Election latest: PM insists UK is better off than in 2010 - as Farage says he 'doesn't want to know racists' (2024)

Key points
  • Deputy PM dismisses election threat from Reform
  • Has Labour chosen wealthy pensioners over children in poverty?
  • Sunak warns Starmer will cause 'irreversible damage' in 100 days
  • Farage says he 'doesn't want to know' racists
  • Reform drops three candidates over racism row
  • Rob Powell:With more coverage comes more scrutiny
  • Politics at Jack and Sam's:The last weekend
  • Live reporting by Faith Ridlerand Niamh Lynch
Election essentials
  • Manifesto pledges:Conservatives|Greens|Labour|Lib Dems|Plaid|Reform|SNP
  • Trackers:Who's leading polls?|Is PM keeping promises?
  • Campaign Heritage:Memorable moments from elections gone by
  • Follow Sky's politics podcasts:Electoral Dysfunction|Politics At Jack And Sam's
  • Read more:Who is standing down?|Key seats to watch|What counts as voter ID?|Check if your constituency is changing|Guide to election lingo
  • How to watch election on Sky News

11:40:01

Poll tracker: Where do the parties stand today?

Our live poll tracker collates the results of opinion surveys carried out by all the main polling organisations - and allows you to see how the political parties are performing in the run-up to the general election.

With under a week to go, the Tories and Labour have taken a drop, while support for Reform UK and the Liberal Democrats is on the rise.

Read more about the trackerhere.

11:20:01

Don't know who to vote for? Here's a very simple guide to what each party is promising

Pledges and promises are coming thick and fast from every party as the general election approaches.

Struggling to keep up with who is saying what?

Here is a summary of where the main parties stand on major issues.

For a more in-depth look at what each party has pledged, scour ourmanifesto checker...

11:00:01

Watch: Nigel Farage speech interrupted by Putin banner

A speech by Nigel Farage was interrupted by a banner showing a smirking Vladimir Putin with the caption "I [heart emoji] Nigel".

Campaign group Led By Donkeys carried out the stunt as the Reform UK leader spoke on stage at the Columbine Centre in Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex.

Footage posted on social media showed the banner slowly descending from the ceiling showing the Russian president with his thumb up.

Upon seeing the banner, Mr Farage - the Reform UK candidate for Clacton - said: "Who put that up there? Someone at the Columbine Centre needs to get the sack."

It comes after Mr Farage received widespread criticism for claiming earlier this month that the West and NATO "provoked" Russia's war on Ukraine.

Watch below...

10:40:01

Was PM wrong to say he had respect for Farage?

Rishi Sunak was asked if it was a mistake for him to say at the start of the campaign that he has respect for Nigel Farage.

It comes in the wake of controversy over racist comments about Mr Sunak made by a man alleging to be a Reform UK canvasser.

Mr Farage, the leader of Reform UK, claims he is an actor.

Asked about his respect for the politician, Mr Sunak says there are views of his "that he's been right to highlight".

"Where I agree with someone's policies, I'll happily say that."

However, Mr Sunak says again that the racist remarks made about him were "wrong".

"I was keen to call it out."

The prime minister is also asked: "When was the last time you were wrong?"

He jokes: "If you talk to my wife and daughters they would say on a regular basis."

10:21:44

PM insists UK is better place to live now compared with 2010

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has today insisted that the UK is now a better place to live in than it was when the Conservatives took office in 2010.

He told the BBC: "It's a better place to live than it was in 2010.

"Of course I understand that the last few years have been difficult for everyone."

He cited the pandemic and the war in Ukraine driving up energy bills, insisting "we are now on the right track".

It was put to him that the country has become poorer by many measures since 2010, and public services are worse.

"I just don't accept that," Mr Sunak replied, citing education and saying "our schoolchildren are now the best readers in the Western world".

10:00:54

'Proportional representation will be on next week's agenda', Campbell says

Former spokesperson for Tony Blair, Alistair Campbell, has speculated that "next week PR [proportional representation] will be on the agenda".

"Because if you have Labour getting a massive majority with fewer votes than [Jeremy] Corbyn, Lib Dems doing really well with fewer votes and Charles Kennedy, Nick Clegg, and Reform getting millions of votes but a few seats, people are going to go, 'oh, hold on a minute'," he says.

