWootton#DanWoottonOutspoken#news#outspoken#uknews Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The evil bastard, slippery stammer is finally expected to announce his resignation.
The podium is being prepared outside the steps of Downing Street.
This is the outspoken watch party.
Let me tell you, I know what's coming is going to be worse.
but this is a man who has single-handedly stripped away our civil liberties,
who has single-handedly introduced two-tier justice to the United Kingdom,
has single-handedly destroyed our relationship with our major ally.
And now, as we can see, the moment that he desperately didn't want,
the moment that he has been hiding behind his miserable wife, Lady Victoria Stama,
who I revealed had already moved out of number 10 Downing Street, is about to happen.
These are live shots of number 10 Downing Street.
The audio is being tested, and we are about to witness history being made.
Slippery Stama will be the shortest serving Labor Prime Minister in history.
That is a legacy that he deserves.
That is a situation that is extraordinary, given he came to power two years ago, promising to end chaos in the country,
promising to end political division.
He leaves No. 10 Downing Street with the country,
either depending on who you believe,
on the verge of civil war or in the midst of a civil war.
He leaves No. 10 Downing Street with the country divided on racial, ethnic, and political lines.
He leaves No. 10 Downing Street the most hated Prime Minister in history.
And so I repeat, I know there will be a lot of you saying, Dan,
what is about to come next is worse.
Andy Burnham as Prime Minister,
a hard left coalition of the willing,
which could also include Zach Polanski and Mothanali.
And I get that.
But our first priority in a country run by evil
is to remove evil from power.
And that is what we are about to see happen.
And I'm going to enjoy it.
So can we just for once enjoy this moment?
And let me bring in my superstar panel as we await history, the independent journalist and YouTube star Lee Harris and Henry Bolton, former UKIP leader, now part of Restore Britain, but of course a very experienced diplomat too.
So, Lee, it's happening.
He had been like Hitler in his bunker all weekend trying to hide behind his wife, who's already out of there at number 10 Downing Street.
now we await the Stama resignation. What are you expecting?
I am expecting him to resign. It does seem that we've had some information come out of the Times this morning who said that Andy Burnham definitely wants a coronation and he wants to be in place before party conference in September.
Kind of expected that. As I said, the Makerfield by-election has given Andy Burnham a real sense of moral and democratic authority over Kirstama.
So kind of knew it was going to happen.
He was going to come back into Downey Tree.
And I also expected the other MPs to essentially rally around him, mainly for two reasons.
Firstly, because I think still, even though they want Kirstama gone, they desperately don't want to have a long protracted leadership contest.
Because that's obviously one of their biggest attack lines against the Tories.
And if they do it, that would be another sign of massive hypocrisy.
And I just get the sense they want that over and done with as quickly as much.
possible. So it is going to be the end of Kirstama. I'm a bit disappointed that he requires a
timetable, Dan. I mean, what on earth does he need a timetable for? I mean, the guy doesn't even
work weekends, and apparently nothing ever crosses his desk. I mean, it probably should be
better for everyone if he leaves right now. But you're like you, what's coming next is going to be
a disaster. It's going to be worse. But I, Kirstama has to go. I agree with you completely.
The man is evil.
Henry Bolton, what are you expecting from the Prime Minister, not for much longer?
Yeah, I think, you know, yes, as Lee has just said, and you've said, the expectation has got to be that he's going to leave.
There is a question as to the timeline, whether or not he tries to stay until the Labour Party conference.
I suspect, seeing as he's making this statement now, that he won't, he'll go before,
that. I think it's a problem. I mean, I absolutely agree that Stama has been an absolute disaster.
Burnham will be an absolute disaster. They will be presenting in a different way. They will have
slightly different sort of policies, but not dramatically so. Burnham is a much better presenter.
He's far more personable, which isn't difficult when you talk about comparing him with Kirstama.
But I think the difficulty that I've got is that we are going to most likely,
end up with a prime minister, if there is no contest here, we're going to end up with a prime minister
whose direction we have no idea about really. He has not in the context of moving into Downing
Street and leading the country, he has not given the Labour Party or the country any indication
whatsoever as to what direction he's going to take us in. He has not talked about major policy
issues. We know he's very pro-European Union, but where's he actually going to, what's his agenda
there? What's his agenda on defence? What's his agenda on immigration and borders? We know
what he's said in the past, but we also know he's been moving a little bit, he's been showing
a little bit of adaptability, should we say, in recent days. But he's not said anything concrete
whatsoever. And I think it's a problem that the Labour Party looks as though we're going to get
an absolute shoe in, a coronation of a man who has simply not been held to account or has been
interrogated on these issues at all. And that would be a terrible thing for the Labour Party,
even though they might not know it yet. Lee, if there is a coronation of Andy Burnham with no
democratic leadership contest, I'm sorry, look at what that did to the Conservative Party. But again,
I sit back. I pop my champagne metaphorically.
because I'm on air, but I hope there's a whole load of people in this heat wave currently popping
their champagne, having their mimosas. Because actually, Lee, this is a situation that the Labor Party
have created for themselves. We all remember just a few years ago, do you remember this, Lee,
people like Angela Red Rainer, the tax evaders saying, if there is a new leader of the Conservative
party, there must be an immediate general election. The law should be changed. Okay, then, come on.
This is all on you. We've got your words, Labour. So actually, whatever they decide to do here is a bit of a disaster. What is interestingly, is there is a lot of speculation over the weekend that Slippery Starma might try and make this more difficult for Burn. And we don't know this for sure by announcing that he's going immediately, that he's standing down as an MP, that there could even be a by-election coming in his seat, which would presumably be a seat very appealing to the Green Party, to Jeremy Corbett.
it very much is still up in the ear about where the Stama is going to play ball here
and give Burnham the soft, easy, smooth transition that he wants.
I think that's the fair analysis, because I remember as well.
I'm old enough to remember the briefing that we had leaked from number 10 about his attack plan against Burnham.
So this does feel like Keir Stama is still desperately trying to hold on with his fingertips.
But one thing we do know about Kirstama is this is a man that folds very, very quickly under pressure.
So I'm not swayed in the slightest by any of this briefing that came out, that they've got a way of, you know, attacking and bringing down burn and making it chances of being leader a lot harder.
I just don't think he's got the legitimacy or the moral authority to do any of that at this stage.
Don't forget this is a man completely despised by pretty much the entire Labour party.
as well as the country and everyone else.
So I don't think he will see that through.
I think just like every other negotiation that that man has done,
even with his own party, as we saw with the welfare bill,
he will fold like a deck chair instantly.
So I think on balance, I think we're more likely to see a resignation
and I think the kind of compromise will be
that he can set out his timetable and resign with some form of dignity,
even though that's only in his head.
No, and we don't want that, do we?
Henry, I don't want that.
Do you think Stama deserves any type of dignified send-off here?
No, no, I don't.
I mean, absolutely he does not.
There's not a thing that this man has done, Stama,
for the benefit of the country or the, what's going on?
Have we got something going on here?
Oh, here he comes.
Here he goes.
Let's listen in.
Slippery Stama has emerged with Lady Victoria.
Let's listen to what is believed to be.
I raise a nation speech.
He's going.
