Clashes on the economy, immigration and coalitions – but the questioners have the upper hand
Gary Gibbon blogs on the party leaders responses so far in the second leaders’ debate.
1,585 items found
Gary Gibbon blogs on the party leaders responses so far in the second leaders’ debate.
FactCheck looks at a variety of claims from last night’s leaders’ debate
Labour’s immigration minister, Conservative & Lib Dem home affairs spokesmen clash over immigration statistics – but who’s been doing their homework?
The UK Statistics Authority has written to the prime minister over his inaccurate use of immigration figures in a podcast last week.
Gordon Brown gets in a muddle by using different sets of figures to show that net inward migration is falling.
Gary Gibbon asks: can Gordon Brown’s announcement today of further immigration controls win over the mainly white “Clocking Off” social group?
Gordon Brown’s speech today is an acknowledgment that there is a vacuum in the public debate on immigration and that the government has not been doing enough lately to fill it.
After the 2016 election Donald Trump was seen in Washington DC as an aberration. After January 6th 2021, his opponents imagined him in a cell, not the oval office. Now the voters of this nation have given Trump another chance.
From deregulation to soaring trade tariffs – what impact is Trump’s win likely to have on global financial stability
We’re joined by pollster and political advisor James Johnson, who correctly predicted the scale of this win for Donald Trump.
We’re joined by Democratic Representative of Pennsylvania Andre Carroll, and Republican strategist Dennis Powell.
Donald Trump and Kamala Harris have spent months zig-zagging the United States this Presidential election campaign, hoping to convince voters to back their bid for the White House. Meanwhile America’s truckers have been making crucial journeys of their own, transporting the goods, machinery and supplies that keep the US economy functioning.
Our teams on the campaign trail reflect on what they’ve heard on the streets of America from voters, in the lead-up to the vote.
Are there people out there who don’t usually vote, young men perhaps, that the polls aren’t picking up and are swinging to Trump in large numbers? Or is there a swathe of independents, older women, traditional Republicans, turning their back on Trump and voting Democrat?
We speak to Democratic strategist Julie Roginsky, who’s in Pennsylvania, and Republican strategist Kristin Davison, who’s in New Mexico as the campaigns head into the final days.