4:01:12 > 4:01:15'The last two generations have been robbed of an opportunity
4:01:15 > 4:01:16'to vote on the EU.
4:01:16 > 4:01:19'And yet it has greater impact on our everyday lives than anything
4:01:19 > 4:01:21'that takes place here.
4:01:21 > 4:01:23'We need to put this issue to bed now,
4:01:23 > 4:01:25'and not leave it for another generation.'
4:01:25 > 4:01:29I want a Britain that is free to control its own destiny.
4:01:42 > 4:01:44'It's estimated there'll be
4:01:44 > 4:01:47'another three million people in Britain by 2020.
4:01:47 > 4:01:49'Our public services are already stretched.
4:01:49 > 4:01:52'The pressure on schools, housing, hospitals in huge.'
4:01:52 > 4:01:56While we stay in the EU, we cannot control who comes into our county.
4:02:09 > 4:02:14'Under EU regulations, so many of us are being put out of business.
4:02:14 > 4:02:16'They don't cater for our needs,
4:02:16 > 4:02:20'and undercut our top quality meat with cheap imports.
4:02:20 > 4:02:23'One by one, we are going bankrupt.'
4:02:24 > 4:02:27This landscape will be changed for ever.
4:02:36 > 4:02:38'The European Court of Human Rights
4:02:38 > 4:02:42'has told the UK that prisoners should have the vote,
4:02:42 > 4:02:44'yet voting is a civic right, not a human right.'
4:02:44 > 4:02:47Why should unaccountable foreign judges
4:02:47 > 4:02:48change the laws of our land?
4:03:03 > 4:03:06I just can't afford to have the gas on.
4:03:06 > 4:03:09Bills have gone up and up, and my pension doesn't go as far any more.
4:03:09 > 4:03:14Prices are rising. It's really tough for a lot of elderly people.
4:03:32 > 4:03:35'I used to bring out all sorts of different types of fish.
4:03:35 > 4:03:38'Now the foreign vessels are sending all our catch abroad.
4:03:38 > 4:03:39'EU quotas, some days,
4:03:39 > 4:03:42'means we have to throw everything back.
4:03:42 > 4:03:45'It's not even worth going out some mornings.'
4:03:45 > 4:03:48It's just a struggle all the way through.
4:03:58 > 4:04:01'Leaving the EU does not mean an end to trading with Europe.
4:04:01 > 4:04:04'It spells the start of being able to trade with the entire world
4:04:04 > 4:04:06'as well as our neighbours on the continent.'
4:04:06 > 4:04:08We'd be able to set up our own trade deals.
4:04:08 > 4:04:11That's a best fit for British business.
4:04:27 > 4:04:29Hiya. You all right?
4:04:29 > 4:04:33'EU regulations place a stranglehold on businesses
4:04:33 > 4:04:36'and cost jobs.
4:04:36 > 4:04:39'There are so many rules and regulations -
4:04:39 > 4:04:42'some make no sense whatsoever.'
4:04:44 > 4:04:48It's never been harder to start and run a business as it is today.
4:05:06 > 4:05:09On May 22nd, have your say on EU membership.
4:05:09 > 4:05:11The other parties promise a referendum every now and again,
4:05:11 > 4:05:15and go on telling us we can't survive outside the European Union.
4:05:15 > 4:05:17The truth is that we can.
4:05:17 > 4:05:18We can govern ourselves,
4:05:18 > 4:05:20we can trade freely with the rest of Europe,
4:05:20 > 4:05:22we can control our own borders
4:05:22 > 4:05:25and make our own trade deals with the rest of the world.
4:05:25 > 4:05:27That's what the Common Market, of course,
4:05:27 > 4:05:29was supposed to be all about.
4:05:29 > 4:05:31We want our country back.
4:05:31 > 4:05:33We believe the best people to govern Britain
4:05:33 > 4:05:35are the British people themselves
4:05:35 > 4:05:36and I am urging you, on May 22nd,
4:05:36 > 4:05:40join our people's army and cause an earthquake in British politics.