Walking up this street two years ago was the proudest moment of my life.
A new Labour government.
The first in 14 years.
A page in our country's history turned after years of disappointment and despair.
The chance to change the lives of millions of people for the better.
That's what I came into politics for.
The journey to that point was not easy.
Six years ago, I inherited a Labour Party that was politically, financially and morally bankrupt.
I was told time and time again that my party was finished, that we were consigned to history,
that a majority at the general election, then alone a landslide majority,
was impossible.
But we proved those people wrong
because we changed our party,
ripping out the poison of anti-Semitism,
restoring trust on the economy,
defence and national security,
and becoming a party that once again
stood proudly with,
but against our national flag.
The hard work of change
was with a singular purpose
not power for power's sake, but to change Britain for the better, to build a fairer country
with dignity and respect where everyone is seen, everyone is valued, wealth and opportunity for all,
not just the privileged people. And look at what we've achieved in just two years.
economy that is stronger, going faster than our peers. Wages rising faster than inflation in every
single month since we came to power. Investment secured, infrastructure being built, an end to austerity
with the fastest fall in NHS waiting lists for 17 years. The biggest improvement in rights
for workers and renters in a generation. The biggest uplift in defence
spending since the Cold War, small boat crossings, falling, asylum hotels closing,
protecting young people from social media, and half a million children being lifted out of poverty
because of the choices that I made. Our reputation in the world restored, with Britain once
again standing up for decency, respect and the rule of law.
securing trade deals, standing with Ukraine, standing up for our values,
and rebuilding our relationship with our allies in Europe.
Change promised by a Labour government.
Change fought for by a Labour government.
Change delivered by a Labour government.
But I know the question being asked now is not who was best placed
to change the Labour Party to take us into power,
and to begin the vital work of improving lives for millions of people.
Those questions have been answered.
The question my party is asking now is whether I am best placed to lead us into the next general election.
I have heard the answer of my parliamentary party to that question.
And I accept that answer with good growth.
race. Every decision I've taken has been about putting the country I love first. That is why I will resign as leader of the Labour Party. I have spoken to His Majesty the King this morning to inform him of my decision. I will ask the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party to set out a timetable with nominations opening on the 9th of July and completed by the summer recess.
In the case of a contest, this will ensure a new leader is in place before Parliament returns in September.
I will remain in post as Prime Minister until the contest is complete.
And I will do everything I can to ensure an orderly handover of power.
I will also give my successor my full and unequivocal support, knowing that they will inherit a Britain that is far stronger
and fairer than the one I inherited two years ago, better prepared for the challenges ahead
and better able to ensure the Labour Party secures a second term in office. I want to thank
all of those friends and colleagues who have been at my side for these past six years or so
for their incredible commitment, service and support. I want to thank the brilliant number 10
and our country's extraordinary civil service who dedicate their lives to public service.
When I leave the biggest job in the country, I shall spend more time on the most important job.
Being the best husband I can to my fantastic wife, Vic, who has been a rock by my side through good times and bad.
and being the best dad I can to my beautiful children, who are my pride and my joy.
Thank you very much.
Slippery Stama, the weasel of a Prime Minister in tears,
as he laments the end of a pathetic premiership.
He is now the shortest serving Labour Prime Minister of all times.
having confirmed he has today called King Charles to resign as leader of the Labour Party.
He says he will resign as Labour Prime Minister by the time of the next parliamentary term after the summer recess.
That means the new leader he says will be in place by September.
It's clear he believes that there should be some sort of competition for that,
which is not a surprise,
but he did in the end say that having listened to his Labour Party parliamentary colleagues,
he accepts their answer with good grace.
So he's a blubbering wreck in the end, Henry Bolton,
but I believe this is a man who's crying for himself
rather than the damage he's done to this country.
Yeah, indeed.
I mean, I understand it.
I mean, on a human level, I understand it.
This is a momentous sort of occasion in his life.
Well, you know, yeah, but he,
He created this. He brought this about.
He entered government without a plan.
And what he said he would do, he didn't do.
And what he said he wouldn't do, he did.
So he entirely sort of misled the country.
He's created a nightmare situation for many of his MPs and ministers.
And indeed, for the wider country.
So, you know, it's good he's gone.
What we're going to see now, I'm glad, though, that he's made the decision.
as you say, it seems that there should be a contest.
Indeed.
There should be a contest without any doubt.
Henry Bolton and Lee Harris standby
because I want to bring in Tommy Robinson to react now live.
Tommy, the bastard is gone.
Blubbering, wreck.
And really, he should be crying, shouldn't he,
about the damage that he's done to our dang country?
Yeah, I'm just, I'm in two minds
because I'm not happy that he's resigned.
think he should be prosecuted. I think the abuse he used in the judiciary and the weaponisation of
it to try and put fear into the British public, imprisoning mothers, grandfathers, none of these
things should ever be forgotten of what he done. He didn't lead our country as a leader. He was
tyrannical and he saw us all as his prisons and it was his way or he would force it to go his
way. No one was allowed a voice against him. And what laser-head?
head now. And the reason why I'm probably not as happy is because I see Andy Burnham as our next
leader. I don't know how much you know about Andy Burnham, Dan. I investigated after the
attacks in Manchester, the Ariana Grande attacks. I looked heavily into Manchester and I found
Andy Burnham continually sharing a platform with Mend. I found him and his friends took money from
Mend. Mende are a extremist jihadist group. He works alongside them, not just works alongside them,
His council were holding joint seminars across the area with this group.
So Andy Burnham is in bed with Islamic jihad as any of them are.
He doesn't care.
So I don't see it.
But the worst thing is Andy Burnham's more of a palatable face.
You saw that in the recent election.
I think in the recent election that there should have been a conservative effort
between restore and reform and everyone else to try and stop Andy Burnham.
Because Andy Burnham is going to be a much better.
leader for Labour than Keir-Starmors.
And I don't want Labour to have good.
So he is a threat.
And obviously that connection to Islamism is a huge threat,
not to mention the fact that Burnham was in part involved in the cover-up of the
rape gang scandal, Tommy, according to Rupert Lowe's rape gang inquiry.
Is that something you agree with?
Yeah, didn't he say that we were, what was the words he used?
What was the word of use?
Propagant, did he say it was propaganda?
I can't remember.
But everyone in Labor is part of the rape down scandal cover up literally.
If you've rose your way through the ranks of Labor, at some point you've been involved
in covering up the raid gang.
That's a fact because it's happened in every town of sea.
And they know it has.
They all know it.
And then they all try and change the history.
And now when he gets in, he'll probably start talking strong on it and trying to make the public believe he's going to bring about the change.
But it is a worry.
But Keirstar, I think, will go down as the worst prime minister this country's ever had ever in history.
He has outraged the public.
He's enraged the world.
He's been the weakest, the weakest looking leader.
I think Kea Starma, didn't Donald Trump announce three days ago?
He was resigning.
Last night, he said Keir Starma will resign,
and he's been a failure,
and he pointed towards the immigration and energy policies.
I mean, that's a mortifying embarrassment.
And this is the thing.
He's embarrassed the country, hasn't he, Tommy, as well?