The UK has a first-past-the-post system, where the candidate who gets the most votes in a constituency wins - no matter the size of their vote percentage.

Proportional representation is a type of system in which the number of seats a party wins more closely corresponds with the percentage of the vote it won.

Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips has finished now, but we'll be continuing with our live politics coverage here.

09:47:57

SNP would pursue second independence referendum if faced with electoral losses, Swinney says

John Swinney also indicated his party would continue to press for a second referendum on Scottish independence even if they faced significant electoral losses.

"The issues that people are concerned about in Scotland today - the cost of living crisis, the cuts in public services and our public spending, the implications of Brexit - these are all decisions that were arrived at [in] Westminster," he said.

"If Scotland was an independent country, we could take a different course."

Mr Swinney also said that the economic consequences of Brexit amounted to "a very significant change in circ*mstances that I believe alone merits the right of the people of Scotland to decide their own future".

The SNP leader also acknowledged the party has had a "tough time" in recent months.

He said he "became first minister to essentially strengthen the party and to build a relationship with the electorate".

"We are building that trust as a unified and cohesive political party and it's unified and cohesive political parties that win elections."

09:40:38

Swinney: Scots have been 'disenfranchised' by timing of election

Next up with Trevor Phillips is John Swinney, the leader of the SNP.

Trevor begins by asking about the issue of postal ballots having not arrived before people in Scotland head off on their summer breaks.

School holidays have already started in large parts of Scotland.

Mr Swinney says this is a "serious issue".

"We've had significant reports of people who were planning to vote by post, who had applied properly for a postal vote before the deadline 19 June and those postal votes have not arrived with people.

"Some of them have now left the country, and they have been disenfranchised by the timing of the election, which is something I deeply regret."

The Scottish first minister says the situation is "illustrative" that there was "no thought" given to the fact the election would take place during Scottish school holidays.

09:31:06

Nigel Farage labels questions of sympathies to Putin as 'Russia hoax'

When asked about his alleged sympathies to Vladimir Putin by Trevor, Nigel Farage labels it as the "Russia hoax".

Instead he points to his previous predictions about the war in Ukraine.

"I understand why the Labour [and] Conservative Parties are worried. I was opposed to the Iraq War. I thought it was absolutely crazy to go into Libya. Ten years ago, I stood up in the European Parliament and I said, you are giving a dangerous man an excuse to give his people to go to war. I said there will be a war in Ukraine," he says, pointing his fingers.

"Can I be clear that Putin is a very, very dangerous and dangerously clever man. I abhor what he's done in Ukraine, totally and utterly. But I was far-sighted. I saw this coming," he says.

But Trevor accuses Mr Farage of answering his own questions rather than tackling what he's been asked.

He then asks whether there were Russian bots influencing the general election - something that Mr Farage emphatically dismisses.

"Did you ask him how many millions of pounds his party have taken from Russian sources over the course of the last few days?" Mr Farage asked instead.

09:25:42

Farage says he 'doesn't want to know' racists

Next up with Trevor Phillips is Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.

First, he is asked about racist comments made by Reform UK canvasser Andrew Parker, which Mr Farage claims was a set up.

But does the Reform UK leader have any proof?

Mr Farage claims that Mr Parker is an "actor" with an "alter-ego".

"I didn't know this was an act - it was an act from the start to the end," he claims. "He spent time with the two Channel 4 undercover reporters in the office... he then took canvassers out with Channel 4 in the car with him.

"He tried to get our canvassers to say nasty, racist things - which of course they did not. It was a deliberate attempt to derail our campaign."

Earlier this week, Channel 4 news aired footage filmed undercover that showed Andrew Parker, an activist canvassing for Mr Farage, using the racial slur "P***" to describe the prime minister, describing Islam as a "disgusting cult", and saying the army should "just shoot" migrants crossing the Channel.

Mr Farage claims this man was a "walking Alf Garnett, a character in the British sitcom Till Death Us Do Part".

Trevor then asks why people with extreme views appear to be attracted to Reform UK, and Mr Farage denies this is the case.

He says: "Anybody who has a racist point of view, I don't want to know."

Election latest: PM insists UK is better off than in 2010 - as Farage says he 'doesn't want to know racists' (2024)

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