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  • The Guardian

    General election live: minister predicts Labour landslide as Braverman tells Tories ‘it’s over’

    By Andrew Sparrow (now) and Helen Sullivan (earlier),

    4 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0AruAh_0uCoITPs00
    Rishi Sunak at a Conservative party rally in central London. Photograph: James Veysey/REX/Shutterstock

    9.53am BST

    Keir Starmer is visiting Wales, Scotland and England today. At his first stop in Camarthenshire he stressed that many voters were still undecided. This is from Sky’s Beth Rigby .

    Starmer in Wales: “There are a lot of undecided voters, still lots of constituencies that will come down to a few 100 votes that’ll make the difference & people need convincing… to vote for change” > told by one figure there at least 60-70 seats that could still go either way

    9.48am BST

    Is there such a thing as a supermajority?

    A reader asks:

    In UK election (sorry I’m from Australia) what is meant by a supermajority and why does it matter?

    When Conservative politicians talk about a “supermajority”, they are just using the word to mean a very big majority (anything over 150 would reasonably count). In the British political system, a supermajority is not a real constitutional benchmark.

    But in some countries a supermajority (such as two-thirds) is required for some types of constitutional change and the Tories (and the pro-Tory papers, which have adopted the phrase with enthusiasm) seem to be using the phrase repeatedly because, in the minds of some voters, it conveys the impression that a Keir Starmer government would have some special power to rig the system in its favour.

    It wouldn’t, but it would not need such a power anyway; in the UK, a government with a decent majority can introduce sweeping changes relatively easily.

    There are some minor exceptions. Under the Fixed-term Parliaments Act, a government needed two thirds of MPs to vote for an early election. But that law has now been abolished. And, as James Ball from the New European explains here , if Labour wanted to change the royal charter for press regulation, passed under the coalition but ignored by most big newspapers, it would need a two-thirds majority in the Commons.

    9.35am BST

    Munira Wilson has defended Ed Davey’s decision to run an election campaign dominated by outdoor adventure photo opportunities, telling LBC the Lib Dem leader had struck a balance between “really serious issues” and “not taking himself too seriously, which I think politicians too often do.”

    Asked if stunts like paddleboarding and bungee jumping had worked, Wilson, the party’s education spokersperson, said :

    Well, we’re all talking about it and we are talking about the issues. I think he’s really taken himself not very seriously to shine a spotlight on serious issues.

    She said Davey had highlighted issues like health, social care, sewage in rivers and seas, and the cost of living crisis.

    9.26am BST

    Labour condemns harassment of its candidates and in pro-Palestinian areas

    Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, has condemned the harassment of Labour candidates and canvassers, amid reports of intimidation in pro-Palestinian areas across the country, Kiran Stacey reports.

    Related: Labour condemns harassment of its candidates and in pro-Palestinian areas

    9.11am BST

    Braverman attacks Sunak over Tories continuing to take cash from Frank Hester after racist comments row

    There is more evidence of the fact that the Tories have, in practice, conceded the general election in the Daily Telegraph, where Suella Braverman , the former home secretary, has kicked off the inquest into what went wrong. As Helen reported in an earlier post (see 7.48am ), Braverman’s main argument is voters have abandoned the Tories because they failed to “to cut immigration or tax or deal with the net zero and woke policies we have presided over for 14 years”.

    But, in a passage that slightly undermines her “woke” argument, Braverman also criticises the Conservatives for continuing to accept money from Frank Hester after the Guardian revealed that he had made comments about Diane Abbott, at a private meeting with staff, that were widely condemned as racist.

    Braverman says:

    Reform demonstrably failed to vet its candidates properly and these people should be nowhere near public life. I’ve been on the receiving end of racism myself and it’s right that the PM called it out. But cries of hurt and anger look less powerful when the Conservative Party was perfectly happy to take the money from Frank Hester . Remarks about hating black women were glossed over in the name of filling our party coffers. I don’t follow the logic. Nor do the voters. Whatever “the smartest men in the room” might privately think, the public are not in fact mugs.

    Most Tories condemned what Hester said, but hardly any of them said the party should stop taking money from him. (They justified accepting his donations on the grounds that Hester apologised, even though he just apologised for being offensive, not accepting that his words were racist.) Braverman is probably the first senior figure in the party to make this point. It is intended as a direct criticism of Sunak, whose allies regularly describe him as “the smartest man in the room”.

