Many newspapers have focused on Keir Starmer’s vision for government in the Labour election manifesto.
The Guardian said it was a pro-business manifesto targeted at former Conservative voters, prioritising economic stability over the policy-focused platform announced by the Conservatives on Tuesday.
The Daily Mirror sees today as a golden opportunity for the Labour leader to seal the deal with voters, saying he must not only propose change but also offer hope for a better tomorrow.
The Daily Mail reported on what it described as a shift in Conservative strategy, with a senior Conservative leader warning voters not to risk “sleepwalking into a one-party socialist state.” The new approach, the paper said, is aimed at persuading Conservative voters considering backing the reformists that they would be running the risk of helping Starmer win a landslide victory.
A Financial Times analysis suggests that Labour is avoiding campaigning in Britain’s Conservative heartland, a sign of Starmer’s “caution”. Despite opinion polls suggesting a “devastating defeat for the Conservatives”, Labour’s activists and funding are concentrated in the 186 seats where they will need less than 15 points to win, the paper said.
The Guardian also exclusively reported that Sunak’s close aide, Craig Williams, had bet that a general election would be called in July, just three days before the Prime Minister made his surprise announcement, citing Mr Sunak’s admission that he “should have thought about what it would look like”.
The Daily Express says 3.6 million people are at high risk of diabetes and warns of a looming obesity time bomb.
The paper said the number of people thought to have pre-diabetes has doubled since 2019, with health officials blaming cheap junk food, and that the NHS is struggling to cope with the strain of caring for the 5.6 million people with known diabetes.
Topping the list is political satirist Armando Iannucci, whose work includes TV comedy “The Thick of It.” Iannucci will be promoted from an Order of the British Empire (OBE) to a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE), according to the paper. Also on the list is Gordon Brown, who the paper believes will receive an honorary medal.