Starmer delivers election speech
Keir Starmer is in Lancing, in the constituency of East Worthing and Shoreham. It is seat where Tim Loughton has been the Tory MP. At the last election he had a majority of 7,474, but Labour now hopes to take the seat.
Tom Rutland, the Labour candidate, introduced Starmer.
And Starmer is speaking now.
Key events
Starmer is now running through his six first step promises.
Starmer says Sunak’s claim UK has ‘turned the corner’ is ‘form of disrespect’ because that’s not what people feel
Starmer says he is fed up of hearing Rishi Sunak says the UK has âturned the cornerâ.
That is âa form of disrespect in itselfâ, he says.
Taxes are higher than at any time since the war, he says. And he claims Sunakâs commitment to abolishing national insurance means he is prepared to repeat the mistakes of Liz Truss all over again.
Starmer says in the 1970s people like his parents were able to think that, whatever disadvantages they had, they could be confident that their children would have a better future.
He says, after 14 years of the Conservatives, people cannot look forward to the future like this.
And he is now talking about security, using the passage briefed in advance about how he can be trusted on this. (See 9.54am.)
Starmer describes his upbringing in Oxted, a rural town ‘about as English as it gets’
Starmer says character is shaped by where you grow up.
He says he grew up in Oxted, which is not far from Lancing.
He urges people in the audience to go. He says it is âabout as English as it getsâ.
He says it was a mix of Victorian red brick and pebbledash homes, with ârolling hillsâ and pastures all around.
He says he loved growing up there.
You could make easy money clearing stones for the local farmers. That was actually my first ever job.
You could play football until the cows came home. Literally.
His football team shared a pitch with the cows, he says.
He recalls his parents. And he says, in the 1970s, they experienced the impact of inflation. They knew what it was like not being able to pay the bills. They had to decide what bill they would not pay, and chose to have the phone cut off.
Starmer delivers election speech
Keir Starmer is in Lancing, in the constituency of East Worthing and Shoreham. It is seat where Tim Loughton has been the Tory MP. At the last election he had a majority of 7,474, but Labour now hopes to take the seat.
Tom Rutland, the Labour candidate, introduced Starmer.
And Starmer is speaking now.
‘I make this promise: I will fight for you’ – Starmer tells voters they can trust him on security
As Eleni Courea and Aletha Adu report in their preview of the speech Keir Starmer is giving tomorrow, he will try to use it to reassure voters who may have concerns about Labour.
In the speech Starmer will say:
Whatever the polls say, I know there are countless people who havenât decided how theyâll vote in this election.
Theyâre fed up with the failure, chaos and division of the Tories, but they still have questions about us. Has Labour changed enough? Do I trust them with my money, our borders, and our security?
My answer is yes you can â because I have changed this party. Permanently. This has been my driving mission since day one. I was determined to change Labour so that it could serve the British people â¦
The very foundation of any good government is economic security, border security, and national security.
Make no mistake, if the British people give us the opportunity to serve, then this is their core test. It is always their core test.
I havenât worked for four years on this, just to stop now. This is the foundation, the bedrock that our manifesto and our first steps will be built upon â¦
I know those people are looking at this election, looking at me personally. So, I make this promise: I will fight for you.
I took this Labour party four years ago, and I changed it into the party you see today. I was criticised for some of the changes Iâve made, change is always like that.
There are always people who say, donât do that, donât go so fast. But whenever I face a fork in the road, it always comes back to this: the golden thread: country first, party second.
Bridget Phillipson, the shadow education secretary, was giving interviews this morning. She told Times Radio that Starmer would âdo everything within his power to keep our country safeâ.
She also confirmed the Times splash saying that, if Labour is elected, it will carry out a 100-day âsprint reviewâ of all the security threats facing the UK, in addition to the full security and defence review already planned. The Times says it will cover threats including âthose from Russia, Iran and other hostile states, Âextremism and generative artificial Âintelligence that has been used to create chatbot terrorists online to Ârecruit radicalsâ.
Teenagers who dodge Tories’ proposed national service could be harming their job prospects, ministers suggest
The Conservatives have said they want to make participation in their proposed national service compuslory for 18-year-olds, but they have not said how they would do this. Yesterday James Cleverly, the home secretary, ruled out imposing criminal sanctions on people who did not join in.
This morning Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Foreign Office minister, told ITV that teenagers who did dodge national service might be harming their job prospects.
She said she wanted participation to be seen as âpart of the normsâ. She went on:
Importantly, of course, when you then as a young person apply for a job, there will be a question that employers will want to know how you got involved â either because were able to achieve one of the 30,000 places (in the armed forces) or because you were volunteering in one or other part of your community.