    8.43am BST

    Labour likely to win with 'largest majority this country has ever seen', Tory cabinet minister Mel Stride claims

    Good morning. I’m Andrew Sparrow, taking over from Helen Sullivan.

    Mel Stride , the work and pensions secretary, has been the lead voice for the Conservative party on the morning broadast round during the election, but no one would claim that he is the most exciting politician in Britain. Today, though, he said something very striking. Election concessions normally come at around 4am on Friday morning, but on the Today programme Stride delivered what sounded very much like a formal concession of defeat. He told the programme:

    I totally accept that, where the polls are at the moment, means that tomorrow is likely to see the largest Labour landslide majority, the largest majority that this country has ever seen. Much bigger than 1997, bigger even than the National government in 1931.

    What, therefore, matters now is what kind of opposition do we have, what kind of ability to scrutinise government is there within parliament.

    This is a huge claim. And it is an exaggerated one; the National government in 1931 had a majority of 492, which not even the wildest MRP poll is predicting this time round. But the mainstream expectation from pollsters is that Labour will have a bigger majority on Friday than Tony Blair did in 1997 (179). Last night the polling firm Survation said Labour was “99% certain to win more seat than in 1997”.

    Of course, Stride is not saying this because he wants to provide Today listeners with impartial analysis. It is an escalated version of the Tory plan to talk up the prospect of a Labour “supermajority” and it has two aims: first, to encourage people worried about the prospect of a Labour majority to vote Tory; and, second (and perhaps more importantly – there are more people in this group), to encourage people who are not passionately anti-Labour to think they can safely stay at home tomorrow.

    If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line (BTL) or message me on X (Twitter). I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” 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; I’ll 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 can’t 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.

    8.22am BST

    The Today programme’s Mishal Husain asks Pat McFadden, Labour’s National Campaign Coordinator, how Labour would work with a far right government in France on small boats, if Le Pen is elected.

    “It’s for other countries to elect their leaders, I’m focussed on our own election” he says.

    “It’s an international problem and we have to work with whoever gets elected”, he says.

    Asked if he accepts it will be a “serious challenge”, he says there will be “many serious challenges”.

    Updated at 8.22am BST

    8.19am BST

    The Today programme’s Mishal Husain asks McFadden , Labour’s National Campaign Coordinator, when people can expect to feel their circumstances have changed.

    McFadden talks about the six first steps, but despite Husain’s prompting, doesn’t give a timeframe.

    He believes in “under promise and over deliver”, but he doesn’t commit to a time frame.

    8.16am BST

    Pat McFadden: I’ve had boiled eggs that have lasted longer than the Tory 'show of unity'

    Pat McFadden , Labour’s National Campaign Coordinator, criticised the “show of unity” said to be displayed within the Conservative Party when former prime minister Boris Johnson appeared at a rally on Tuesday night –and commented on Suella Braverman ’s article in the Telegraph.

    McFadden told Times Radio: “The show of unity, I’ve had boiled eggs that have lasted longer than this show of unity.

    “Almost before he (Mr Johnson) was finished speaking, we had Suella Braverman in The Telegraph saying that it had all been a terrible mess. I think maybe that is the Conservatives’ problem, is that it is all quite late for Boris to now be throwing his weight behind a prime minister, when, I think - to borrow a phrase from Northern Ireland - even the dogs in the street know there’s not a lot of love lost there.”

    Asked if he would “fear” going up against Mr Johnson as a campaigner or prime minister more than Sunak, he told the programme:

    “I think Boris destroyed his credibility through the whole ‘partygate’ and destruction of standards in public life.”

    He claimed that “people saw through the act a little bit” and realised in elected government “they want to know what the sense of direction is going to be”.

    8.11am BST

    Labour slips behind SNP in new poll

    Labour has slipped behind the SNP days before election day, a new poll suggests.

    PA reports that a survey by Savanta for The Scotsman suggests 31% of Scots could vote Labour on Thursday, three points down on the last poll, while support for the SNP is unchanged at 34%.

    According to analysis from Professor John Curtice , Labour, which won just one seat north of the border in the 2019 election, is on course for 22 Scottish MPs while the SNP would keep 24 seats.

