Dan Wootton Outspoken - MSM LOSE PLOT AFTER NIGEL FARAGE SAYS UNIPARTY IS OVER AFTER HISTORIC ELECTION REFORMQUAKE
Episode Date: May 2, 2025Go to https://ground.news/outspoken to see through media bias and stay fully informed. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month. Dan and his super-sized election results Supe...rstar Panel – Alex Phillips, Father Calvin Robinson, Connor Tomlinson and Howard Cox – analyse the historic results, which Nigel Farage has declared heralds the end of the Unipary. We’ll also be joined by Lincolnshire’s first ever Mayor Dame Andrea Jenkyns after she stormed off a deranged MSM interview with Sly News. PLUS: Katie Hopkins conducts a farm invasion to expose Nut Zero madness. We’ll show you the shocking confrontation that ensued. AND: Prince Harry is hammered by the Court of Appeals, losing the case of his life over security which he brought against his own father's government. We’ll analyse the scathing judgement. THEN IN THE UNCANCELLED AFTERSHOW: Megyn Kelly reveals that the revelation Meghan Markle had a mood board featuring Prince Harry BEFORE she met the royal came via her ex-husband Trevor Engelson. Dan analyses that new bombshell with the Duke’s biographer Angela Levin. Sign up to watch at www.outspoken.live. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Instacart, groceries that over-deliver. No spin, no bias, no censorship. I'm Dan Wooten. This is a special edition of Outspoken Live,
episode number 218. Rest in peace, the uni party. We won't miss you. Not even one bit.
Breaking right now, the reform quake was bigger on the Richter scale than even Nigel Farage predicted.
It marks the end of two-party politics as we've known it for over a century in this country.
It is finished. It is over. It is gone. That is a significant moment.
But it also will mark the beginning of the end of the Conservative Party.
They may well have been around since 1832 in the Great Reform Act,
but they've been wiped out in the shires of England.
Wiped out.
And the MSM and the political establishment are losing the plot.
Back in Westminster, when you were saying, I will be the next prime minister, a lot of people
thought that was ludicrous. You were being audacious and it wasn't believable. What do
you say to them now? They're not laughing now, are they? They see this is reform quake. That's
what's going on across the country today. These are the most astonishing set of local election
results in the history of our country. So you have come to the right place for the best analysis of these historic election results that
you certainly won't get from the corrupt and crooked legacy media, including, by the way,
we will look into what today's results mean for the future of the right and Rupert Lowe's bid to launch a challenger to
reform UK. So we're going to analyse it all with my supersized election results superstar panel,
Alex Phillips, Father Kelvin Robinson, Connor Tomlinson and Howard Cox. And there she is too.
Congratulations to Lincolnshire's first ever Mayor Dame Andrea Jenkins.
And I'm going to be asking her about this deranged interview with Sly News. Watch this.
Your questioning is quite divisive. You're looking into things when it was a little play with words.
It was a little joke because of the irony.
Do you not understand irony?
Go Andrea.
Two other big breaking news stories though,
which we do need to tackle today as well.
First, Katie Hopkins has conducted a farm invasion
to expose Not Zero Madness.
I'm going to show you that shocking confrontation.
And Prince Harry, hammered by the Court of Appeals, he has lost the case of his life,
he called it, over security, which he brought against his own father's government. Now,
this hour, Prince Harry is giving an interview. We will bring it to you in the next hour. So we're
covering it all today. It is a very busy one. We'll also have more on the big royal stories of
the week in our uncancelled after show with Prince Harry's biographer, Angela Levin. www.outspoken.live
is where you can register for that.
It's also, of course, Friday, which means we'll be unveiling the worst Britain in the world this week.
That's where we put your four union jackasses from Monday to Thursday, head to head.
Gosh, last I checked, there were already something like 30,000 votes.
You can get voting on the community tab on my YouTube channel right now.
But let me just remind you of the nominees. Monday, Ed Davey. Tuesday, an honorary nomination,
Meghan Markle. Wednesday, Ed Miliband. And Thursday, Anas Sawar. So they're going head to head
to be named the worst Britain in the world this week. But now, let's go.
Sometimes six votes really can change history. Sarah Pochin's victory in one of Labour's safest
seats, Runcorn and Halsby, making her Reform UK's first female MP, and taking Nigel Farage's party back
to a gang of five after they booted out Rupert Lowe and reported him to the police, was decided
by less than two handfuls of voters. Just think about that. It's amazing, isn't it?
And let's be honest, it has made all the difference in a reform quake even bigger on the Richter scale than Nigel Farage himself ever predicted.
And after toying with Labour, with this wakey-wakey post on X, with his massive grin after they had yesterday begged voters to wipe the smile off his face, in the past few hours,
Farage has declared the uni party in the United Kingdom now dead.
It marks the end of two-party politics
as we've known it for over a century in this country.
It is finished, it is over, it is gone.
That is a significant moment.
But it also will mark the beginning of the end of the Conservative Party. They may well have been
around since 1832 in the Great Reform Act, but they've been wiped out in the shires of England,
wiped out. Of course, Farage was immediately ambushed when he came
off stage by Beth Rigby of Sly News as the MSM increasingly loses the plot.
Back in Westminster, when you were saying I will be the next prime minister, a lot of people thought
that was ludicrous. You were being audacious and it wasn't believable. What do you say to them now?
They're not laughing now, are they?
They've seen this is reform quake.
That's what's going on across the country today.
These are the most astonishing set of local election results
in the history of our country.
But of course, Beth's answer was to try and push Farage to the centre.
In some of those red wall seats that Boris Johnson did well in,
and you're also obviously hitting the Conservatives really hard.
But to maintain that, do you need to change the style in which you lead?
And what I mean by that is you're a divisive politician.
Well, good, good.
But to keep a coalition together, do you have to
change anything? I'm sorry, I'm not
Mr Bland. You know, I
am who I am. Take me or leave
me. I'm a straight speaker.
I say what I believe. And if you like
it, that's fantastic.
And if you don't, I don't care. In a fast-pass
opposed system, though, people tend to win
on centre ground because they've got to build
a massive coalition of voters.
But just up there you were talking about
people don't work from home, you don't like
diversity on the councils. A lot of
people won't like that. What you're
missing is that is the
centre ground of public opinion.
There's a silent majority that
believes in the things that we believe in.
Westminster, and dare I
say it, much of the media is out of touch with where this country is moving. And I think that's what today's election
results prove. Nobody in... Of course it is. But that still didn't satisfy Sly News, who then had
to pull out that old trope that reform and Farage is divisive. But I tell you what, this is happening.
It's not a one-off, it's real.
So, sort of divisive politics, or...
Are you going to carry on doing that?
Do you know, you know, I'm a bit older than you.
I know, you're not that much older than me.
Michael Thirt versus Margaret Thatcher in the 83 election,
you could say was divisive politics.
They both had completely
different worldviews. And there wasn't much love lost between one and the other. But provided it's
civil, provided it's within reasonable rules, I think politics is about having a choice of
different visions that some love and some... Isn't it interesting, you never see Beth Rigby
ask Labour or the Greens or the Lib Dems about
their very obviously divisive politics. And it is hardly divisive given in the projected
national vote share, which has just been revealed, Reform UK has surged to 30%. That is based on
real world votes ahead of Labour on 20%, the Lib Dems on 17% and the increasingly pathetic
Tories under Kemi Badenoch on just 15%. But this new era of politics also heralds a new era of
dirty tricks as the deep state becomes even more desperate to preserve the globalist status quo.
That was a point the wonderful Dame Andrea Jenkins made
after becoming the first ever Mayor of Lincolnshire in a stunning landslide.
Now I've fought many elections, four general elections, my third local election,
but I'm going to be brief with this don't worry. I've never experienced such negativity and soul-destroying campaigns against me like this one.
It was soul-destroying.
The dirty tricks in the US politics,
I believe it's now been imported here into Britain.
And what I love about Andrea is that even now she's in power,
she isn't afraid to call a spade a spade.
The Conservatives called the police on me and implied I slept with political friends.
They contacted the mainstream media to smear me.
The independence husband pushed for a hearing at the council.
My barrister had to represent me.
The case was dismissed.
The campaign was also filled with irony.
As one of the candidates stated, I was parachuted in.
She said in her South African accent.
Now, they undemocratically tried to remove me from the ballot.
But I will say no more on this and I wish them all well.
Oh, what a brilliant line.
You see Andrea's just looking around.
Well, guess what?
Her rival candidates
and these absolute cretins, by the way,
had spent weeks engaging in lawfare
to try and stop her march to the mayoralty,
they stormed off stage.
And to the people of Lincolnshire, I will fight for you.
I will not shy away from asking tough questions
and challenging the two-tiered system
that has broken Britain.
With me as your first, I will always put you first.
But I'm actually quite glad that those poor little uni party petals
were not on stage for the moment where Andrea saved her biggest zinger,
the zinger that the MSM have gone into meltdown over right to the end of her speech.
We're going to have a Britain where we put British people first, where we put you and your families first.
We'll make sure that you are in front of the queue and you are at the heart of our policy decisions. Today, we as
Reform, as we're making gains up and down the country, you will see an end to soft-touch
Britain. The fight back to save the heart and soul of our great country has now begun.
Now that Reform is in a place of power, we can help start rebuilding Britain.
