When is the next general election TV debate? Date, time and how to watch

Sunak and Starmer debate
Sunak and Starmer debate

The first head-to-head clash between Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer on June 4 has set the stage from an entire TV debate calendar in the countdown to the general election.

Millions of viewers tuned in to watch the Prime Minister take on the Labour leader for the first of a slew of political debates happening to win over voters ahead of July 4.

The two men clashed over policies including tax, ending the junior doctors’ strike, social care and immigration over the hour-long discussion, giving audiences a taste of what to expect in upcoming programmes.

Both ITV and the BBC will host more debates in an array of formats giving different leaders the opportunity to make a lasting impact on the latest opinion polls.

When is the next general election TV debate? The full schedule

The next upcoming general election TV debate will be a discussion hosted by the BBC on June 7 featuring leading figures from Britain’s largest seven political parties and starting at 7.30pm.

Here are all the debates at a glance:

The schedule builds up to what is expected to be the final televised debate of the election campaign, which will be another head to head between Sir Keir and the Conservative leader on June 26 – a week before the nation goes to the polls.

What channel are the debates on?

Both ITV and the BBC have confirmed they will host general election debates over the course of the campaign.

The programmes will be available on BBC1, BBC News and ITV1, as well as live on their streaming platforms BBC Iplayer and ITVX.

For those watching from Scotland, the ITV debates will be on the equivalent channel STV.

ITV also streamed the first debate on June 4 live on their Youtube channel and are expected, along with the BBC, to do the same for the following programmes.

The BBC have also confirmed they will air their debates on local radio.

Seven-party debate - June 7, 7.30pm on the BBC

The first BBC televised debate programme will take place on Friday June 7 and feature “leading figures” from the seven biggest political parties across Britain.

The debate will be held in London from 7.30pm to 9pm, where questions will be put to them from the audience and host Mishal Husain, the BBC Radio 4 presenter.

The parties taking part will include the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, Scottish National Party (SNP) Reform UK, Green Party and Plaid Cymru.

Each party may choose who to represent it and Angela Rayner, the deputy Labour leader, and Penny Mordaunt, the Tory Cabinet minister, have already been confirmed to be taking part.

It is also likely Nigel Farage will appear on behalf of Reform UK.

Election leaders event - June 12, unconfirmed time on Sky News

Details remain relatively vague for the election event hosted by Sky News on Wednesday June 12, with the time and participants yet to be disclosed.

So far, Sky News have said the event will take place in Grimsby in front of a live audience.

Sir Keir has agreed to take part in the programme but talks remain ongoing with the Prime Minister’s team.

A spokesman for the Conservatives said Mr Sunak would be “delighted to travel to Grimsby” but his attendance, nor the number of parties taking part, has not been confirmed.

Seven-party debate - June 13, 8.30pm on ITV

A similar programme will happen the following week as ITV will give the same seven parties another chance to have their say on Thursday June 13.

The debate will start at 8.30pm and run for 90 minutes with moderation by Julie Etchingham, the ITV newsreader who also oversaw the Labour and Tory leaders’ head to head on June 4.

Senior representatives from the Tories, Labour, Lib Dems, SNP, Reform UK, Green Party and Plaid Cymru will face questions from Ms Etchingham as well as a studio audience live from Salford, Manchester.

It is likely that Mr Sunak and Mr Starmer will not partake in the larger debates following their head to heads and similarly, each party is able to choose its representative.

No party has confirmed who will represent them at this debate.

Question Time special - June 20, 8pm on the BBC

On Thursday June 20,  the BBC will return to host a Question Time special with leading members of the UK’s four largest parties: the Conservatives, Labour Party, SNP and Liberal Democrats.

Fiona Bruce will lead the broadcast from 8pm to 10pm in York and speak to Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, who has confirmed his attendance, with Rishi Sunak, John Swinney and Sir Ed Davey also invited.

Sunak and Starmer head to head - June 26, 9pm on the BBC

The BBC will host what is likely to be the 2024 election campaign’s final TV debate on Wednesday June 26 – one week before the country will head to the polls.

The programme will be another head to head between Mr Sunak and Mr Starmer only, similar to the ITV debate they took part in on June 4 and hosted by Sophie Raworth, the BBC news presenter.

It will kick off at 9pm and run until 10pm.

Sir Keir agreed to the two head-to-head discussions only and said he would not speak at the larger debates happening on either channel.

How many debates will there be before the election?

So far, a total of six debates will be held in the run up to the general election on July 4, with five left to go after Mr Sunak and Mr Starmer went head to head on June 4.

This number could be subject to change as other broadcasters, including GB News, have also placed bids to host some form of political debate.

The debate announcements were confirmed after the Tories had pressed Sir Keir to take part in a record six debates during the six-week election countdown.

Conservative sources had dubbed the opposition leader “the knight that won’t fight” and “Sir Fear Starmer” after he failed to sign up to their weekly debate demand.

Labour headquarters indicated instead that their leader would take part in two head-to-head debates against Mr Sunak, matching what Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn did ahead of the 2019 election.

Will the debates clash with any football fixtures?

There will be several clashes between debate timings and football fixtures – an inevitability with the jam-packed TV schedules.

Football fans and politics watchers will be torn on June 7, when the BBC’s debate with the seven parties coincides with England’s international warm-up with Iceland on Channel 4.

England will play Denmark on June 20 – the same day as the BBC’s Question Time Leaders’ Special – but at an earlier kick-off time of 5pm before the election programme at 8pm.

So there is only one BBC clash taking place as the channel managed to avoid competing with the Men’s European Championship fixtures.

There are no more ITV football fixtures clashes after the broadcaster moved the England Women’s Euros match with France, which had been due to air on ITV1, to ITV4 as it coincided with Mr Sunak and Mr Starmer’s head to head on June 4.

When is the general election?

The general election will take place on July 4 as the country heads to the polls between 7am and 10pm to have their say over the next prime minister.

It was confirmed by Rishi Sunak in a rain-sodden speech outside of Downing Street on May 22 that the election would happen six weeks later.

Many assumed Mr Sunak would want more time for his Rwanda deterrent and recent tax cuts to take effect but that afternoon, he set in motion the July 4 vote.

Both the Prime Minister and other party leaders have been on the campaign trail since then in a bid to win over voters, taking part in several TV election debates also.

However, the polls currently predict a bleak outcome for the Tories given the Labour Party’s 20 percentage point lead.

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