2015 United Kingdom general election debates
The 2015 United Kingdom general election debates were a series of four live television programmes featuring the leaders of seven main British parties that took place during the run-up to the general election. They each featured different formats and participants.
The first was a one-on-one programme between David Cameron, Prime Minister, and Ed Miliband, Leader of the Opposition. The second featured Cameron, Miliband, Nick Clegg, Deputy Prime Minister, Nigel Farage, Natalie Bennett, Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister of Scotland, and Leanne Wood. The third debate featured the leaders of the five opposition parties: Miliband, Farage, Bennett, Sturgeon, and Wood. The final programme's participants were Cameron, Miliband, and Clegg. Only the Labour Party's Miliband participated in all four events.
The formats and participants were arrived at after a lengthy process. Following the result of the election, a survey of 3,019 people, carried out by Panelbase, found that 38% of voters considered the debates to have influenced their voting intention.
Background
The first series of televised leaders' debates in the United Kingdom were held in the previous election. Broadcasters proposed another series of televised debates in the run up to the 2015 election, although in a different format. The suggestion was that the debates should take place during the early stages of the campaign, before April. Cameron suggested that the televised debates should take place before the campaign itself, as he felt that the 2010 debates overshadowed the rest of the campaign; he was, however, still positive towards them taking place.There was media speculation from individuals such as Michael Crick of Channel 4 News as to who may be included in the debates. He suggested that if UKIP did not receive sufficient coverage, they could make a legal case against broadcasters that under-represent the party, if the leaders of the Conservative Party, Labour Party and Liberal Democrats are included. Prime Minister David Cameron had dismissed the call for UKIP's participation. The Leader of the Opposition Ed Miliband said in January 2013 that the composition of each debate was a matter for the media organisations.
In the run-up to the European Parliament election, 2014, there were two debates between the leader of the Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg and the UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage. According to polling, Mr Farage is reported to have comfortably won both debates and this prompted further speculation that Farage could or should be invited to take part in the debates ahead of the general election. UKIP won the European elections, topping the poll. This further strengthened Farage's case and increased calls for UKIP to be represented in such TV debates.
In October 2014, the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky News announced joint plans for three debates, one with just the leaders of the Conservative and Labour parties, a second also including the Liberal Democrats, and a third including UKIP. Several other parties represented in the Commons complained at their exclusion from this plan. On 30 October the Green Party were informed by the BBC that their requests to be included in TV debates was rejected. However, the Green Party did not give up, and were boosted by the existence of a petition in support of their inclusion with over 275,000 signatures.
David Cameron then said that he would not take part unless the Greens did. As a result of this combined pressure, ITV and the BBC published revised plans in January 2015, including the Greens, as well as the SNP and Plaid Cymru. Many of the Northern Irish political parties then made statements requesting their inclusion in the debates. Sinn Féin sought legal advice, while the Democratic Unionist Party wrote to the BBC and ITV demanding their inclusion. George Galloway, the sole MP for the Respect Party, also argued for his inclusion, on the basis that Respect then had the same number of MPs as the Greens. The DUP's formal complaint was rejected by the BBC.
Proposals
May 2014
On 9 May—almost exactly a year before the election date—David Cameron proposed a five-way debate, with the leaders of "all the main parties". This would be followed up by a separate "head to head" debate between himself and Labour's Ed Miliband.This itself was an adjustment from an earlier proposal of Cameron for three debates.October 2014
During October 2014, all four main broadcasters, the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Sky announced joint plans for multi-platform party leader debates in the run up to the 2015 general election. Three debates would have taken place within the six-week campaign period, at a time when the parties were to be setting out their policies, to help further engage the audience with the election. The proposal entailed debates at fortnightly intervals on 2 April, 16 April and 30 April at locations around the UK.- The First Debate was to be a "head to head" debate between David Cameron and Ed Miliband.
- The Second Debate was to follow the pattern of the 2010 debates, between the Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat leaders.
- The third Debate would have had the Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat and UKIP leaders.
January 2015
The proposals issued were for:
- Two seven-way debates including representatives of the Conservative Party, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, Greens, SNP and Plaid Cymru one hosted by BBC, and the other by ITV.
- A debate that would be 'head-to-head' between David Cameron and Ed Miliband, jointly hosted by Channel 4 and Sky.