Inch by inch, reform will reset Britain to its glorious past. We will tackle illegal
migration. We've been working on policies. I say no to putting people in hotels.
Tents are good enough for France.
They should be good enough for here in Britain.
Amen. Yes, they should be.
And while these results were incredible,
Reform UK does really need to deliver now.
It was actually yesterday with Farage and Sarah Poche, the new MP, and Runcorn and Halsby,
when I was really struck by a comment
that a member of the public made to Nigel Farage.
Watch this.
Nigel, pleased to meet you.
I've already cast my vote.
Oh, brilliant.
I'm Sarah, I'm the candidate.
I think you make a brilliant MP.
Thank you.
So that's so nice of you.
The finest Runcorn's ever had.
Oh, bless you.
Well, thank you for that.
That's such a nice thing to say.
You've actually got somebody
with real life experience.
Yeah.
Not just an old age kid.
I will work so hard for you all.
I really will.
Really, yes.
You're our only hope.
Oh, we are.
For the country.
And you just sold your friend
from all the other parties.
I just heard the passion
in that man's voice.
You're our only hope. And I know it is how so many of you feel. And I'm going to admit that's why I have found the crowing today about those of us who criticize Reform UK for engaging in the same sort of lawfare they complain about against their own MP, Rupert Lowe, very off base. So Matt Goodwin posted on X, my thoughts to all those people on this platform who only a few weeks
ago declared it was all over for Nigel Farage and reform, spend less time on X and spend more time
out there in the country. There is only one alternative. Now, I don't remember anyone saying
it was all over for Reform UK or that any of us want it to be all over, but called me old-fashioned
morality matters in politics. No independent
journalist, even one on the right, should defend the indefensible. And as news spectator columnist
Madeline Grant responded to Goodwin, some of us said the grubby campaign against Rupert Lowe,
including briefing to journalists that he had dementia, was a disaster in terms of reform's
ability to attract decent candidates and one day govern competently. Not quite the same
thing as all over. And look, there has been damage after the civil war. Christian Calgi of the Daily
Express reported this briefing from the Tories today. Farage is obviously jubilant, but once
the glow of victory dims, Nigel will be hoping Sarah Pochin and Andrea Jenkins toe the line.
The last time a member of Reform threatened his authority,
Farage kicked Rupert Lowe out of the party and claimed he had dementia. How long might it be
before we see the independent mayor of Lincolnshire taking her former party to court? So that's why
I say God bless James McMurdoch, the Reform UK MP who stood up for Rupert Lowe today when she was
provoked, when he was provoked, sorry, by
Alex Phillips, our own Alex Phillips, who will be here very shortly, by the way. Watch.
Are you thinking today it's not so much Rupert Lowe as Hoopert Lowe?
No, I don't think like that. I think Rupert's a brilliant MP. I think he's a good guy.
It's a bit of a bit of troubled waters at the minute between everyone, but I'll do what I can to to calm that.
And look, it's a good thing. We want competition in Parliament.
We want people to show that they've got spirit. And that's all that's happening here.
We've reform have shown that we're not to be trifled with.
Yes. And that was the right answer, James McMurdoch, because we want to encourage people like Rupert
Lowe into the party, back into the party. Is there a way back? Well, Alex Phillips also
asked that of Gwaine Towler, who, of course, was also forced out of Reform UK by Zia Yusuf.
That big fallout was, frankly, very unedifying. I spoke to James McMurdoch earlier, and he
still seemed to want there
to be a reconciliation. I'd imagine
Rupert waking up this morning looking at those
reform results and perhaps there's
something in his bones that say
I wish I hadn't done what I
had done and wouldn't it be good if
I could be back in the fold given how
successful they're looking.
Do you think there's any chance?
No. I'd like there's any chance? No.
I'd like there to be, but no, I don't.
Rupert has many talents, many abilities,
but he just isn't a team player.
He just isn't.
Well, that is a real shame.
So has the battle of the right been sewn up by reform today? Is it just over now for Rupert Lowe and Ben Habib and their dreams of
creating a new force on the right? So let me present both sides of the argument. First,
Patrick O'Flynn, who's pro-Farage. He says, no mainstream commentator on broadcast news seems
to understand that a huge proportion of the electorate thinks 25 years of mass uncontrolled
immigration has ruined Britain and are furious about it. That's
why a new brand called Reform, led by a 25-year campaigner against mass immigration, is cleaning
up. And even Ben Habib, even Ben Habib on the other side, was taking a different tone today.
He posted on X, the people voted to get back the country in 2016. They didn't get it.
They voted for it again in May 2029.
They didn't get it.
Then again in December 2019, they didn't get it.
They voted for it again last night.
Let's make sure this time it happens.
And look, Farage, he believes this is only the beginning. As The Times reporter Patrick
Maguire revealed, the mood in the Farage camp this morning, well expressed by this senior aide,
if the Labour Party think tonight was bad, wait until they see what we have for them in Wales next year. And now let me bring in
today's election results special super-sized superstar panel.
Okay, let me introduce them all. Conor Tomlinson, host of Tomlinson Talks on YouTube and Substack. The aforementioned Alex Phillips, who was, of course, a longtime advisor to Nigel Farage at UKIP and a former Brexit Party MEP.
Howard Cox, who was the Reform UK London mayoral candidate but recently defected.
Father Kelvin Robinson, who now supports the UKIP party.
There she is.
The first ever mayor of Lincolnshire, Dame Andrea Jenkins.
So, Andrea, that was an incredible moment when your rivals,
who had spent weeks and weeks trying to destroy you
with actual lies stormed off stage during your speech.
I found it quite amusing, Dan, actually, a piece of my humour.
And do you know, afterwards in the press huddle,
one of the journalists said,
how do you feel about them walking off stage?
I said, well, I don't particularly care.
So, no, I think it's shown them up, if anything, hasn't it?
And Andrea, this wasn't even close. This wasn't even close. This was a remarkable landslide win.
And don't you think, Andrea, this was the reason why the Conservative Party were engaging in this lawfare.
They knew they couldn't defeat you at the ballot box,
so they had to try and beat you by using the deep state.
It failed, but I was really struck last night when you said that you feel
the American style of lawfare, which absolutely was really utilised
by the Democratic Party for years against Donald Trump.
You think we've got that in the United Kingdom now against Reform UK?
I do, and it's coming from the Conservatives.
I mean, a journalist even said to me that the Conservatives
and the independent candidate are working together to try and defeat me.
So it seems like, you know, their enemies become their friends
if their other enemy is a bigger enemy, isn't it really?
You said that you found it ironic that the candidate who was claiming that you were not from Lincolnshire,
despite being bred there, despite spending most of your life there despite living there had a south african
accent and the mainstream media went into meltdown i know i know i mean let's look at the background
it was her husband who got this hearing against me at the council to try and get me thrown off
the ballot so um her husband who's also a lex agent. So, you know, there's history there.
And I just I mean, it's the irony of it, isn't it, Dan? For someone to say you parachuted into
Lincolnshire, where I grew up, went to school, college, university.
And as I said, with a strong South African accent, I just found it quite ironic, really.
And are you going to have a new way of dealing with the mainstream media? African accent. I just found it quite ironic, really.
And are you going to have a new way of dealing with the mainstream media?
I'm seen as a racist.
Are you going to have a new way of dealing with the mainstream media, Andrea?
I mean, we're going to play it later in the show,
but you were just done with sly news.
You were just done.
You just walked off.
Is that going to be your new approach?
I mean, look, I don't mind challenging people, but I thought she was rather pathetic.
You know, she had her own agenda. She wasn't happy that reform got elected and myself got elected.
So she was just gunning for me. And I just thought it was a pathetic interview, to be honest.
I didn't really rate her, did you? Oh, no, I don't rate Sly News at all.
I mean, there was Beth Rigby trying to suggest that Nigel Farage remains a divisive figure
when Reform UK has just received 30% of the vote, 10% more than the Labour Party,
which won in a landslide at the last election.
So I think they're always going to go
down that path aren't they but obviously andrea you've got delivery on your mind now and you have
this plan to introduce doge a department of government efficiency to lincolnshire how much
pushback are you expecting um well to be honest um we've now got oh oh gosh shut my video here we go
it's stopped to be honest we have now got a reform controlled Lincolnshire County Council
so that's amazing so I now can push ahead with my manifesto Dan which is brilliant because I mean all
the councillors are fully behind what we're
doing um about having a link to doge getting a better deal for the taxpayer so keep council tax
low we're going to root out waste and i personally if we've got control the council like to see is
get rid of diversity officers as well dan the fight back for common sense will start now in
lincolnshire that's what i think i I love it. I absolutely love it.
It's going to be very exciting.
And Andrea, just a final word.
Operation Scatter.
Are you planning to stop illegal migrants being able to come to Lincolnshire in the same way that they are now?
Look, let's just say conversations being had.
In my manifesto, I had a Lincolnshire people first policy.
And when we look at some of our towns like Boston,
which has social housing, 25% goes to people not born in this country.
When I was an MP, people was waiting,
single parents was waiting eight or nine years for a house.
To me, it's about fairness, Dan.
And that fairness starts now in Lincolnshire.
So you're going to see a massive pushback in areas like this
and in Lincolnshire.
And I'm going to be a thorn in the government's side.
Oh, yes, you are.