    The poll, carried out between 28 June and 2 July, suggests the Conservatives are on 15%, up one point, while the Liberal Democrats are at 9%, up two points on the last poll earlier in June.

    The latest poll of 1,083 Scottish adults found 6% said they would back Reform UK, no change since the last poll, while the Greens were up one point at 3%, and 2% said they would vote for other parties.

    Chris Hopkins, political research director at Savanta, said:

    Our final Scottish voting intention before 4 July suggests the SNP is ahead of Labour, showing a modest improvement and potentially blunting their losses on election night.

    If our results were reflected on polling day, John Swinney ’s election as SNP leader looks like it will have come just in the nick of time.

    That being said, Labour’s efficient vote, in particular around the central belt, will still mean it’s likely going to be a very good evening for Anas Sarwar and Keir Starmer .

    Their majority is no longer dependent on Scotland, but they’ll want to squeeze the SNP as much as they can.”

    8.02am BST

    On BBC Radio Four, Mel Stride was asked whether he thinks public services are better than they were in 2010.

    “Yes, I think many of them absolutely are, despite Covid and the pressures that we faced with inflation, because of the war in Ukraine, etc,” he said.

    Asked whether he had accepted that the Tories had lost the election, the Work and Pensions Secretary told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

    I have accepted that where the polls are at the moment - and it seems highly unlikely that they are very, very wrong, because they’ve been consistently in the same place for some time - that we are therefore tomorrow highly likely to be in a situation where we have the largest majority that any party has ever achieved.”

    Updated at 8.17am BST

    7.59am BST

    We're on the brink of a Labour landslide, says Tory minister

    Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride has just told Times Radio, “there will be plenty of time” for “post-mortems” of the Conservatives’ performance after polling day, as well as “where the party goes in the future”.

    He suggested his party was the only one that could “hold this (Labour) government to account” as he repeated Tory warnings of a “supermajority”.

    He said “we are right on the brink of a very perilous situation” with a “very weak and marginalised opposition”.

    Asked if he thought there was anything the Conservatives could have done during the campaign to increase support, Mr Stride told Times Radio:

    Tempted though I am to come up with all sorts of speculations on this, I think we need to get through and out the other side of the General Election tomorrow, and then there will be plenty of time for us to do post-mortems and dissect what should or shouldn’t have been done in the past, or importantly where the party goes in the future.



    We’re on the brink, probably, of the largest landslide we’ve ever seen in this country ... what we have to have is some balance within our parliament.



    I think we’re right on the brink of a very perilous situation.

    Updated at 8.18am BST

    7.55am BST

    Survation poll 99% certain of Labour landslide

    A forecast by polling company Survation shows Labour winning 484 of the 650 seats in parliament, far more than the 418 won by the party’s former leader Tony Blair in his famous 1997 landslide win and the most in its history.

    The poll of 34,559 people predicts Conservatives will win just 64 seats, which would be the fewest since the party was founded in 1834.

    Labour is on course to win around 484 seats, according to the poll, more than it did when Tony Blair took office in 1997.

    The polling company says a Labour landslide is “99% certain”.

    7.48am BST

    Suella Braverman: 'It's over'

    Former home secretary Suella Braverman has urged the Conservative Party to “read the writing on the wall” and “prepare for the reality and frustration of opposition”.

    Writing in The Telegraph , Braverman says victory should no longer be the goal for the Tories.

    “Thursday’s vote is now all about forming a strong enough opposition,” she writes.

    “One needs to read the writing on the wall: it’s over, and we need to prepare for the reality and frustration of opposition.”

    Braverman blames the situation on a fracture within the Conservative Party resulting from a rise in Nigel Farage ’s Reform UK.

    It is notable that Labour’s vote share has not markedly increased in recent weeks, but our vote is evaporating from both Left and Right.

    The critics will cite Boris [Johnson], Liz [Truss], Rwanda, and, I can immodestly predict, even me as all being fatal to our ‘centrist’ vote.

    The reality is rather different: we are haemorrhaging votes largely to Reform. Why? Because we failed to cut immigration or tax or deal with the net zero and woke policies we have presided over for 14 years.

    We may lose hundreds of excellent MPs because of our abject inability to have foreseen this inevitability months ago: that our failure to unite the Right would destroy us.”

