No wonder Rishi Sunak wanted a head-to-head debate with Sir Keir Starmer. After being credited with a narrow win in last week’s ITV debate, here he came off second best.
The prime minister was flat under tough interrogation from Sky News political editor Beth Rigby. And he found the audience was hostile towards him on the NHS, the economy and even immigration.
It’s no surprise, then, that the YouGov snap poll published less than half an hour after the programme finished scored the performances as 64% for Sir Keir and just 36% for Mr Sunak.
From the outset, Sir Keir clearly realised he needed to raise his game after last week, when he was too sluggish in challenging or rebutting Mr Sunak’s £2,000 Labour tax grab allegation.
By the time the 90-minute programme was nearing its finish, Mr Sunak looked deflated by the audience criticism and almost as if he couldn’t wait for it to end.
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3:32
Did Sunak’s claims add up?
Mr Sunak even stumbled into a blunder that will reinforce his critics’ claim that this millionaire prime minister is out of touch with the cost of living plight ordinary people are facing.
When a father asked about his daughter’s struggle to buy a house, Mr Sunak talked about a property costing £425,000. In Grimsby? Oh dear. Really, prime minister!
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A Rightmove search for Grimsby reveals that out of 914 properties currently listed for sale in the town, only 13 are up for £425,000 or more. His political opponents will seize on that.
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After his pummelling on tax last week, Sir Keir wasted no time in hitting back, declaring he’d take no lectures from the Tories on the matter. And later, tackled by a member of the audience, he took time to make the case for Labour’s controversial policy of VAT on private schools.
“It’s a tax break we are removing,” he said. “It’s not a new tax.” And his plea for raising standards in state schools with the money saved won applause.
This was a much stronger performance from Sir Keir than last week. He raised his game: this time the KC and ex-Director of Public Prosecutions was more Rumpole Of The Bailey than Mark Darcy from the Bridget Jones films.
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4:20
Starmer challenged on ‘trust’
For instance, he kept talking when Beth Rigby tried to cut him short. Naughty, but determined. Here, he was much more assertive than last week.
Mr Sunak, on the other hand, was flat compared with his combative performance on ITV. He had to apologise for his D-Day snub not once but twice, begging for forgiveness again.
The D-Day fiasco appears to have damaged the prime minister’s confidence – and it won’t have been helped by several heckles from a hostile audience. Even on the Tories’ supposed strong subject of immigration, he appeared to struggle.
He was thrown by a question from Rigby about why he called the election before the first Rwanda flights are due to take off and, surprisingly for a prime minister with a reputation as a spreadsheet wizard, he didn’t know the numbers on questions about net migration.
Towards the end of the audience’s harsh questioning of Mr Sunak, a former Tory activist attacked him not only on his D-Day blunder, but also on the Queen being left alone at Prince Philip’s funeral during the Boris Johnson partygate scandal.
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0:46
PM ‘deeply sad’ over D-Day ‘mistake’
The audience reaction to Mr Sunak here confirmed that many voters want to punish the Conservatives for the failings of past prime ministers Mr Johnson and Liz Truss, and not just for the past two years.
Sir Keir now leaves Grimsby for Labour’s manifesto launch in the morning in good heart. For Mr Sunak, this was a bad night and unless there’s a Tory recovery soon, the mood among the party’s candidates and activists will be grim and potentially mutinous.
There are still three weeks until polling day, of course. But with consistently bad opinion polls, already time is running out for Mr Sunak and the Conservatives.
Sir Keir even said at one point: “The first day we get into government.” Beth Rigby instantly picked him up on his momentary lapse. He just smiled.
The police’s use of facial recognition technology is to be significantly expanded in an attempt to catch more offenders, ministers have announced.
Under the plans, 10 live facial recognition (LFR) vans will be used by seven forces across England to help identify “sex offenders or people wanted for the most serious crimes”, according to Home Secretary Yvette Cooper.
The tech, which has been trialled in London and south Wales, will be subject to strict rules, the Home Office said, but human rights groups have warned it is “dangerous and discriminatory”.
Amnesty International UK said the plans should be “immediately scrapped”, with facial recognition proven to be “discriminatory against communities of colour”.
“It has been known to lead to misidentification and the risk of wrongful arrest,” said Alba Kapoor, the charity’s racial justice lead, “and it’s also known to be less accurate in scanning the faces of people of colour.”
The Home Office said the LFR vans will only be deployed when there is “specific intelligence”, and will be operated by trained officers who will check every match made by the cameras.
The vehicles will also only be used against bespoke watch lists, compiled for each use under guidelines set by the College of Policing.
The vans will be operated by police forces in Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire, Bedfordshire, Surrey and Sussex (jointly), and Thames Valley and Hampshire (jointly).
Image: The 10 vans set to be deployed to police forces across England.
Pic: Home Office
‘The most serious offenders’
Ms Cooper has said ministers are focused on making sure “there are proper safeguards in place”.