That much I know.
Dame Andrea Jenkins, congratulations again.kins congratulations again thank you so much i know you're on your way to a reform celebration party right now so let me turn
to the superstar panel because alex phillips it hasn't just ended with dame andrea luke campbell Dame Andrea, Luke Campbell is also now the mayor of Hull.
So you are completely blown away, Alex.
This is beyond your wildest imagination.
This is utterly incredible.
Now, I haven't kept up with the latest results.
I've just come off a BBC panel.
In fact, I'm sitting at the BBC right now, right?
I'm using taxpayers' money.
Oh, you poor thing.
No, they set me up on their internet
and gave me a room to do your show.
So there you are.
Auntie's done you a favour, Dad.
Okay, fine.
I won't slag them off for one minute.
On that panel, looking at the results as they came in,
last time I checked,
Reform had control of seven councils.
No other party had control of the council
and seven were under no overall control.
And people saying, is this the end of two party politics?
And I said, is this the beginning of a one party state?
This isn't just the general public saying we don't like Labour.
We don't like the Conservatives.
This is swathes of the population falling in love with a political party that they think that now they can call home.
And my gosh, Andrea, I had tears in my eyes.
She looked beautiful on that stage.
The sea queen dress.
She fizzes with energy and humour.
You know, she's got gumption.
She's got gall.
She's got a personality.
She's a real human.
She's so relatable.
And this is what reform's all about.
And I've been zipping around doing various panels and shows today.
And I've been looking in the deadened eyes of the zombie government and the zombie so-called opposition party who all look like, you know, carbon copies of the same non-person who wouldn't know how to relate to a human being as if we're from a different planet.
And I sat there on these panels and for the first time in 20 years, right, 20 years I've been doing this UKIP Brexit party reform.
For the first time, I was like, we're the cool kids. We are rock and roll.
We're not the ostracised ones. We're not the ones being poked fun at called, you know, racist and lunatics and brought on every now and then as a token gesture.
We are it. And I sat there facing down the Lib Dems, the Labour Party and the
Conservatives. And I thought this has been a long time in the making. And this feels good.
So Howard Cox, is there now any alternative to reform UK on the right? Or does this result
sew it up? And unfortunately, for yourself, for Ben Habib, for Rupert Lowe,
you just have to accept that maybe moral purity on these issues
is not going to cut it because there's been a reform quake
in the United Kingdom.
Absolutely, and I was really encouraged by what happened today.
I'm delighted to see Andrea winning today.
She's been a good friend.
She's very supportive of my main core work with Fairfield UK. She's always been very supportive, and I'm delighted to see Andrea winning today. She's been a good friend. She's very supportive of my main core work with Fairfield UK.
She's always been very supportive and I was delighted.
As far as, you know, what else is happening,
the thing that matters to me today is,
and I'm really pleased as a devout Thatcherite,
to see the Tory party actually in the swamp of doom and gloom.
I'm absolutely over the moon to see that.
I really am. As far as another party
is concerned, there isn't another party. Yes, I've joined the integrity thing. It's only a working
title of various things. Really, it's the GB PAC, which is basically putting together conservative
policies together and presenting it to the right, all parties. And obviously, we're presenting that
to Nigel and his gang. I look forward to working
with them. But my main aim at the moment, Dan, is still to work on behalf of 37 million motorists,
because Labour are coming for them big time.
Okay, Conor Tomlinson, you describe yourself as a critical friend of Reform UK. Is there anything to criticise today? Or has this move to the centre,
has this whole presentation of we're no longer a party of the right, we're not a party of the left
either, we're just a party of the workers, has it worked? Well, I'm actually not going to criticise
them, Dan, as the, the i suppose brand ambassador for what matt
goodwin would call the very online right and i like matt don't get me wrong um but i do find
that ironic because he does spend a lot of time on twitter to the extent of where he's asked me
how to craft his tweets before so come off it matt really um i do think that reform would not have
been uh less centrist and actually raced to the right on deportations about a week before the local elections if it
weren't for nudging or encouragement by people who wanted to see them succeed but wanted to live up
to their potential um folks like myself who you know was on stage at the reform conference in my
capacity as a supporter though not party affiliated saying yeah mass deportations they should support
that and then i did notice um that that zia yusf went on GBU's day or so afterwards and cited the 1.2 million illegal
immigrants statistic, which me among others have been pushing for quite some time. So it's nice to
know that we've reached that stage in the conversation. I'm just looking at the results
now. I mean, Reform have got seven councils, Lib Dems have got two. So this is a demolition of the
bi-party state, you know, the two zombies of the Conservatives and the Labour that are propping each other up, as Peter Hitchens once analogised
shortly before saying, and still vote Conservative, by the way. And there are a few other things to
celebrate as well. I mean, as you said, Luke Campbell winning, it's kind of humorous that
obviously the Labour politician gets chucked out in a by-election for punching up a constituent,
and then you elect a boxer. So that nice always uh enjoyed andrea jenkins contributions i thought she was very funny
in terms of the way that she's dealt with the media as was nigel's earlier and the only other
thing to celebrate as well is uh raj four had people who who might not know about this the
guardian profiled some of reform sort of softer more um presentable to the left candidates raj
four had is a muslim chap a candidate who's run for reform twice now
and ran in the BNP.
No, not that one.
The Bangladeshi Nationalist Party,
actually, before he lost.
So that's good.
So it shows that actually
some of reform's candidates
are a bit more hardliner,
seem to have gotten over said line,
while some of the softer ones
they were pushing to the fore
as the sort of new centrist presentable face
haven't squeaked through.
So I'm more than happy to celebrate reform's victories if the candidates are good and do things that we want like you know rejecting operation scatter and all that
father calvin robinson do you think that there is some sort of move to the right because as much as
people like matt goodwood might criticize what folk like rupert andt and Ben and Howard Cox have been arguing for over the
past few weeks. We did see a big U-turn from Nigel Farage on the issue of mass deportations.
We did, and it was necessary, actually. First, I'd like to congratulate Dame Andrea Jenkins. I
think she's done fantastically, and I think she's been treated abysmally by the press.
You obviously mentioned the Sly News interview, but also the BBC are putting out tweets constantly today saying former Greggs worker elected Andrea Jenkins.
Now, first mayor, it's like, first of all, it's Dame Andrea Jenkins to you have some journalistic etiquette to BBC.
And secondly, former Greggs worker. Did you call Rachel Rachel Reeves a former accountant when she got elected?
No, you didn't. Of course you didn't. The hypocrisy of the BBC is annoying.
But congratulations to Dame Andrea Jenkins
and congratulations to our former colleague, Darren Grimes, as well,
who also got elected.
Yes, great news. Darren Grimes is now a Reform UK councillor,
and I think that is amazing for him.
Standing up, making a difference, that's what matters.
I don't agree. I love Alex Phillips.
I don't agree with Alex Phillips when she says it's because people are falling in love with
reform. I think what we're actually seeing here is that people are fed up of the uniparty. People
are fed up with the Conservatives after 14 years of nothing, fed up of Labour after being tyrannous
and anti-free speech and anti-British and anti-Christian and anti the rest of it. And so
they're voting the only way they can vote at the moment, which is reform. I think a lot of people have actually held their
nose and voted reform despite the last few months of mess. I think if reform can get past the mess
now and move forward, it will be a positive thing for the country. The way they treated Rupert Lowe
and others has been horrible. And a lot of us on the right have been watching that thinking this
is no way to unite the right. And actually where we do need division is in politics in this regard. So when
when Beth with an F says to Farage, you're too divisive, it's like, well, yes, this is where he
needs to be divisive, not internally in his party with with good men like Rupert Lowe, but actually
externally on things like immigration, mass migration, these are issues that should be
naturally divisive, actually. And we need a party that's opposite of what the Conservatives have
done for the last 14 years and opposite of what Labour are pushing right now. So well done to
reform. They're doing great. But I'm not on board with the Kool-Aid. You know, I think approaches
like Matt Goodwin's actually turns people off when it's all about can't even criticise them,
can't criticise them. You know, they are the only way. It's like, well, we need to have critical friends.
I think Conor's approach and people like yourself, Dan,
has been fantastic at holding them to account
and making sure they actually still have some right-wing policies
and don't go to the centre ground.
Can I quickly just say one thing there as well?
Calvin is correct.
If they had not made a headache for themselves
over the Rupert Lowe issue where they did treat him badly,
they wouldn't have had Kathleen Blakelock standing therelock standing there for the english democrats and yes she only
got 95 votes but remember it came so down to the wire with a recount that went from four to six
votes in the 16th safest labor seat that's 95 votes that would have given sarah poach in a very
comfortable 100 vote margin so you know just not making headaches for themselves will make them the undisputed party of the right.
Because every vote counts as last night proves more than ever.
Breaking right now, the mainstream media has gone into total meltdown about the reform quake.
We predicted this. We know it was going to happen.
And we know that it is only going to get worse.
So I'm going to call out some of the worst examples. First, this absolute scumbag called Tom Sheldrick, who's working for Woke ITV, who posted on the X.
I questioned Artie Hume, the new Reform UK councillor in Amble, about reports he has praised Tommy Robinson and Andrew Tate in social media posts previously.
A Reform colleague in Northumberland said, it's not my decision if councillor Hume is part of the Reform group on the council.