It's not just what he's done to our.
country. He's embarrassed us on a world stage. I mean, you've spent a lot of time in America recently.
You know that. He's a laughing stock, an absolute laughing stock. But the next leader is going to be
no different. That's my problem. The next leader is going to believe no different, be no different,
but have more of a palatable face and not be as stupid as Kirstama. So do you think Stama
weaponized the judiciary against you? I mean, we know, for example, that his
Attorney General, Herma was involved in the jailing of Lucy Connolly?
It was Herma who prosecuted me, and it was Homer who, even on our appeals,
it was the government that were blocking everything from when I was in prison,
even the attempts to be removed that it was their decision to hold me on solitary,
it was their decision to continue hold me on solitary,
even when we pointed out there were prisons I could be sent to,
especially open prisons that had no Muslim prisoners.
They still doubled down and enforced holding me on solitary.
So all the conditions were that come from that Labour government, yes.
How do you think Slippery Starmour will be remembered?
I don't think he will be remembered.
Not in years to come.
In our generation, of course, we're going to remember him,
but he's never going to be remembered as one of the greats as a leader of when people list,
if you said who are the leaders of Britain in 30, 50, 100 years time.
No one's going to mention Kea Starrner, are they?
So, yeah, I'm glad he's gone, but I want to know more about the rent boys.
Why he didn't pay them?
What a story went on with him?
Now, he's trying to blame everything on Russia, isn't he?
He's trying to blame his rent boys on Russia.
This is after the conviction last week.
The BBC is reporting that this was a Russian plot,
but obviously we still don't know who the mysterious figure behind the firebombing actually was.
And Tommy
I'll tell you
Certain people
Do firebop in you
Certain people
Get things up
Growing up in the UK
You know
The Criminal Fertnity
You know
Who's up
Rent boys don't go around
Blowing shit up
Right
Tommy
It's not the sort of people
That are hired
To go and blow stuff up
Yeah
People who are hired
To go and bomb
And if you look at
The arson attacks
That are come out
That are funded by Iran
There's no rent boys
Blowing stuff up
Right
So it just doesn't add up
Those three rent boys
I bet
They have no criminal history other than their sexual practices,
but they have no criminal history, and there's a lot more to it.
And, of course, one of their fathers has said that they had absolutely full animosity to Russia.
So that story never made sense.
It was always a cover-up.
I stand by that and obviously have covered people like George Galloway,
who have made very similar claims.
Tommy, to me, when I think about Stama's legacy as Prime Minister,
I always think back to those days after the Southport massacre.
And remember, he had only been Prime Minister for a matter of days.
And do you remember he turned up to the scene of the massacre?
And he was surrounded by locals.
These were not agitators.
It's been proven that these were locals who were absolutely devastated
about what had gone down.
And this is what happened.
How many more children are died on our streets, Prime Minister?
How many more children?
How many more children, Prime Minister?
Are we going to do something?
Time to change, Toma.
Come on, it's needed.
How many more children?
Is it mine next?
What's shameful?
Bye-bye.
You got your photos.
Off you go.
Make a real change, Prime Minister.
Make a real change!
Our children!
Go away!
And Tommy, he went.
back to number 10 Downing Street and quaffed champagne at a party.
I don't think the country ever forgave them.
And then he come out and he doubled down and doubled down some more,
calling every single person Far Right.
He said it was all organised by the far right,
what police reports approved later.
There was no far right involvement in anything in Southport.
It was all locals.
It's the weapon that he's used against everyone.
But the problem is for him,
even the day before I last night, the Kingdom of it.
That rhetoric doesn't work anymore.
for our last event, didn't he, some big speech about the far right and how dangerous we are
and don't stand of us. And the public basically once again told him to politely fuck off.
And finally he has politely fucked off. I think that, yeah, he's been a, do you know what I should
say, Dad? Dan, I've been in this 17 years, yeah, and we have needed this country's public to be
awake. We needed them to see the problems. I've done as much as I possibly could.
Kirstama had probably done more for us in his leadership
than I could ever dream of.
So Kirstama has done more to awaken the public,
more to let them see the problems,
more to let them see the weakness, the cowardice,
more to let them see the tyranny.
The United Kingdom movement,
I don't think could have been as strong possibly
with the numbers it's had without him as a leader.
So I'm probably should be thanking him
because all of the problems that we face
that are coming forward,
we need them to come to a head
We need the public to come to a head with them soon.
We can't wait another 10 years.
We're losing our country day by day, week by week, month by month.
The ability to regain control of our nation could be an impossibility in another 10 or 15 years.
So we're running out of time.
The clock is ticking.
The next election is probably the most important election.
And it may well be soon, right?
I know they're going to have a leadership contest to think there'll be a snap election.
Well, I don't believe that Andy Burnham will want to run out
the clock, right? Because when you become prime minister and a new popular prime minister,
you have quite a short window. What's interesting is at the moment he's promising MPs,
oh no, there's not going to be election. I think there's going to be an election, right? Because
he's got to go when he's at his most popular. And let's be honest, he ain't changing anything.
He's not changing anything with the economy. He's not changing anything with illegal immigration.
He's not changing anything with Islamism.
It's not like he's against immigration. It's not like he's against any of these things. So it's just
more of the same but with a different smile.
In fact, more of the same, but with a more palatable face and a more palatable.
So, yeah, I think he could be more dangerous, more dangerous for us as a nation.
Because, yeah, I hope he does hold an election, though.
I hope he does.
Tommy Robinson, the United Kingdom activist.
Thank you so much.
Joining us for our slippery star marries out watch party and joining us on the superstar panel.
Now, Chauvonne White alongside Henry Bolton and Lee Harris.
Now, Shavon, we're going to come to you very shortly because, of course, you still haven't got that meeting with slippery Stama.
But, Henry, I interrupted you, so I just wanted you to wrap your thoughts.
Yeah, I was almost going to say word for word what Tommy's just said.
He said it very, very well.
The problem is, as I said during the local government elections and reform,
was using that slogan, vote reform, get Stammer out.
And I was saying, hang on a minute, I get that.
I get we want to get rid of Stama.
but think about what comes next.
If what comes next is a Burnham or a Reeves or a Rainer or a streeting,
we are going to have an even worse problem because of exactly what Tommy has said.
We're not going to have huge changes in the policy,
but we are going to have a more palatable sort of public friendly face.
We are going to have somebody who doesn't look so dour and boring and dull
and who does at least give the impression of listening,
whether he does or not is a different matter.
The policies won't change.
And I think Burnham is more dangerous
because the direction he wants to go in is further.
He's more pro-European than even Stama, for example.
But he is undoubtedly going to be good for the Labour parties polling
compared to Stama.
That's a problem.
That's a problem for the nation.
