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GB News
GB News
12 Jun 2024


NextImg:General Election LIVE: Keir Starmer pledges to repair extra one million potholes a year - ‘It’s a plague!'

Sir Keir Starmer has said Labour are the 'party of drivers' as he pledged to repair an extra million potholes a year.

The Labour leader told The Sun "we are going to fix it" insisting that the policy is costed.

In a dig at Rishi Sunak's manifesto, Sir Keir also suggested voters would rather see more potholes being fixed than Tory tax cuts.

Reminiscing about his family's first car, a Ford Cortina, he said: "My dad loved driving. I loved this car. When I was about four or five years old, I was outside cleaning the car the whole time.

"So he loved driving. I love driving. I still do drive because I love it. Not as much as I would like and I'm as irritated by the potholes as everyone else, by the way."

Sir Keir said that £320million for the policy would come from deferring the controversial Arundel A27 bypass in Wiltshire.

Elsewhere, the Green Party are set to launch their manifesto today, with a pledge to tax "multimillionaires and billionaires" to fund improvements to health, housing, transport and the green economy.

Reform UK is just one point behind the Tories in a new survey, by YouGov which puts Labour on 38 per cent, the Tories on 18, Reform 17, Lib Dems 15 and Greens on eight.

The Defence Secretary told Times Radio that in order to proper accountability “you don’t want to have somebody receive a supermajority” along the line of Tony Blair’s in 1997.

He said: "In this case, of course, the concern would be that if Keir Starmer were to go into No 10, it will either be Rishi Sunak, or Keir Starmer there’s no other outcomes to this election, and that power was in some way unchecked, it would be very bad news for people in this country.

"A blank cheque approach allowing someone to do anything they wanted, particularly when their particular set of plans are so vague, and they say ‘change’, but you have no idea what they actually want to change to, other than the fact that they’ve outlined plans which would cost £2,094 to every working family in this country."

Adrian Ramsay

Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay

PA

Co-leader Adrian Ramsay said the party intends to change the "conspiracy of silence" on taxes by creating a fairer system and asking those "with the broadest shoulders" to pay more.

Ahead of the party's manifesto launch in Brighton today, he said: "There is a conspiracy of silence between the main Westminster parties at this election.

"Labour and the Conservatives would rather hide their plans for cuts to public services than confront the need for a fairer tax system that asks those with the broadest shoulders to pay more – including the very wealthiest in society, who have grown even wealthier over the last 14 years.

"If people are to have access to an NHS dentist or a GP appointment, if we are to create warm, secure homes for all and fund the green transition to tackle the climate crisis and create the jobs of tomorrow, we must be honest today."

A new poll released after Rishi Sunak’s manifesto launch shows Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party is just a point behind the Tories.

The survey, by YouGov, puts Labour on 38 per cent, with the Tories on 18 per cent, Reform on 17, Liberal Democrats on 15 and the Greens on eight.

Meanwhile, a Redfield and Wilton survey asked who would be the better leader of the opposition to a Labour Government. Farage came out on top by a whisker, on 28 per cent, just slightly ahead of Rishi Sunak on 27 per cent in a blow to the Prime Minister.