Do you know what? ITV, let's just shoot him. Let's ruin his life, right?
Like, I mean, how on earth can you say something positive about Tommy Robinson?
How on earth can you say something positive about Andrew Tate?
And look at how this guy and look, I've got to be fair.
He's a young kid. He's probably been put up to it by his woke bosses.
But look at how Tom Sheldrick just thought that he had got the scoop of the year.
We're going to continue to analyze with my superstar panel.
Well, let's watch this first councillor hume i'm tom sheldrick from itv tine teas it's been reported that you've um
on social media in the past councillor him you've praised both andrew tate and tommy robinson do
you have anything to say about that the right person to be representing people in Amble?
That would be a no comment.
This is ludicrous, lazy journalism.
Reform UK shouldn't play up to it.
Who gives a damn?
If someone has tweeted something positive about Tommy Robinson in the past,
there's lots of positive things to say about him.
And if Reform UK is going to be strong about the fact that they're going to allow lefties into the party,
some of whom even call for slavery reparations from the United Kingdom, something that would destroy our economy, then just leave this guy alone, okay? Let this guy join the council.
I have a feeling probably Artie Hume is a very, very good bloke. Stand by him.
Make a difference.
Stand by your people.
And I actually love the approach that Andrea Jenkins, Dame Andrea Jenkins,
took with Sly News during an interview where they clearly were looking to rile her
with divisive and unfair hectoring.
So she'd just had enough and she stormed off. Watch.
Left halfway through your speech.
They were so disgusted by what you said.
I spoke to the Tory candidate.
He left when you said...
He left when you said migrants should be put in tents.
That's good enough for France.
That should be good enough for them too.
Do you think that's a divisive way of conducting politics?
I think it's what the majority and the silent majority think.
That's what you think of migrants, that's where they should be. And, well, illegal migrants, people come here illegally,
they should be put in tents like they do in France.
People seeking asylum should also be put in tents?
Well, I think genuine asylum seekers, you know, like Ukraine, etc.,
that's a different matter.
And then you also accused one candidate...
She said you were parachuted in and you made a...
Yes, she said I was on BBC.
..and you made a comment about her South African accent.
What did you mean by that?
What I meant is, how can they say I've been parachuted in
when I spent most of my
life in Lincolnshire school? Why mention the accent sorry? Because the irony of saying
someone's been parachuted in who's not even from the country. I mean I went to school, college,
university so I think. So someone who's got an accent can't be from this county? I think actually
I'm not even going to answer any more of your questions. I think that your questioning is quite divisive.
You're looking into things when it was a little play with words,
it was a little joke because of the irony.
Do you not understand irony?
The only reason I'm asking is because reform,
they get a reputation for these divisive policies.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. A sensible politics. Thank you very much. Thank you.
A sensible question.
Thank you.
My first day on the job is going to actually...
Now, the only reason you're asking
is because you're mainstream media scum
who have one narrative to spread.
And actually, I like this idea.
One of my friends said to me earlier,
Dame Andrew is going to be our Marjorie Taylor Greene. And I love that. I love that. I think
there's a place for that. But the British Fashion Corporation were at it too. BBC Politics post on
ex-Reform UK's Andrea Jenkins as the new Greater Mayor of Lincolnshire, marking a return to politics
for the former Greggs worker and Miss UK finalist. Now, this sparked outrage.
Raoul Braverman, husband of the former Home Secretary Suella and a Reform UK member,
wrote another great example of why the MSM is dying.
This is a nasty and snide comment.
Andrea Jenkins is a former MP and minister.
Will the BBC delete or apologise?
Let's wait and see.
Stephen Barrett added, I have not seen anything more disgraceful from the BBC.
Shut it down.
And Alex Phillips, I know you're there at the BBC right now.
Maybe we can go and challenge them on this.
But come on, the MSM is in overdrive already to deride, to shame, to hunt down Reform UK. Now, we may
have a different approach on this, Alex, because what I want is to see the party be strong and back
their people and say, I don't give a damn that this guy may have praised Tommy Robinson and
Andrew Tate. He's one of us. We stand by him.
Yeah, and you know what?
I agree that that's a wonderful approach,
and I think that that might be able to be an approach going forward.
But what they needed to do is get this foothold,
get that momentum in the local elections,
so they do look like a big enough beast to stand up and do those things.
Because, you know, people often say,
well, look, Donald Trump didn't kowtow to the media.
He didn't kowtow to all of this pressure from the left and the demonization.
Well, OK, but he was the candidate for the Republican Party in a demonstrably two party system.
What reform we're looking at at local level are five parties all jostling for position and a bunch of independents.
And so the margins are much more narrow.
And to get 30 percent of the vote share shows that the strategy has paid off.
Because the other thing, Dan, and you know this, you're one of the few people out there really sort of making a proper go of independent media in this country.
A lot of people in the UK still watch the BBC.
They still watch ITV.
Yeah, not so many Sky, perhaps.
But this shaming tactic that is used by the mainstream media is pernicious.
And it does have a dampening effect.
And we were talking about Catherine Blakelock and her 95 votes and every vote counts.
It does. And so when people start feeling ashamed to say they support reform or that they've only sort of picked up vibes about Tommy Robinson,
they haven't looked into his story and then it's suddenly like, well, reform loves Tommy Robinson.
They think, oh, gosh, I'm not supposed to like him, so I mustn't vote for them.
This has an impact.
And, you know, at the end of the day, party strategy is calculated empirically.
It is incredibly complicated.
Projections, focus groups, data sets, tracking, polling, all sorts of things.
I've worked in politics on and off, albeit, but in this country and in other countries for 20
years. I get the game. I get the strategy. I get what needs to be done. The most important thing
leading up to this day was getting as many councils as possible. I think reform has surpassed
their own expectations. And now with that 30% of the vote, now they can pigeon chest their way in politics and perhaps begin to say, we're not going to dance to your tune.
We're not going to do it your way. But again, you know, it's all very well people saying, oh, I wish they'd do this.
I wish I wish all sorts of things. But when you're looking at real politic and when you're looking at actually making gains and making wins that can then be used to actually change the country, have a material effect, not just constantly be there, being the Puritans and
being sort of true to your word, but losing every time when you're not deploying tactics,
you're not helping anybody. And so I think what reform have done, if they've proven their strategy
to be right, what I hope now is it will give them enough confidence to pivot again and start being the vanguards that people need them to be.
I think that's already happening.
Calvin Robinson, you wanted to come at Alex Phillips. Here's your chance. Where is she wrong? Is she wrong?
Absolutely. We do need Puritans. Actually, the Puritans won in the end.
We looked down our noses at the Puritans and they left. And what did they do? They founded the United States of America, which is the most successful country in the world. And so that's what we need. We need people that stick to their integrity, stick to their guns and don't get pushed around by hope, not hate or any leftist rag that says we don't like that one. We don't like that one. And or anything along those lines. We need a party that is firmly conservative, firmly right-wing,
and is unashamed of that
and proud of that, actually.
That's what I would like to see.
I think we're getting above ourselves,
beyond ourselves at the moment
with this self-patting on the back
that reform's doing.
They've won over 500 seats.
Great.
In a local election.
Great.
This has happened before.
2015, UKIP won about 500 seats.
What happened in the next general election? Well,
the rest is history. The local election is very, very different to a general election. We all know
this. And we all know that people are upset right now. And they're making their vote heard to show
the major parties that they're upset. But there's still three or maybe four years before the next
general election. A lot can change in a week in politics. So imagine what can change in four
years. The Conservative Party could elect a Conservative leader. They could get their act election a lot can change in a week in politics so imagine what can change in four years the
conservative party could elect a conservative leader they could get their act together um well
i think they will i think they will i mean today is surely the end of kemi badenow it is surely the
end of kemi badenow she has been absolutely hopeless and there's no excuse. And the Conservatives know there's no excuse. And
this is now an extinction level event for them. And Conor Tomlinson, even though I would find it
very difficult to ever vote for the Conservatives again, Robert Jenrick could also put pressure on
Reform UK, make Reform UK move to the right. That's what i'm all about i mean the whole landscape
can change i think we've been a much healthier position um if robert jim was the leader of the
conservative party not because the conservative party would be a viable option because you'd be
changing the man on the door but the crooks are still inside the building but because they would
have this mutually reinforcing effect with reform they'd be be in a kind of right wing arms race. When he says he wants to retire Farage, it might be all a bit of bluster and gusto,
but it does light a fire under them and stops them getting complacent, which then lets them listen to their critical friends.
A few points that you've raised, Dan. First of all, yeah, extinction event for the Tories.
I think I saw from a pollster that was amplified by The Spectator, they're responsible for about 45% of all of the losses today. And we've only got 18 out of 23
council results so far, but they've lost control of 12. So that's staggering. I don't think Kemi's
job is going to be all that secure for all that long. Regarding the reform councillor who was
chased down by that ITV guy who didn't seem that young, or perhaps that balding patch on the top of his head is just the consequence of terminally low testosterone.
I just think everyone's young these days, now that I'm middle-aged.
You flatter us, Dan, truly.
I don't think you can put Tommy Robinson and Andrew Tate in the same box, because they're regarded that way by the establishment as the kind of bogeyman of the right
or incels on misogyny or whatever.
Tommy Robinson, no matter what you think about his tactics,
has never run a pornography company
and then converted to Islam for simple reasons.