February 2015
On 23 February 2015, the broadcasters agreed on three debates:- 2 April: ITV - Debate between the party leaders of the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, the SNP, the Green Party and Plaid Cymru.
- 16 April: BBC - A second debate between the seven party leaders above.
- 30 April: Sky and Channel 4 - Head-to-head debate between the Leader of the Conservative Party and the Leader of the Labour Party.
March 2015
The Telegraph and The Guardian, in association with Google and YouTube, then announced that they intended to hold an internet-broadcast live debate, which was planned to feature David Cameron, Ed Miliband, Nick Clegg, Nigel Farage,and Natalie Bennett, and had issued an invitation to the five party leaders. The debate was to be held on 26 or 27 March. The Liberal Democrats nominally expressed their intention to participate; however there was concern that the absence of the SNP might prove to be an obstacle. UKIP categorically agreed to participate. Conservative chairman Grant Shapps expressed that he was in favour. However, without any formal agreement forthcoming, the organisers wrote to David Cameron on 17 March asking for his commitment. The debate did not take place.
That day, the Conservatives accepted the offer of a single, 7-way debate to be broadcast on ITV on 2 April, with the other two planned debates cancelled. According to the Conservatives, they were approached with a new 4-programme plan, which was reported to be:
- 26 March on Sky/Channel 4: Leaders’ interviews with Cameron and Miliband interviewed sequentially by Jeremy Paxman, with studio audience.
- 2 April on ITV: Debate with the leaders of the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, Greens, SNP, Plaid Cymru and DUP.
- 16 April: Debate with the "challenger parties", i.e. SNP, UKIP, Plaid Cymru, Greens and DUP.
- 30 April on BBC: Question Time with Cameron, Miliband and Clegg taking questions from audience sequentially.
Negotiations continued, with the broadcasters offering to include Labour in the 16 April debate. A final settlement was reached on 21 March. The agreed schedule was only a slight modification of the 17 March proposal, with the "challenger party" debates now featuring Ed Miliband instead of a representative from the DUP, with resistance from the DUP. The final plan was thus:
- 26 March on Sky/Channel 4: Leaders’ interviews, with Cameron and Miliband interviewed sequentially by Paxman, with a studio audience.
- 2 April on ITV: Debate with the leaders of the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, Greens, SNP and Plaid Cymru chaired by Julie Etchingham.
- 16 April on BBC: Debate with the "challenger parties", i.e. Labour, UKIP, SNP, Plaid Cymru and Greens, chaired by David Dimbleby.
- 30 April on BBC: Question Time with Cameron, Miliband and Clegg taking questions from the audience sequentially, chaired by Dimbleby.
Impact
''Cameron & Miliband: The Battle for Number 10'' (26 March)
Channel 4, Sky and the BBC News Channel broadcast the first programme on 26 March. Miliband, having won the toss, chose to go second, so this programme consisted of Jeremy Paxman interviewing Cameron, Cameron facing questions from a studio audience, Miliband facing the audience, and finally Paxman interviewing Miliband.The programme was recorded in Studios 4 & 5 at Sky Studios in Isleworth.
Response
Average viewing figures for the show were 2.6 million on Channel 4 and 322,000 on Sky News. Several hundred complaints were received by Channel 4 and Ofcom claiming the programme was biased against Miliband.According to the Evening Standard the next day, Cameron was "widely deemed to have edged ahead". A Guardian/ICM instant poll found 54% thought Cameron had won to 46% for Miliband, while a YouGov "Instant Reaction" survey found 51% for Cameron and 49% for Miliband. A subsequent regular YouGov poll found that among undecided voters, 49% thought Milband had done best to 35% for Cameron. The Centre for the Analysis of Social Media concluded the social media reaction was more favourable towards Miliband. Newsnight's political editor called Miliband the winner.
Labour's election polling improved after the programme in one poll and was better among those who watched it with YouGov, but Miliband's and Labour's polling worsened with ComRes and other polling failed to show any impact of the debate.
