UK normal election LIVE: Latest updates from the marketing campaign path

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Labour are waking up to a huge headache this morning after veteran MP Diane Abbott confirmed reports she has been blocked from standing for the party at the next election.

Keir Starmer has been under intensifying scrutiny over Ms Abbott’s future following an investigation lasting more than a year into her conduct and will no doubt be fearful this internal row could detract from Labour’s pledge to meet a key NHS waiting time target.

Meanwhile, Rishi Sunak has pledged to scrap ‘rip-off’ degrees under new plans to fund 100,000 new apprenticeships for young people.

Follow MailOnline’s live coverage of the campaign trail below

Breaking:Diane Abbott ‘dismayed’ at reports she has been banned from standing as Labour candidate

Diane Abbott has tweeted she is ‘dismayed’ by reports suggesting she has been banned from standing as a Labour candidate.

Ms Abbott earlier told the BBC and other media outlets media reports she had been barred from representing the party were ‘true’

The Labour Party is yet to issue a fomal response

Drinkers at the Flower Pot pub in Macclesfield had cause for concern yesterday when a new barman produced a dodgy pint that didn’t appear decent value for money.

Thankfully, the pourer isn’t a permanent addition to the staff as Foreign Secretary David Cameron dropped by on the campaign trail in the north west. ‘I haven’t done this for a while, so I’m trying to make sure I don’t get too much head,’ he said.

A couple of hours up the M6, Sir Ed Davey was also in the north west where he practiced falling off a paddleboard in Lake Windermere.

Read Matt Strudwick’s piece here on election publicity stunts you may have missed:

Wes Streeting – Junior doctors won’t receive pay rise on day one of a Labour government

A Labour government would not be able to award a full pay rise to junior doctors “on day one”, shadow health secretary Wes Streeting has said.

He told ITV’s Good Morning Britain:

I want to be really upfront with junior doctors this side of the election – the 35% pay claim they’ve put in, I’m just not going to be able to afford that on day one of a Labour government.

We’re going to have to work together and negotiate on pay and recognise, as was the case with the last Labour government who inherited a similar mess, getting to fair pay is a journey not an event, and I am willing to negotiate on pay and those wider conditions that junior doctors are working.

He went on:

I’m willing to sit down and negotiate on those wider conditions so that junior doctors are genuinely valued and and look forward to a career in the NHS rather than thinking about whether they’re going to stick it out because things are so terrible.

A poll released last night would have cheered Conservative voters as it showed Labour’s lead narrowing despite an error-prone start to Rishi Sunak’s campaign.

The Daily Mail’s Deputy Political Editor Harriet Line reports Labour’s lead over the Tories has slipped to just 12 points, according to the poll, with Sir Keir Starmer’s party on 40 per cent, while the Tories climb to 28 per cent – up two points since the start of May.

Read Harriet’s story here:

What’s happening on the campaign trail today?

It has been busy start to the morning with Diane Abbott confirming reports she has been banned from standing as a Labour MP in the general election.

While we will continue to bring news and reaction to that plus everything else taking place on the campaign trail, let’s take a look at what we have coming up today:

  • Rishi Sunak will be campaigning in the south west after arriving in Cornwall on an overnight sleeper train. He will visit a training academy this afternoon to discuss apprentices and is rumoured to be stopping by a local pub during a community visit. He will also hold a Q&A in Devon at some point
  • Mr Sunak’s wife Akshata Murty is expected to visit a Royal British Legion care facility in Yorkshire at 10am.
  • Sir Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting are dropping in to a medical training facility in Worcestershire at around 11.15am for an on camera Q&A with medical trainees. They will then host an event with Labour members and Starmer will give a speech this afternoon.
  • Labour frontbenchers Angela Rayner and Jonathan Reynolds will visit London Stansted airport this morning.
  • Sir Ed Davey is in Wales to launch the party’s campaign in the country. Sir Ed will be joined by the Welsh Liberal Democrat Leader Jane Dodds in Knighton.
  • Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar and Glasgow East candidate John Grady will visit the eco-friendly homes in Glasgow East to discuss Labour’s plans to support energy efficiency from 10.30am
  • John Swinney and Scotland’s Transport Secretary Fiona Hyslop will officially open the Levenmouth rail link. This afternoon, the SNP Leader will join the party’s candidate for North East Fife, Stefan Hoggan-Radu, on the campaign trail in Leven.
  • And tonight former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is to hold an election launch event in north London.

SNP round on Labour over Diane Abbott row

It appears rival parties are smelling blood as the Diane Abbott row threatens to engulf the Labour party.

The SNP’s Westminster leader Stephen Flynn described the situation as a ‘pretty sorry reflection’ of Labour’s values as he compared her apparent ban with the recent decision to welcome Tory defector Natalie Elphicke.

He told Sky News:

I think this is a pretty sorry reflection of the Labour Party and where it stands, what its values are and what its principles are at the moment.

Diane Abbott gets her membership back at the very last minute but isn’t allowed to stand.

I’d just like to thank Diane for everything she has done, as a trailblazer for women in Parliament, but also as the first black female in Parliament. She’s a phenomenal individual and her legacy is going to be long lasting.

Pictured: Rishi Sunak gets a round of bacon sarnies as he arrives in Cornwall

While the Diane Abbott row has reignited on Wednesday morning in Labour circles, the Prime Minister has arrived in Cornwall.

Perhaps buoyed after his best day on the campaign trail and one poll suggesting Labour’s dominant lead has narrowed, Mr Sunak will be no doubt hoping to capitalise on Labour’s faltering start this morning.

