‘What matters to you more: Economic growth or successful climate policy?’
We’re staying with the BBC’s seven-way political debate between senior figures in the UK’s political parties.
“What matters to you more: Economic growth or successful climate policy?” asks an audience member.
Mr Farage says climate policies like net zero are unrealistic and unaffordable.
“Nigel is going to keep your fact-checkers busy for a little while. Farage has been misleading you… so much of what he said there is simply untrue,” says the Greens’ Carla Denyer.
She criticises Labour for dropping a £28bn green investment pledge earlier this year.
Labour’s Angela Rayner says there will be investment including insulating homes and creating green jobs, but oil and gas will be part of the future.
The SNP’s Stephen Flynn says Westminster is betraying future generations and his party maintains its commitment to net zero.
“We are facing an ecological emergency”, and economic growth can come with tackling it, says the Liberal Democrats, calling for a national insulation scheme.
“Nothing is more important than protecting the environment that you will be living in in future,” says Plaid Cymru’s Rhun ap Iorwerth.
The Conservatives’ Penny Mordaunt says moving to green policies too quickly will “destroy supply chains”.
Rayner scripted, Mordaunt polished – Farage enjoying himself
The final 30 second concluding statements are under way. Angela Rayner goes first. “If you want change, vote Labour,” she says, though it’s as though she’s memorising a script rather than talking with passion.
Carla Denyer, of the Greens, says Labour are offering more of the same and Labour has changed into the Tories. She got better as the debate went on. Iorwerth is lively and will have done his party some good here.
Penny Mordaunt is polished. “For a more secure future, vote Conservative,” she says. She’s been class here and shows why for the Tories, she’s an underused asset. Daisy Cooper mentions sewage in rivers for the first time this evening. Why so late?
The last word goes to Nigel Farage, who says that unlike the others he doesn’t need an autocue. He’s right about that. He’s been impish throughout, clearly enjoying himself. We’ll see a lot more of him in this campaign. That’s why he became party leader, of course!

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