''The ITV Leaders' Debate'' (2 April)
A two-hour debate between seven party leaders was hosted by ITV News anchor Julie Etchingham on 2 April at dock10 studios in Salford. They were positioned on the stage as follows :- Natalie Bennett
- Nick Clegg, Deputy Prime Minister
- Nigel Farage
- Ed Miliband, Leader of the Opposition
- Leanne Wood
- Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister of Scotland
- David Cameron, Prime Minister
Response
The audience for the debate averaged about 7 million, peaking at 7.4 million.Several polling organisations surveyed those who had viewed the debate immediately afterwards to select who they believed "won" the debate.
Survey Organiser's/Political Party Leader | Natalie Bennett | Nick Clegg | Nigel Farage | Ed Miliband | Leanne Wood | Nicola Sturgeon | David Cameron |
ICM | 3% | 9% | 19% | 25% | 2% | 17% | 24% |
ComRes | 5% | 9% | 21% | 21% | 2% | 20% | 21% |
YouGov | 5% | 10% | 20% | 15% | 4% | 28% | 18% |
Survation | 3% | 6% | 24% | 25% | 2% | 15% | 25% |
"Snap" is based on the phrase "snap decision".
On a forced choice between Cameron and Miliband, Survation found Cameron the winner.
There were 1.4 million tweets about the debate, with the most tweeted moment being Farage's comments about HIV+ immigrants. Sturgeon's Twitter account received most mentions, followed by Farage, Bennett, Miliband, Wood, Cameron and Clegg. An IPSOS Mori analysis of tweets found them most favourable towards Sturgeon, then Wood, Bennett, Miliband and Clegg tied, Farage and least favourable to Cameron.
The Democratic Unionist Party, which is a Northern Irish unionist party, was not included on the television debates. Nigel Dodds, the Deputy Leader for the Party, said that:
It is wrong that Northern Ireland should be excluded , after all the Democratic Unionist Party has 8 MPs currently in the outgoing parliament and we're going to play a very crucial role in the next parliament. We're bigger than four of the other parties that were included in the debate, so I think that it's only fair and proper that all regions of the United Kingdom are represented.
''BBC Election Debate 2015'' (16 April)
A debate between five opposition party leaders hosted by David Dimbleby was shown on BBC1 on 16 April. It was also available on the BBC News and Sky News channels. The debate was held at the Methodist Central Hall in Westminster, London. The leaders involved were:- Ed Miliband, Leader of the Opposition
- Nigel Farage
- Natalie Bennett
- Nicola Sturgeon, First Minister of Scotland
- Leanne Wood
Clegg, despite wishing to attend, was also omitted from the debate, with reports saying Cameron blocked his presence, but Conservative Party sources said the decision was the broadcasters'.
Response
Across all three channels, 8.8 million watched at least a portion of the programme.Miliband was judged to have won the debate in a snap poll from Survation, with 35% to Sturgeon on 31%, Farage on 27%, Bennett on 5% and then Wood on 2%. The most mentioned on Twitter was Miliband, followed by Sturgeon.
Allegations of Audience Bias
During the 16 April debate, Nigel Farage accused the BBC of a left-wing bias in selecting the studio audience. The BBC explained that the audience had not been selected by them, but by an independent polling organisation in such a way as to give a balanced audience.''Question Time'' special (30 April)
, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg were the featured in a BBC Question Time special programme at Leeds Town Hall on 30 April presented by David Dimbleby from 20:00 BST to 21:30 BST.Nigel Farage, Nicola Sturgeon and Leanne Wood were each featured in separate question and answer events hosted by the BBC after the Question Time special programme. These events were broadcast that night by the BBC and Sky News channels. In each event the host asked members of the audience to ask the party leaders various pre-prepared questions about varying topics. The audience in each event was sorted by their political affiliation and the topic of their questions.
