Election latest: Starmer incredulous over latest Tory attack line (2024)

Election week
  • Starmer 'can hardly believe' latest Tory attack line
  • Minister latest to hit out at Labour leader's 6pm Friday finishes
  • Reform 'very disappointed' as another candidate quits
  • Royal Mail points finger of blame over postal vote delays
  • PM delivers? Sunak starts day with 5am Ocado trip
  • Explained:Why 'supermajority' warnings don't add up
  • Sky News Daily:Five things main parties aren't talking about
  • Live reporting by Faith Ridler
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  • How to watch election on Sky News

12:00:01

It's 12pm - time for your afternoon general election update as we enter the very final stretch of a fiery, six-week campaign.

Here's everything you need to know so far today:

  • The Conservatives have kept up their attacks onSir Keir Starmerover suggestions he would keep up his commitment to not working after 6pm on Fridays should he become PM;
  • Health minister Maria Caulfield told Sky News "it is slightly concerning" that the Labour leader would take this approach;
  • Sir Keir - who keeps Friday nights free to spend time with his wife and children - has hit back, claiming the attack is evidence of a "desperation" from the Conservatives which is "bordering on hysterical".
  • Both Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir are busy on the campaign trail today, in a last ditch effort to convince voters to back their parties on Thursday;
  • And the government is "urgently" investigating delays to postal ballots being delivered, after postal affairs minister Kevin Hollinrake criticised Royal Mail for apparently failing to deliver some votes in time.
  • Stephen Flynn, the SNP's Westminster leader, today criticised the "complete and utter shambles" of these delays, claiming it "disenfranchises" people in Scotland who have gone on holiday (schools have already broken up there);
  • Sir Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, is back on the campaign trail in the South East, knocking down Conservative blue dominoes in yet another stunt;
  • And a second Reform UK candidate - Georgie David - has announced her decision to suspend her campaign because of "racism and misogyny" in the party - and back the Conservatives.

Stick with us for live updates throughout the day.

12:12:23

Reform UK 'very disappointed' after another candidate suspends campaign

Reform UK has said it is "very disappointed" that another candidate has suspended their campaign - and instead endorsed the Conservatives.

Georgie David, who was the Reform candidate for West Ham and Beckton, said she is "in no doubt that the party and its senior leadership are not racist".

However, she said the "vast majority of candidates are indeed racist, misogynistic and bigoted".

In response, a spokesperson for Reform UK said: "We are very disappointed with Ms David's course of action.

"We strongly disagree with her sweeping comments about the 'vast majority' of our 600-plus candidates, the vast majority of whom she can never even have met.

"And we find it sad and strange that she chose not to bring up any of her concerns with the party leadership before publicly trashing so many of her blameless colleagues who are giving their all to get Reform UK elected.

"Ms David was a last minute addition to our candidate list, and we apologise to the voters of West Ham and Beckton for any inconvenience."

The other candidates in West Ham and Beckton are:

  • James Edward Asser, Labour;
  • Lois Austin, Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition;
  • Emily Bigland, Lib Dems;
  • Rob Callender, Greens;
  • Sophia Naqvi, Newham Independents Party;
  • Holly Alice Ramsey, Conservatives;
  • Kayode Shedowo, Christian Peoples Alliance.

11:53:48

Badenoch and Braverman deny association with Tory leadership campaign websites

By Faye Brown, political reporter

Kemi Badenoch and Suella Braverman have denied being associated with website domains purporting to be for future leadership bids.

It comes as a source close to Penny Mordaunt told Sky News she kept her domain active from the 2022 contests "for the same reason you'd keep a spare tire in the boot" - and not to mount a challenge against the PM.

With Rishi Sunak widely expected to lose the election on Thursday, there has been mounting speculation about what direction the Conservatives will head in and who could take command.

While Northern Ireland minister Steve Baker has been open about fancying his chances, other senior Tories are keeping their cards close to their chests.

11:03:34

Royal Mail blames 'stakeholders' for 'printing and administering' delays to postal votes

More on one of the day's top stories now - namely reports that some postal votes have not yet arrived at the homes of voters.

Royal Mail officials have said they "remain confident" that those postal votes that were received on time will be delivered before polling day, adding there is "no backlog".

The Post Office minister said earlier she is urgently investigating delays to people receiving their postal votes.

A Royal Mail spokesperson said: "We have no backlog of postal votes and, whilst we are not complacent, we remain confident that postal votes handed to us on time will be delivered prior to polling day."

It suggested that "stakeholders" involved in "printing and administering" the postal votes could be to blame.

"Where specific concerns have been raised, we have investigated, and confirmed ballot packs are being delivered as soon as they arrive in our network.

"We would welcome a review into the timetable for future elections with all stakeholders to ensure that the system for printing and administering postal votes before they are handed to Royal Mail works as smoothly as possible."

11:01:45

Tory criticism over 6pm finishes on Fridays 'bordering on hysterical', says Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer has said Tory attacks on his desire to spend Friday evenings with his family were a sign of "increasing desperation bordering on hysterical".

