Rishi Sunak today appeals to disaffected Tory voters to return to the fold to prevent a ‘socialist supermajority’ wrecking Britain.
Writing in the Daily Mail, the Prime Minister urges former Tory supporters considering staying at home today or voting Reform to lend their votes to the Conservatives again to stop Sir Keir Starmer winning unchecked power.
Mr Sunak acknowledges that people are ‘frustrated with me, with our party’ after a tough period in which Britain has been hit by Covid and the fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
But he warns that the election will have ‘lasting consequences’ if it produces a landslide which would embolden Labour to raise taxes ‘even further’.
‘I need your vote to defend our vision of Britain: to back lower taxes, controlled borders and a secure future for our country,’ he writes. ‘Join with us and we can make a difference and stop the socialist supermajority.’
Polls suggest that up to half the voters who backed the Conservatives in 2019 could desert them today, with some backing Reform, some staying at home and others even backing the Lib Dems or Labour.
Mr Sunak points to analysis suggesting that as few as 130,000 voters in key seats could change the course of the election, and says that a ‘huge number of seats in this election will be decided by a few hundred votes’.
In his final campaign speech last night, Mr Sunak said his experience as a Southampton football fan had taught him ‘that the game isn’t over until the final whistle goes and that there’s fight in the underdog’.
It came as:
Mr Sunak hit the campaign trail in Hampshire at 2pm yesterday, kicking off with a visit to Braishfield Primary School, where Caroline Nokes is the Tory candidate in Romsey and Southampton North.
The two leaders have focused their campaigns on very different seats – with Labour targeting ambitious areas which were once considered safe for the Tories.
The Prime Minister has generally stuck to Conservative heartlands – aiming to mitigate the damage on polling day, rather than striving to secure new ground.
Analysis suggests 45 out of 54 seats visited by Mr Sunak are Conservative defences, including nine where his party has a notional majority of more than 20,000.
Ahead of his final speech of the campaign, the Prime Minister warned Labour could end up in power for ’20 years’ if it wins a supermajority. Before appearing at Romsey Rugby Football Club near Southampton, he warned the public: ‘If you vote for anyone other than the Conservatives, you could find yourself with a Labour government not just for five years, but for ten, 15, 20 years.
‘Four years ago, Keir Starmer ran for Labour leader promising to raise income tax on the top 5 per cent of earners, to abolish universal credit, to scrap tuition fees, to nationalise the utility companies, and to defend free movement.
‘Starmer now says he has changed his mind on all these things. But how can you trust someone who changes their mind on so many issues? How do you know that, if it was politically expedient, he wouldn’t just change his mind again on all of these questions?’
Mr Sunak added: ‘His constant U-turns show two things: that he was wrong before. And that he hasn’t even the courage of his own past lack of convictions.’
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