I don't think you can put them in the same box either.
But my point is, is that Nigel Farage
has said positive things about Andrew Tate, for example.
There are conversations that we can have and conversations that are had
in a context of a particular time, for example, before a whole load of criminal charges were laid
against Andrew Tate. That's just one example. Howard Cox, where do you think there's an
opportunity for a party of the right of Reform UK now? Because that's going to be the real
challenge, isn't it? And we know that's what Ben Habib is trying to do. And you have obviously
signed up to the Integrity Party. I guess today doesn't help that cause.
I disagree with you, Dan. I think it does help the cause. What it's doing is destroying the
uniparty system, the Conservatives and Labour are not going to be seen.
Labour are going to be absolutely annihilated. Did you hear Starmer's response to this sort of thing?
Oh, this means we've got to go harder and further. You know, hang on a second.
He's just got smashed to smithereens in various councils and he's saying his policies are still right.
He's going to continue with them. That won't wash with the public.
The thing about reform for me, I actually, you know, from my point of view.
There have been.
Sorry.
And then we had Emily Maitlis, who had a hilarious take on this.
Alex, she posted, I wonder if losing Runcorn might end up being the best thing that could
happen to Labour right now. The clamouring for a wake-up call is coming from many different
directions. If this liberates the government to be bolder and faster and less scared of its own
shadow, that's no bad thing. And it got us thinking, Alex Phillips, I mean, isn't it brilliant?
She really is now like one of those North Korean regime newsreaders.
I mean, how you could ever try and spin these results
as good for Slippery Starmer is quite extraordinary.
Well, yeah, I mean, actually, it is quite sort of North Korean
because she's echoing the line that Zakir Starmer himself said,
which is let's now go harder and stronger.
And I'm like, in what direction?
What, you want to screw over farmers even more?
You want to tax employers even more
and decimate the economy even more?
You want to take even more allowances away from pensioners
and be even more zealous about net zero?
You want to go stronger, harder and faster
down the two-tier route?
Because that ain't going to keep you in power for very long.
I mean, look, these people are deluded.
I've been in politics for a very long
time, as have they. It was a bold, courageous, crazy thing to do back in my 20s when I left the
BBC to join UKIP. I'm sitting here 20 years later, having gone on a very long journey with Nigel
Farage and thinking we got there in the end. These people, however, are finding out for the very
first time in their lives that their cosy cartel that's always been overpromoted, that's always been secure, that's always been so confident in themselves,
that's always been able to make being left wing lucrative and be able to make themselves the people who will get the best stab at getting the jobs and the roles and all the rest of it.
They're finding out for the very first time in their lives that the jig is up.
And so you can't expect them to take it easy
and take it lying down.
It's a big shock for them, Dan.
I know.
I have to say, sometimes I do love AI though.
James from our team came up with this
and I just thought it's perfect.
Emily Maitlis really is now a regime broadcaster.
It was interesting,
Ayesha Hazarika, the Labour peer, actually admitting the quiet part out loud on Sly News
last night. Watch this. Reform are, in such a short amount of time, changing the political
landscape. They are. And I think we have all got to take reform very, very seriously.
I think there has been a bit of a tendency in politics
from both the establishment parties to slightly kind of mock reform.
I think we do need to take them seriously.
They, by the way, if they do win these, you know,
if they do win power tonight, they're going to have to prove
that they're worthy of being taken seriously
because local government is very, very difficult at the moment.
You know, you have to really deliver in local government. It's very difficult with the financial settlements.
Oh, yeah. Like you're delivering in Birmingham. Yeah, right. And then there was also a great
confrontation on the British Bastion Corporation by Sarah Olney of the Lib Dems, who was completely
owned by David Bull. And I did love this, Alex Phillips, but it was so great
to finally see, finally see the state broadcaster realise that reform needs a seat at the table.
Watch this.
We were promising one point.
Sarah, Sarah, my phone didn't pick it up. You were almost hissing with fury when David Ball said that. I just think it is ridiculous to claim that, you know,
firing a few diversity officers is going to do anything at all
towards filling the massive financial...
What about the 4,000 staff who earn over £100,000?
Let me finish.
The massive financial black hole in local government,
which has by and large come about because councils are not properly funded to
fulfil their statutory obligations. The things that central government tells them they must do,
but doesn't fund them properly. It has got nothing whatsoever to do with the number of
equalities officers that are employed. And I think it's completely ridiculous for you to try and claim...
Well, if you have 4,000 people earning over £100,000 in local government, that is far too
much money. But also just in terms of tax receipts,
if you go down the line of reducing tax for those businesses,
lowering national insurance contributions...
But that's not a council's responsibility, is it?
No, but then you have more money to fund those councils.
Right, but, I mean, you're trying to claim...
You're trying to claim that the people in charge of the county councils,
the people that are being elected today,
are going to have anything at all to do with.
Do you think councils are well run?
There are well run councils and there are less well run councils.
Owned, completely owned, because we know they are not well run. outside of the argument, be forced to have a seat at the table at the MSM? Because I think it's also going to expose the MSM increasingly for their lunacy.
Oh, sorry, Howard, we've lost you.
Do you want to come in, Father Calvin?
Oh, we've lost Father Calvin too. Hopefully. Hello hello i'm back again here you are howard
yeah i'm one of those sad buggers that actually stayed up all night and watched the bbc
uh as i watched that and i was pleased to see david ball as well as alex wilson you know the
assembly uh winner you know in the uh the mayoral election of last year and they both talked a lot
of sense and i felt i felt all the other parties were very uncomfortable because they saw two very
confident people knowing what was going to happen today so i was delighted by that
i have to say there is huge sympathy for the people who have been up all night, but it does result sometimes in some funny moments,
like Richard Tice, the Reform UK deputy leader, on TV news.
And I have to say, Richard is usually a very turned-out guy,
and he usually looks incredible, and he is looking a bit worse for wear,
and he confuses Luke Campbell, the new mayor of Hull,
with Luke Pollard, who is an appalling Labour MP. Watch.
Very good afternoon to you. And yes, I'm just fresh from Lincolnshire, where we won the mayoralty there very convincingly with Dame Andrew Jenkins.
We've secured control of the council. And so we have fantastic results there.
And yes, I think everything I'm hearing and seeing,
I'm confident that the brilliant Luke Pollard is going to win here.
Alex, we can give him for that, though.
He's pulled an all-nighter, hasn't he?
Because this is the thing.
You guys don't have that many people in reform.
And this is why I'd like to see more reform spokespeople.
They should trust more people to get out and about.
Well, yeah, I mean, they've got more in reform
than perhaps we had in UKIP.
And I know what a count is like.
I'm one of the few people in the world
that has been to multiple election counts,
including my own.
And they take a long time.
And they're in great letters.
And there's no wine.
And they're tedious.
And they're horrible. And you're up all night to the point that you barely know what your own name is so i do feel
sorry for richard um but look what's going to happen now when that snap election was called
almost a year ago and reform basically was just richard tyson david bull and you know i had managed
to coax over the former brexit party mps said, if you really want to change things, this is where it's going to be at.
And I argued to them, just you mark my words in about a year's time, you'll realise I'm right.
I was. But other than having sort of a logo, that was it.
We just had Zoom meetings together or we'd meet in this, you know, office room in Richard's Tower block and sort of sit and go, right, what should we do?
How can we expand things? I remember of sit and go, right, what should we do? How can we expand
things? I remember it well. Yes, exactly, exactly. And so now, what reform is going to have is, you
know, hundreds of councillors up and down the country. And of those, they're going to be people
who can be brilliant spokesmen and women. They're going to have to thoroughly build out things like
the policy unit. My understanding is they're setting up a think tank and going ahead into the next election.
Yeah, they're going to have to have a really sort of brilliant front bench team as the Brexit Party managed to assemble.
And, you know, it's a shame we've lost some friends along the way.
But most of the former Brexit Party MEPs are ready for the fight.
People like Belinda Delucy, she'll be be standing i will be standing of that have no doubt
yes well i want both i want both of you in the first reform uk cabinet okay i quite fancy alex
phillips's culture secretary shutting down the organization that you're currently sitting within
i am very keen on that uh but look it is absolutely fascinating and of course i think it is absolutely fascinating. And of posted, this is vandalism,
pure eco vandalism. Farmers' lives are being destroyed for this junk. Future landfill,
imported, plastic wrapped. This needs to be stopped and fast. Now, this video has gone massively viral. She is attempting to call out the
nut zero scam in the brave and, how would I put it, not completely straightforward way that Katie
usually does things, but she is raising a huge amount of attention to these revolting solar farms that are destroying farms up and down the country.
We'll get analysis from our superstar panel shortly.
But first, look at what happened when Katie Hopkins cleared security in order to get on this site.
I just wanted to bring you here to show you...
Who are you? Sorry.
Oh, I've just been let in by these guys.
This is a solar panel farm that's being put up
in the West Country.
Look at this field down here
that they're completely ripping up
in order to...
You can't be on here.
Thank you. Don't push me, guys.
You can't touch me.
You can't be on here.
I just walked in. You can't be on here. Thank you. Don't push me, guys. You can't touch me. You can't be on here. I just walked in.
You can't be on here.
They're completely destroying the valley
to put solar panels up.