As the Financial Times reports, yesterday Rishi Sunak said that people who have done national service could get preference when applying for university or for an apprenticeship, or in interviews for the civil serviceâs fast-track programme. He said:
We want to make sure Britainâs future generations can get the most out of national service. Thatâs why weâre looking into ways it can open doors they wouldnât otherwise get in work or education.
This morning, asked if the parents of teenagers who refused to sign up for national service could face prosectution, Trevelyan said she could not give details now, and that this was the sort of issue the proposed royal commission would look at.
![Libby Brooks](https://i.guim.co.uk/img/uploads/2023/01/24/Libby_Brooks.png?width=300&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=6e3c999375ccf1ce0c3c9b2278df42dd)
Libby Brooks
A sleepy bank holiday listener to BBC Radio Scotland would be forgiven for getting their party leaders mixed up this morning.
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey was speaking to Good Morning Scotland ahead of launching the partyâs Scotland campaign later today – but it was curious to hear him borrowing from both Labour – âwe are part of the changeâ – and the SNP – âvote Lib Dem to send a message to Westminsterâ.
With four seats on Scotland, the Lib Dems are eyeing up the weakness of the SNP and targeting others, in particular the seats of former leaders Jo Swinson and Charles Kennedy.
It was clear from the interview just how desperate the Lib Dems are to return to third place in the Commons behind Labour and the Tories – not surprising given the profile it has brought the SNP since 2015 – and this will be one of the key battles in this election campaign.
We donât have comments open yet, but we plan to open them at 10am. Because itâs a bank holiday, we donât have as many moderators working as usual.
Starmer and Sunak on campaign trail as Labour says Tory national service pledge âunravelling by the minuteâ
Good morning. We had the first big policy surprise of the election campaign at the weekend, and the Conservative plan to bring back a form of compulsory national service has had a mixed reception, to put it politely. As Eleni Courea and Aletha Adu report, a former head of the navy has described it as bonkers.
The propoal gets an enthusiastic write-up on the front page of the Tory loyalist Daily Express.
But the Daily Mail is notably more equivocal in its coverage.
Last night, in a sign they think the Conservatives are vulnerable on this issue, Labour issued a lengthy briefing note highlighting 22 âunanswered questionsâ about the policy. Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the Foreign Office minister, was doing a media round this morning, and when some of these were put to her on the Today programme, her answers were not particularly compelling.
Labour says:
The MoD could have to supply a 50% increase in Army accommodation, which based on the cost for new bed spaces could cost £4.8bn just on accommodation. Does the Conservativesâ costs take this into account?
When Justin Webb asked the minister a version of this question, saying she must have âsome ideaâ where the new recruits would live, Trevelyan just said that a royal commission would consider the details, and that the Tories were not planning to implement this in full until the end of the next parliament.
And Labour says:
The National Citizen Service had its funding slashed by two-thirds by the government in 2022, when Rishi Sunak was chancellor. What were the flaws in that model of youth service which made it a bad use of money, that have been corrected in the new plan proposed this week?
Webb suggested that proposing to spend £2.5bn a year on national service, having just slashed the budget for the National Citizen Service programme (the voluntary programme launched by David Cameron when he was PM), implied âincoherenceâ. Asked to explain why the budget for the National Citizen Service had been cut so much, Trevelyan blamed Covid and other shocks to the economy that had led to spending being cut back in some areas.
In addition to highlighting criticisms of the plan from Michael Portillo, a former Tory defence secretary, Labour pointed out that Thin Pinstriped Line, a defence policy blog, has published a withering assessment of the plan. It said: âItâs hard to see how this policy could be delivered for the stated cost of £2.5bn per year given that even rough calculations are showing that it would cost billions more to deliver both short and long term.â Ben Wallace, another former Tory defence secretary, recently said this blog was âthe voice of reasonâ which could not be bettered for defence analysis.
Labour said the policy was clearly unravelling. A party spokesperson said:
The Toriesâ National Service promise is unravelling by the minute, with the full scale of the schemeâs unfunded costs growing ever larger, and the list of unanswered questions about how it will work growing ever longer.
Here are some of the main campaign events of the day.
9.30am: Keir Starmer gives a speech, and takes questions from journalists.
Morning: Rishi Sunak is doing a campaign event, and he is also due to record an interview with the BBCâs political editor, Chris Mason. But his main campaign event will be in Chesham and Amersham at 5pm.
The Liberal Democrats are launching their battlebus, which they are calling Yellow Hammer 1.
And the SNP leader and Scottish first minister John Swinney is campaigning in Dumfries.
If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line (BTL) or message me on X (Twitter). I canât read all the messages BTL, but if you put âAndrewâ in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use X; Iâll see something addressed to @AndrewSparrow very quickly. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos (no error is too small to correct). And I find your questions very interesting too. I canât promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.