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Sir Ed Davey: We felt we had a duty to talk about caring for our disabled son

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Sir Ed Davey: We felt we had a duty to talk about caring for our disabled son

It’s hard for politicians to cut through. It’s even harder when you are leading the fourth largest party in parliament with only 11 MPs.

How do you insert yourself into a conversation that’s happening largely between the Conservatives and Labour, with a sprinkling of Reform’s Nigel Farage in the mix?

Well, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has done it two ways.

The first through endless silly stunts – be it repeatedly falling off a paddleboard on Lake Windermere or riding a giant waterslide in his swimming trunks in Somerset.

But the second, and far more profound, way to reach voters has been to open up about his own childhood, caring for his dying mother, and now, as a father himself, raising a disabled son.

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The decision to make a highly personal election broadcast, which showed Sir Ed at home with his 16-year old son John, as well as footage of him at his childhood home in Nottingham talking about his mother dying of breast cancer when he was 15, has, in part, been to highlight the world of carers.

But it has also been to try to show a side of this political leader the electorate don’t know.

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Since the short film was released three weeks weeks ago, it has been viewed over 6.4 million times on the leader’s X feed. That is what you call cut through.

In an interview with Sky News at the Daveys’ family home in Kingston, Sir Ed and his wife Emily Gasson explained that revealing the caring responsibilities they both shared at home for John, who has an undiagnosed neurological condition and needs round-the-clock care, was a “gradual thing”.

“We started talking about it quite gently in my first year or so of leadership [and] we got this reaction from people saying, ‘thank you for talking about it’, and we sort of felt we had a duty to,” explained Sir Ed Davey, as he sat holding Emily’s hand in their back garden.

“I’ve talked more about my whole life as a carer, because I lost my father when I was four. So my mum was widowed, aged 36 with three boys under 10. Then she got ill.

“When I was nine, she told us she had breast cancer, and my little brother and I nursed her until she died when I was 15, so I was a young carer.

“And then we had our first child John and we realised after about a year that he was going to be severely disabled. So, I have had a caring role in different ways in my life. And it’s quite clear millions of others do too.”

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The party leader continued: “Carers take a huge burden off the NHS but get very little support and they’re not recognised. And it [has] almost become part of our political thinking – to talk about our experience and hopefully touch people’s lives, but also make it quite a serious point.

“People need the care and support when they’re caring, but also if they do, that can be good for the rest of society.”

Emily, who is also a local Lib Dem councillor, said she doesn’t use social media, but wasn’t surprised that the film of Sir Ed at home with John went viral.

“I think I can understand why people are being attracted by it, because I’m sure… so many people have had a similar experience or a member of their family [have had] a similar experience, so you can understand why it touches people in so many different ways,” she said.

“But as I say, we’re not unique in any way, shape or form… this story or what happens to people when they have [this experience] is never told. It’s never spoken about. It’s, you know, people just get on with it.

“A lot of the thing about being a carer is it’s absolutely exhausting. It’s physically exhausting. It’s emotionally exhausting. By the end of the day, you’re finished, you know, 9pm you’re absolutely finished. So your voice is not going to be heard because you’re just exhausted.”

Having told their story, Sir Ed put health and care at the heart of the Lib Dems’ manifesto launch two weeks ago, with an £8bn package of services in England.

Plans included giving everyone the right to see a GP within seven days, as well as free personal care for older or disabled people at home.

Sir Ed said the proposals would be funded by reversing tax cuts for banks, and closing tax loopholes exploited by the wealthiest individuals, which he claimed would raise £7.2bn.

He told me this could be achieved by investing £1bn in HMRC processes – although independent experts have been less sure, with the IFS think tank saying there was “uncertainty” around whether more resource into tax collectors would really squeeze out much more.

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What is in the Lib Dem manifesto?

With the Lib Dems eyeing a return to being the third largest party in parliament once more – and the latest MRP polling putting them on 48 seats – Sir Ed said he wanted to champion carers and social care in the next parliament, and wanted to see a cross-party commission to tackle the social care issue once and for all.

“This is a big issue, a long term issue,” he said. “[We need] some proper work where people come around the table and say, ‘we have to do this – there are consequences, but we’re all going to sign up to it’.

“And I think if you don’t do that, you won’t get the political commitment, won’t get consensus, and you won’t bring people with you.”

As for his campaign, the Lib Dem leader has come under some criticism for all the stunts he’s pulled off, with questions around whether in the quest for more exposure, he was throwing away credibility.

Sir Ed roundly rejected that, telling me that people were “fed up with politicians”.

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The Lib Dems’ wet and wild campaign week

He added: “I think [the public] are disillusioned. Politicians haven’t reached out to people. And I think by showing you’re a normal person, whether it’s the stunts and having fun, as well as the serious message and the stuff about being a carer, I think it shows I get it.”

Another question mark over the Lib Dems is their record in government in the coalition years, as the party who propped up the Conservatives and went along with austerity cuts.

Sir Ed faced difficult questions over it from a live audience at the BBC’s Question Time event last week.

Asked it he regretted going into coalition, he demurred and talked about what he thought the Lib Dems achieved in government – be it progress on renewable energy or same sex marriage.

But he also acknowledged the experience broke the bond of trust between his party and the public, which has taken years to rebuild.

In 2010, Nick Clegg’s Lib Dems had 57 MPs. In the 2019 election, the party had its worst performance yet and returned just 8 MPs (they got to 11 by the end of the parliament via by-elections).

Pic: PA
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Sir Ed has faced a grilling over his role in the coalition government with the Conservatives in 2010. Pic: PA

“You know, I lost my seat in 2015,” said Sir Ed. “When I became leader, I said to the party, we need to wake up, we need to wake up and smell the coffee. People had lost trust in us and I got that.

