Rishi Sunak in Final Weekend Campaign Push to Save His Seat

Rishi Sunak in Final Weekend Campaign Push to Save His Seat

Rishi Sunak’s Labour opponent in his Richmond and Northallerton seat in Yorkshire has accused him of “panicking” as the prime minister campaigned to save his own seat in the last weekend before polling day. Tom Wilson, the 29-year-old NHS worker and musician who spoke to The Independent last weekend, has questioned why the prime minister’s team apparently tried to arrange a hustings in the seat with farmers that was cancelled.

Mr. Sunak, who was campaigning in the North East yesterday to be close to his seat for the weekend, is potentially facing the prospect of being the first prime minister to lose his constituency in an election in British history. Some recent polls have suggested the result in the rural seat, which covers part of the Yorkshire Dales but recently elected a Labour regional mayor, is “too close to call.”

On the battle bus yesterday, Mr. Sunak dodged a question from The Independent about whether he will campaign in his own constituency this weekend – and whether he can guarantee he will win his seat. The prime minister said he didn’t “take anything for granted” and he would fight hard for every vote. But by Friday evening he was at The Bank pub in the village of Stokesley in his constituency to officially open a new decking area and meet local voters. Today he has been campaigning in Richmond and was at the army barracks at Catterick for Armed Forces Day.

But there has been confusion over a hustings that Mr. Wilson claims the prime minister’s team asked the Country Land and Business Association to arrange in Richmond, the main town in his constituency, that was due to take place yesterday. Mr. Wilson tweeted: “On Thursday, while I was preparing for the BBC Radio York hustings, which the prime minister was once again absent from, I was contacted again to say the hustings had been called off. Instead, the PM spent his, at least, seventh day of the campaign in the constituency.”

Mr. Wilson told The Independent that the prime minister is “panicking.” He added: “The prime minister is truly rattled, and scrambling to save his own seat here in Richmond and Northallerton. More rural voters than ever are putting their trust in Labour to deliver real change.”

Jonathan Roberts from the CLA said that Mr. Sunak, as had been alleged by his opponents, did not pull out of the husting. He said: “I took the view that there were too many candidates in that seat to contact, and so it would have been too difficult to organise at a time when – in any case – many of our members would be too busy on the farm to attend.” The Independent has asked the Conservatives for a response.

Rishi Sunak’s decision to skip a D-Day memorial has been openly criticised by a second cabinet minister before he then cancelled a press event as the row engulfing the prime minister over the blunder deepened. Mr. Sunak is said to be “despondent” over the backlash to him missing the international ceremony attended by other world leaders, including US president Joe Biden and French president Emmanuel Macron, to mark the 80th anniversary of the Allied landings.

The prime minister did not take media questions on Saturday’s campaign trail after his awkward exchange with broadcasters the previous day. A scheduled opportunity for reporters to quiz him did not take place as was originally planned, with the Conservatives calling off the “huddle” citing time constraints, as Mr. Sunak toured County Durham and Yorkshire. Instead, the prime minister spoke with volunteers away from public view at a walled garden at Auckland Castle, Bishop Auckland, before attending a village fete in Great Ayton, a North Yorkshire village in his Richmond constituency.

It came just hours after another cabinet minister condemned Mr. Sunak’s decision to leave Normandy early on Thursday as a “mistake” as Tory anger at the move continued following the prime minister’s apology. Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Saturday morning, Transport Secretary Mark Harper said: “People make mistakes. The prime minister has made a mistake. He’s apologised for it.” He did not go quite as far as his cabinet colleague Penny Mordaunt, a Navy reservist, who branded Mr. Sunak’s snub “completely wrong” during the BBC’s fiery seven-way TV election debate on Friday evening. The Commons Leader added: “The prime minister has rightly apologised for that, apologised to veterans but also to all of us, because he was representing all of us.”

The move prompted a fierce backlash from some Conservatives already nervous about their party’s electoral prospects and political rivals alike, with the outrage swelling after it emerged Mr. Sunak had returned to the UK from France to record a General Election campaign TV interview. Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said people were “flabbergasted” by the prime minister’s decision, which was “such a letdown for our whole country and our history, particularly for our brave veterans.” During a visit to Newbury on Saturday, he added: “I share the concerns of veterans and people across the country who feel really let down and are upset, and indeed some very angry.” Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer said it was his “duty” to thank veterans at the D-Day event.

An anonymous source close to the prime minister told Bloomberg Mr. Sunak has been left despondent at the reaction. Cabinet ministers told the outlet his misstep had exacerbated their concerns about his judgement, with one former loyalist saying they regretted the Tories had not ousted him as prime minister earlier this year. Several ministers went on to brand Mr. Sunak’s decision to call a snap general election on 4 July a catastrophic mistake, believing he should have waited to first see if the economy improved. One minister feared the move could become one of the great miscalculations in British political history if it led to electoral defeat and then a takeover of the Conservative Party by Nigel Farage, with Mr. Sunak potentially on track to being remembered as worse than Liz Truss, the report added.

Mr. Farage has loomed large over the Tory campaign this week after he announced on Monday he would stand as a candidate in Clacton, Essex, for Reform UK in the upcoming general election as well as his decision to takeover as leader of the party. Polls suggest Reform is gaining ground at the expense of the Tories. After Ms. Mordaunt told the debate audience that the D-Day gaffe should not become “a political football”, Mr. Farage replied: “Well, it already is. It already is because the veterans themselves are speaking out saying he’s let the country down.”

The Tories have sought to move on from the row with new policy offers, including a pledge to axe stamp duty for first-time buyers on homes up to £425,000. They also set out their “Backing Drivers Bill” which would ban Wales-style blanket 20mph limits and reverse the Ultra Low Emission Zone (Ulez) expansion from inner into outer London. Sir Keir set out Labour’s plans for small businesses, including an overhaul of the business rates system, at a brewery in Camden alongside Dragons’ Den star Deborah Meaden. Sir Ed tried his hand at tennis in Newbury and visited an adventure golf course in Wokingham as he promoted the Lib Dems’ proposal to plough £50 million a year into maintaining three new national parks.

Source: The Independent, PA Wire

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