Because the problem isn't particularly Stama,
or Burnham, the problem is this Labour party. And that's the threat. It is the left wing at the moment
that is pushing all these so-called progressive policies on immigration. They're failing to invest in
our defence. They're screwing up our policing. They're screwing up our kids' education. They're
spending money that we don't have. The whole thing is an absolute disaster. And that's going to
continue under Burnham. So that, hence my concern that, you know,
have we jumped out of the fire, frying pan into the fire here? That's my concern. And I don't think
that there will be a new general election. There may be, of course, for the reasons you've said,
but it would be, I think, remarkably risky for any Labour politician right now, any Labour leader
to call a general election, given that you and I, we all know that their majority will be
absolutely decimated. At the moment, he's sitting on what, 160-odd majority. That is a solid
majority that he's ever going to get, and he's got at least 100 of those MPs already being
pushing, they've already been pushing Stama to leave. So I think he can count on their support. What he's not
got is the support of the nation. But again, finally, as Tommy said,
Starner has been absolutely authoritarian.
Burnham, with a majority of 160, can afford to be authoritarian.
He doesn't necessarily need to listen to the country.
He might choose instead to try and deliver some sort of positive results,
rally the Labour Party, those people who've moved away from it,
before a 29 election.
So I doubt me that there's going to be an early general election.
And even if there is, no party has got a plan for government yet.
Reform doesn't.
The Conservatives don't.
No party has a plan ready to go for government.
That's where previous governments have failed the country.
They've gone in, they've said, we'll do this, this, this and this, but had no plan.
They've started working it out once they've got there.
Too late.
Henry Bolton, thank you so much.
I want to bring in Chavon White.
Chavon's daughter Riannon White is one of the victims of slippery Stama's regime.
Her beautiful daughter murdered by an immigrant who had arrived in the country just weeks ago.
Stama has up until this point refused to meet Chavon.
How do you feel about him resigning today and tearing up at the end there when he spoke about his wife and his children when you don't have your child or one of them?
The best news that he's gone.
Tearing up, tearing up, feeling sorry for himself, I don't care.
I don't.
I think he's caused so much problem for this country.
And now resigning is the best thing he could possibly do.
No, I didn't get to meet him.
But you know what?
Let's hope, let's just hope that the next PM that comes in,
We'll do a better job.
We don't know.
This is something that's a, we've got a chance we've got to take.
But will I get that one?
Will it be Andy Burnham?
Will it be somebody else?
Who knows?
But if they don't start realizing that this country needs help,
then if they're just going to be another Stama,
and they're going to have to go.
Chavon, will you be asking Andy Burnham for the same meeting that you requested of Kirstama?
Yes, I will.
Yeah.
Like I said, Dan, as you know, we've tried Stama, we've tried Chabana Mahmood, we tried Jess Phillips, everybody else.
I will try him.
I know he wasn't in at the time if he comes in now, but we can always hope that we can get answers somewhere.
But I will keep fighting regardless of who it is.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Stand by, Chauvin White, because I want to bring in the chairman of the great British pack, Ben Habibu.
former deputy leader of Reform UK to react to this news. Ben Nigel Farage has in the past few moments
called on Labour to have a general election. He has released this substack in the past few moments.
Britain is broken. We need an election. I am calling for a general election at the soonest possible.
date. Do you agree? That's what the country needs. I think you've got to be very careful what you wish
for. As Henry said, there's not a single political party on the so-called right-hand side of British
politics that's ready for government. And reform certainly isn't ready for government. And I'd argue
that reform, nor the conservatives, nor restore yet, are ready to win a majority. This is just
typical Farage, if you don't mind me saying so, you know, banging a drum, an opportunistic drum to gather
some limelight on himself.
But, you know, the reality here is that Stahmer's gone
because he's been practicing a form of governance
that has been practiced for the last 30 years
and which the British people have repeatedly asked for them to change,
and they've refused to do it.
Successive governments have come in.
They've promised to put the British people first.
They've promised to reinstate our borders.
They've promised to reduce immigration,
reduce regulations, reduce taxes,
promote the working in middle class,
and so forth, and they all do the opposite. And it's no accident that since 2016, we haven't
had a single prime minister go to turn. They don't go to turn because they stand in opposition
to what the people want. They stand in opposition to the national interest. And as much as people
might think Andy Burnham is some kind of resurgent prospect of popularity for the Labour
Party, he won't be. Their popularity might pop up for a month or two, maybe even
12 months. But after that, the reality of what Burnham stands for and what the Labour Party stands for,
and indeed, as far as I can see, the Conservative Party still hasn't shook itself off from its
unit party position. The reality is that they stand for these policies which will not deliver
for this country, which are not wanted by the people. Burnham will not be popular by the time
the general election comes. The Labour Party will be, again, extremely unpopular. And the really
important thing here is that the so-called right, and I have to keep saying so-called right,
because I think the right-hand side of British politics doesn't really fully understand what it is
itself. But the right-hand side of British politics needs to get its act together. It needs to
determine what it means to be right-wing, and that it needs to get ready for government, as Henry
was saying, we've got to have a plan. We can't just be talking in sandbites. We can't be
talking about all the ills that have gone before. We've got to have a positive vision of what's
required to be done in order to save our country and then a plan to implement it. And have the people
ready to implement that too. It's not good enough surrounding yourself with a bunch of sycophants
just because they blow hot air up your backside and make you feel good as some leaders in the
so-called right have. You've got to get a team of champions, a team of Samson's who can articulate
the policies that will come out of this plan that I refer to and then can articulate us to
of the British people, leave the British people along the way, and then have the fortitude and
capability to deliver that plan into action. I see no coherency on the so-called right-hand
side of British politics. So whilst I can see in principle, the democratic deficit this country
is suffering requires a general election, Farage needs to be very careful what he wishes for,
because he ain't ready. He ain't ready to win an election, and he certainly isn't ready to govern.
It's interesting, Ben. I do think this is probably something he feels he has.
has to say rather than believing an election would be a good thing for him at the moment.
But Ben, look, how will slippery Stama be remembered?
Because to me, I completely understand there's lots of people like we've just had Tommy
Robinson on saying, look, Burnham is a threat and actually he's so much worse, so he's much
more dangerous to the country.
And look, we will fight Burnham when he is Prime Minister.
But right now, Stama is Prime Minister Ben Habib.
and this man has, I believe, been a truly nefarious force for this country,
stripping away free speech, stripping away the right to a jury trial.
How do you think he'll be remembered?
Well, I think he will be, certainly by me.
He'll be remembered, as I've described him, an anti-British prime minister.
He wants to take us back into the European Union.
He's busy handing over the diminished armed forces that we have into the European Defence Union.
He's busy handing over billions and, well, billions of pounds to the French for not enforcing borders.
He set up border security command, which doesn't command Jack Didley Squat.
Those who protested against the violent killings of white children in this country were blanded as far right.
People in Belfast, when they protested against the attempted beheading of that man in the streets of Belfast,
they were branded as far right.
This is a man who just is so out of touch.
with the British people and so in contempt of the kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
that he should never have been near office in the first place. Let's not forget his great mate,
Homer, the Attorney General, ennoble, put into the House of Lords so that he could be made
Attorney General. Never won an election himself. Has no democratic right to be there. He's the one that
elevated Tommy Robinson's case from a civil case into a criminal one and then incarcerated him.
Herma's the one who's making the case for the Caribbean Islands to get reparations from the United Kingdom.
18 trillion pounds is the figure they put in that.
They wouldn't hesitate to bankrupt this country.
Herma's the guy behind handing Chegos over to Mauritius.
These people hate this country.
And it's not good enough to get rid of Stama.
