Election latest: Greens launching manifesto with vow to target 'super rich' - as PM and Starmer prepare for Sky event (2024)

Manifesto week
  • Green Party launching manifesto - watch and follow live
  • Greens want 'super rich' to pay more tax - see the key pledges
  • Party vows to push a Labour government to be 'bolder'
  • Economy flatlines in blow to Sunak
  • Labour mocks Tory claim economy has 'turned corner'
  • Compare the parties' pledges:Conservatives|Lib Dems
  • Live reporting by Ben Bloch
Battle For No 10 - Sky leaders' event
  • Watch and follow live on Sky News from 7pm - with build-up all day
  • Sunak and Starmer to be grilled by Beth Rigby and Grimsby voters
  • How will the event work?|Starmer up first after FA Cup-style draw
  • Five things to watch out for tonight
  • How leaders prepare for debates – and the dos and don'ts
  • Politics At Jack And Sam's:The Day… Of the biggest clash yet
Election essentials
  • Campaign Heritage:Memorable moments from elections gone by
  • Trackers:Who's leading polls?|Is PM keeping promises?
  • Follow Sky's politics podcasts:Electoral Dysfunction|Politics At Jack And Sam's
  • Read more:Who is standing down?|Key seats to watch|How to register to vote|What counts as voter ID?|Check if your constituency is changing|Your essential guide to election lingo|Sky's election night plans

11:16:51

Green Party manifesto: The key pledges

Green Party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay have unveiled their manifesto at an event in East Sussex.

Here are the main points of the manifesto announced by the duo:

  • Bring water companies, railways, and big five retail energy companies into public ownership;
  • Overhaul the tax system with a levy on "the very richest, the top 1%" to invest in public services;
  • Invest £50bn in health and social care "to defend and restore the NHS", including making personal social care free at the point of use;
  • Create 150,000 new social homes every year by the end of the next parliament - and end the Right To Buy scheme;
  • Invest £30bn over five years in insulating homes;
  • Stop all new fossil fuel projects and cancel those recently licensed, like Rosebank in Scotland;
  • Scrap university tuition fees and increase the schools budget.

The manifesto is due to be published in full, and we will bring you much more of the Green Party's offer shortly.

11:32:35

Green co-leader insists party is being 'honest' about amount of money it can raise

The Green Party co-leaders are now taking questions from journalists, and first up is the BBC, who asks if they are really being honest that they can definitely raise the money needed for all the spending they are promising.

Carla Denyer replies: "Yes, we absolutely are. Our manifesto is fully costed - a lot of work has gone into it over many months.

"I think the Green Party was actually more ready for this general election than some of the other parties, from the look of it."

That line gets a round of applause, and Ms Denyer also gets a giggle when she says they are standing more candidates at this election than the Tories.

On substance, Ms Denyer acknowledges that their spending plans are "ambitious", but argues that they are "the only party being honest that that's the level of investment needed to get the kind of public services we need".

11:24:52

Greens 'reject pessimism of other parties' - and call for 'bolder' Labour Party

Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay says their manifesto "rejects the pessimism of other parties".

Introducing the manifesto alongside Carla Denyer, he said: "This manifesto isn't more of the same.

"It is a look at what things could be like, and soon, if we are willing to invest in what is necessary and be bold and ambitious.

"We reject the pessimism of the other parties who don't believe we can safeguard our publicly funded health system.

"That we can't provide warm and secure homes for everyone.

"That tackling the climate crisis is too challenging for us.

"We reject this pessimism."

'People are working harder yet getting poorer'

Ms Denyer then added that the party planned to "transform the economy for good", saying Britain couldn't go on with a situation where most people are "working harder yet getting poorer."

To whoops and cheers from the audience, she then announced that they would nationalise the railways, water companies and big five energy companies.

Mr Ramsay acknowledged the party wouldn't be in power after the election, but said the party would push a Labour government to "stop backtracking on their promises" and drive them to be "braver, more ambitious and not to take timid baby steps towards change".

11:03:42

Green Party launching manifesto

The Greens are launching their manifesto in East Sussex as the party continues its push to win a second seat in this general election.

We're expecting them to start in the next five minutes or so.

The party is targeting at least four seats in this election - including Bristol Central, which is being defended by Labour shadow cabinet minister Thangam Debbonaire.

Co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay will be unveiling their key pledges, and reiterate their aim is to push a potential Labour government into being more radical than Sir Keir Starmer appears to want to be.

Watch live on Sky News, in the stream above or the feed below - and follow live updates here in the Politics Hub.

10:38:45

What to expect from the Green Party manifesto

The Green Party will be launching its manifesto in Brighton shortly.

It's where Caroline Lucas served as the party's only Westminster MP.

Our political correspondent Gurpreet Narwan is there for us ahead of the launch at around 11am, and says the imminent policy document has "been billed as a big plan to invest in 'broken Britain'".

