Election latest: 'You name it, Labour will tax it': Rishi Sunak goes on the attack as he faces Keir Starmer in first live head-to-head of election campaign (2024)

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  • Sunak facing Starmer in first TV debate - follow updates
  • PM pledges tax cuts|Starmer vows 'practical plan'
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  • Farage has milkshake thrown over him in Clacton
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  • Live reporting by Ben Bloch and (earlier)Faith Ridler
Expert analysis
  • Sophy Ridge:Tonight's debate could be critical
  • Jon Craig:Sunak has got to take gloves off and come out fighting
  • Ed Conway:Why caps on migrant numbers don't really work
  • Matthew Thompson:The story behind Lib Dem battle bus icons
Election essentials
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21:20:04

Analysis: Tax and cost of living - Round one to Sunak

Wow! Rishi Sunak comes out fighting on tax, repeatedly accusing Sir Keir Starmer of planning to raise taxes by £2,000.

He's combative and keeps his message simple. He's aggressive.

His advisers have obviously told him to take the gloves off and he has.

He interrupts the Labour leader, shouts over him and keeps hammering home his tax rise allegations.

In contrast, so far Sir Keir is slow and ponderous. Round one to Rishi Sunak.

21:18:29

'NHS is broken,' Starmer says

Now, the pair are asked by a cancer survivor in the audience about the state of the NHS and "how long it will take to fix it".

Sir Keir says his wife works at a hospital and agrees the NHS is "broken".

"It is unforgivable what happened to the NHS," he says.

He points out waiting lists have increased under the PM.

Rishi Sunak says "he was brought up in the NHS" as his dad was a GP and his mum a pharmacist.

He says he acknowledges damage has been done but says record funding is going into the health service.

"The NHS is still recovering from COVID," he says.

He admits there are challenges and points some blame to industrial action for NHS waiting lists - this is met with groans in the audience.

21:16:17

Leaders asked to 'draw breath' as they clash over cost of living concerns

After some to-and-fro between the two party leaders, debate leader Julie Etchingham asks them to "draw breath" and explain how they will "connect" with questioner Paula and her cost of living struggles.

Rishi Sunak says he wants to be judged by his past actions - bringing up the furlough scheme he introduced as chancellor during the pandemic.

He once again pledges to protect people's financial security by cutting taxes.

Sir Keir Starmer says his parents "didn't have a lot of money" growing up and adds that he knows how Paula feels.

"I don't think the prime minister quite understands the position you and other people are in," he says.

The prime minister comes back on this, saying he has a plan to "ease anxieties" - and for another time during this debate says he will bring down taxes.

21:14:11

Cost of living gets heads nodding - as Starmer draws laugh in spin room

By Jennifer Scott, political reporter

A little jovial "oooooh" rolls across the spin room as the lights go down and the show commences - as well as a giggle about the leaders not seeming to know what to do with their hands.

But now we are down to business with Paula, whose description of the cost of living crisis gets a lot of heads nodding in the audience, whether it be her struggling to make ends meet or batch cooking to avoid peak energy prices.

As Starmer lays into Sunak's "plan" and how it isn't working for Paula, the PM pulls an odd eyebrow - and gets his own nods from the audience as he claims Labour will raise taxes to pay for their own policies.

But the biggest reaction in the spin room is a cheer and laughter as the Labour leader mentions his dad is a toolmaker. We all had that on our debate bingo card, didn't we?

21:13:07

Starmer: 'If Sunak thought the plan was working, he wouldn't have called the election'

Sir Keir Starmer is asked to respond to Rishi Sunak's assertion that the "plan is working" and the economy is growing.

The Labour leader replies questions why the election was called now.

"Because if he thinks things are going to get better towards the second half of this year, why's he called it now?

"He's called it now because he knows - and I'll ask him this - he know inflation is going to go back up. He knows energy prices are going to go back in the autumn - that's what he's not telling you.

"So he says the plan is working, but I don't think he believes the plan is working, because if he thought the plan was working, he wouldn't have called this election right now."

