Jeremy Corbyn wants to cap rent increases (Credit: Oli Scarff/AFP)
Policy of the day: Rent asunder
Having on Sunday targeted older voters with a pension rebate, the opposition Labour Party on Monday appealed to private-sector renters as the party threatened to "put bad landlords out of business" and introduce rent controls in England. People in the 25-to-34 age group make up the largest proportion of the rental market, and there is concern that young adults are being priced out of ever buying property as rent takes up an increasing slice of income.
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn wants to cap rent increases at the national inflation rate and submit private landlords to official property checks, threatening forced repayment of rent if housing is substandard. The Conservatives, who would end "no-fault" evictions, countered that Labour's plans would "hurt the renters they claim to want to help by hiking up rents." The Greens would also introduce rent controls, while the Liberal Democrats would introduce index-linked controls on rent increases.
Electoon: That forced handshake in first TV debate
With friends like these…
Tony Blair dominated the news agenda for the three successive general elections he won, and the former Labour leader rolled back the years with a succession of headline-generating quotes on Monday morning at a Reuters event in London.
As expected, he tore into Boris Johnson... but he also attacked the leader of his own party, Jeremy Corbyn, saying: "The public aren't convinced either main party deserve to win this election outright. They're peddling two sets of fantasies and both, as majority governments, pose a risk it would be unwise for the country to take."
Blair, a committed Europhile who plotted a more centrist course than Corbyn, accused both main parties of "populism running riot," and said the UK was "a mess." He called the current election "the weirdest of my lifetime." Adding: "Our politics is utterly dysfunctional."
In other you're-not-helping-much news, Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab won't have enjoyed witnessing Ian Taylor, his predecessor as Conservative MP for Esher and Walton, urging constituents to vote for the Liberal Democrats. The area has been safely Conservative for more than a century, but locals voted Remain in the referendum and Taylor said that "voting now will need to be tactical rather than by traditional allegiance." As we have mentioned a few times already, the Conservatives want people to vote for them, saying they are the only party that can get Brexit done.
Straight back in the saddle
"It's good to be back..." The last Queen's Speech, last month (Credit: Victoria Jones/AP)
Downing Street has published plans to reconvene parliament on Tuesday 17 December if the Conservatives win a majority. That first day would be spent swearing in new MPs, possibly speeding up the process by having two queues rather than one, plus the new Speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, who replaces John Bercow.
Boris Johnson's government would then set out its legislative agenda via a State Opening of Parliament and a Queen's Speech with "reduced ceremonial elements" two days later, as part of Johnson's pledge to present parliament with Brexit legislation before Christmas. If another party wins – or if Johnson doesn't have a majority – the whole process is likely to wait until after Christmas.
Insults of the day
Hancock and Morgan unveil the advert (Credit: AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
Not to encourage name-calling, but sometimes it is worth checking in on the political quotes to see whether the invective is inventive. The Conservatives' attack phrase of the day came when high-rollers Matt Hancock and Nicky Morgan unveiled a poster decrying Jeremy Corbyn, who has declared his intention to stay neutral in a second Brexit referendum if his Labour Party wins, as "the prime ditherer."
On the other hand, the Liberal Democrats' Chuka Umunna warned that Boris Johnson would turn the UK into a "vassal state" of the US by becoming Donald Trump's "poodle." With two weeks of the campaign to go, more insults are sure to follow.
UK election jargon buster: Deposit
Theresa May at her 2017 constituency declaration, at which 10 of the 13 candidates lost their deposits (Credit: AP Photo/Alastair Grant)
Some say politics is all about money, and you certainly need some to run as a candidate in a UK election. Specifically, £500 ($645), which must be paid by each candidate before his or her nomination papers can be accepted.
It is known as a deposit because it is returned after the election to any candidate winning 5 percent or more of the votes (until 1985, the threshold was 12.5 percent). It is therefore hugely embarrassing for a major party candidate to lose their deposit.
The idea is to prevent spurious candidacies clogging up the democratic process and, although critics say the cost prevents open democracy – the Electoral Commission has suggested scrapping deposits for general elections. It could be worse: the cost in 1918 was $193, equal to more than $9,000 now.
In pictures: Today's photo opportunism
Read more from UK election at-a-glance
Sun 24 Nov: Bikey, Waspi and the cost of nurses
Sat 23 Nov: Neutrality, dementia and 300,000 new voters
Fri 22 Nov: A Brexit contract, Wales and lots of Davids
Thu 21 Nov: Radical pledges, subversive searches and polls
Tue 19 Nov: Greens set out their plans
Mon 18 Nov: Leaders courting business
Sun 17 Nov: Teeth MOTs, high skills and Renaissance balls
Sat 16 Nov: Trees, women and “house-things”
Fri 15 Nov: Free broadband for all
Thu 14 Nov: All about Brexit