Business minister Kwasi Kwarteng refused to say how much Boris Johnson’s election pledges would cost – despite attacking Labour’s “reckless” spending plans.
The Conservative MP dodged the question during a TV interview after repeating his party’s claim that Jeremy Corbyn’s plans amounted to £1.2 trillion over five years.
In what was quickly described as a “car crash interview”, Mr Kwarteng told Sky News’s Sophy Ridge on Sunday: “I’m not going to bandy around figures.” Ms Ridge replied: “But that’s what you’ve been doing for Labour.”
Meanwhile both the prime minister and the Labour leader faced criticism over their handling of the Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph, as the election campaign geared up for a second week.
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Mr Kwarteng told Sky: "The Prime Minister is absolutely right: I think that the whole point of the deal is that we want to have a frictionless border but at the same time we want to leave the EU...
"From our side we want to have as little bureaucratic interference as possible and I think what the Prime Minister said is absolutely on the money."

Boris Johnson suggests goods checks from Northern Ireland to Britain will not be enforced in his Brexit deal
Prime minister sparks fury by saying Northern Ireland has a ‘great’ Brexit deal because it will keep access to the EU single marketAnd in his final contribution to the campaign this morning, Mr Kwarteng acknowledged that comparing Jeremy Corbyn to Stalin was not 100 per cent accurate.
He said: "The comparison was about the philosophy and the Marxism. Nobody is suggesting that Jeremy Corbyn is going to line people up and shoot them, nobody is suggesting that.''
Now another Tory candidate has been forced to step down over his racist and sexist posts on Facebook.

Tory candidate stands down after racist and sexist Facebook posts emerge
Antony Calvert called capital ‘Londonistan’ and said of female opponent’s appearance on TV, ‘obviously the BBC make up dept don’t work on Sunday’
Majority believe general election will fail to break Brexit deadlock
Exclusive: Less than a third of people think the vote will resolve UK’s departure from the EU
