My dear fellow patriots, defenders of the Cross, and sons and daughters of St George,
Today, on the 23rd of April, we gather not merely to mark a date on the calendar, but to renew a sacred covenant. St George’s Day is England’s day — the day we remember a Christian warrior who faced the dragon with faith unyielding and a sword drawn in defence of the innocent. In him we see the very soul of our nation: a land forged in the fires of Christian conviction, where the Gospel took root in our fields and cathedrals long before any parliament ever sat.
As the voice of the Christian Nationalist Party, I stand before you to declare that this heritage is not a relic of the past — it is our future, and we will fight to reclaim it. We are a people called by God to be a light to the nations. Yet today that light is under assault both abroad and at home.
Across the Middle East, our brothers and sisters in Christ — ancient communities that trace their faith back to the Apostles themselves — endure systematic persecution, displacement, and martyrdom. Churches are burned, families are scattered, and the very name of Jesus is treated as a crime in lands where Christianity once flourished. We do not turn a blind eye to their suffering. We remember them in our prayers and we vow that a Christian Nationalist government will never barter away their lives for diplomatic convenience or political correctness. Their struggle is our struggle; their faith is our faith.
Here in our own beloved England, we face a different but no less deadly dragon: the slow erosion of our Christian foundations by smug, pampered, secular elites who would rewrite our history, silence our pulpits, and replace the family altar with the dictates of political correctness. They tell us that faith has no place in public life, that our borders must remain open to every ideology except our own, and that the Cross must be hidden so as not to offend. We reject this lie with every fibre of our being. England was not built by atheists or relativists — it was built by men and women who knelt before the King of Kings and pledged their lives to Him.
But hear this, friends: hope is rising. The tide is turning. Across our towns and shires, the ordinary people of England are awakening to the truth that only a nation rooted in Christ can endure. They are tired of empty promises and godless governance. They are ready for leadership that honours the Bible, protects the unborn, defends the family, secures our borders, and places the interests of our own people first — not out of hatred for others, but out of love for our own.
In the elections that lie just ahead, victory is not merely possible — it is within our grasp. I hear it in the voices of young men and women who refuse to apologise for their faith, flocking to traditional churches. I feel it in the prayers rising from church halls across the land. With your hands, your hearts, and your votes, we will send a clear message: England belongs to the English, and the English belong to Christ.
A Christian Nationalist government will restore our sovereignty, revive our churches, strengthen our families, and stand unapologetically with persecuted Christians wherever they may be.
St George did not slay the dragon by negotiation or compromise. He faced it with courage, with faith, and with the banner of the Cross flying high. So must we.
Let this St George’s Day mark the beginning of our renewal. Let it be the day we resolve, before God and one another, that we will not yield, we will not retreat, and we will not be silent.
May Almighty God bless each of you, bless our Party, bless our ancient realm, and guide us to victory in the days ahead.
For England! For Christ! And for the glory of God!
St George for England!