“And so we did two things: we are not going to promise something in this election we can’t deliver and we realised we needed to rebuild trust and listen to people. What are their problems?

“And so our whole manifesto has been built around what people are telling us.”

After a very difficult decade, Sir Ed is hopeful for this election as the party targets 85 seats up and down the country where the Lib Dems are second behind the Conservatives – with 40 of those across the Blue Wall in the South East and a further 25 in the South West of England.

He said: “In the Home Counties and the West Country, we’re finding – and this has never happened before in my lifetime – people who have always voted Conservative saying they’re going to vote Liberal Democrat, because they can’t bring themselves to vote Conservative.

“That is different, and that’s why I think we can do very well at this election.”

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Photo of Keir Starmer and his wife at Taylor Swift concert was ‘standout moment’ for Labour – but was it accidental or choreographed?

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Photo of Keir Starmer and his wife at Taylor Swift concert was 'standout moment' for Labour - but was it accidental or choreographed?

The “standout moment” of Labour’s election campaign happened “probably by accident” last week – and at a Taylor Swift concert, a party insider has told Sky News’s Electoral Dysfunction podcast.

On this week’s episode, ex-Labour adviser Ayesha Hazarika said the “beautiful shot” of Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer with his wife Victoria at a Wembley show on Swift’s Eras Tour was the highlight of Labour’s election campaign so far.

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Hazarika said: “I think the standout moment for the Labour campaign for me happened this week, probably by accident, not choreographed.”

“The photo of the campaign was Keir Starmer with his wife Vic, at that Taylor Swift concert,” – which he posted on X on Friday night.

“It was a beautiful shot.., it was joyful, it was modern, it was optimistic… Taylor Swift in the background wearing red.”

She added: “That is the optic that his team have been trying so hard to push. And then probably someone just took a snap and put it on Twitter and then that’s captured it.”

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But Sky’s political editor Beth Rigby believes the photo was “more choreographed than that”, as parties agonise over their image ahead of the UK general election on 4 July.

“It was a really genuinely nice photo of the two of them… but I think that was a couple of things going on there,” she said.

Keir Starmer with wife Victoria
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Pic: PA

There had been “a lot of press in recent days” about why Victoria Starmer “had not been on the campaign trail,” she added, pointing out Sir Keir keeps details about his family private, including his children’s names.

“So I think maybe there was something about just reminding everyone that he is happily married to Vic… just kind of inserting her in a way that was really low-key, but very, clear.”

The other reason may have been to “show a different side of him”, Rigby added, as on camera he “turns into a more robotic politician”.

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‘The only poll that matters is on 4 July’

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She said Sir Keir has previously said: “You can’t see me with my family. If you could see me, you would see a massively different side of me.”

The former leader of the Scottish Tories Ruth Davidson said: “You’re right about how relaxed he looks, that that’s one of the things that made it. But the other thing is the body language is great and not forced.”

But he comes across on TV as “boring as sin” and “passionless”, Davidson added.

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She and Beth Rigby both said Labour has a problem if Sir Keir ends up being like the former PM Theresa May, “and nobody sees what people who know him [see]”.

Email Beth, Ruth, and Ayesha at electoraldysfunction@sky.uk, post on X to @BethRigby, or send a WhatsApp voice note on 07934 200 444.

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Cutting knife crime to be ‘moral mission’ for Labour if it wins general election

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Cutting knife crime to be 'moral mission' for Labour if it wins general election

Reducing knife crime will be a “moral mission” for Labour if it wins the general election on 4 July, Sir Keir Starmer will say on Tuesday.

The party leader will outline his plan to halve knife crime over the next 10 years, including creating a new cross-government “coalition” to work on solutions – including families of victims and survivors of knife crime, along with tech companies and relevant organisations.

Sir Keir will also promise to chair an annual knife crime summit to “track progress” on the target, and appeal to all parties to work together on the issue.

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“Knife crime is an issue above and beyond party politics,” he will say. “For the parents grieving sons and daughters who never came home, action to end this scourge cannot wait.

“Far too often we hear the same stories from grieving families who have been subject to these brutal murders carried out by children.

“It is our duty as political leaders of all stripes to work together to end knife crime and keep our young people safe.”

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Figures from Labour showed knife-related offences had risen by 81% since 2015 across England and Wales.

The party’s pledges for after the election include increasing the penalties for carrying a knife – including custody in the most serious cases, as well as extending the list of banned knives.

They will also introduce a new “Young Futures” programme to support young people in local communities.

Read more:
Simple guide to parties’ promises
What is tactical voting?

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“Cutting knife crime will be a moral mission for the next Labour government,” Sir Keir will add.

“Our new cross-government coalition will put knife crime victims and their families at the heart of government, working with us to take the strongest action in a generation to end this tragic crime.”

But Conservative policing minister Chris Philp attacked the Labour leader’s record from his time in charge of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), claiming convictions for weapon possession fell on his watch.

“In contrast, the Conservatives have cut crime by 54% since 2010 and recruited 20,000 more police since 2019,” he added.

“We are going even further with our plan to recruit 8,000 more police officers.

“The choice at the election is clear: cracking down on crime with Rishi Sunak and the Conservatives, or back to square one with Keir Starmer and the same old Labour who consistently fail to tackle crime.”

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The Tories will be reiterating their plans to lower migration on Tuesday, laying claim to being the only party to support the Rwanda plan for deporting asylum seekers arriving in the UK by small boat.

They will also pledge to reduce legal migration, with an annual cap on the number of visas that are granted for work or for people to join their family.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said: “Migration is too high and the Conservatives have a clear plan to get it down.

“Labour would rip up our plan on day one by scrapping the Rwanda scheme, despite countries across Europe looking to it themselves to deal with their own migration pressures.”

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