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Jacob Rees-Mogg attends Bristol Cinema to watch Downton Abbey before taking off in a retro Bentley

Jacob Rees-Mogg was filmed enjoying a day at the Bristol cinema with his family. The Tori Grandmaster made a passing trip to Hengrove Cineworld today (May 3) before piling up his wife and children in the back of his retro Bentley.

The Northeast Somerset MP has resigned from his ministerial duties to make the new film at Downtown Abbey. According to the Mirror, viewers claim that Mog could even stand up to greet God to save the king during the screening of the film at 11 o’clock.

After stepping out the side door, the MP was spotted getting into his 1968 T-Series. He amassed his wife Helena de Chair, 45, and three of his children in the back of a gray motorbike for £ 20,000. before going home.

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The Brexit minister was spotted along with his eldest son, Peter Theodore Alfege, who is known as the “mini-mog” for sharing his father’s style of dress. The family’s journey to the movies comes as their home life in Somerset is described as “The Bash Children of the Street Run Around Lord Snuth in The Beano” by a Sunday Times reporter.

Jacob Rees-Mogg and his family get in their car (Image: Mike / SplashNews.com)

Nick Rufford, who went to interview the Gournay Court MP, said it was a step back in time. He said he found that every time they started talking seriously about the issue, the MP was overtaken by one of his children running around.

Although they hired his own nanny, Veronica Crook, to care for his offspring, the five children, aged four to 13, from cannonballs in the gardens. Jacob Rees-Mogg said his eldest child, Peter, was not there because he was a boarder in Eaton.

Referring to the speed limit of 20 miles per hour in the villages of Somerset, where he lives, the MP said: “The limit of twenty miles per hour is ridiculous. They just hinder movement.

“People support them when they are offered, and later realize how annoying they are. In general, this is a microcosm of politics: opinion polls show that something would be popular, but once you put it into practice, it is not. “

This comes after Mog urged people to stop making life difficult for drivers, adding that “there will be no public transport” to Bristol from rural areas. “My general opinion is that I would like people to stop stigmatizing the motorist,” he told BristolLive in an exclusive interview. strongly against this. “

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