Covering a general election campaign as a journalist can largely be summed up in two words – battle bus.
Not too dissimilar to the coaches that rockstars use for their tours, battle buses are the vehicles each political party uses to transport their leaders, candidates, and advisers around the country during the election campaign.
Sky’s political correspondents have each been following a different party – often joining them on their battle buses.
Here we take you behind the scenes on the campaign trail this week for the Conservatives, Labour, and the Liberal Democrats.
Conservatives – Darren McCaffrey
Monday, 10 June
Image: Boarding the battle bus
It’s just after 7am on a pretty miserable Monday morning and we’re going to the South East of England today.
Unsurprisingly, by the way, the prime minister is not on the bus – he very rarely is. But we are.
Let’s see what this week holds for not the best start, I think it’s fair to say, for the Conservatives’ campaign…
Advertisement
Tuesday, 11 June
Image: At Silverstone race track for the Conservative Party manifesto launch
Good morning from Silverstone. It’s Tuesday. It’s the big day for the Conservatives.
I say we’re at Silverstone, the track is just there, but we’re not allowed outside, because apparently there’s a big Hollywood film being filmed with Brad Pitt, so we’re not allowed to film outside.
We’re here for the Tory party manifesto launch, which is happening behind there – but we’re also not allowed to go there at the moment either.
So we’re stuck in this room with tea and lots of other journalists, waiting for Rishi Sunak a little later on.
Image: At Silverstone for the manifesto launch
So it’s all over. The PM has made his speech.
It’s interesting what’s happening here though, in the very far corner, you have to be a little bit quiet, there are lots of journalists who have been briefed about what’s in the speech, so they can ask questions about what’s in the manifesto and they’re being probed on that at the moment by the lobby – that’s what happens at these events.
Wednesday, 12 June
Image: At Kings Cross station
It’s Wednesday morning, we’re heading north to meet the PM in Lincolnshire a bit later this morning.
We’re meant to be on the 9.03am train but it’s been cancelled so we’re all waiting around not quite knowing what’s about to happen or what time we’re going to get there.
This is just a sign of how the campaign goes – a bit of confusion sometimes.
We’re on the way to Grimsby.
The prime minister is on the bus and this is our chance to go to the back of the bus where he is and have a little chat with him – off-camera – but it’s a chance to ask him some questions to see how the campaign is going. Let’s go!
Image: Speaking to Rishi Sunak on the Tory battle bus
Rishi Sunak: “When I’m on the road, I’m an avid games player. I do Connections, Wordle, Sudoku, Solitaire
“I’ve got everyone doing it. Connections is really fun, my kids got me onto it.”
So that’s another visit done.
Frankly, I’m pretty tired. I’ve lost count of the number of visits we’ve done, but me and the bus are going to roll on to the next one – with less than three weeks to go now until polling day.
Labour – Serena Barker-Singh
Image: Doing lives in Grimsby ahead of Sky’s leaders programme
Wednesday, 12 June
We’ve just got to Grimsby.
We’re setting up to do some lives, teeing up what Labour’s launching today and also nodding to the fact that we’ve got our debate later.
Image: On the way to a Labour campaign event
So I just interviewed Keir Starmer – well you get one question – each broadcaster gets one question.
I asked him about tax. It’s quite a difficult day where there are lots of different bits that people can ask.
So I asked whether he’s going to stick to the promises in his manifesto tomorrow once he’s in government.
Image: Interviewing Sir Keir Starmer
Liberal Democrats – Matthew Thompson
Image: At an event with the Disabled Sailing Association in Devon
Tuesday, 11 June
This is the glamour of being on the campaign with the Lib Dems.
It’s mainly hanging around in various states of being freezing cold waiting for Ed Davey to do something completely daft.
Image: At a Lib Dem event in Somerset with Sir Ed Davey (behind, right)
Wednesday, 12 June
Image: In Stratford on Avon
Image: With Sir Ed Davey at a campaign event in Stratford on Avon
“Go to uni, they said… become a journalist, they said… report the news, they said!”
Welcome to Stratford-on-Avon.
This is a part of the world that hasn’t been Liberal since 1906 and you might say it needs something of a sizable swing for the Lib Dems to win it back from the Conservatives.