''Question Time'' with David Dimbleby
, Ed Miliband and Nick Clegg were each were given about half an hour to answer questions from the audience while David Dimbleby moderated. At this event, David Cameron refused to rule out cutting child benefits. Ed Miliband declared that he would either be Prime Minister with a majority of seats in Parliament or not be in power at all rather than form a coalition with the Scottish National Party.Response
An instant Guardian/ICM poll declared that Cameron had 'won the debate' with 44% - Ed Miliband came second with 38% and Nick Clegg finished last with 19%.''Ask...''
was given about half an hour to answer questions from an audience at the BBC's Scotland Headquarters in Glasgow. Ask Nicola Sturgeon was broadcast at 21:30 BST on BBC1 in Scotland.Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood and UKIP leader Nigel Farage recorded half-hour programmes earlier in the day. Leanne Wood's programme was called Ask Leanne Wood and was recorded in a studio in Cardiff. Nigel Farage'sprogramme was called Ask Nigel Farage"and was recorded in Birmingham. Ask Leanne Woodwas broadcast on BBC1 in Wales at 22:45 BST. Ask Nigel Faragewas broadcast on BBC1 in England at 22:45 BST. Ask Nigel Farage"was broadcast on BBC1 in Wales at 23:10 BST.
Debates for Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales
Scotland
''Scotland Debates'' (7 April)
STV broadcast the first Scottish Leaders Debate in the run up to the general election, which was moderated by STV's political correspondent Bernard Ponsonby. The debate took place at the Assembly Rooms in Edinburgh between:- Jim Murphy, Leader of the Scottish Labour Party.
- Ruth Davidson, Leader of the Scottish Conservatives and Regional List MSP for Glasgow.
- Willie Rennie, Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats and Regional List MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife.
- Nicola Sturgeon, Leader of the SNP, First Minister of Scotland and Constituency MSP for Glasgow Southside.
''The Leaders' Debate - Scotland '' (8 April)
This BBC Scotland debate took place in the Elphinstone Hall in Aberdeen University. It was moderated by James Cook. It included six Scottish Party Leaders:- Jim Murphy, Leader of the Scottish Labour Party and MP for East Renfrewshire.
- Ruth Davidson, Leader of the Scottish Conservative Party and Regional List MSP for Glasgow.
- Willie Rennie, Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats and Regional List MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife.
- Nicola Sturgeon, Leader of the SNP, First Minister of Scotland and Constituency MSP for Glasgow Southside.
- Patrick Harvie, Co-convenor of the Scottish Green Party and Regional List MSP for Glasgow.
- David Coburn, Leader of UKIP Scotland and MEP for Scotland
''Sunday Politics Scotland'' Debate (12 April)
''The Leaders' Debate'' (3 May)
This debate was shown on BBC One Scotland, BBC News and BBC Parliament. It featured representatives from the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats and the SNP, and was hosted by Glenn Campbell at the Festival Theatre in Edinburgh.Northern Ireland
''Newsnight in Northern Ireland'' (16 April 2015)
Newsnight hosted a political debate between the representatives of Northern Ireland's five largest parties. It was held in Broadcasting House in Belfast and hosted by Evan Davis. The participants were as follows:- Nigel Dodds, Deputy Leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, Leader of the DUP in Parliament and MP for Belfast North.
- Máirtín Ó Muilleoir, Sinn Féin MLA for Belfast South.
- Mark Durkan, SDLP MP for Foyle.
- David Ford, Leader of the Alliance Party and MLA for South Antrim.
- Mike Nesbitt, Leader of the Ulster Unionist Party and MLA for Strangford.
UTV Debate
held a one-hour election debate on 28 April 2015 from 8pm-9pm presented from UTV studios in Belfast by Mark Mallett featuring the 5 main Northern Ireland Parties. The participants were;- Nigel Dodds
- Mark Durkan
- Martin McGuinness: Sinn Féin Deputy Leader & Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland. Elected MP for Mid Ulster 1997, 2001, 2005 and 2010.
- Naomi Long: Deputy Leader of Alliance Party. MP for Belfast East.
- Danny Kennedy: Ulster Unionist Party MLA & Minister for Regional Development in the Northern Ireland Executive.
