Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn have clashed in the final head-to-head debate of the 2019 election campaign.
The pair faced off in an hour-long challenge on the BBC over terror, tax, the NHS and their plans for spending.
As usual Boris Johnson made a string of claims about both Labour's claims and his own. But as usual, not all of those claims were in fact true.
From Labour's tax plans to the party's record on security, Mr Johnson trotted out a string of claims which just don't entirely stand up to scrutiny.
We've debunked his usual whoppers about 50,000 more nurses and 40 new hospitals before - you can read our explanations here.
But here are six new claims he made that left us scratching our heads.
On Labour's tax plans

WHAT HE SAID: "I think it's quite incredible that Mr Corbyn should claim that people on £20,000 a year are amongst the richest in society and therefore deserve to be clobbered by his tax increases."
THE FACTS: Jeremy Corbyn has vowed to raise Income Tax only on people who earn more than £80,000, not £20,000. It's true that the IFS think tank has said that, in or order to afford Labour's spending plans, at some point lower earners will be affected in some way. But it's not clear where this £20,000 figure has come from - and £80k earners are in the top 5% of income tax payers in the UK.
On Diane Abbott disbanding MI5

WHAT HE SAID: "He's proposing to put in a Home Secretary in the form of Diane Abbott who's called for MI5 to be disbanded."
THE FACTS: Diane Abbott signed an Early Day Motion calling for the abolition of MI5 in 1989, but said more than two years ago that her views had changed. She said in May 2017: "At that time I and a lot of people felt MI5 needed reforming. It has since been reformed and of course I would not call for its abolition now."
On a Brexit deal being ready to go
WHAT HE SAID: Asked 'you don't know you could do a trade deal with the EU', he replied: "On the contrary, we have a fantastic deal. It is there, ready to go."
THE FACTS: The deal Boris Johnson has 'ready to go' is a withdrawal, not a trade deal. The latter is much tougher - one between the EU and Canada took seven years - and if we don't get it by the end of December 2020, we'll still leave the EU with no deal.
On getting Brexit out of Parliament

WHAT HE SAID: "The great beauty of this deal is it gets Brexit done, gets it out of Parliament, stops the wrangling, stops the chaos and moves us forward."
THE FACTS: In February 2019 the government promised a role for Parliament in scrutinising future Free Trade Agreements to be struck around the world after Brexit. That suggests Brexit will be discussed in Parliament for many more years to come.
On the case of Usman Khan

WHAT HE SAID: "There was no parole or probation involved in this. He was released automatically and there was nothing any parole or probation officer could do about that. That was the nature of the sentence."
THE FACTS: While it's true Usman Khan was released automatically without a parole hearing - which tragically allowed him free to kill, and is something that wouldn't happen if he'd been given the same sentence under current rules - the Press Association reports there would have been some probation service involvement. As a PA explainer put it: "Khan’s sentence was an extended sentence, meaning he would have to spend an extra five years on licence after he was freed from prison. This meant he would have been supervised by the probation service for the 13 years after his release."
On bringing back the nurses' bursary
WHAT HE SAID: "We're bringing back the £5,000 bursary".
THE FACTS: Launching the Tory manifesto, Boris Johnson vowed to give nurses a £5,000 to £8,000 a year maintenance grant. But this doesn't "bring back" the old system. Unlike under the original bursary scheme - which the Tories scrapped in 2015 - nurses in training will still have to pay tuition fees on their courses.