Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to key eventsSkip to navigation

Oliver Dowden reportedly reveals preferred choice for next Tory leader – UK general election as it happened

Deputy PM says Victoria Atkins is ‘star’ and is one of only people he could see leading Tory party

Updated
Tue 2 Jul 2024 20.59 BSTFirst published on Tue 2 Jul 2024 05.50 BST
Key events
Oliver Dowden, deputy prime minister.
Oliver Dowden, deputy prime minister.Photograph: Mark Thomas/Alamy
Oliver Dowden, deputy prime minister.Photograph: Mark Thomas/Alamy

Live feed

Key events
Jim Waterson
Jim Waterson

British female politicians have become the victims of fake pornography, with some of their faces used in nude images created using artificial intelligence.

Political candidates targeted on one prominent fake pornography website include: the Labour deputy leader,Angela Rayner;the education secretary,Gillian Keegan;the Commons leader,Penny Mordaunt;the former home secretary,Priti Patel;and the Labour backbencherStella Creasy,according to Channel 4 News.

Many of the images have been online for several years and attracted hundreds of thousands of views.

While some are crude Photoshops featuring the politician’s head imposed on to another person’s naked body, other images appear to be more complicated deepfakes that have been created using AI technology. Some of the politicians targeted have now contacted police.

Dehenna Davison,a Conservative MP until the recent dissolution of parliament, is one of those featured on the site. She told Channel 4 News it was “really strange” that people would target women like her and she found it “quite violating”.

She said that unless governments around the world put in place a proper regulatory framework for AI, there would be “major problems”.

Creasy told the broadcaster that she felt “sick” to learn about the images and that “none of this is about sexual pleasure, it’s all about power and control”.

Thursday’s general election is an opportunity to “draw a permanent line” under the Scottish independence debate, a senior Scottish Conservative has said.

With his party’s election campaign entering its final days, party chairman Craig Hoy said voting for theConservativesin “key seats” where the party is going toe-to-toe with the SNP could “finish off any hope the SNP have of seeking independence”.

Chairman of Scottish Conservatives, Craig Hoy.Photograph: Lisa O'Carroll, the Guardian

He said this would enable the country to focus on “the things that really matter”, such as healthcare and roads.

This General Election in Scotland is a huge opportunity to beat the SNP, so that all of the focus can finally be on the things that really matter, such as faster GP appointments and fi xing the roads.

If voters back the Scottish Conservatives in the key seats where we are going toe-to-toe with the nationalists, it could be the season finale of the SNP’s bid for independence.

We could finish off any hope the SNP have of seeking independence and draw a permanent line under the debate that has divided Scotland for more than a decade.

Health leaders have warned that strikes “must not become the status quo” for the NHS as junior doctors in England return to work after a five-day walkout, PA reports.

It is expected that tens of thousands of appointments, procedures and operations were postponed as a result of the industrial action by members of the British Medical Association (BMA).

NHS leaders said that hospitals have been left to “pick up the pieces” as staff work to reschedule all of the appointments lost during strike days.

Junior doctors take part in a rally outside Downing Street as members of the British Medical Association walk out for five days in a strike action over pay in the run up to the general election.Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/REX/Shutterstock

Officials are expected to confirm the number of appointments that were postponed on Friday – the day after voters take to the polls in the General Election.

Both the Conservatives and Labour have pledged to resume talks with the BMA’s Junior Doctors Committee if they are voted to power.

Health SecretaryVictoria Atkinspledged to “get back into the negotiating room immediately after the election” while Labour’s shadow health secretary Wes Streeting said that he will call the BMA on 5 July.

Health leaders have called for the long-running dispute to be brought to a close swiftly.

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said the impact of the strike will be felt “for some time to come” adding:

We know that tens of thousands of operations and appointments are likely to have been cancelled.

Now health leaders and their teams will need to begin picking up the pieces by rescheduling all these so that patients can get the treatments they so desperately need.

It is important to remember that it is patients who are bearing the brunt of this ongoing dispute, patients who are often waiting in pain or discomfort for care.

While we recognise that junior doctors have genuine issues over pay, conditions and training, it is questionable that these strikes in the midst of a General Election campaign could have moved the dial. We are concerned that so many patients should have their care disrupted when no government was in a position to negotiate.

We hope that the next government can re-start negotiations and bring this dispute to an end so the NHS can focus on improving performance and cutting waiting lists rather than filling rota gaps and rescheduling appointments.”

Will Thatcher’s home town vote for first Labour MP?

Robyn Vinter
Robyn Vinter

Projections show there is a real chance on Thursday of what would be the first everLabourvictory in Margaret Thatcher’s home town.

The true blue constituency has never voted Labour, not even during the New Labour landslide of 1997, when huge swathes of the country left the Tories behind.

Grantham continued to resist the pull, with the Conservative vote share only increasing every election. By 2019, Gareth Davies, the incumbent Tory MP, had a whopping 66% of the vote.

But such is the disastrous polling for Rishi Sunak’s party that on Friday morning, voters in the seat of Grantham and Bourne, renamed from Grantham and Stamford to take into account a boundary change, could be waking up to their first elected Labour MP. There was one period in 2007, when their MP Quentin Daviesdefected to Labour,but as soon as voters had the chance in 2010 Labour was relegated to third place with a solid Conservative win.

Though a boundary change is a factor in the town’s potential new switch of allegiance, projections from the consultancy Electoral Calculus using the old boundary show Labour would still steal the seat from the Tories. In other words, people in Grantham are likely to vote for change.