We need to get rid of all of them.
And we need a political philosophy that actually at its heart loves the United Kingdom.
It's as simple as that.
You've got to love this country first and foremost, if you want to have to have.
have the plan and the policies to save it.
Indeed, you do.
Indeed you do.
Ben, Habib, what do you expect to happen now to the Labour Party?
I mean, there is also going to be a civil war within Labor too.
Slippery Stama, I think, made it quite clear within his speech today that he doesn't want
a coronation, that he expects Burnham to be challenged and for there to be a process.
But do you believe there's going to be an anti-democratic?
stitch up where you have senior labor figures like Harriet Harmon saying,
oh, we can't go to our membership.
It's interested, isn't it, Ben, how the democratic left-wing parties all of a sudden
when the pressure is on don't really believe in democracy?
No, well, they don't.
I mean, you started it by saying, identifying Dan, his war against free speech.
That is fundamentally anti-democratic.
And we've already seen democracy abused in the anointing of,
of Andy Burnham. A sitting MP, resigning, costing this country millions of pounds, simply so that they
could get Burnham into Parliament, knowing that if Burnham were in Parliament, he would be anointed
Prime Minister. The whole thing is a stitch-up. It's a stitch-up by the Labour Party from start to finish,
and the ranks have closed in on Stama. I heard Peter Barnes speaking yesterday on talk, and he said
something with which I absolutely agree. Political parties.
have been poisonous for this country.
And you see the way the Labour Party is now using its position of power,
effectively to change the Prime Minister without any democratic mandate to do it.
And the British people are not stupid. They see it.
And like when Boris, whether or not you agreed that Boris Johnson was a good or bad Prime Minister is kind of academic.
He was elected by the British people. I know we don't have a presidential system,
but he was elected by the British people, removed by the Tory party.
Stama was elected by the British people, very, very very very very very.
very few in number voted in him, but nevertheless they voted him in.
And now he is going to be replaced by the Labour Party.
Burnham doesn't have a mandate.
And it will be very, very challenging for Burnham when the proverbial hits the fan,
and he hasn't got a mandate from the British people.
And the proverbial is going to hit the fan.
Again, as Henry pointed out,
the policies that are going to be used by this government will largely continue as they are
or be worse than those perpetrated by Starma.
So the Labour Party is now going to be in turmoil.
It will be in turmoil between now and the next general election.
The next general election is up there to grab for the right-hand side of British politics.
There is no reason why the next government should not be a full-throthel pro-British government.
That's what the British people want, and it's up to the right-hand side of British politics to get its act together and make sure that happens with a plan, with the people,
and the ability to implement.
Ben Habib, chairman of the great British pack.
Very well.
Point.
Thank you for joining our watch party.
Because you know Lee Harris and Chavon White,
we have to celebrate a little bit, right?
Yes, things are going to be bad
in the coming weeks and months,
but at least Stama is gone.
That is the start of this fight.
But I just want to take you through a little bit more
of what Nigel Farage has said.
This is in a substack just released,
headlined, Britain is broken. We need an election. I am calling for a general election at the
soonest possible date. And he goes on to say, that is why we must have a general election at the
earliest possible opportunity. I'm not frightened of Andy Burnham or any of the other Labour Party
Stooges. The same applies to Kemmy Baden-Rots Conservative Party who oppose a general election and seem to
think that it is perfectly acceptable to chop and change prime ministers at will. This is how the
Unip Party operates. The truth is, they are frightened of us. That's why they banned together at every
by-election to attempt to block us from victory, why they tried to cancel the local elections,
and while they'll try their very hardest to hold off on a general election for as long as possible.
Andy Burnham has good reason to be afraid of us. Reform is the only party that listens to the desires
of the working people and offers them solutions rather than flattery and patronisation.
We know that Britain is broken, growth has collapsed, taxes are at a post-war high,
and we pay more for our energy than anyone in the developed world.
We hand over £100 billion a year just to service the debt racked up by the Conservatives and Labour.
Our borders are wide open, our streets are lawless,
and last year a quarter of a million of our most ambitious people gave up and left.
Rachel Reeves' increase in employers' national insurance contributions has made it more expensive
for businesses to hire people, and the strivers who work hard and play by the rules are part.
while those who take more than they put in are rewarded.
This is the Britain that two failed parties have handed us.
So, Lee Harris, big bold call from Nigel Farage.
He wants a general election.
Do you really believe that he wants that at the moment?
Or is this what he has to say to take the fight to Andy Burnham?
To show that he's not scared of a general election, nor should he be.
I think he's probably betting on the fact that, as Henry probably rightly pointed out,
that they're going to try and resist having a general election.
Although there is a theory.
There's a theory that I've heard through my channels that he could call an early election
in an attempt to catch reform on the hop.
I mean, you saw how that worked out for Rishi Sunak.
And this is where I kind of differ from what Henry was saying very, very slightly.
Only very slightly.
I agreed with pretty much everything he said.
But why I wanted Kirstama to go when reform were saying, you know, vote reform, get Kirstama out, was actually something that he clarified in the end of his own point, which was that this brings instability.
And I know you agree with me on the stand.
So the more instability, the more disasters that we see within the Labor Party, this being a one that will stick in the public's mind, I kind of want them to do a coronation.
I want and know that Andy Burnham is going to be an absolute disaster.
So going back to what Tommy was saying, I think that we're going to go through a honeymoon period.
And then after this honeymoon period, it's going to just be back to normal play.
And the reason it's going to be back to normal play is nothing is going to materially change under the Labour Party.
They're not going to stop net zero.
They're not going to sort out our completely broken immigration and asylum system.
They're not going to ban DEI.
They're not going to do all of the fundamental things that we need to do in this country.
And this is where, again, I agreed with 99.
9.9% of what Ben Habib just said. The only where I slightly differ on him is I don't think,
I kind of agree with it maybe on the technical plans, but I don't think the right has ever been
more completely focused and knows exactly what to do to fix this country. Now, I'm not saying
that we know the final details of that, but I think there is now an agreed consensus, you know,
thanks to reform and thanks to restore and there are other parties like this involved. Everybody
is singing from exactly the same hymsheet on the right. We,
know what to do. I mean, for God's sake, it would be a disaster for the country, Dan,
but if he put me in power, I would know the steps. We all know the steps that we have to take
to fix this country. So that's where I disagree with Ben. I think if there was, I agree with him
that there is, you know, look, it's very difficult for reform to put a plan together without
being physically in government, but they certainly can put plans together to a point. I think
they have actually started to do that. But I do agree with Ben. They need more solid plans. We need
We need to start seeing more of that over the next case.
If Nigel Farage is serious, if he's going to back up what he's just said about wanting a general election,
let's see some more policy papers coming out, which they've already started doing.
But I still believe that right now you have never seen a more focused right wing in this country.
Yes, we're divided.
I completely accept that.
But everybody, even though there is division, it's more of a personality division than it is a policy division.
everyone agrees on the fundamental steps that we need to take to fix this country.
And that's something that actually feels me full of hope.
Yeah, I mean, Chavon, it's an interesting one, isn't it?
Do you have any hope that the right could potentially unite for a general election?
Because as far as I see it at the moment, you have splits between reform, restore and the Conservative Party.