Mr Sunak says the Labour leaders assertion is "slightly ironic" because he's been demanding an election "since I got this job".

"Now that we've called an election, he's saying, 'oh no, don't have an election because I don't want to tell you what I'm going to do'."

Sir Keir tries to interrupt, but is shut down by the moderator.

Continuing, Mr Sunak repeats that "the plan is working", but adds: "Of course I know everyone is only just starting to feel the benefits of it."

He says inflation is down, inflation is growing, and taxes are being cut.

"Keir Starmer would put all that progress at risk," he says, claiming that Labour would raise household taxes by £2,000.

Addressing the person who asked the question about the cost of living, Paula, Sir Keir says: "I just don't know how you feel when you hear a prime minister say, having heard what you're going through, that the plan is working, it's all alright."

He says so many people are struggling, and the PM "lives in a different world".

Mr Sunak repeats his question about what Labour wants to raise taxes, and Sir Keir replies that the Tories have raised taxes 26 times - after promising not to do so in their last manifesto.

He labels the PM "the British expert on tax rises".

Mr Sunak says: "Mark my words: Labour will raise your taxes. It's in your DNA."

21:10:36

Starmer: Working people pay price if government loses control of economy

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer are asked by an audience member who is "worried about her future" due to the cost of living crisis.

Mr Sunak says he "understands the strain" the last few years have put on the country.

He says his plan has helped bring inflation down and his "bold plan" will "bring stability".

But the Labour leader says "this government has lost control".

"If a government loses control of the economy, it is working people who pay the price," he says.

21:08:11

Sunak pledges tax cuts - and says 'no one knows' what Labour will do

In his opening statement, Rishi Sunak says "uncertain times call for a clear plan and bold action".

He says in five weeks either he or Sir Keir Starmer will be prime minister.

"Beyond raising your taxes and raiding your pensions, no one knows what Labour would actually do," he says.

The prime minister then pledges tax cuts and pension protection, as well as a reduction in immigration.

"I have a clear plan for a more secure future for you and your family," he finishes his statement by saying.

21:06:30

Starmer has 'ambition for the country and a practical plan to deliver it'

Sir Keir Starmer is first to speak, giving his opening statement in the debate.

"This election is all about a choice," he says, arguing that he offers "stability" and the Tories offer "chaos".

He says he has "ambition for the country and a practical plan to deliver it".

He says he wants to "change our country" and "make it work once again for you and your family".

21:00:33

First TV debate of the general election campaign is under way

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer are about to walk on to the stage in Salford to face off in the first TV debate of this 2024 general election.

The party leaders will face questions from ITV's Julie Etchingham about their records, and their plans for government, should they win the key to Number 10.

The pair will each try to convince voters that they should be trusted to govern the country and tackle the issues facing the voters watching in the studio and at home.

There will also no doubt be some fiery moments as the two leaders attack each other in a bid to come out on top.

We'll have live updates and analysis on the debate right here in the Politics Hub throughout.

And tune in to Sky News the moment it ends when we'll reveal the results of a snap YouGov poll on who voters thought emerged victorious.

20:55:01

Sunak will show the future in debate, says Atkins

By Jennifer Scott, political reporter

Health Secretary Victoria Atkins is now doing a tour of the broadcasters in the spin room to big up Rishi Sunak's chances at tonight's debate, which is minutes away.

She says as the prime minister of the United Kingdom, he has "an enormous amount of responsibility" in the day job, yet is still "putting everything into speaking to people across the country".

But she thinks tonight's debate will give him a chance "to show the future" his government will bring to a wider audience.

Ms Atkins also takes the chance to have a pop at Sir Keir Starmer and his campaign strategy - particularly the signage Labour is using with the word "change" emblazoned everywhere.

"A placard with a single world is not good enough," she says, accusing him of voting against things - like a reduction in immigration - that he now claims to stand for.

"The British public will see through this in tonight's debate," she adds.

Fighting talk ahead of the debate, for sure...

Election latest: 'You name it, Labour will tax it': Rishi Sunak goes on the attack as he faces Keir Starmer in first live head-to-head of election campaign (2024)

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