- Richard Cairns representing the Traditional Unionist Voice
- Paul Birch representing Cannabis is Safer than Alcohol
- Lily Kerr representing the Workers Party
- Neil Wilson representing the Northern Ireland Conservative Party
- Stephen Agnew representing the Green Party
- David McNarry representing the United Kingdom Independence Party
BBC NI Debate
BBC Northern Ireland held a primetime TV debate between the main Northern Ireland parties: DUP, Sinn Féin, SDLP, UUP and Alliance. and this happened just 2 days before the Election on Tuesday 5 May 2015. The debate was chaired by Noel Thompson. The participants were;- Nigel Dodds
- Mark Durkan
- Martin McGuinness
- Naomi Long
- Mike Nesbitt
Wales
''Wales Election Debate''
A televised debate took place 22 April 2015, It was held at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama in Cardiff. The debate was between:- Stephen Crabb
- Owen Smith
- Kirsty Williams AM
- Leanne Wood AM
- Nathan Gill
- Pippa Bartolotti
''The Wales Report: The Leaders Election Debate''
BBC Wales televised debate took place 1 May 2015, It was held at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff, chaired by Huw Edwards. The participants were:- Kirsty Williams AM
- Leanne Wood AM
- Nathan Gill
- Pippa Bartolotti
- Stephen Crabb
- Owen Smith
''Daily Politics'' debates
During the run up to the general election, the Daily Politics held a series of special editions of the programme featuring debates moderated by Andrew Neill and another BBC correspondent and involving representatives from several political parties. They were:Issue | Date | Correspondent | Conservative | Labour | Liberal Democrat | UKIP | Green | SNP/PC |
20 April | Roger Harrabin | Matt Hancock | Caroline Flint | Ed Davey | Roger Helmer | Andrew Cooper | — | |
21 April | Bridget Kendall | Philip Hammond | Douglas Alexander | Tim Farron | The Earl of Dartmouth | Patrick Harvie | — | |
22 April | Robert Peston | David Gauke | Chris Leslie | The Lord Newby | Patrick O'Flynn | — | Stewart Hosie | |
23 April | Branwen Jeffreys | Nicky Morgan | Tristram Hunt | David Laws | Jonathan Arnott | James Humphreys | — | |
27 April | Mark Easton | Theresa May | Yvette Cooper | Norman Baker | Steven Woolfe | — | Simon Thomas | |
28 April | Mark Urban | Michael Fallon | Vernon Coaker | Nick Harvey | — | Rebecca Johnson | Angus Robertson | |
29 April | Hugh Pym | Jeremy Hunt | Andy Burnham | Norman Lamb | Angus Dalgleish | Jillian Creasy | — | |
5 May | Alison Holt | Iain Duncan Smith | Rachel Reeves | Steve Webb | Suzanne Evans | Jonathan Bartley | — | |
6 May | Jo Coburn | William Hague | Harriet Harman | The Baroness Brinton | Diane James | — | Alyn Smith |
Regional debates
Regional debates were also been held by the BBC, featuring local correspondents and local politicians from the main political parties. They were broadcast simultaneously in each of England's regions on 29 April at 10:50pm. They were:Region | Correspondent | Conservative | Labour | Liberal Democrat | UKIP | Green | Respect |
Stewart White | Liz Truss | Andy Sawford | Norman Lamb | Douglas Carswell | Rupert Read | — | |
Marie Ashby | Robert Jenrick | Chris Leslie | Lucy Care | Roger Helmer | Kat Boettge | — | |
Tim Iredale | Karl McCartney | Diana Johnson | Claire Thomas | Victoria Ayling | Vicky Dunn | — | |
Andrew Neil | Priti Patel | Sadiq Khan | Simon Hughes | Richard Hilton | Shahrar Ali | — | |
Carol Malia | Guy Opperman | Julie Elliott | Helen Flynn | Phillip Broughton | Jill Perry | — | |
Roger Johnson | Ben Wallace | Lucy Powell | Gordon Birtwistle | John Bickley | Elizabeth Ward | — | |
Sally Taylor | Penny Mordaunt | Rowenna Davis | Layla Moran | Mike Glennon | Mark Chivers | — | |
Polly Evans | Michael Fallon | Peter Kyle | Norman Baker | Mark Reckless | The Baroness Jones | — | |
Justin Leigh | Sarah Newton | Ben Bradshaw | Dan Rogerson | Steve Crowther | Emily McIvor | — | |
David Garmston | Jacob Rees-Mogg | Thangam Debbonaire | Tessa Munt | Steve Stanbury | Dominic Tristram | — | |
Mary Rhodes | Sajid Javid | Tristram Hunt | Lorely Burt | Suzanne Evans | Will Duckworth | — | |
Harry Gration | Julian Smith | Mary Creagh | Greg Mulholland | Toby Horton | Jillian Creasy | Asama Javed |