    Braverman says the Tories need “a searingly honest post-match analysis”, “because the fight for the soul of the Conservative Party will determine whether we allow Starmer a clear run at destroying our country for good or having a chance to redeem it in due course.

    “Indeed, it will decide whether our party continues to exist at all.”

    Updated at 8.08am BST

    7.42am BST

    Thursday’s general election looks likely to be a historic pivot: one of those long-remembered moments when the established order at Westminster is swept away by what Jim Callaghan , the victim of one such shift in 1979, called a “sea change in politics”.

    Yet as Guardian reporters fanned out across the UK during the campaign to spend time talking to voters and non-voters in 15 varied constituencies for the Path to power series, they found precious little hope that things will be different come 5 July.

    Every constituency had its own particular concerns that bubbled up repeatedly in conversation: in Waveney Valley it was unwanted pylons , in Burnley it was the Gaza conflict and in Clacton it was immigration .

    But several common threads run through much of the reporting, forming a dark narrative about the state of Britain and its people as Labour prepares to take power.

    Everywhere reporters went, the infrastructure that makes up everyday life, from GP surgeries to libraries to roads, has been eroded by more than a decade of underinvestment:

    Related: Hope in short supply: what our election reporters found out as they travelled the UK

    7.32am BST

    Can Starmer keep his family out of the spotlight?

    Victoria Starmer joined Starmer on stage at the launch of Labour’s campaign, but has otherwise rarely been seen on the trail. Keir Starmer has said that if he’s elected, “she’s absolutely going to carry on working, she wants to and she loves it. It’s also good for me because it gives me an insight into the NHS.”

    The Guardian’s Gaby Hinsliff , interviewed by Rupert Neate in today’s First Edition , says:

    It’s 2024, I do not care who the PM is married to it shouldn’t matter,” she says. “We shouldn’t be talking about it; it only matters if there is a conflict of interest. I don’t take my husband to work, and I can’t think why anyone else should have to.”

    “Grazia readers have moved on…They expect to see female politicians interviewed in their own right and in their professional capacity. If a leader can’t find a way to make themselves relatable without a spouse, perhaps they shouldn’t be a leader. It was also sad that Theresa May felt she had to explain why she didn’t have children, and disappointing that Andrea Leadsom [who challenged May for the leadership in 2016] suggested that having children made her a better choice to be prime minister. We should have moved beyond all this.”

    The Starmers are fiercely protective of their children’s privacy.

    “The degree to which they have kept their children out of [the spotlight] so far is impressive, and not something a PM has tried before,” Hinsliff says. “I really respect them for it, and wish them the best of luck trying to preserve it. But it is going to be difficult.”

    Rishi Sunak has mostly kept his children out of the public eye, but they have been seen at some events including a street party on Downing Street to celebrate the King’s coronation, and he posted a photo of them on Instagram during his bid for the Tory party leadership in 2022. He also described them as “the experts of [the climate crisis] in my household”.

    Updated at 8.05am BST

    7.23am BST

    Welsh government commits to making lying in politics illegal

    The Labour-led Welsh government has committed to introduce “globally pioneering” legislation that would in effect make lying in politics there illegal.

    Members of the Senedd described it as a historic moment that would combat the “existential threat” that lying in politics poses to democracy.

    After a passionate and dramatic debate in the Welsh parliament on Tuesday evening, the government’s counsel general, Mick Antoniw , said the legislation would be introduced before the next Welsh elections in two years’ time.

    He said: “The Welsh government will bring forward legislation before 2026 for the disqualification of members and candidates found guilty of deliberate deception through an independent judicial process.”

    Antoniw said the practical details of how a law to tackle lying would work would need to be worked out and he called for cross-party cooperation.

    Related: Welsh government commits to making lying in politics illegal

    Updated at 8.05am BST

    7.18am BST

    Parties pitch for votes on final day of the campaign

    With just one sleep to go, here is how party leaders are spending their last day before voting day – and the messages they’ll be trying to drive home:

    Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will end his campaign trail in the South East. He has used th the word ‘supermajority’ in three tweets in the last hour. As in stop the Labour / tax-raising supermajority.

    He has shared his fears of a Labour “supermajority” and said in an overnight statement: “If you are worried about an unchecked, unaccountable Labour government you can stop that by offering us your support so we can stand up for you and be your voice in the next Parliament.”