It will plough money into public services by "redesigning the tax system", going after the richest in society.

Gurpreet says: "The thrust of it is a new tax on multimillionaires and billionaires, starting at 1% on those with assets over £10m.

"It also wants to equalise tax on wealth with tax on income by raising capital gains tax on the sale of stocks and shares and investment properties so they are in line with the tax people pay on wages."

But the Greens are also planning "a big raid on wage earners", inculding raising national insurance on those earning over £50,000.

Gurpreet notes this would include one in four teachers.

The party argues it's the only one "being honest with the electorate" about what's required to fund public services.

Labour and the Tories aren't being straight with voters, it says.

After impressive results in the local elections last month, Gurpreet says the party's eyeing up four seats at Westminster.

It's become "something of a refuge" for rural Tory voters but also those from the left of Labour who have become disillusioned with Keir Starmer, making for an "interesting mix" of support.

10:14:50

Sky News holds FA Cup-style draw to decide who will face questions first in leaders' event

Sky News has held an FA Cup-style draw to determine who will face questions first in its special leaders' event tonight - Rishi Sunak or Sir Keir Starmer.

The Conservative and Labour leaders will answer questions from Beth Rigby, as well as members of the public, during the Battle For Number 10 broadcast.

The running order has now been decided live on Sky News as chief political correspondent Jon Craig carried out the draw.

Explaining the draw, Craig said: "This is a bag with two balls in it - one is red and one is blue.

"This is not a time for sound bites, but I do feel the hand of history is in this bag right now."

As he drew the first ball, Craig said: "This is the moment - it's red. That means Sir Keir Starmer goes first."

Our award-winning political editor Beth Rigby will scrutinise the leaders on their commitments to the country during 20-minute in-depth interviews - after which arepresentative audience - drawn from the local area and nationally - will put their questions to Mr Sunak and Sir Keir.

The Battle For Number 10 - a Sky News leaders' special event - will air live on Sky News tonight from 7pm, with live coverage here in the Politics Hub.

09:40:29

Five things to watch out for in tonight's Sky event

By Joely Santa Cruz, data journalist, and Victoria Seabrook, climate and politics reporter

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer will be interrogated by Sky's political editor Beth Rigby and members of the public tonight.

During The Battle For Number 10, they will talk and be questioned at length about their ambitions, so viewers can understand in detail what their plans are.

Mr Sunak is somewhat on the back foot as he has to defend his party's 14 years in government, while Labour is yet to publish its manifesto, making it harder to get to the bottom of some of its plans.

But here Sky News picks apart some of the claims - and counter-claims - each is likely to make…

09:21:50

Labour won't match Tory pledge on child benefits

The Tories have pledged to double the tax threshold for child benefits to £120,000 per household, and we asked if Labour will match that pledge.

Shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh said they will not, claiming the Tories have "mademultiple unfunded spending commitments".

All of Labour's policies, to be detailed in tomorrow's manifesto, will be "costed and funded".

Asked why voters should choose Labour if they won't match that pledge, Ms Haigh replied: "Because we are putting out a series of cost of living measures that will actually make an impact in people's lives."

She said people "cannot trust" the Tories, again pointing to the fallout from the tax-cutting mini-budget of Liz Truss.

09:16:19

'Labour learned lessons after Corbyn - unlike Tories after Truss'

Sir Keir Starmer made headlines yesterday when he compared the Tory manifesto to something his predecessor as Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, would have endorsed.

But Sir Keir served in Mr Corbyn's shadow cabinets and campaigned on his manifestos, so we asked Louise Haigh why he would make such a criticism.

The shadow transport secretary said the point was that "the Conservatives clearly haven't learned their lessons from less than two years ago when Liz Truss went forward with her disastrous mini-budget which crushed the economy".

By contrast, she argued, Labour has "learned the lessons from our 2019 general election manifesto, which was roundly rejected by the public and led us to our worst election defeat in our history".

Sir Keir's plans, she said, will be "funded and costed", but "will still deliver credible and radical change".

09:11:10

Labour to scrap Avanti West Coast rail contract as soon as possible

Labour's shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh has told Sky News we can be "confident" the pledge to renationalise almost all passenger railways services will be in the party's manifesto, due to be unveiled tomorrow.

As transport secretary, she would be able to terminate the Avanti West Coast contract from October 2026 with three months notice.

Asked if she would use that power, Ms Haigh replied: "Yes. Our commitment is to bring in those contracts as they expire or when they are breached.

"And I anticipate I will be seeking advice early on whether Avanti has been in breach of its contract, given the woeful service it has been providing to passengers."

She added that October 2026 will be "the last date" that Avanti will be given notice of the termination of their contract.

Election latest: Greens launching manifesto with vow to target 'super rich' - as PM and Starmer prepare for Sky event (2024)
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