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Sunak warns Labour government would be ‘disaster’ as he battles to save election campaign

Rishi Sunak is set to urge Tory activists not to surrender to Labour and hand Sir Keir Starmer a landslide win

David Hughes
Monday 24 June 2024 09:00 BST
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak during a meeting with representatives of the nighttime economy in central London, while on the General Election campaign trail. Picture date: Saturday June 22, 2024.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak during a meeting with representatives of the nighttime economy in central London, while on the General Election campaign trail. Picture date: Saturday June 22, 2024. (PA Wire)

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Louise Thomas

Louise Thomas

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Rishi Sunak will warn that it would take decades to recover from the “disaster” of a Labour government as he seeks to rally Tories to fight for every vote in the closing stages of the General Election campaign.

The Prime Minister will tell activists they have just 10 days to “take our message to every corner of the United Kingdom” before polls open on 4 July.

With the Conservatives still around 20 points behind in the polls and after a bruising few days dominated by allegations about alleged insider betting, Mr Sunak will urge Tories not to “surrender” to Sir Keir Starmer’s party.

The prime minister will launch the Scottish Tory manifesto and address a campaign event in London at the start of the last full week of campaigning.

His latest intervention comes with him under pressure from within the Conservative Party to take a tougher stance against those being investigated by the Gambling Commission for betting on the election date.

According to extracts of his speech briefed to the Daily Mail, Mr Sunak will say: “We have 10 days to take our message to every corner of the United Kingdom.

“To make the argument that this country needs lower taxes, not £2,000 more taxes for every working family.

“To make the case that a Labour government would be bad for our country, and an unchecked Labour government would be a disaster from which it would take decades to recover.”

Labour has repeatedly denied Tory claims that it is planning to increase taxes on working families.

But Mr Sunak will say: “When a politician won’t tell you what they are going to do, it means that they know you won’t like it.

“All their evasions tell you is that they are going to whack up council tax and a bunch of other taxes.

“And one thing we know about Keir Starmer is that he has no problem going back on his promises. His career is a story of commitments dropped as soon as they became too difficult to keep.

“I tell you this: once you have handed Keir Starmer and Labour a blank cheque, you won’t be able to get it back.”

In an attempt to boost Tory morale, Mr Sunak will say: “Don’t surrender to Labour. Fight for every vote, fight for our values, fight for our vision of Britain.”

Rishi Sunak on the campaign bus
Rishi Sunak on the campaign bus (Getty Images)

The Conservative campaign has been plunged into a deeper crisis by the gambling controversy, with the party’s chief data officer Nick Mason understood to be taking a leave of absence amid claims he placed bets on the election date.

Director of campaigning Tony Lee has also taken a leave of absence, while Mr Lee’s would-be MP wife Laura Saunders and fellow candidate Craig Williams, who was a parliamentary aide to the Prime Minister, are also under investigation by the Gambling Commission.

With speculation at Westminster about how wide the inquiry might go, home secretary James Cleverly faced questions about whether ministers – potentially even in the Cabinet – had placed bets on the surprise summer election.

Asked if ministers had bet on the date, he told the BBC: “Not to my knowledge.”

Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove compared the impact of the row with the Partygate scandal.

“It looks like one rule for them and one rule for us,” he told the Sunday Times, adding: “That’s the most potentially damaging thing.”

Mr Gove went on to suggest it was “just not acceptable” for those in a “privileged position” close to the Prime Minister to use what he described as “inside information to make additional money for yourself”.

Former justice secretary Sir Robert Buckland suggested Mr Sunak should have taken a tougher line and suspend those caught up in the row.

“I do expect everybody to uphold the highest standards,” he told LBC Radio. ”I’m deeply hurt and rather angry that this has happened in the middle of a campaign that is tough enough without things like this to complicate it further.”

Former Tory whip Anne Milton told Times Radio: “Suspension is the right thing to do while people are investigated. It’s harsh … if the allegations are found not to be true, but that is what would happen in any other sphere of work.”

Mr Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer will face questions from Sun readers on Monday afternoon in the latest set piece of the election campaign.

Labour is set to focus on health issues, raising concerns about “DIY dentistry” because of a lack of NHS treatment.

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said: “It’s virtually impossible to get a dentist appointment after 14 years of Conservative neglect.

“People are resorting to pulling their own teeth out – DIY dentistry should be the stuff of Charles Dickens’ books, not Britain in 2024.”

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