That's the thing, though, Dan, is it?
I mean, everybody says about being...
together as one, a unit, there's all these divisions, you know, everywhere else.
But if people actually work together and got this sorted, get some of it.
Do I believe Burnham's the right man?
No, I don't.
Again, I think he's like another little hit there.
But do I believe that we could resolve it eventually?
Hopefully we could.
But these politicians come in, though, Dan,
and they all say they're going to do this.
they all say they're going to do that, but do they actually back it up?
Well, no, they don't, Lee.
We know they don't, do they?
No.
And I think, again, this is going to be a problem that's going to appear very quickly for Andy Burnham.
Because there is only so many levers that he can pull that haven't already been pulled or which are unable to be pulled.
I mean, just thinking about some of the things he's already said.
So he's already kind of hinted that he's going to do.
something on welfare. I mean, I don't quite know what that looks in reality, like looks like in
reality, because if you see how Kis Stama attempted to do that, I mean, the entire backbench
rebelled against him. So, and again, they're not going to fix the fundamental problems that we are
seeing in this country. So it doesn't matter. You know, Tommy and everyone else who's spoken on this
has been absolutely right. Andy Burnham is just a different face of the same exact problems.
Labor have lost the battle of ideas. I think, I think that's the general.
consensus that this country cannot survive under an ideology that is being driven by the current
Labour Party. It's just not going to work. And that's why I think we have seen seven prime
ministers, because this isn't just on the Labour Party, don't forget. This is also equally,
and actually in some respects, more on the Conservative Party that were in power for 14 years
and allowed this absolute mess to flourish. And in fact, in some cases, contributed to it willfully.
So we've got two parties that have, you know, ruled this country for 100 years and, you know, they're entitled.
I think they're now starting to realize that they, their time is coming to an end.
But up until, I think, maybe the last sort of 12 months, I think they still believe, I think
Kenny Badock still believes in some bizarre way that the Tories are going to be anything significant at the next election.
They're not going to be.
And we should all hope that they won't be.
And, you know, this is why, Dan, I genuinely believe.
that the next election is probably going to be one of the most important elections for all of us.
This country cannot survive another five years under this Labour government.
It couldn't survive another five years under a Tory government.
I think we're careering towards civil unrest.
We are.
If we don't do something serious.
We absolutely are.
So a reminder of where we are at, he's gone.
Slippery Stama has called the king,
this morning after a weekend with his rock, Lady Victoria,
who remember moved out of Downing Street a number of weeks ago.
But at the end of his address to the nation, he was a blubbering wreck watch.
When I leave the biggest job in the country,
I shall spend more time on the most important job.
Being the best husband I can to my fantastic wife, Vic,
who has been a rock by my side,
through good times and bad, and being the best dad I can,
to my beautiful children who are my pride and my joy.
Thank you very much.
Chauvin White, you lost your daughter, in part because of leaders like Slippery Stama,
who has refused to meet with you, your daughter brutally murdered by an illegal.
Now, I just wonder how you feel about Stama's tears today for his own family, for his own children.
I don't think anything. I think he's fake. He's a traitor. But he can sit there and put on these fake tears, Dan, but his wife and his children.
What about myself? His daughter's never coming home. What about the Southport children? And all these other victims who are not coming home,
and yet this arrogant whatever is now blubbering.
Are we meant to actually care?
I don't care, but the thing is, like Tommy,
I laughed at Tommy earlier because he said about the rent boys, etc.
But take responsibility.
You're up on the rape inquiries.
You're up with the rent boys.
You're this and that.
Then he goes on about his wife,
who has also left him, his premises or whatever,
and yet he's coming on with all the fake tears.
You know, the best thing he can do, the best thing he's done is go.
And the best thing he can do is to take his arrogant backside with him.
And hopefully, we don't, do I want Burnham?
No.
But who else?
Who's the best one, Dan?
Because who else is going to come in and actually stick to their words?
We just don't know.
And again, will England be about in five years?
Probably not.
We're going to be just right overrun.
Yeah, that's the terrifying thing.
why Lee I think is right that the stakes are so high.
Lots of reaction coming through.
Paula London, our friend, has just said, tearing up.
We love that Keir did that as he has made millions of us want to cry in frustration.
He won't be missed.
We also have reaction coming from some of the party leaders as well.
Kemi Badernock, the Conservative Party leader, has posted Hiking National.
insurance, the family farm tax, giving up on real welfare reform, not funding our defence,
not drilling our own oil and gas, appointing Peter Wood-Mandelson, then lying about what had
happened. Britain is not ungovernable. Kare Stama is a terrible prime minister, but the problem
isn't just Stama. Labor MPs only want higher taxes to hand out more benefits, as the welfare
secretary has pointed out, these are Labor's choices and their values, regardless of who is
running the party. We need to get Britain working again. We need the Conservatives. And Nigel Farrah,
The Reform UK leader has demanded an election, said we are ready to deliver radical change.
If Labour thinks it can shove another professional politician into turn number 10, it has another thing coming.
I'm told that Rupert Lowe is currently on the road driving, but he did before that post about his resignation.
this is the leader of course of Restore Britain.
Stama resigns.
He has been a truly disgraceful Prime Minister.
I do not believe him to be a good man or a patriot.
He has deliberately and rapidly accelerated the destruction of Britain of our home.
History will not remember him kindly, nor should it.
I sat in Parliament looking him in the eye,
listening to him attempting to justify his decision to block a national inquiry
into the mass rape of young British girls.
I will never forgive him for that and so much else.
What comes next?
No, whatever that is, Restore Britain will be ready to offer the British people a democratic
route out a better way, the only way. But Stama is gone and that is a good thing. Enjoy it.
Well, joining our outspoken watch party now, one of Restore Britain's big new recruits,
former Conservative and Reclaim MP, Andrew Bridgen. Andrew, your reaction to Stama finally leaving.
Well, it was inevitable that he'd have to go after the Maker Field by-election, which was actually a bi-election, probably the most high-profile by-election of our lifetime.
And the majority of the parties there, their aim was to get rid of Starmor.
Well, the fact is that Andy Burnham enjoyed an increased majority for himself and the Labour Party on the basis that he was the only one who could deliver it.
And he's delivered it in record time for all the bull and blood.
of Stama, he was going to fight on and fight on when he saw the political inevitability.
There was no way he was going to go into a leadership competition with Andy Burnham,
because Starrma would have been humiliated.
He is the most hated, despised Prime Minister I can ever remember, and not without cause.
But we have to remember this is the seventh Prime Minister we've gone through in the UK in the last decade.
I suppose on average
he's got a longer
a longer lifespan in number 10
than the average of them
there's a reason for this
is because our prime ministers
have repeatedly
consistently betrayed the people
and that's the punishment
and I'm afraid Andy Burnham
will have a bounce in the polls
because he's not Keir-Starmour
which is an advantage
but it won't last long
because the fundamentals haven't changed
it's still the same old Labour
party. Andrew Bridget, do you believe that Andy Burnham is going to challenge any of the deep
state, or is he just another one who knows that there is a narrative that has to be followed and
the way to stay in power is to not really shake things up too much? We've already seen him
moving back from so many of his positions that may have challenged.
for example, some of the Stama manifesto pledges?