Large financial backers are returning to Labour

Rowena Mason
Rowena Mason

Labour HQ was shocked and delighted to discover the party had raised £4m during the first two weeks of the election campaign, while the beleaguered Tories managed just £290,000.

But according to a Labour donor who used to raise funds for the party, the adage “when power shifts, so too does the money” rings true.

Donations of more than £11,180 – a sum that recently increased from £7,500 – must be reported to and published by theElectoral Commissionand the turnaround in Labour’s fortunes with large financial backers could not be more stark. Over the decade untilStarmerbecame leader, Labour had lost more than 95% of its big private donors, according to party sources involved in raising cash.

Some business figures had lost interest when the party was no longer in power, others faded away during theEd Milibandera, and then a real exodus occurred during theJeremy Corbynyears.

The real blow came in 2019 when the longstanding Labour funderDavid Sainsbury,of the supermarket dynasty, gave £8m toJo Swinson’sLiberal Democrats.“That was a low point,” recalls one person involved in raising cash for the party.

But in the last four years, not only have private donations come trickling back, but Starmer’s party has had an influx of “mega-donors” – people giving hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of pounds each time.

The cash has been flowing so readily that private donations now outstrip funding from the trade unions:

The Guardian’s Whitehall editor,Rowena Mason,is on the campaign bus withRishi Sunaktoday.

She writes:

Sunak had an early start this morning as he toured an Ocado warehouse at 5am - watching the robots pack bags and talking to workers about their 10 hour shifts in fridge-like temperatures.

The prime minister has appeared to be more chirpy and less tetchy this week, now the end of the campaign is in sight and the rows over D-Day and gambling have subsided a bit.

After boarding the bus, he stopped for a McDonalds wrap for breakfast and revealed that his regime of fasting all day on Monday has gone out the window during the campaign.

That avocado never stood a chance:

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak purchases McDonald’s breakfast on the day of a Conservative general election campaign event at Beaconsfield service station in Buckinghamshire, 2 July 2024.Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

48 hours to go

It is 7am, and you know what that means: exactly 48 hours from now, polling stations will open across the UK.

With that in mind, the Guardian’s Rupert Neate has spoken to YouGov abouthow undecided voters could shape the results:

Pollsters from YouGov reckon about 12% of the electorate are still undecided. Theytracked down 641 of them,and discovered that, while they are evenly spread across age groups, they are much more likely to be female (67%), to have voted leave in the EU referendum (43%, against 30% for remain), and to have voted Conservative at the last general election (43% compared to 15% who voted Labour).

When questioned (which can be hard as uncertain voters are less likely to respond to pollsters) some are more undecided than others. They found that 9% are likely to end up voting Conservative, 9% forLabour,5% for the Lib Dems, 4% Green and 3% Reform. A quarter of the undecided voters are “unlikely to actually vote”.

“This leaves 45% of the overall sample of people who are ‘truly undecided’, having told us they are at least 6/10 likely to vote at the election, but even with one week to go won’t commit to a party,” says YouGov’s director of political research, Adam McDonnell. “This group accounts for 6% of the entire public.”

It’s a far larger group of people than at the 2019 election, and is unusually concentrated among one party. “For months and months we have noticed that people who voted Conservative in 2019 are more likely to be undecided,” says Surridge. “By this point in the campaign we would have expected the proportion of “don’t knows” to have come down below 10%.”

This morning's front pages

It is almost 7am: let’s take a look at the day’s top stories.

The Guardian leads with aninterview with shadow energy security secretaryEd Miliband,who promises that Labour will take the lead on global efforts to tackle the climate crisis:

GUARDIAN: Labour would take global lead on climate change- Miliband#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /lnxTmRrwLu

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The I Paper:Labourfaces up to prospect of far-right neighbour in France with early talks

I PAPER: Labour faces up to prospect of far-right neighbour in France with early talks#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /a6KsKqgdCp

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

Metro: Naver mind the ballots

METRO: Never mind the ballots#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /WdDfdzisvl

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The Daily Telegraph:Royal Mailblamed for postal vote chaos

TELEGRAPH: Royal Mail blamed for postal vote chaos#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /CtNpw27xEo

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The Daily Mail: Britain’s forces not ready for ‘conflict of any scale’

MAIL: Britain’s forces not ready for ‘conflict of any scale’#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /H7o9FM0cmq

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The Times: Starmer: a big majority will be best for Britain

THE TIMES: Starmer: a big majority will be best for Britain#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /jeFrldVeYV

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The Daily Express: Voting reform ‘risks losing hundreds of Tory MPs for a generation’

EXPRESS: Voting reform ‘risks losing hundreds of Tory MPs for a generation’#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /kf3vYGZXE2

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

Scotland’s Daily Record: Sacre Bleu!

DAILY RECORD: Sacre Bleu!#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /Eo8WiGtWKB

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

The Daily Mirror: Give our children hope

MIRROR: Give our children hope#TomorrowsPapersTodaypic.twitter /UX3kQZgHsf

— Neil Henderson (@hendopolis)July 1, 2024

And theLiberal Democratswill call on voters to “end the sewage scandal” and vote for “historic change”.

Ahead of his visits to the South West of England, LibDem leaderEd Daveysaid: “In just 48 hours’ time, the British public can vote to end the sewage scandal and kick the Conservatives out of power,” PA reports.

“Filthy sewage dumping has caused untold damage to our precious environment and left people feeling unable to swim in their local rivers and beaches because they’re worried about getting sick.”

Comments(…)

Sign inorcreate your Guardian accountto join the discussion

Most viewed

Most viewed