After he disembarked from an overnight sleeper train from London Paddington, Mr Sunak spoke with staff at a seafront cafe as he bought bacon and sausage sandwiches for the media and his staff.

Rishi Sunak asked journalists which sandwich they would prefer, bacon or sausage, leading one to reply: “Bacon, Prime Minister.”

The Prime Minister will likely want to talk about his latest pledge which will see ‘rip-off’ degrees scrapped under a new law to boost young people’s life chances by funding 100,000 apprenticeships.

Watch: Wes Streeting confronted over Diane Abbott ban

We can now bring you the moment Labour’s Wes Streeting was asked for his reaction to Diane Abbott’s assertion she has been banned from standing for the party in the upcoming election.

Mr Streeting is on the morning interview round for Labour today and undoubtedly wants to talk about a new NHS pledge over treatment times.

See video below:

Wes Streeting – I’m ‘not particularly’ comfortable with Diane Abbott’s treatment

Labour shadow health secretary Wes Streeting (pictured) said he was “not particularly” comfortable with how fellow Labour MP Diane Abbott has been treated by the Labour Party.

He told Times Radio

I know that Diane had the whip restored and her suspension lifted yesterday. This was following her suspension over remarks that she made, for which she later apologised. So I know at this stage, in terms of decisions about her candidature, as much as has been reported.

I think this has gone on for a very long time. But I’m here this morning to talk about the NHS waiting lists and I say this with enormous respect for everything that Diane has achieved in politics.

Asked if Ms Abbott was owed an apology Mr Streeting said:

Diane rightly apologised for the comments that she made that led to her suspension, as to the process, I think those questions are better directed to people responsible for the process.

I think it’s best that we wait for all other facts to emerge about the decision making in this case, which I’ve not been involved in, have no responsibility for and I’m here to talk about the seven and a half million people who are on NHS waiting lists.

The Diane Abbott story: What has happened and how did we get here

Diane Abbott, the veteran Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington, has confirmed reports she has been blocked from standing as a party candidate on July 4.

Britain’s first black female MP said briefings were published in newspapers ‘within minutes’ of having the Labour whip restored after she was suspended from the parliamentary party for more than a year.

Here’s what happened:

  • Ms Abbott was suspended from Labour amid an investigation into her comments about Jewish people in a letter to the Observer newspaper in April last year.
  • The MP had responded to writer Tomiwa Owolade’s claims that “Irish, Jewish and Traveller people all suffer from ‘racism'” and suggested Jewish people were not ‘all their lives subject to racism’
  • On Tuesday, BBC Newsnight reported an investigation into Ms Abbott’s remarks was completed in December 2023 which saw her issued with a formal warning and ordered to complete an ‘antisemitism awareness course’.
  • Amid intensifying questions over whether she would stand in the election, Ms Abbott had the Labour whip restored on Tuesday afternoon.
  • But she has now confirmed reports stating she would still not be allowed to run as a Labour MP are accurate. Labour is yet to respond to Ms Abbott on Wednesday morning.

Our political editor James Tapsfield has the story on Diane Abbott following her claims she has been banned from standing as a Labour MP in the general election.

Read his story here:

Labour frontbencher on Diane Abbott – I’m hearing this for the first time

Labour’s shadow health secretary Wes Streeting has been given somewhat of a hospital pass this morning as he faces the media intent on grilling him over Diane Abbott.

Ms Abbott has just told the BBC and other outlets she is banned from standing for Labour at the general election despite having the whip restored to her following an investigation over a letter she wrote suggesting Jewish people do not face racism ‘all their lives’.

Mr Streeting told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, ‘I’m hearing this for the first time’, when he is asked about Ms Abbott’s claims.

Diane Abbott – It is true I’m banned from standing for Labour

Diane Abbott has claimed Labour has banned her from representing the party at the general election.

The veteran MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington said she had the whip restored on Tuesday but ‘within minutes’ newspaper reports emerged that she would not be allowed to stand for Labour on July 4

She told The Evening Standard:

I had the whip restored yesterday afternoon but within minutes we saw they had briefed the Times the story as attached, that you have probably seen. And it is true.

Breaking:Diane Abbott – I’m banned from standing for Labour at election

Big news first up this morning.

Diane Abbott has said she is barred from standing in the general election for Labour despite having the whip restored following an investigation into her conduct.

We will bring you more as we get it.

What happened yesterday on the campaign trail?

Rishi Sunak headed to the Potteries and later played bowls as he pushed his new tax cut for pensioners dubbed the ‘triple lock plus’, while shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves was in Derby, a short hop along the A50, setting out her first major speech of the campaign.

Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey ventured onto a paddleboard in the Lake District and Nigel Farage visited Dover on behalf of Reform UK.

Here are five takeaways from a busy day:

Stick with us for the latest news and reaction throughout the day.

Firstly, let’s take a look at today’s front page story on the Daily Mail following Rishi Sunak’s new pledge concerning apprenticeships

Harriet Line, the Mail’s Deputy Political Editor, reports Rishi Sunak’s latest pledge will see ‘rip-off’ degrees scrapped under a new law to boost young people’s life chances.

One in eight students could see their course axed in a bid to cut down on ‘Mickey Mouse’ degrees and pay for 100,000 apprenticeships.

Read Harriet’s story here:

Good morning

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the general election.

We’ve reached the halfway stage in the first full week of campaigning with parties on the trail hunting for votes across the country.

Join us today as we bring you all the latest news plus the best pictures and reaction on social media.

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