The father-of-two said he would continue to have "protected time for the kids" at the end of the week if he were to take over the top job on 5 July.

The Conservatives have tried to make hay with the comments, with an attack on social media saying: "Keir Starmer has said he'd clock off work at 6pm if he became prime minister.

"You deserve better than a part-time prime minister. The only way to prevent this is to vote Conservative on Thursday."

Starmer 'can hardly believe' Tory attack line

Asked about the Tory criticism, Sir Keir said: "This is just increasingly desperate stuff.

"I actually can hardly believe that 48 hours before an election, the Conservative Party has got nothing positive to say as they go into this."

Sir Keir said they were in a "negative, desperate loop".

He added: "My family is really important to me, as they will be to every single person watching this. And I just think it's increasing desperation bordering on hysterical."

10:57:13

Postal votes must arrive, Starmer says

The Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is now asked about reports that some postal votes have not yet arrived at the homes of voters.

"I am concerned about the postal ballots because it is really important in this election that every single person has the ability to vote - and I hope vote for change," he says in response.

"I think it's on all of us on a sort of non-party political basis to say we must do everything we collectively can to ensure that those ballot papers get to people and they can fill them in and have the vote to which they are entitled so that the country can move forward with the change that I hope will be delivered at this election."

10:56:17

Starmer: UK needs 'clear framework' when it comes to international trade

Sir Keir Starmer is now taking questions from the media, including from our political correspondent Serena Barker-Singh.

She asks about the cost of living crisis, which has eased because Europe is still reliant on Russian gas imports - with UK companies still facilitating the trade through insurance and ownership.

Would Sir Keir toughen sanctions to clamp down on this?

The Labour leader says the UK needs to have a "clear framework in place when it comes to trade".

He adds: "But what I would say you started with energy.

"One of the reasons that we've paid such high prices in energy is because we're over reliant on the international market.

"That is precisely why we want to start the work on day one, setting up Great British Energy, a home-grown renewable energy company, because that will give us lower bills for good, because we control it.

"It will give us independence and security, because whatever happens in Ukraine and Russia will not impact in the way that it has done."

You can read more on how British firms help to keep Russian gas flowing into Europe from our economics and data editor Ed Conway here:

10:51:01

Starmer: Tories have got 'nothing left to say'

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is also busy on the campaign trail today, addressing those gathered at a rally in Nottingham.

Less than 48 hours before polls open, Sir Keir hails his party for running a "positive campaign... all about change".

"What a contrast to the increasingly desperate, negative campaign that the Tories are running," he says.

"They have literally got nothing to say to the electorate."

In contrast, the Labour leader says: "We have got plenty to say.

"This campaign is about change, it is about turning the page and rebuilding our country."

Sir Keir says if you don't vote Labour on Thursday, we could end up "on Friday morning with five more years" of the Conservatives.

"Have you seen anything in their campaign that suggests they have changed?"

He adds that "every single vote counts", stressing that some constituencies will go down to "a few hundred votes" either side on election night.

"People want change, but change will only happen if you vote for it."

10:48:42

Sunak jabs at Truss and Starmer as he pledges to cut NHS await times

Still in Oxfordshire, the prime minister is now taking questions from the audience.

One woman says she's waited three years for an autism and ADHD diagnosis for her son and eventually ended up going private anyway.

She asks how the prime minister can tackle the waiting lists and support those with diagnoses.

Rishi Sunak says he's introduced a scheme that allows people to access the private sector via the NHS if the wait times are too long.

"What I tell the NHS is: 'Look, if there's a private provider that can do whatever it might be, whether it's an assessment or a hip replacement, and they can do it at the same tariff rate, then people should be able to choose where to get their treatment and get it done there'," he says.

He says this "because I don't have any ideological disagreement with the private sector", in an apparent stab at Sir Keir Starmer, adding that is one of the differences between the Conservatives and Labour.

He then references the "pharmacy first" policy which should also help cut GP waits, before adding that six million NHS referrals were not carried out during the pandemic, slowing wait times further.

"We're now starting to see waiting lists come down," he says.

As for why he can be trusted, the prime minister repeats that he was right when warning of the dangers Liz Truss posed, and "that's why you can trustme now when I'm warning you about the dangers of what Labour would do if they were in power".

10:24:26

'You can make the difference,' Sunak says in late pitch to Oxfordshire voters

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is in Oxfordshire today, where he is taking questions from staff at a warehouse.

Ahead of the Q&A, he addresses those gathered.

As he has throughout his campaigning, Mr Sunak admits that the Tories haven't got everything right in the past, but this election is about the future.

He repeats his attacks on Labour and says the Conservatives will continue to cut taxes if re-elected.

"There is an important choice, and a vote for the Conservatives... is a vote to lower your taxes and continue the progress [we've made]," he says.

"Don't sleepwalk into something you haven't thought properly about... every vote matters, you can make the difference."

We're just two days away from the election now.

Election latest: Starmer incredulous over latest Tory attack line (2024)
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