©(Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP)
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Wednesday set a general election date for July 4, ending months of speculation but not the doom-laden forecasts about the size of the government's expected defeat.
The poll will be the first time Sunak, 44, faces the public while in charge, after he was appointed leader of the largest party in parliament by Conservative MPs in October 2022.
The vote—the third since the Brexit referendum in 2016—comes as Sunak seeks to capitalize on better economic data to woo voters hit by cost-of-living rises.
Halving inflation within a year from historic highs of above 11% at the end of 2022 was one of the former financier's five key pledges.
That happened last year, and on Wednesday, rates slowed to a near three-year low at 2.3%, prompting finance minister Jeremy Hunt to declare, "This is proof that the plan is working."
Sunak, in a Downing Street statement made in driving rain after he gathered his top ministers, said he had spoken to head of state King Charles III and requested the dissolution of parliament.
Parliament will be prorogued—suspending the current session—on Friday, then formally dissolved next Thursday, before campaigning begins.
Keir Starmer, whose resurgent Labour party is widely tipped to win power in a landslide, called the vote a chance to "turn the page" on 14 years of Tory "chaos."
Uphill Task
The economy—hit by external factors such as COVID and more self-inflicted wounds such as Brexit and former premier Liz Truss—will be a key battleground.
But Sunak faces an uphill task to convince the public that the country's finances are still safe in Tory hands after 14 years in power.
Sunak has tried to steady the ship since succeeding Truss, whose 49-day tenure ended after her unfunded tax cuts sent household bills soaring, spooked the markets and crashed the pound.
Immigration—another key issue since the government's vote-winning pledge to "take back control" of Britain's borders after Brexit—remains politically troublesome.
Sunak—the Tories' fourth leader since 2016—has talked tough to "stop the boats" of irregular migrants crossing the Channel from northern France.
But his controversial scheme to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda has yet to get off the ground, as costs and legal challenges mount.
Wipe-Out?
Desperate polling for Sunak has sparked talk of a landslide similar to the first of Tony Blair's three election victories for Labour in 1997—and even a near wipe-out for the Tories.
Starmer, 61, and his top team have in recent weeks been honing their election pitch, nearly five years after the party was thrashed by Boris Johnson and his vow to "Get Brexit Done."
Last week, Starmer set out six key pledges that were notably more electorally friendly than the hard-left policies of his divisive predecessor, Jeremy Corbyn.
Starmer, a pro-European centrist, promised economic stability, shorter health service waiting times and a new border security command to tackle irregular immigration.
He also vowed to establish a publicly owned clean energy company, crack down on anti-social behavior with more neighborhood police and recruit 6,500 new teachers.
Phil Hazlewood, with AFP
The poll will be the first time Sunak, 44, faces the public while in charge, after he was appointed leader of the largest party in parliament by Conservative MPs in October 2022.
The vote—the third since the Brexit referendum in 2016—comes as Sunak seeks to capitalize on better economic data to woo voters hit by cost-of-living rises.
Halving inflation within a year from historic highs of above 11% at the end of 2022 was one of the former financier's five key pledges.
That happened last year, and on Wednesday, rates slowed to a near three-year low at 2.3%, prompting finance minister Jeremy Hunt to declare, "This is proof that the plan is working."
Sunak, in a Downing Street statement made in driving rain after he gathered his top ministers, said he had spoken to head of state King Charles III and requested the dissolution of parliament.
Parliament will be prorogued—suspending the current session—on Friday, then formally dissolved next Thursday, before campaigning begins.
Keir Starmer, whose resurgent Labour party is widely tipped to win power in a landslide, called the vote a chance to "turn the page" on 14 years of Tory "chaos."
Uphill Task
The economy—hit by external factors such as COVID and more self-inflicted wounds such as Brexit and former premier Liz Truss—will be a key battleground.
But Sunak faces an uphill task to convince the public that the country's finances are still safe in Tory hands after 14 years in power.
Sunak has tried to steady the ship since succeeding Truss, whose 49-day tenure ended after her unfunded tax cuts sent household bills soaring, spooked the markets and crashed the pound.
Immigration—another key issue since the government's vote-winning pledge to "take back control" of Britain's borders after Brexit—remains politically troublesome.
Sunak—the Tories' fourth leader since 2016—has talked tough to "stop the boats" of irregular migrants crossing the Channel from northern France.
But his controversial scheme to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda has yet to get off the ground, as costs and legal challenges mount.
Wipe-Out?
Desperate polling for Sunak has sparked talk of a landslide similar to the first of Tony Blair's three election victories for Labour in 1997—and even a near wipe-out for the Tories.
Starmer, 61, and his top team have in recent weeks been honing their election pitch, nearly five years after the party was thrashed by Boris Johnson and his vow to "Get Brexit Done."
Last week, Starmer set out six key pledges that were notably more electorally friendly than the hard-left policies of his divisive predecessor, Jeremy Corbyn.
Starmer, a pro-European centrist, promised economic stability, shorter health service waiting times and a new border security command to tackle irregular immigration.
He also vowed to establish a publicly owned clean energy company, crack down on anti-social behavior with more neighborhood police and recruit 6,500 new teachers.
Phil Hazlewood, with AFP
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