Well, Andy Burnham is a darling of the World Economic Forum.
And if he weren't an approved candidate, he wouldn't be in the position he is now
where he's going to be coronated prime minister.
And he hasn't, I mean, Parliament doesn't sit until 2.30.
I don't think any public appreciation or pleasure from Andy Burnham
I'm not sure it's going to last any longer than the Fizz
in the champagne at number 10 this afternoon.
Do you believe he is going to do a worse job than Stama
and be more dangerous?
Tommy Robinson was on earlier saying
he views him as more dangerous, Andrew,
because of the fact that he's got a more palatable face.
Well, he has more charisma, which, again, that's a low bar.
He's probably a better politician.
So, yes, he has the ability to persuade the public
to go along to a greater extent with his policies.
He'll throw a few sweeteners.
I've already heard that he's very likely to end,
David Lamy's plans to curtail the majority of jury trials, that's going to be a good thing.
And he's going to throw a few sweeteners out there.
But the underlying direction of travel of the government to the UN Agenda 2030 in the New World Order,
that's not going to change, Dan.
It can't change.
Or quite honestly, Andy Vernon wouldn't be in the position he's in now.
So fundamentally, this is another World Economic Forum,
approved Prime Minister, the last thing our country needs.
Well, we know what happened when the Conservative membership voted for someone who wasn't an approved.
And that was Liz Truss for all her faults.
She came up with a very credible right of centre tax-cutting budget.
And she was destroyed in record time.
That's the power.
I'm sure Andy Burnham's got plenty of skeletons in his cupboard
which the World Economic Forum and their masters will hold over him.
We need to get back to servant leaders
and people actually representing the public
and the only politician I know in the House of Commons now
with those characteristics is Rupert Lowe.
A man of great integrity is doing it for all the right reasons,
as a man who gives his parliamentary salary away to charity every month.
Yes, indeed.
Do you know Andy Burnham at all person?
Oh, yeah, he was in the House when I first arrived in 2010.
He's an affable guy, but that's quite dangerous.
He's a very adept politician.
He was, that's what he is.
And he has his campaign.
I mean, you should have seen that the campaign literature
he's putting out in Makerfield.
I mean, there was no mention of the Labour Party
and certainly no mention of Keir Stama.
His posters, I mean, I had
Labour supporters or people
on the doorstep saying, no, I wouldn't
vote Labor, they're rubbish.
I'm voting for R. Andy.
I mean, it was great.
A magician would have been happy of
the slight of hand that he did there.
But, I mean, at the end of the day, he was the only one
who could deliver whatever one wanted,
which was to get rid of Stama, and he's done it
in three days.
And I mean, we do celebrate that.
But it's quite chilling, isn't it, Lee?
Listening to Andrew basically say,
well, we're getting another
World Economic Forum
approved leader who isn't going to put
the British public first.
Yeah, I mean, like I said,
Andrew's right. There's going to be no
material change, whoever
leads to the Labour Party, because their fundamental
ideology is broken. And this is
why the country is in such a mess.
It's an ideology that the conservative share.
and that is why we've just been rejecting.
And Andrew quite rightly says they've lied,
lied and betrayed the public too many times.
So nothing is going to get any better.
In fact, I think it's going to get worse,
which I know sounds bad when I'm going to say it,
but it's actually a good thing.
More instability, the better.
It's going to be painful either way.
I would rather it be,
I'm one of those rip the plaster off as quickly
and as painful as possible.
So I'd rather have more pain for less,
time than less pain for more time. And that's what worries me that the slight worry I had with
reform not winning Makerfield was exactly this, that it would give Andy Burnham this honeymoon period.
It would give MSN an excuse to give, you know, sing their praises for some time. And it could
extend this awful government's time in office for longer than it needs to be. But the comforting
thing is, is that fundamentally, yes, it's going to be a bit longer potentially that we'll have to
put up with them. And again, they're only going to call an election if their hand is forced,
potentially for economic reasons. Something as Ben spoke about a long time ago that I've
agreed with him in. And Nigel Farage as well has said this, that there could be economic
circumstances that bring us towards an early general election. But either way, I think we're in
for a rubbish time. I think the only thing I would say about Andy Burnham, I think his only skill
is to be able to act and pretends to be something that he isn't. He's a political chameleon.
a political weather vein. He doesn't really have any of his, I think he's been a Blairite,
he's been a Corbyn Easter, he's been absolutely everything. And being an amenable man that I've
heard that he is, does make him more dangerous. Andrew's right about that. But there is no,
the reason I know he's going to be so doomed to failure so quickly is because of that. I think
he's like Kirstama in that respect, that he hasn't got a political focy. He's a, he's a,
vacuous politician he will say whatever he thinks the public want to hear at the time
without any substance at all and we've seen him do this as one um example of Andy
Burnham that never leaves me was was back in the COVID back when COVID was happening
there was some money that was a budget that was being agreed for Andy Burnham and I
don't know if you remember this happening but he stood on the steps of the town hall and
pretended he acted that he just received a text message
text message from the government confirming how much money they were going to have in the budget.
It was all a charade.
The whole thing was a complete fake.
Robert Jenrick had phoned him at 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
He already knew the answer.
So this whole receiving a text in front of the cameras was just called complete pantomime set up by Andy Burnham.
The man is a slipperier in some respects in Stama.
Because with Stammer, even though he lied constantly through his.
premiership. We kind of, A, we kind of expected it. And B, he's not a very good liar, right? All his
madness lies, everything that he came out, just fell apart instantly. Whereas Andy Burnham, I think,
is a very competent liar. And I think that makes him more dangerous. I don't think it changes his
hand, apart from the fact that it gives him the impression that he might be in a semblance of control,
unlike Kirstama. But he is dangerous for that reason. Very dangerous. Kelly J. Keene is joining us on the
superstar panel too. Kelly, I want to get you.
your reaction to this speech from Stumber. But first, can I just ask, what did you make of the fact
that we had owed to joy blaring in the background? Dan Hodges, the Daily Mail's Labor columnist,
has just posted small thing, but I'm sick of people like Steve Bray and other protesters being
allowed to disrupt any national event they feel like. And I do just wonder, Kelly, if it was another
example of, okay, it's a song that we love, right? Because it's a national song. But is it another
example of Britain being in decline, the fact that our Prime Minister can't even speak outside
Downing Street to resign without protesters blaring him out.
It's such a shame, isn't it? And everyone's very sad that he got interrupted. He's just, you know,
and at the last government as well. It was Boris, didn't they? Well, I just think over the last,
I don't know, maybe it's a decade. Maybe it's more, but it's a decade since I've really noticed.
the sort of standards in public life
has just slipped so beyond measure
that I don't know if anything really shocks me anymore
I'm always quite pleased when those that have just turned a blind eye
and pretend it's not happening
have it done to them though
that's a little bit of a moment of joy for us all
but yeah you're right
look we're in trouble aren't we're in trouble
we're in trouble if he stayed we're in trouble if he goes
we're in trouble unless there's a general election
and someone very much further to the right.
And I don't mean far right.
I just mean further than where we are right now,
actually takes control of this country.