And these solar panels are going...
They're just ripping up
entire areas of our countryside.
And of course, Katie knows
that these sites are being hidden
from view of the British public.
And that's why they were so determined to remove her.
Look at what happened.
But I'm just showing people what's being done.
You can't agree with this.
You cannot possibly agree with this.
I know it's your job.
I know you need a job.
But this is just absolute vandalism.
I'm not safe.
I'm typically not safe, honestly. I'm quite a dangerous person. It's not safe. What are you doing right now? It's not safe. I'm not safe. I'm typically not safe, honestly.
That's for sure.
I'm quite a dangerous person.
It is heartbreaking. I pray to God.
I pray to God reform get in.
I pray we can roll back on this net zero bollocks.
And I pray that this needless, wanton vandalism of our countryside can stop.
Canadian solar. I mean, is there anything worse?
Look at it.
Jesus.
Okay, I'm fine.
I'm going now.
I just wanted to do my video, now I'm off.
No, you don't have the authority to go inside.
Pardon?
What did you say?
You don't have the authority to go inside.
Well, it's my countryside. I do have the authority.
It isn't my countryside.
It's not yours.
And it's certainly not Canadian solar panels.
I let myself on, though.
I'm sorry, but it's a working site.
Yeah, but the gate was open and I just let myself on.
Well, the gate was open.
The gate was open.
But I'm just a countryside walker.
You're not a countryside walker. You're not a countryside walker.
You're a personality and you shouldn't be on here with that or without helmet or anything.
But the gate was open.
Off, please.
Please.
Thank you.
Off, please.
Your gate was open.
I wandered in.
I would have thought with all you big boys.
Our security guard was there, so you obviously just ignored him and walked on.
No, no one stopped me.
I've had my film going.
All of you big boys here and no one stopped me out please let's go look at your little face
have you got children yeah i can tell it's the way i speak to my dogs as well well maybe your
boys need to work on your security but you shouldn't be vandalizing excuse me can you leave
no i'm not talking to you i'm talking to the 1.2 million people
that follow me. But you shouldn't be vandalising
the countryside.
No one's listening to me.
Or put too many people to.
Just checking.
Thank you. You'd quite like it
if I got run over, wouldn't you?
And the point of Father Calvin Robinson, her tactics might be unconventional,
but she will bring more awareness to this issue than what any of the mainstream media will.
And that clip has now gone viral and been viewed well over a million times on X alone.
It is happening up and down the British
countryside. I love her bravery. Howard Cox. Yeah, okay. Sorry. Yeah, I mean, I love that woman.
She's astonishing. And I sat there and I've watched that two or three times. It's fantastic.
As you know, because of what I do with my campaigning, I'm fighting net zero all of the time.
And to see what she did today was going to help us all in this fight against Ed Miliband.
And from my point of view, you know, she is the ultimate communicator on social media.
And I love her to bits for what she does. I'm surprised she hasn't been arrested yet, though.
Well, that's going to happen, isn't it? That is going to happen.
She thinks she's going to be arrested, doesn't she?
She does.
Yeah, she does. I mean, Alex Phillips, I think it's chilling,
but she said to me earlier in the week that she does believe that she will end
up in jail. She knows she is an enemy of the state.
However, she also believes that they can
take nothing from her. Yeah, I mean, look, I think, is she going to be arrested? Maybe there might be
the police turning around at her door to give her the wagging finger. I don't think they're going to
mess about and arrest her. I think that's, you know, more trouble than it is good for the state,
quite frankly. And I think they're probably quite aware of that.
But she does raise a very important issue.
And, you know, on the issue of solar panels,
something that I find absolutely baffling, incredulous, actually,
is this whole push to cover our green and pleasant land,
our perfectly fertile arable land that we should be using to farm and be self-sufficient and not rely on 40% of our food coming from imports,
which is what we
did during the Second World War, which led into rationing, especially when we live in such an
unstable world. What I find baffling, however, is the same government are driving a load of money,
about 50 million odd quid into ARIA, this sort of Advanced Research Innovation Office or whatever
it's called, in order to try and stop the sun from shining. They want to put salt up into the
air from fishing boats. They want to spray chemicals into clouds to actually prevent the
sun from beaming down and at the same time, coat the land in solar panels. I mean, it's just
absolutely so farcical. But the thing is, once you destroy arable land in the way that this project
is going to do, it's incredibly difficult to get back. And if you want to know the direction of travel and the sensible route to take, you look at what other countries are doing,
especially your enemies. And what China are doing is they've suddenly realized that they've got a
huge population. They've relied a lot on imports from other countries. They are going for farm,
baby farm. Now, if countries like China are waking up and saying, hey, we want to control the maritime
routes. We want to control shipping. We want to control cargo, we want to control the delivery
of grain, of food, of fuel, of products around the world, so we can mess about with that tap
and play with the global economy, therefore, we had better make sure we can feed ourselves,
we should be doing the same. This isn't just about destroying the countryside. This is plainly dangerous. The minute a country cannot provide its own energy and cannot provide its own food, it is so vulnerable.
Anything can happen. Absolutely. But, Conor Tomlinson, we know that there is an agenda, a major agenda.
And don't you think that this is going to become, Connor, the next big battle
within the Labour Party? There are now growing suggestions. And by the way, this is not
nut jobs and Labour saying this. This is people who know how Labour operate, saying that if
Slippery Starmer sacks Ed Miliband, which let's be honest, he has to, he has to sack Ed Miliband, which, let's be honest, he has to. He has to sack Ed Miliband if he has any hope of saving the economy
and saving the country.
But the view is that he will end up prime minister,
that Ed Miliband will end up prime minister,
because it will be Ed Miliband who challenges Starmer from the left.
Yeah, I highly doubt that.
I think Tony Blair's already on the phone to him this afternoon
saying, get rid of him.
Reminder, Ed Miliband's already dedicated 8.3 billion
to his brand new Quango Great British Energy by 2029,
and they've already decided to cut the funds
for one of the nuclear power plants,
you know, the energy that actually bloody works
and would give us a surplus that we could sell,
like we were the French,
and instead spend an extra 200 million quid on solar panels on top of
hospitals and schools. At the same time, they're experimenting with blocking out the sun.
Bear in mind, 80% of those solar panels come from China. 80% of the battery capacity comes
from China. The majority of those wind turbines they manufacture come from China. They're coated
in carbon fiber, and you have to get in a helicopter with either
a jet washer or a flamethrower to thaw them out in the winter, or if it's too breezy in the autumn,
you have to switch them off. And if you wanted to do an entirely renewable grid,
I did the costings for this, Net Zero did the costings for this, and the National Grid,
that far-right conspiracy outlet, did the costings for this back in 2020, before inflation,
before the Chinese had even more control over the minerals we'd need to
build it, they found that a fully renewable grid would cost three trillion pounds and it would only
meet 26% of energy demand. So I guess we're just going to have rolling blackout so that Ed Miliband
can feel good about himself. No, I expect a reshuffle by the end of next month.
Father Calvin, testing, testing. Can we hear you?
There you are.
I agree with everything my co-panellists have just said.
And I think this is a great testament to you.
But talk to me about Katie, because you love Katie Hopkins and her tactics.
I do love Katie.
She's fantastic.
And this is why independent media is winning.
Because as you've pointed out throughout the rest of this episode,
the Sly News, the BBC, they're all on the side of the left.
They're on the side of Labour.
And so, of course, they're not out there side of the left. They're on the side of Labour.
And so, of course, they're not out there in the fields reporting on cutting down on our agriculture.
Of course, they're not siding with the British farmers.
And so we need independent journalists like Katie Hopkins
to just wander on and say, you can't touch me, love.
I'm reporting for myself to my 1.2 million viewers,
which is far more than the BBC gets in any given programme
at any given time of day.
So this is the changing of the landscape.
We are taking back control.
And by the way, this is a shameless plug,
but it is completely related to this.
I conducted a interview earlier in the week
where Katie Hopkins really did open up
about quite what she's gone through
in a way that I think will shock and horrify.
Watch.
LBC involving the two presenters, James O'Brien and Sheila Fogarty,
to actually sabotage your show.
All the time I was hated, the most hated woman in Britain,
Fatty Fogarty there would not sit in a room with me
to handle a professional manner.
My children don't have my last name anymore.
My children don't have any physical relation to me on paper.
I could be probably one of the biggest enemies the state has because there's nothing anyone can take from me.
Jihadis, two of them who practiced chopping my head off, came to my home and my children were in it.
Do you feel safe in the UK now? Elon is very clear that Tommy Robinson is being persecuted,
is a political prisoner.
He was able to let Trump know that Farage isn't the guy
that Farage had been selling in to Trump.
The moment that Trump was actually being inaugurated,
where did I find Nigel Farage?
Outside having a cigarette.
I took myself off for nearly five years to try and protect my children from me.
You believe the only way to make the noise stop is to really do something dramatic.
Having come out the other side in life, our path is already set.
And you can watch that full, extraordinary, explosive and emotional video on Dan Wooten Outspoken.
OK, lots is going on today. This is obviously our supersized superstar panel for election results.
