Leaders debate: Ed Miliband ‘hates attacks from the left’
In countering the SNP, the Greens and Plaid Cymru, the Labour leader will have to be careful not to upset left-leaning potential Labour voters during tonight’s debate.
962 items found
David Cameron is accosted during his first on-camera walkabout of the election campaign, by a man with a ukulele who tells him – in somewhat colourful language – to go “back to Eton”.
Both educated at Oxford and both married to barristers, but beyond that Ed Miliband and Tony Blair are very different Labour leaders.
In countering the SNP, the Greens and Plaid Cymru, the Labour leader will have to be careful not to upset left-leaning potential Labour voters during tonight’s debate.
Polls shows David Cameron came out on top in last night’s election special. So the big question for Labour is, can they do enough in these TV appearances to make a difference?
Will last night’s general election programme, in which Jeremy Paxman grilled the Labour and Conservative leaders, swing undecided voters towards Ed Miliband or David Cameron?
David Cameron and Ed Miliband make their big pitch to the nation tonight. Don’t want to get taken in by the spin? Read this first.
David Cameron and Ed Miliband clash with Jeremy Paxman in the first public contest leading up to the general election, and take a grilling from the public on their records and future promises.
The Tory leader says he will take part in one seven-way TV debate between all the party leaders. But Labour wants him to participate in two more debates, including a head to head with Ed Miliband.
Ed Miliband is dubbed “two kitchens” after being filmed in one of the kitchens at his north London home, but he’s not the first politician to be accused of misleading the voters.
The Labour leader confirms he will appear in all three televised leaders’ debates even in David Cameron refuses to take part.
Ed Miliband calls on David Cameron to have a face-to-face debate with him, after the prime minister issued an ultimatum that he would only do one televised debate with at least seven party leaders.
Have living standards really bounced back to their pre-crash levels? Or are we losing thousands of pounds a year, as Ed Miliband says?
The Labour Party thinks its attack on the tax affairs of some Tory donors plays into its big message by revealing the unfairness at the heart of the country.
The president of RMT rail union announces he will stand for the Green Party at the general election, after claiming that Labour had become a “reddish Conservative Party”.
Although she hails from the centre right, Angela Merkel’s political instincts are closer to Ed Miliband’s than to David Cameron’s.