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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Jessica Elgot Deputy political editor

‘Who do you trust to keep you safe?’: Sunak to fight next election on UK’s security

Rishi Sunak delivers his speech at the Policy Exchange, London, 13 May 2024: he is seen from the side standing at a wooden lectern with one hand raised, addressing a seated audience in a small room with a dark grey carpet and white walls. He is wearing a black suit, white shirt and blue tie; the audience members seen in this picture are mostly men and also wearing suits and ties, though the head of a woman can be seen in the background.
Rishi Sunak said the next five years would be some of the most difficult and dangerous in the UK’s history. Photograph: Carl Court/AP

Rishi Sunak has vowed to fight the next election on the UK’s security, attacking Labour and Keir Starmer in a fiercely political speech in which he said: “The choice at the next election is: who do you trust to keep you safe?”

The prime minister said in his speech he would frame the Conservatives as the party of the future, but also defended the party’s record over the past 14 years, and said Starmer’s “past actions” meant the Labour leader would not be able to keep the country safe.

The attacks drew a rebuff from Starmer: “This is the seventh reset in 18 months. I know first-hand the importance of national security … but in order for that to happen you need a credible plan. What’s his record? He’s hollowed out our armed forces, he’s wasted billions of pounds on procurement.”

In his wide-ranging speech at the Policy Exchange thinktank, Sunak rejected the opportunity to name an election date, but said he would debate Starmer “as many times as he likes” during the campaign.

“Keir Starmer’s gone from embracing Jeremy Corbyn to Natalie Elphicke, all in the cynical pursuit of power at any price,” Sunak said.

The speech comes at the end of a difficult fortnight for the prime minister after a series of defeats at the local elections including losing the Conservative mayor of the West Midlands, Andy Street, as well as the defection of Elphicke, one of his backbench MPs, who joined Labour to criticise his failure to tackle migrant arrivals on small boats.

Sunak said the next five years would be some of the most difficult and dangerous in the UK’s history, with threats from “an axis of authoritarian states like Russia, Iran, North Korea and China”, as well as the challenges of illegal migration, divisive cultural issues and the transformational consequences of artificial intelligence.

“Extremists are also exploiting these global conflicts to divide us. People are abusing our liberal democratic values – the freedom of speech and right of protest – to intimidate, threaten and assault others, to sing antisemitic chants on our streets,” he said. “And from gender activists hijacking children’s sex education to cancel culture, vocal and aggressive fringe groups are trying to impose their views on the rest of us.”

But the prime minister said he was optimistic about the future, and he would frame the next election as a choice between parties with a plan for the future versus dwelling on the past. He said the Conservatives had plans on a broad range of issues, from a smoking ban and cancer diagnostics to extending maths to all 18-year-olds.

Acknowledging the dire position of his own party in the polls, Sunak said the Labour party was fighting the election with a purely negative agenda. “I’m clear-eyed enough to admit that yes, maybe they can depress their way to victory with all their talk of doom loops and gaslighting and scaremongering about pensions. But I don’t think it will work,” he said.

“Labour have no ideas. What they did have they’ve U-turned on. They have just one thing: a calculation that they can make you feel so bad about your country that you won’t have the energy to ask what they might do with the incredible power that they seek to wield.”

In a shift from his party conference speech when he said he would end the “30 years of status quo”, Sunak launched into a defence of his party’s record in government. He named the creation of 4 million jobs, delivering the Covid vaccine rollout, NHS funding, pensions triple lock, universal credit and cutting carbon emissions as key achievements.

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