Starmer says Sunak’s £2,000 tax claim is
‘garbage’ in heated TV election clash
The two leaders traded blows on taxes, NHS waiting
lists and immigration as they went head to head on Tuesday.
Pa
Political Staff
Sir Keir
Starmer rejected as “absolute garbage” Rishi Sunak’s claim that he would hike
taxes by £2,000 as the two leaders clashed on the economy, immigration and the
NHS in their first TV election debate.
The Labour
leader said the attack line was “nonsense” after the Prime Minister deployed it
repeatedly in the heated showdown on ITV.
In his
opening pitch to voters on ITV, the Prime Minister sought to draw dividing
lines with his rival as he claimed Sir Keir would “raid” pension pots and raise
taxes on families.
Meanwhile,
the Labour leader questioned the timing of the election, accusing Mr Sunak of
calling a summer polling day because he “knows” inflation and energy prices
will take a turn for the worse later in the year.
Sir Keir
mockingly dubbed the Prime Minister “the British expert on tax rises” after Mr
Sunak’s repeated his insistence that Sir Keir would increase the burden.
The two
leaders were reprimanded by debate host Julie Etchingham for talking over each
other following opening skirmishes over the state of the public finances.
First blood
was drawn when the Tory leader challenged Sir Keir to say how he would resolve
the Government’s long-running dispute with junior doctors, earning a round of
applause as he said he would not offer a 35% pay rise.
But Sir
Keir drew audience laughter as he ridiculed the Prime Minister over his claim
that NHS waiting lists were improving, saying: “They were 7.2 million, they’re
now 7.5 million. He says they are coming down and this is the guy who says he’s
good at maths.”
Mr Sunak
then blamed industrial action, eliciting groans from the crowd and prompting
his rival to hit back: “It’s somebody else’s fault.”
In his
initial statement at the ITV debate, the PM had said: “Beyond raising your
taxes and raiding your pensions, no-one knows what Labour would actually do.
“But you
know what I would do? I’ll cut your taxes, protect your pension and reduce
immigration.”
Expanding
on the accusation later in the show during a debate about climate change, Mr
Sunak said Sir Keir would “reverse all of the changes I’ve made” which would
“cost everyone and you thousands of pounds.”
The Labour
leader initially declined to engage with the claim, but eventually said: “This
£2,000 he keeps saying it’s going to cost is absolute garbage.”
Sir Keir
said: “This election is all about a choice. More of the chaos and division
we’ve seen for the last 14 years or turning the page and rebuilding with
Labour.
“I have
ambition for our country. I have a practical plan to deliver it.”
Elsehwere,
Mr Sunak offered his strongest suggestion yet that he could be willing to leave
the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if the Government’s stalled
Rwanda deportation plan remains blocked by the courts.
He said:
“If I am forced to choose between securing our borders and our country’s
security, or a foreign court, I’m going to choose our country’s security every
single time.”
Sir Keir
said the UK risked becoming a “pariah” state if it left international
conventions.
Mr Sunak
will have been aiming to move the dial against a backdrop of dire opinion poll
ratings for the Tories, with recent analysis suggesting the party is heading
for an electoral wipeout.
Snap
verdicts following the debate marginally brightened the PM’s hopes, with YouGov
polling showing 51% of people thought he performed best overall during the
show, as compared with 49% voting for Sir Keir.
The Prime
Minister pointed to his record as chancellor during the pandemic as he asked
people to judge him by his actions.
“Every week
when I’m out and about, someone comes up to me and tells me how furlough saved
their family, saved their home, because that’s who I am,” he said.
Sir Keir
suggested the wealthy Prime Minister did not understand the plight facing
hard-pressed households.
Referring
to his own childhood, he said: “I do know the anguish of worrying, when the
postman comes with a bill, what is that bill going to be, can I pay it? I don’t
think the Prime Minister quite understands the position that you and other
people are in.”
In other
key developments on Tuesday:
-Sir Keir
said he supported processing asylum claims in third countries “if that was
possible to do it in compliance with international law”.
– Mr Sunak
said he would use private health care if he had a loved one on a long waiting
list for surgery, while Sir Keir said he would not.
– Mr Sunak
said he had discussed whether he or Gareth Southgate “had the worst job in
Britain” when he met with the England football manager.
– Both Mr
Sunak and Sir Keir said the UK’s special relationship with the US would
continue if Donald Trump re-enters the White House.
– Nigel
Farage was doused in milkshake earlier on campaign trail following his rally in
Clacton.
Mr Sunak
appealed to wavering voters in his closing statement at the ITV debate,
following right-wing firebrand Mr Farage’s shock announcement that he would
take over as leader of Reform UK and stand as a candidate.
“Either
Starmer or I will be your prime minister and a vote for anyone else makes it
more likely that it will be him,” he said.
Sir Keir
told voters he would not pretend there was a “magic wand that will fix
everything overnight” but would offer practical solutions to the problems faced
by the nation.
“Imagine
how you would feel waking up on July 5 to five more years of the
Conservatives,” he said.
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