    In a marathon final leg of his tour, Labour leader Keir Starmer will speak to voters in England, Scotland and Wales.

    “We’re out in constituencies where we haven’t necessarily won before, because we think that many people are disillusioned with what they’ve seen in the last 14 years,” he told reporters on Tuesday.

    “We’re a changed Labour Party and we’re constantly putting our case forward, still smiling, still with a spring in our step that we’re probably the only positive campaign left now.”

    Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey will hit the road again to round off his stunt-packed campaign.

    There is no time to slip into a Dryrobe and warm up after surf lessons on the Cornish coast, because party chiefs have several stops lined up on Sir Ed’s final pre-vote tour of southern England.

    Wrapping up his party’s thread on care, which he has spoken about several times on the campaign trail, Davey said: “Throughout this campaign, I’ve been so moved by all the people I’ve spoken to or who have got in touch to discuss their experiences caring for loved ones.”

    Reform UK leader Nigel Farage will take another trip to the Essex seaside constituency which he is contesting. Survation pollsters have said Clacton is the only constituency where Reform UK has a confident lead, but they could take 16 seats at an “upper end” estimate.

    Scottish First Minister John Swinney has told voters some seats will be won or lost “by only a handful of votes”.

    In his final pitch, he said: “Be certain about one thing - your vote will matter. It could make all the difference.”

    Updated at 7.19am BST

    7.00am BST

    This morning's front pages

    It has just gone 7am: let’s look at today’s stop stories. With 24 hours to go until polls open, the Guardian leads with Keir Starmer accusing the Conservatives of desperate tactics amid claims that Tory criticism of his defence of family time was insensitive and had antisemitic undertones .

    The Times has Boris Johnson saying a Labour landslide would be “pregnant with horrors”:

    The i : Prisons crisis for new government on day one

    The Financial Times leads with water groups facing lawsuits, but also carries the interesting headline, “Rich offload assets as concerns mount over Labour’s capital gains tax agenda”.

    The Independent : The final poll - Tories brace for wipeout

    The Daily Mirror : Is it coming home? 14 years of hurt never stopped us dreaming

    The Daily Express : Rishi: Your vote counts, your voice counts… please use it wisely

    The Daily Mail : Boris and Rishi unite to stop Starmergeddon

    The Daily Record carries a letter from Starmer saying “Let’s send a Labour government to Westminster with Scotland at its beating heart”:

    The Yorkshire Post : ‘Part-time’ attacks on Starmer ‘must stop’

    Finally, the Daily Star with an endorsement from Kim Wilde for Count Binface:

    6.48am BST

    Jewish figures criticise ‘stigmatising’ Tory attack on Starmer family time

    Keir Starmer has accused the Conservatives of desperate tactics amid claims that Tory criticism of his defence of family time was insensitive and had antisemitic undertones.

    Ben Quinn , Peter Walker and Kiran Stacey report:

    With Rishi Sunak embarking on a marathon day of campaigning, beginning with a pre-dawn visit to a distribution centre and closing with a late-night rally, Tory ministers and aides sought to contrast these efforts with what they termed Starmer’s “part-time” approach.

    As an increasingly personal election campaign neared its end, the Conservatives pushed out “final warnings” about what they said a massive Labour majority would mean for taxes, migration and other policy areas.

    Downing Street chiefs believe the criticism of Starmer for saying he would maintain his current habit of trying to spend time with his wife and children after 6pm on Fridays “pretty well come what may” has resonated with voters.

    However, it has sparked an angry backlash, with senior Jewish figures saying the decision to target such a culturally significant time of the week – Starmer’s wife, Victoria, comes from a Jewish family – was ill-judged and deeply unfair.

    “I would have thought to anybody it’s blindingly obvious that a Friday night is quite important in some religions and faiths,” Starmer told reporters during a campaign stopover in Derbyshire.

    Calling the attacks “laughably pathetic”, the Labour leader said his comments in a radio interview the day before had simply been to set out how he tried to keep Friday evenings aside for his family and would if elected prime minister, adding: “But I know very well it’s going to be really difficult to do it.”

