Election campaign day 22: Starmer lays out his blueprint for power
Labour has published its General Election manifesto.
Sir Keir Starmer has set out his plan to turn round the country after 14 years of Tory “chaos” but warned there are no “quick fixes”.
Here are the key moments from day 22 of the General Election campaign:
– Starmer’s power play
Sir Keir Starmer had promised there would be no surprises when Labour unvelied its election manifesto – and he certainly proved as good as his word.
Inside, however, there was little by way of new policy, prompting one journalist to ask if he was “Captain Caution” in contrast to Rishi Sunak who had “thrown the kitchen sink” at his party’s blueprint for government.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies said the the tax and spending changes it set out were “trivial”.
In his address, Sir Keir – who is sitting on a 20-point opinion poll lead – acknowledged there was no “magic wand” he could wave to solve the country’s many problems but insisted that the manifesto represented “a credible long-term plan”.
“We gave up on being a party of protest five years ago,” he said to cheers from the Labour faithful. “We want to be a party in power.”
– Quote of the day
Mr Sunak’s decision to call the election for July 4 caught most of Westminster – not to say the rest of the country – on the hop.
So, it should perhaps come as no surprise that the Gambling Commission is now taking an interest into how one of his closest aides came to place a £100 bet that there would be a July election just three days before the Prime Minister’s big announcement.
Craig Williams, who was MP for Montgomery and Mr Sunak’s parliamentary private secretary in the last parliament, acknowledged he had made a “huge error of judgment” and said he would “fully co-operate” with the commission’s inquiry.
“I will not be expanding on that statement because it’s an independent process,” he said.
With Mr Williams now the Tory candidate for the new seat of Montgomeryshire and Glyndwr, Plaid Cymru have questioned the “propriety” of him continuing to run.
Foreign Secretary David Cameron said he would have to face the consequences of his “very foolish decision”, but with nominations having closed last week, he suggested it was too late to stop him standing for the Conservatives.
– Picture of the day
While Sir Keir was making his pitch, Mr Sunak was taking the opportunity of an enforced break from campaigning to look prime ministerial strutting the international stage.
Having been panned for missing the international leaders gathering at the D-Day commemorations in Normandy, Mr Sunak headed to Italy for what he is hoping will not be his final G7 summit.
While he preferred last week to spend his time being interviewed by ITV, it was possibly a last chance to rub shoulders with the likes of presidents Joe Biden and Emmanuel Macron.
He was warmly welcomed to Puglia by Italian prime minister Georgia Meloni.
The two leaders have previously found common ground on migration and Mr Sunak was expected to use the occasion to press his fellow leaders to take collective action “across the route” to address the issue.
– Intergalatic challenge
Sir Keir may be harbouring hopes of taking power at Westminster, but that it is nothing on the ambitions of another Mr Sunak’s challengers.
Count Binface, who is standing against the Prime Minister in the North Yorkshire constituency of Richmond and Northallerton, said his aim is nothing less than to “conquer the entire omniverse”.
“I’ve taken on Mrs May in electoral combat and what happened to her? I took on Mr Johnson, what happened to him? I’m still standing,” he said.
– Plaid Swifties
Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth may not not look like an obvious Taylor Swift fan, but the US singing megastar is apparently providing the soundtrack to his election campaign.
He even revealed that he has a favourite track – Anti-Hero – in which the singer admits she may be getting older but “never wiser”.
– Social media moment
Labour candidate for Brent East Dawn Butler marked the halfway point of the election campaign through song, opting to rap her own version of So Solid Crew’s 21 Seconds To Go, changing the words to “21 days to go”.
Filmed in her constituency, the Labour candidate raps: “Rishi at D-Day, where did he go? Like don’t let a liar run the show.”
– What the polls are saying
Two nationwide opinion polls have been published in the past 24 hours, both of which show Labour maintaining a large lead over the Conservatives.
An average of all polls that were carried out wholly or partly during the seven days to June 13 puts Labour on 43%, 21 points ahead of the Conservatives on 22%, followed by Reform on 14%, the Lib Dems on 10% and the Greens on 6%.
– What’s happening tomorrow
Mr Sunak is in Italy for day two of the G7 leaders summit.
Sir Keir is interviewed by the BBC.