Jeremy Corbyn has defended his decision to stay neutral in the event of a second referendum, describing the position as a “sign of strength and maturity” as he urged: “Our country has to come together.”
After a stint outside an Amazon warehouse attacking tax cheats, the Labour leader was in Loughborough to launch the party’s youth manifesto, where he pledged to give 16-year-olds the vote and emphasised the party’s climate credentials.
Elsewhere, Chuka Umunna accused Tory minister Rishi Sunak of letting “the cat out of the bag” after he told The Telegraph that no-deal planning would resume after the general election under a Conservative government.
The leaders of the four main parties were each grilled by a Question Time audience on Friday night, with Boris Johnson refusing to apologise for homophobic and Islamophobic comments, and Nicola Sturgeon undermining Labour’s stance on Scottish independence.
It also emerged that the largest pre-deadline voter registration surge in UK political history took place on Friday, with more than 300,000 people becoming eligible to vote, two thirds of them under the age of 34.
Jeremy Corbyn struggled when grilled on misogyny and antisemitism, and Jo Swinson came under fire for her party’s hardline anti-Brexit stance and record on austerity.

Boris Johnson refuses to apologise for Islamophobic and homophobic comments
Prime minister told he has 'personally contributed' to rampant racism in BritainThe race to join the electoral roll took place on the unofficial Naitonal Voter Registration Day declared by campaigners and backed by civil society groups and trade unions with the social media hashtag #RegisterToVote, reports Andrew Woodcock.
The Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage is in Hartlepool, where he and party chair Richard Tice visited a market and stopped for a coffee before moving onto the King John Tavern.

“I’ll be proud to lead a Labour government that gives votes at 16 … and properly funds our education system.
“Let’s end the post code lottery on education and give every young child a real chance.”
“He spoke at great and enormous length, he always does," Mr Corbyn says of the former environment minister.
"Two things came out of his speech, Mr Corbyn says: “One, he doesn’t like me one little bit. I don’t do personal, so I’ll say on more about it.
“But he also had no arguments against [declaring a climate emergency]. He couldn’t really summon up an argument against it.
“But declaring a climate emergency is one thing and dealing with it is another.”
Corbyn says Labour is working with Bernie Sanders and AOC – architects and backers of a Green New Deal in the Us - on their plans and proposals for a Green Industrial Revolution.
The transition to a greener society can be used as a mean to create jobs and economic opportunities, he says.
“Unfortunately all my fundraising appeals haven’t brought one penny in from any billionaire. I’m very proud the average donation given by supporters is £25.
The document outlines six recommendations, including a properly funded justice system and the abolition of the so-called "innocence tax" - which means those acquitted of crimes cannot recover their defence costs.
The document also says legal aid should be recognised as "being as much a part of civil society as the NHS, housing, social security and education" and calls for investment to reverse a decade of cuts.
Earlier this month, seven institutions - including Mozilla and the Open Data Institute - wrote a letter urging Facebook, and its vice president of global affairs and communications, to suspend political advertising until the general election was over, warning the UK lacked the legislation needed to tackle contemporary disinformation.
Social media is an increasingly important battle ground in elections - and home to many questionable claims pumped out by all sides. If social media sites won't investigate the truth of divisive advertising, we will. Please send any political Facebook advertising you receive to digitaldemocracy@independent.co.uk, and we will catalogue and investigate it. Read more here.