One man who’s fairly confident of getting that sizable swing, swinging beside me, is Sir Ed Davey.
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News
Sir Keir Starmer is under mounting pressure to raise Israel’s bombardment of Gaza with Donald Trump during his UK state visit, after a UN Commission said a genocide was taking place.
Sir Ed, who is boycotting the state dinner being held for Mr Trump, said Sir Keir must “press” the president now.
He said: “What is happening in Gaza is a genocide. And the president of the United States, who wants a Nobel Peace Prize, is doing nothing to stop it.”
Image: Displaced Palestinians flee northern Gaza. Pic: AP
Israel‘s foreign ministry said it “categorically rejects this distorted and false report” and called for the commission to be abolished.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
3:05
Is Israel committing genocide?
‘We cannot be bystanders’
Reports suggest the situation will be a talking point between Sir Keir and Mr Trump during his visit.
It comes before the UK is due to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly later this month, along with allies including Canada and France.
In a late night statement, Canada’s foreign ministry described the Gaza City offensive as “horrific”.
Lib Dem leader Sir Ed added: “We have long said that Hamas is genocidal and condemned them for their actions.
“Now, I think we have to say that what the Netanyahu government is doing amounts to genocide.”
Labour MP Rosena Allin-Khan, a former shadow minister, also called on her party leader to make discussing the situation in Gaza with Mr Trump a “top priority”.
Speaking to Sky News’ Politics Hub With Sophy Ridge, she said: “We say ‘never again’ when we look at Bosnia and Rwanda, but here we are again, and it’s been livestreamed, and we’ve all seen it.
“We cannot be bystanders to a genocide.”
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
8:51
‘We cannot be bystanders’
UN report pulls no punches
The accusation of genocide is made by the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory.
It alleges Israel has been “killing Palestinians or forcing them to live in inhumane conditions that led to death; causing serious bodily or mental harm, including through torture, displacement and sexual crime; deliberately imposing inhumane conditions, and fourthly, imposing measures intending to prevent births”.
Earlier this month, the International Association of Genocide Scholars also passed a resolution stating that Israel’s conduct passed the threshold of committing genocide.
However, a report from the British government said it had “not concluded” that Israel intended to “destroy in whole or in part a national, ethnic, racial or religious group”.
Nearly 65,000 people are now believed to have died, according to figures collated by Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry. It does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count.
Downing Street has insisted its migrant returns scheme with France is not a “shambles” after the High Court blocked a man’s deportation.
Having seen the previous Conservative government’s Rwanda scheme run into trouble with the courts, the Labour administration’s alternative suffered its own setback on Tuesday.
An Eritrean man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was due to be on a flight to France this morning.
He brought a legal claim against the Home Office, with lawyers acting on his behalf saying the case “concerns a trafficking claim”.
They also said he had a gunshot wound to his leg, and would be left destitute if he was deported.
The Home Office said it was reasonable to expect him to have claimed asylum in France before he reached the UK in August, but the ruling went in his favour.
Mr Justice Sheldon granted the man a “brief period of interim relief”.
While the judge said there did not appear to be a “real risk” he would face destitution in France, the trafficking claim required further interrogation.
He said the case should return to court “as soon as is reasonably practical in light of the further representations the claimant […] will make on his trafficking decision”.
A Number 10 spokesperson downplayed the development, insisting removals under the deal with France will start “imminently” and ministers are not powerless in the face of the courts.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
1:08
‘One in, one out’ deal: What do we know?
‘We told you so’
The pilot scheme was announced to much fanfare in July, after Emmanuel Macron made a state visit to the UK.
He wants the number of migrants being returned to France to gradually increase over the course of the scheme, to deter them from coming in small boats.
The pilot came into force last month and is in place until June 2026.
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch was quick to say “we told you so” following Tuesday’s court decision, while Reform UK’s Nigel Farage criticised the government’s plan.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
2:18
Migrant deal with France has ‘started’
The small boats crisis represents one of the biggest challenges for the new home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, following her promotion in Sir Keir’s recent reshuffle.
Describing the former justice secretary as “very tough”, he said: “She’s completely for real. I’ve known her for over 10 years – she really wants to see law and order restored.”
The UK has discussed adopting a more crypto-friendly approach with the US in a bid to boost industry innovation and attract more investment to Britain.