As part of the plans, the home secretary has announced she will be launching a consultation on how and when the cameras should be used, and with what safeguards, which the government will use to draw up a new legal framework for the use of the cameras.
Ms Cooper said the tech had been used in London and South Wales “in a targeted way”, and helped catch “the most serious offenders, including people wanted for violent assaults or for sex offences”.
According to the Metropolitan Police, the tech has led to 580 arrests for offences such as rape, domestic crime and knife crime in the space of 12 months.
The government has pointed to independent testing by the National Physical Laboratory, which it said found the tech was “accurate” and showed “no bias for ethnicity, age, or gender”.
Liberty has welcomed the government’s decision to create a statutory framework for using facial recognition, but said that should be in place before the tech is rolled out.
“There’s no reasonable excuse to be putting even more cameras on our streets before the public have had their say and legislation is brought in to protect all of us,” said a statement.
The civil liberties charity cited how more than 1.6 million people have had their faces scanned in South Wales, mostly on football match days in Cardiff city centre.
But Lindsey Chiswick, from the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), has said the expansion “is an excellent opportunity for policing”, and will help officers locate suspects “quickly and accurately”.
Police should consider disclosing the ethnicity and nationality of suspects when they are charged in high-profile and sensitive cases, new national guidance says.
Coming into force today, it says there must be a policing reason to release the information, such as where there are high levels of disinformation, if it will improve public safety, or if it is significantly in the public interest.
A Home Office spokesperson told Sky News they will support the new guidance by authorising the release of relevant accompanying immigration information if appropriate.
The change comes after two men charged over the alleged rape of a 12-year-old girl in Nuneaton were reported to be Afghan asylum seekers, sparking protests.
Warwickshire Police did not confirm the immigration status, leading to Reform UK accusing them of a “cover-up”, something the force strongly denied.
Responding to the row, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said last week she wanted police to be more transparent, and that new guidance was being worked up.
Speaking to Sky News after the new instructions were announced, policing minister Dame Diana Johnson said “we welcome the guidance” which the government thinks is “really helpful”.
She added: “We want to be as transparent and as open as possible with the public” – and this includes releasing ethnicity and nationality unless there is “good reason not to”.
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2:41
Migration protesters face off
How high-profile cases sparked debate
When considering what information to release, police must consider contempt of court laws which aim to give defendants a fair trial, as well as media guidance from the College of Policing.
Until now, the media guidance said once a suspect has been charged, police can give out information such as their name, date of birth and address. It did not mention anything about ethnicity, nationality, or immigration status.
The Southport murders committed by Axel Rudakubanalast July led to speculation about his ethnicity and immigration status, fuelling riots in many parts of the country.
In the Nuneaton case, Reform leader Nigel Farage said retaining the “basic and sober facts” was “a cover-up that in many ways is reminiscent of what happened after the Southport killings”.
Warwickshire Police said officers “did not and will not cover up such criminality”, and followed national guidance.
Image: Reform leader Nigel Farage argues releasing the information could prevent unrest. Pic: PA
How will new guidance work?
The new guidance says it is at the discretion of the police force to decide whether to release ethnicity and nationality details, and that they must consider the ethical and legal implications.
It says it is not the job of police to verify a suspect’s immigration status, which rests with the Home Office.
The advice has been developed by the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) and the College of Policing, in consultation with the Home Office and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).
Deputy chief constable Sam de Reya, the NPCC lead for communications and media, said: “We saw during last summer’s disorder, as well as in several recent high-profile cases, what the major, real-world consequences can be from what information police release into the public domain.
“We have to make sure our processes are fit for purpose in an age of social media speculation and where information can travel incredibly quickly across a wide range of channels.
“Disinformation and incorrect narratives can take hold in a vacuum. It is good police work for us to fill this vacuum with the facts about issues of wider public interest.”
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3:31
One year on from the Southport riots
‘A chilling message’
The guidance is interim, and will be considered as part of a wider review of the College of Policing’s authorised professional practice for media relations later this year.
Chief constable Sir Andy Marsh, the college’s CEO, said officers will continue to police “without fear or favour”.
But the guidance is likely to provoke backlash from anti-racism campaigners. Last week, the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants warned that revealing ethnicity and migration status would “send a chilling message: that some people are inherently more ‘suspect'”.
‘Public trust requires transparency’
A Home Office spokesperson told Sky News they welcome the new guidance, adding: “Public trust requires transparency and consistency from the authorities that serve them.”
They added: “The public, and police forces themselves, want greater clarity on when, why and how information is released and the legitimate and compelling reasons it may need to be withheld.
“The Home Office will support that effort by authorising the release of relevant accompanying immigration information in future cases, where it is appropriate to do so, and where the police have requested it. All cases will of course take account of consultation with the police and CPS.
“The government also asked the Law Commission at the end of February to speed up the elements of its review around the law of contempt in relation to what can be said publicly ahead of a trial.”
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