But while we have been on air, I can tell you that Prince Harry has just given an extraordinary interview, a truly extraordinary
interview to the BBC. My brilliant team have been putting together some of the jaw-dropping
highlights. I promise you, you're going to be stunned with what he says about his father,
what he says about the royal family, what he says about
the British government. This all comes, of course, because he lost the court case against the British
government today. So do stand by. My superstar panel will all be back. We're going to watch
this interview for the first time. None of us have seen it. Neither have you. I'm told it is
truly sensational stuff. So don't
go anywhere. We're back in just one minute. But first, the reason you're watching this show is
that it's becoming increasingly difficult to trust mainstream media or the so-called fact checkers
who claim to determine which facts are true. And for good reason, given the ongoing debates over
free speech, the controversy surrounding Brexit and how Trump and other anti-establishment politicians are portrayed.
But I have the solution. It's called Ground News and it's the best way to stay informed and cut
through media bias and manipulative narratives so you can get the facts for yourself. It's been a
game changer for a news junkie like me and you can see it for yourself at ground.news slash outspoken. But I want to show
you this incredible website and app in action and let's use a story to do so. So what's the story
I've loved most in recent weeks? Of course it's been the UK Supreme Court decision that women can
only be biological adult human females reversing years of trans extremism. You can see clearly in
one place that over 350 sources around the world are covering
this story. So Ground News instantly shows how the story is being covered by the media, broken down
by whether it leans to the left or the right. This is called its bias distribution chart. And if you
scroll down, you can see every headline about the story, along with the political bias and ownership
of the publication. So let me just take a couple on the right. The Daily Wire is, of course,
completely brilliant. UK Supreme Court rules trans-identifying men are not women. Good
headlines too from Spiked Online and the Daily Telegraph. But on the left, typical, the National
in Scotland even said that this was only a victory for gender-critical feminists. And the Canary ran
with a clearly ludicrous headline, victory for the far-right as Supreme Court rolls back trans
women's rights by two decades.
I mean, try calling J.K. Rowley far right to her face is all I would say.
My favourite feature, though, is the Blindspot feed,
which surfaces upwards of 20 stories daily
that receive the majority of coverage from one side of the political spectrum.
So if you love the news like I do,
the Blindspot feed is the best way to get a balanced perspective on what's happening.
Go to ground.news.com or scan the QR code to subscribe today.
Get 40% off the same vantage plan I use for unlimited access.
That's ground.news slash outspoken.
But now back to the show.
Breaking right now, an extraordinary royal interview that will go down in history in the
same way as princess diana's tell-all with the panorama martin beshear interview on the bbc
prince harry has completely lost the plot after the UK appeals court made a decision to reject his claim in court this afternoon,
that he is entitled to security paid for by the British taxpayers for the rest of his life.
Now, Harry had previously said this was the most important case he had ever had to fight, that this was all about protecting
his family. And we knew, close observers of Harry knew, that there was going to be a serious reaction
if he did lose. Well, that reaction has come within hours because Prince Harry has just sat
down with the British Bashing Corporation, the state broadcaster in the United Kingdom, to give a quite truly horrifying interview for the Royal Family, which I'm going to watch for
the first time here with my incredible superstar panel, Alex Phillips, Conor Tomlinson, Howard
Cox, and Father Calvin Robinson. So we're going to kick off with the moment where Harry is asked about today's
decision. Let's watch. There have been so many disagreements, differences between me and
some of my family. This current situation that has been ongoing for five years with regard to human life
and safety is the sticking point. It is the only thing that's left. Of course, some members of my
family will never forgive me for writing a book. Of course, they will never forgive me for lots of things. But, you know, there is, I would
love reconciliation with my family. I've always, you know, there's no point in continuing to
fight anymore. As I said, life is precious. I don't know how much longer my father has. You know, he won't speak to me because of this security stuff.
But it would be nice to reconcile.
Wow.
So Alex Phillips, already we see there Harry trying to present himself as the victim.
But the reality is that there are so many reasons why his family don't want to speak to him.
He was told time and again that there were consequences for writing that book, for making that Netflix documentary when the late Queen Elizabeth II was in her dying days.
Yes, King Charles does have incurable cancer, as Lady Colin Campbell has revealed here on Outspoken.
But for that reason, he doesn't want the stress of another drama with his son, who is perpetually the victim.
And this interview, it's not going to help.
No, exactly. You know, it's interesting.
England's second most senior judge, Sir Geoffrey Voss, who is presiding over this case, told the Duke his grievance over the downgraded security had not translated into a legal argument and actually said the decision had been predictable
and sensible. And there's Harry going, I want reconciliation for my family. I want this.
The last thing's all about this security grievance. I need this. I need that. They
might not forgive me for writing, but I'm ready to forgive them. And you just think,
so why are you doing what you're not supposed to do? Why are you having to sit down for the world's media and start talking about
timelines for his father's life? That information hadn't been publicly revealed by the monarchy.
That's incredibly sensitive information. He doesn't care about invading anyone else's
privacy, does he? Which he's done time and again. And it's like, how can you be told if you do this,
if you reveal our private conversations,
if you reveal private text messages between Catherine and Meghan Markle,
if you reveal the fact that you had some 50 cuffs with the future King Prince William,
there are going to be consequences.
They want nothing to do with you.
But of course, Harry sees conspiracy in all of this.
Watch. Beginning of 2020, I was scored the highest as far as risk was concerned. And then overnight,
I was reduced to the lowest without actually going through the risk management board.
So one does question how that is even possible and also the motive behind that at the time.
And that was in 2020. And as hard as it is to appreciate or understand why the decision was
made the way that it was in 2020, the hardest thing for me has been the fix of that decision for the last five years.
The fact that I still haven't had a risk management board assessment done for me over the last five
years. Everybody else within this group of people get it at the minimum once a year. So again, I would not have taken this this far if I didn't have
compelling evidence of facts that reveal why the decision was made.
But Father Calvin Robinson, there is no compelling evidence. This is delusion. This is
paranoia. This is a man who sits in his home, very unhappy in Montecito, and believes the world is
against him. I mean, this is quite extraordinary. Can we just think for a moment what he's claiming
here? He's claiming that the British government and security services are actually fiddling the risk assessment, which would put his life at risk. I mean, that is completely insane. know how the situation works when they do these security assessments. But what changed in 2020?
Well, Prince Harry stopped being a working royal in 2020. He moved to America in 2020. So the entire
situation around his personal security changed. Therefore, the risk changed and people making the
risk management deemed him a lower risk than he was previously. Makes a lot of logical sense to
someone with a working brain cell. The problem that he's having is he speaks in euphemisms. He
can't address the truth. When he says things like, oh, the last remaining concern is
this security situation, there is a security situation around Prince Harry, but it's not his
security when he's traveling. It's him leaking information to the media. It's him having
conversations that should be private in public. That's a security concern. And when he says, oh,
there's this remaining issue,
but it's an issue of life.
When he gets out there on a platform
and speaks in favour of abortion and pro-choice,
as he calls it,
and actually no one's life is at risk here.
His life is not in serious risk.
And that's why the security has been downgraded to low.
He needs to get a grip on reality.
He needs a strong male role model in his life
to give him a good shake and say, wake up, lad.
The problem is, Calvin, they tried for so many years, so many years. William was always there,
always picking up the pieces, be it the Nazi uniform, using the P word, stripping naked in
Las Vegas. But of course, the final straw was when William said, look, are you really sure about this
woman? Are you really sure about this mad woman? The family has loads of reservations. And of course, he hit the roof. But he does actually
say here that he believes that his family are knowingly being put in harm's way. So watch this.
And there is no family in harm's way. Everybody knew that they were putting us at risk in 2020,
and they hoped that me knowing that risk would force us to come back. But then when you realize
that that didn't work, do you not want to keep us safe? Whether you're the government,
whether you're the royal household, whether you're my dad, my family, despite all of our differences, do you not want to just ensure our safety?
And I, you know, again, I am calling for, you know,
the Home Secretary and the government to do a review of RAVEG.
And I'm also asking for an R&B assessment that I haven't received since 2019.
Wow. Howard Cox.
Well, I mean, the extract before that extract, what got me,
he described his family as a group of people.
You know, he's disdained for the family.
You know, he's just got getting worse and worse and worse.
It's nothing to do with family caring and loving or anything.
I don't hear any of those words.
All I hear is i want to be
recognized i want to be protected and he doesn't need that and he's he chose to leave didn't he the
family and all of the uh things that go with it all the uh acts he has to do going around the
country seeing people on behalf of the royal family that's all gone he should know that he's
got no position to ask for any protection.
He's got loads and loads of money. I'm sure Netflix will pay loads of money to, you know, to look after him.
But anyway, it saddens me, especially as I'm the oldest one here.
I'm nearly 120 years of age. I've been around. I've been I've been around, you know, the royal family.
I'm a devout royalist. To see to see him do what he's doing to his family now breaks my heart.
OK, Connor, before I bring you in, this is the moment where he's specifically asked, I believe, about King Charles's cancer.
Watch this.
He is ill with cancer. Will you continue to visit him alone without the family where does this leave things moving
forward the ability of your children to see their grandfather um you know life life is a precious
thing and i'm acutely aware of the fragility of that um i i can i can only come to the UK safely if I'm invited.
And, you know, there is a lot of control and ability in my father's hands.
Ultimately, this whole thing could be resolved through him.