    Starmer said the aim was to create “protected time” for his children, his wife and her father. “Obviously her dad’s side of the family is Jewish, as people will appreciate, and we use that for family prayers – not every Friday, but not infrequently.

    “That doesn’t mean I’ve never had to work on a Friday, of course it doesn’t. Plenty of times I haven’t been able to do it, but I try to protect that time, I’d like to try and protect it in the future.”

    Related: Jewish figures criticise ‘stigmatising’ Tory attack on Starmer family time

    Updated at 8.06am BST

    6.38am BST

    Zadie Smith on hope after 14 years of the Tories

    Zadie Smith has written a long piece for the Guardian this morning on the hope for real change –and a return to the sort of free, functional healthcare and education she once boasted about to Americans – after 14 years of Tory rule:

    You should think of yourself (I said to myself) as something like the Ancient Mariner, just repeating over and over your tale of woe, in the hope that the next time the big bright bird of potential equity flies past the ship of state, we might remember what it looks like, and what it can do, and not let any Tories or neoliberals rush up on to the deck to shoot it down.

    This Ancient Mariner metaphor stood me in pretty good stead until I settled in the US, around 2010, returning 10 years later to a Britain I barely recognised. At this point, I became Rip Van Winkle. The list of things that have boggled my mind in the past four years is too long to recount here, but the final straw came just a few weeks ago, while I was washing up. The radio was on. A government spokesperson was extolling the virtues of conscription. Where else (asked the spokesperson) can people of different classes and races and genders meet each other on a more or less equal footing and pursue a common goal? Where else in modern-day Britain can community be fostered and encouraged, and people allowed a space in which their human capacities, whatever they may be, can flourish? Where else, I ask you, where else ?

    I couldn’t work out if this spokesperson was so dense that he truly couldn’t think of an alternative answer to his own query, or if this was one of those very unfunny comedy skits you sometimes find yourself listening to when your hands are otherwise occupied with soap suds. But no: he was 100% serious. The thought that a well-funded state school would provide all of the above had truly never occurred to him. And then I realised: oh Jesus, if things carry on as they are, one day he’ll be right.

    Related: ‘Here comes the sun’: Zadie Smith on hope, trepidation and rebirth after 14 years of the Tories

    6.28am BST

    Gordon Brown: Use this election to reject the Farage version of Britain

    Former PM and Labour leader Gordon Brown , in an opinion piece for the Guardian, has urged voters to, “reject the Farage version of Britain and to get our real country back, and to show that greatness comes from standing tall in defence of our principles. To show that greatness comes from standing tall and moving together in defence of your culture, your history and your values.”

    Related: Use this election to reject the Farage version of Britain. Let’s get our country back | Gordon Brown

    6.20am BST

    Even a small number of votes for Reform UK will see the SNP handed seats in Scotland, according to the Conservatives.

    The party has continued its warnings against its traditional voters defecting to Nigel Farage ’s party on the eve of polling day.

    Opinion polls indicate the SNP and Labour are engaged in a two-way race north of the border, with seat projections suggesting the Tories may hold on to the same number of seats they won in the previous election.

    In recent days, the party has urged Scottish voters not to shift to Reform.

    Party chairman Craig Hoy said:

    Many seats in Scotland are a straight contest between the SNP and Scottish Conservatives. In those key seats, no other party can win. Reform, Labour and the Lib Dems are simply too far behind. Even a small number of votes for Reform could lead to big wins for the SNP.”

    Despite polling suggesting a Labour surge, Hoy appeared to suggest it is his party that can inflict a defeat on the SNP.

    “The opportunity is within our grasp to hand the SNP their worst election defeat in more than a decade, but just a few people choosing to vote Reform could put all that at risk,” he added.

    “In key seats up and down Scotland, only a vote for the Scottish Conservatives can beat the SNP and get the focus on to the issues that really matter to you.”

    Updated at 8.06am BST

    6.15am BST

    Across the market towns of Britain the battle for the soul of the right is fierce

    As the traders pack up under the striped awnings of the market stalls in the centre of Alford, east Lincolnshire , Matthew Warner is loading balls of wool from his family shop into the back of his car.

    Warner, a father of two, is feeling a serious strain on the family finances from fuel prices and childcare, and his wife cannot work full-time hours as a nurse because of the costs. A longtime Tory voter, the 33-year-old is still undecided on who he will vote for on Thursday, but he says he is now attracted by Nigel Farage’s Reform party, who are making significant inroads in seats like this.