That wouldn't be difficult, though, would it?
To be further right than where we are now?
No.
No, but we, I mean, we're in trouble.
And I think more and more people are noticing,
which is can only be a good thing as long as they act.
Well, I'm told that Andy Burnham's last act is going away,
as mayor of Manchester, which he did just before the by-election,
was to give a multi-million pound contract to a company where the CEO's his wife.
So I think we're going to get more of the same.
More of the same.
So he's really going to bring integrity back to politics, right?
Just like Stamerton.
Take away the drama, bring back the integrity.
Oh my God, look at this.
I'm not going to read it all, I promise.
But Sidic Khan has just spoken out.
And of course, I mean, who does calm think he is?
Look at this ludicrous letter.
He said, Kirst Stama has been a friend and colleague for over three decades ever since
South Time as young lawyers.
He is a man of great integrity who has devoted his career to public service.
He's made a huge contribution to the Labour Party and our country.
And I want to thank him.
I mean, Kelly J, these scumbags have destroyed our country.
And they can try and back each other up as much as they want.
I don't think it's going to work.
I do think the public is waking up.
Oh, 100%.
I mean, those men both speak, when they speak,
they have as much integrity as each other.
I mean, Burnham's going to come in
with a bit of a northern accent,
which might fool some people,
certainly some of the media class
who feel like they're being kind
because they're actually talking to someone with a flat cap.
But, yeah, Sadiq Khan, I don't know.
Well, actually, I do.
Nobody trusts that man.
Nobody. I don't expect even his own family trusts him.
So we know that the votes that he's been getting is because he's promising people who don't deserve anything quite a lot.
But there are going to be some nasty skeletons, I feel, in that man's closet.
I just, I feel he's very sinister.
Like on a feelings base, which is, you know, I'm a woman.
I'm allowed to do that.
On a feelings base, I feel he is a very sinister character.
And with, you know, with the same amount of kind of charisma,
as Kirstama.
So I'm not surprised he's come out in support.
It is like looking at a mirror, I'm sure, for him.
Yeah, I know.
What did you make of the tears at the end, Kelly J?
You know, oh, I care so much about my wife,
even though she moved out of Downing Street weeks ago.
I'm so upset.
His allies had been briefing all weekend.
Oh, I'm so upset.
You know, I gave up.
my children's teenage years to be leader of the country. Then we have Chavon White with us, of course,
who he refuses to meet, even though one of the illegal migrants who came to this country
literally took the life of Rianne and White, Chauvonne's daughter. How did you feel emotionally seeing him
like a bit of a blubbering wreck at the end of the speech? Kelly J., not because of what we have lost as a
country, but because what he believes he has lost as a father and a husband. And by the way,
I would hasten to add, he was a very bad husband and father before he became Prime Minister,
if you know what I mean. I think I know what you mean, Dan. Look, his tears don't mean anything.
I'm sure we'll all have a cup of them. You know, it's, who cares? Who cares that he cried.
I don't believe him. I think he's feeling sorry for himself. The fact that he wouldn't meet
Chavonne is just, that just says everything about that man.
And okay, so his privileged kids moved into a house now they're having to move out, you know, long after their dad had left.
I'm surprised he didn't have a little moment for Lord Ali, to be honest.
But, you know, you can't shed those tears and have any dignity when you've done the things that he's done.
when he took the winter fuel allowance from vulnerable people,
when he refused to even have a conversation with the mother of one of the most brutal,
a victim of one of the most brutal crimes that I think any of us have ever heard about,
really, and so unnecessary, so unnecessary and absolutely because of his policies.
So I just don't, I just don't care for the man.
I hope he disappears very, very quickly.
I hope actually that he has that those tears turn into a little bit of rage
and maybe he dropped some little truth bombs about some other people
and decides to go out in a blaze of glory.
That would be nice.
But I think we should be really worried about Burnham.
I think what Burnham promises people who don't know any better
is that the Labour Party is going to return to what they thought it once was.
And I think actually it probably never was what anybody thought it was.
It was always this little lefty racket.
Indeed, indeed.
A couple of little pieces of breaking news.
Dominic Tarzinski, who is the MEP who Stama banned from entering the country as a result of his decision to speak at the United Kingdom Rally.
He has reacted to Stama going simply by saying, see you in court, loser.
So the fact that he's left is not stopping this legal action.
the royal rotor confirming that the king spoke to Kyr Stama by telephone from Highgrove earlier this morning.
This is before the Prime Minister announced his resignation.
Of course, he had mentioned it in his speech.
And Michael Crick, the hard-left commentator, writing it will be a bit crowded at the Senate off in November with a record line of 10 p.ms.
Major Blair, Brown, Cameron, May, Johnson, Truss, Sunnack,
Stama, Burnham.
Andrew Bridgen, is the worry that we are now Italy.
The disunited kingdom, as I call it, is completely ungovernable,
no matter who is in charge, which means the globalists are really running the show.
Well, the globalists were always running the show.
The fact is that the shelf life of prime ministers is reduced
because the public of waking up and seeing through it,
and that's only going to increase.
I mean, I honestly think that the,
Burnham Bounds will be short-lived.
If he thought he could get a bounce to October,
and he'd only have to survive six weeks of parliamentary sitting
to get us to the end of the conference season in October,
he will call a general election if he thinks he can.
I'm not sure the bounce will last that long,
and I think in 12 months' time, Dan,
we're going to be back in exactly the same situation
because people can see through these self-serving politicians.
And I must say that when Stama came out with that statement
through a third party that he felt betrayed by people who thought were loyal to him,
I mean, my statement would be,
how do you think the victims of the Muslim rape gangs and their families felt?
Do you think they felt betrayed?
It's all about him.
And politicians are supposed to be the servants of the people, not their masters.
It's clear that the current crop, the vast majority of them,
do not subscribe to that ethos.
And we need to get back to it very, very quickly.
We've got a rotten parliament,
and Starmel was the worst prime minister we've ever had.
And I heard that from Labour MPs.
They thought that they were the worst government
we've ever had in our lives.
Amen to that.
What a perfect line to end on.
A rotten prime minister,
the worst we have ever had.
What a watch party we have had.
Andrew Bridgen.
Thank you so much.
Now, of course, restore Britain Kelly J King, the legendary commentator,
Lee Harris, YouTube sensation, and of course, Chauvin White, the activist now,
but really a mum, grieving the loss of her daughter, Riannon White,
who Slippery Stama refused to meet.
Thank you too to Tommy Robinson and Henry Bolton and Ben Habib
for being part of our breaking coverage today.
start to a Monday, right? As I say, things are going to get tough over the coming weeks and over the
coming months, but today we celebrate. Today we celebrate because slippery Stama is gone. Our evil
authoritarian dictator has gone and that has to be a good thing. Don't worry. Our outspoken live
coverage hasn't stopped today. We will be back with you at 5pm UK time as normal. That is
midday Eastern 9 a.m. Pacific to look at all of the ramifications of what is a
historic day in British politics with Bernie Spofforth, Lauren the insider and Lucy Connolly.
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As I say, huge day. We're back live with you at 5pm.
But remember, until then, I will always keep fighting for you.
Thank you.