Not necessarily by intervening, but by stepping aside,
allowing the experts to do what
is necessary and to carry out an RMB. I'm sorry, Connor, that is sick. That is truly sick that he
is putting this on his dad. Number one, because of Charles's cancer, which, as he has now revealed
to the world, is much worse than many of us think. But number two, because we know what is sacrosanct in our
democracy, a clear separation between the monarchy and the decision makers. And what Harry is asking
his father to do is actually not even constitutional, is it? Well, I don't know about that,
because the government serves the king's pleasure
and there isn't actually a separation of powers in the country in fact i think a lot more people
would be very happy at this point if charles was just disbanded government marched the army into
parliament and dismissed the whole treacherous law however i'm no big fan of charles so i won't i
won't come to his defense there well technically because the thing is we don't want charles
interfering in politics that's the whole point like it doesn't know about that i mean i don't
want him interfering in politics just because he's not got my politics but anyway i'll put that to
one side as a revolution resumer i don't think as a man you air all of your grievances especially
family ones like this so let me just yeah i i just want to put this forward right please so
my dear friend ayaan hirsi ali has a has a fatwa on her head. She has for about 15, 20 years.
And that's because of a jihadist in the Netherlands.
But of course, any country she goes to, thanks to the treacherous immigration policy that our government and the rest of Europe and the US have conducted, less so the US, more so Europe, any place she goes, she has to have private security with her at all times.
Because they've just imported people who relentlessly want her head. So I think that probably the threat to her life is significantly more large
than that on Prince Harry's.
I'm willing to bet that.
And she still has the courage to go out in public, make speeches,
fight the cause, and put herself in a lot more danger than he does.
But let's say that his life is truly a threat.
Let's say it's like President Trump level 2024 election level.
Then why on earth would you stick
yourself in front of every single camera talk about your family's grievances write a tell-all
book do a deal with netflix rather than retreat into some armed compound on the arse end of
nowhere like just get off the tv screens if you're really that worried about it or hire sufficient
armed security enough so that you can go over and resolve your differences with your dad in private
rather than sitting on the spray broadcaster whining about it i know it's so wrong it is so wrong on so many
levels and of course see i really do believe that it's critical that the royal family doesn't uh
interfere in politics and yet i'm told obviously this is the first time we've seen this, but I'm told he also specifically name checks Keir Starmer and Yvette Cooper.
Watch.
You know, I would ask, yes, I would ask the Prime Minister to step in.
I would ask Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, to look at this very, very carefully.
And I would ask her to review RABEC and its members.
Because if it is an expert body, then what is the raw household's role there if it isn't to influence and decide what they want for the members of their household?
I mean, the guy thinks that he is some type of revolutionary, Father Calvin Robinson.
He is one of the richest, one of the most privileged men in the world.
You know, a whole load of people come to this country, be it Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerberg
or Elon Musk, and they pay for their own security.
He's also been completely disingenuous because Charles has said, just come and stay at Buckingham
Palace.
That's completely fine. These are the wrong battles he's picking. To me, it's a sign of a very deeply
unhappy man and a very deeply unhappy marriage. And I know as a religious man, you would hope
that that marriage would work out. But at the end of the day, these battles are just pathetic.
Yeah, actually, my primary concern is that he reconciles
with his father
before he dies.
And I think he should be
focused on that too.
And you're quite right
that he could pay
for his own security
or he could just go
stay at Buckingham Palace
with his father
as recommended.
The problem is that,
well, there are two problems here.
His sense of entitlement,
that he thinks
he's owed something
by the country,
by the taxpayer,
by the royal family.
He's not.
And the second is his victimhood mentality. But it's never, ever his fault. It's always someone else's fault. Even his dying father, the king, is at fault in this situation. He can never
take personal responsibility. And so he's going to be a very unhappy man until he learns to break
free from this woke victimhood mentality and break free from his sense of entitlement and just gain some personal self and responsibility.
But also, like, there is a cost to what you did.
And the cost was always going to be the loss of your family, mate.
And unfortunately, you decided to go ahead.
And what he did, I think people forget what he did.
It's so despicable.
He accused the family of being racist.
He specifically accused Charles and Catherine of being racist. He included details about Prince William's private parts. I
mean, it's like, I actually think he's gone mad. I think he's lost the plot. But look, I just want
to show you actually what the judge said, because Harry thinks that there's a conspiracy going on. This is what the
Court of Appeal judge said. It was actually on camera to date, this ruling. Watch.
Just as significant as it has always been. His military service, she said, placed him at
particular risk. Although it was not suggested that no security provision had been made,
the Duke of Sussex strongly criticised the adequacy of what Rabeck had determined was appropriate.
I said in my judgement that these were powerful and moving arguments, and I said that it was plain
that the Duke of Sussex felt badly treated by the system. But, I concluded, having studied
the detail of the extensive documentation, I could not say that the Duke's sense of grievance translated into a legal
argument for the challenge to Ravec's decision. The decisions taken in the decision letter
and subsequently were taken, I said in my judgment, as an understandable and perhaps
predictable reaction to the Duke of Sussex having stepped back from royal duties
and having left the UK to live principally overseas.
So the conclusion in my judgment,
with which my colleagues, Lord Justices Bean and Edith, agreed,
was that the Duke of Sussex's appeal would be dismissed.
So, Conor Tomlinson, I mean, it's abundantly clear, like no conspiracy whatsoever. You left
the royal family. You knew there was going to be a consequence. If there is a security threat,
we'll still look after you. And Conor, it is worth pointing out, by the way, you know, a whole load of senior members of the royal family who are working do not receive full-time security.
Yeah, first of all, I didn't realise that David Starkey had a second job as a judge.
When you say that he's lost his mind, my dad has a very good phrase that he's
said to me a few times in my life admittedly and that is a a dangerous woman will draw you
further than gunpowder can blow you and i think that harry's oh i like that and perhaps perhaps
perhaps his private parts too because he seems obsessed with his brothers um have been pulled
down a particularly noxious rabbit hole.
And it's going to take a hell of a lot more to crawl out
rather than to continue digging.
So I, sadly, I wouldn't expect,
if he keeps going about it the way he does,
reconciliation with his dad in his lifetime.
It's not to say that his dad hasn't done things wrong too.
I mean, I'm sure the affair he had
didn't do wonders for the family.
But I think the most awful part in this,
and predictably, Dan, I'm sure you'll agree with me,
the most awful part of this,
the most awful influence is probably Meghan Markle
because she's done the most to drive a wedge
between him and his family
and block off any ability for reconciliation.
Totally, totally, absolutely.
Well, look, you guys are legends
and Alex Phillips too, who was here.
But I think the British Bashing Corporation worked out that she was broadcasting outspoken from their premises and was like off.
And of course, Dame Andrea Jenkins, too. Thank you so much.
We're obviously dealing with a huge amount of breaking news, but you're all incredible connor thomason and connor by the way
congratulations you have launched tomlinson talks on youtube this week so people need to subscribe
to your personal youtube page don't they yes thank you very much dan uh no bad blood between
myself and my former lotus use colleagues um it's just that swindon was not so sunny and i am kept
busy with other ventures that I cannot announce,
but that they're localized to London.
So more coming soon,
but yeah,
once a week,
Thompson talks,
the format returns.
I felt like a flower wilting without sunlight.
If I wasn't sitting there ranting into a camera.
I loved it.
I loved it last night,
especially your takedown of Fraser Nelson.
What,
what did you call him?
Was it one of the most wrong people in the,
in the,
how did you just go?
The most incorrect man in Britain. I said you just go the most incorrect man in britain
i said i felt like that blue fish and spongebob you know shaking his fist going why haven't you
learned your lesson old man and i think i think he's not going to i like that a lot and of course
father carl and robinson who remains on lotus eaters with uh the common sense crusade and i
have to say father by the way thank you for the shout out for Outspoken during Fox and Father this week, which I very much enjoyed the whole episode.
And Howard Cox, true legend, who, of course, runs the Fair Fuel campaign.
What a day. What a week.
And, of course, he will be back with us on Outspoken very, very soon.
Don't go anywhere, though, because Angela Levin is standing by for more
royal news. We're going to move to Substack in order to do so. www.outspoken.live. Now,
of course, though, it is time to reveal the worst Britain in the world this week. I promise you I haven't looked at the results, so this is going
to be exciting for me too. Well, 35,000 votes, and we can come and have a look right now at these
results. With 3% of the vote, Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader, with 7% of the vote. Anna Sawar, the Labour leader in Scotland,
with 36% of the vote. A runner-up, Meghan Markle. But the worst Britain in the world this week,
and if you were watching earlier when we were discussing Katie Hopkins' farm invasion,
you will understand why. The Energy Secretary, arguably
the most dangerous man in Britain, Ed Miliband. Thank you so much. Well, I only got a couple of
hours sleep last night because I love election night. So this has been so much fun. And I would
love to, we actually hosted on my Substack last night, like a live chat throughout the night. So I'd love you to be part of my Substack.
www.outspoken.live is the address.
I hope you have a very restful weekend.
But we are going to be back live, even though I think it's a bank holiday on Monday, isn't it?
I don't really believe in these bank holidays.
So I'm here.
Don't worry.
I am here live, 5 p.m. UK time, time midday eastern 9 a.m pacific on monday hit
subscribe if you're watching right now on youtube and rumble turn on the notification
bell so you're alerted to our new episodes and most importantly i promise to keep fighting for you