    Alford is in the heart of one of the safest Tory constituencies, Louth and Horncastle, but the race is a near-perfect encapsulation of the battle for the soul of the Conservative party.

    Its MP is Victoria Atkins , the health secretary, a key figure in the party’s moderate wing and a champion of Rishi Sunak. Her Reform opponent, Sean Matthews, is a retired police officer and was previously a local Tory branch chair who quit the party in protest over its removal of Liz Truss and installation of Sunak.

    Like many voters in the market towns of this constituency, Warner says he believes it is time for a change after 14 years, having voted Tory at every election. “Nigel is standing out to us more than any other,” he said, though he is dismissive of all the other main parties. However, he says ultimately that he does not trust Reform – or any other party – to make a difference to the struggles of ordinary people.

    Related: Across the market towns of Britain the battle for the soul of the right is fierce

    6.05am BST

    Tuesday's best campaign photos

    Boris, burgers and Basingstoke: here are the best pictures from T-2 days on the campaign trail:

    5.57am BST

    Labour landslide may boost investment and confidence in UK, say City analysts

    A landslide victory for Keir Starmer in the general election on Thursday could hand Britain a stability premium in global markets, boosting the pound, shares and investment in the UK at a time of mounting political turmoil elsewhere, City investors have said.

    In sharp contrast with Conservative party warnings over the dangers of a large Labour majority, analysts in the City of London said the prospect of a resounding mandate for Starmer’s party could secure Britain’s “safe haven” status among investors in an increasingly volatile world.

    After failing to close the gap in opinion polls during the election campaign , Rishi Sunak made a last-ditch warning that a Starmer “ supermajority ” would “bankrupt people in every generation”.

    However, City analysts said a Labour landslide could pave the way for global investment in Britain after years of political and economic uncertainty since the 2016 Brexit referendum under the Tories, which had clouded the prospects for international investors.

    Related: Labour landslide may boost investment and confidence in UK, say City analysts

    5.54am BST

    Boris Johnson made his only appearance on the general election campaign on Tuesday night, less than 48 hours before voters head to the polls, and did not appear with or praise Rishi Sunak.

    The former prime minister made a surprise appearance at a Tory rally in Chelsea, accusing Keir Starmer of trying to “usher in the most leftwing Labour government since the war” and claiming he would increase taxes and fail to stand up to Vladimir Putin.

    Johnson thanked those at the National Army Museum for attending the late event, claiming that it was “way past Keir Starmer’s bedtime”. He thanked the prime minister for asking him to come, but that was the only mention of Sunak in his speech.

    Related: Boris Johnson takes swipe at Starmer and scorns Sunak in first campaign appearance

    5.44am BST

    Boris Johnson does not appear with or praise Rishi Sunak as he returns to campaign trail

    Hello and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the general election. With less than 48 hours to go until voting stations open, former PM Boris Johnson has made a surprise first appearance on the campaign. Johnson appeared on Tuesday night at a Tory rally in Chelsea and did not share a stage with or praise Rishi Sunak , the Guardian’s Aletha Adu reports .

    Instead, he said Starmer would try to “usher in the most left-wing Labour government since the war”. Making a reference to “other parties” allegedly “full of Kremlin crawlers”, Johnson said: “Don’t let the Putinistas deliver the Corbynistas. Don’t let Putin’s pet parrots give this entire country psittacosis - which is a disease you get by the way from cosying up to pet parrots.”

    With just over 24 hours to go now until voting opens, here is what is coming up today:

    • Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey is also campaigning in south-east England

    • Labour Party leader Keir Starmer is campaigning in Wales, Lanarkshire and Dudley.

    • Tory leader Rishi Sunak is campaigning in south-east England today.

    • Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is campaigning in Clacton.

    • SNP leader John Swinney is campaigning in Cumbernauld, Glasgow and Livingston.

    • Scottish Green co-leader Patrick Harvie will join the candidate for Mid Dunbartonshire, Carolynn Scrimegour in Milngavie.

    • Scotland’s deputy first minister Kate Forbes is on the campaign trail with the SNP candidate for Aberdeenshire North and Moray East, Seamus Logan.

    Updated at 6.10am BST

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