The Prague Post - UK's Sunak attacked by rivals after apology for skipping D-Day event

EUR -
AED 4.277912
AFN 79.721865
ALL 97.026611
AMD 445.222107
ANG 2.084828
AOA 1068.16671
ARS 1585.671851
AUD 1.78699
AWG 2.099641
AZN 1.969683
BAM 1.956337
BBD 2.347644
BDT 141.848295
BGN 1.954512
BHD 0.439094
BIF 3477.553758
BMD 1.164849
BND 1.502512
BOB 8.054209
BRL 6.361011
BSD 1.16562
BTN 102.67516
BWP 16.7726
BYN 3.93688
BYR 22831.049672
BZD 2.344243
CAD 1.609752
CDF 3337.294273
CHF 0.938315
CLF 0.028795
CLP 1129.635924
CNY 8.31947
CNH 8.316455
COP 4664.05729
CRC 589.261612
CUC 1.164849
CUP 30.868511
CVE 110.294776
CZK 24.447337
DJF 207.566928
DKK 7.464548
DOP 73.480153
DZD 151.224266
EGP 56.548787
ERN 17.472742
ETB 166.734729
FJD 2.65635
FKP 0.866148
GBP 0.866724
GEL 3.139303
GGP 0.866148
GHS 14.045852
GIP 0.866148
GMD 83.868956
GNF 10103.727692
GTQ 8.939452
GYD 243.756853
HKD 9.08395
HNL 30.538375
HRK 7.537972
HTG 152.461814
HUF 393.151803
IDR 19156.532009
ILS 3.919072
IMP 0.866148
INR 102.640886
IQD 1527.018802
IRR 49011.041858
ISK 143.602722
JEP 0.866148
JMD 186.621183
JOD 0.825839
JPY 172.78736
KES 150.592004
KGS 101.866393
KHR 4674.281974
KMF 492.14932
KPW 1048.339398
KRW 1623.013879
KWD 0.356281
KYD 0.971366
KZT 629.342604
LAK 25281.933854
LBP 104379.027121
LKR 352.03655
LRD 233.704096
LSL 20.721783
LTL 3.439498
LVL 0.704606
LYD 6.327708
MAD 10.593351
MDL 19.535358
MGA 5201.42655
MKD 61.54688
MMK 2445.476685
MNT 4189.667571
MOP 9.364068
MRU 46.527761
MUR 53.734316
MVR 17.950152
MWK 2021.154324
MXN 21.860981
MYR 4.921477
MZN 74.436098
NAD 20.721783
NGN 1775.067267
NIO 42.891764
NOK 11.752393
NPR 164.280056
NZD 1.988806
OMR 0.447878
PAB 1.16562
PEN 4.116729
PGK 4.939376
PHP 66.549042
PKR 330.813229
PLN 4.250949
PYG 8401.304152
QAR 4.260068
RON 5.07769
RSD 117.187413
RUB 94.587393
RWF 1688.363053
SAR 4.370505
SBD 9.579516
SCR 17.250843
SDG 699.487165
SEK 11.01477
SGD 1.501456
SHP 0.915389
SLE 27.129171
SLL 24426.308661
SOS 666.182708
SRD 45.256151
STD 24110.03227
STN 24.506721
SVC 10.198753
SYP 15145.308002
SZL 20.703678
THB 37.631043
TJS 11.044029
TMT 4.088622
TND 3.410635
TOP 2.728192
TRY 47.962449
TTD 7.905168
TWD 35.767279
TZS 2917.948184
UAH 48.165517
UGX 4100.124505
USD 1.164849
UYU 46.713012
UZS 14423.955932
VES 176.80539
VND 30740.377594
VUV 140.014668
WST 3.229449
XAF 656.136953
XAG 0.028423
XAU 0.000328
XCD 3.148064
XCG 2.100676
XDR 0.815037
XOF 656.134136
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.738837
ZAR 20.715446
ZMK 10485.04405
ZMW 27.735607
ZWL 375.081055
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    71.48

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.3500

    14.74

    +2.37%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    68.57

    +0.86%

  • CMSD

    0.2400

    23.87

    +1.01%

  • BCC

    -1.8100

    83.97

    -2.16%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    16.83

    +0.36%

  • GSK

    0.4000

    39.36

    +1.02%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    55.08

    -0.29%

  • RIO

    0.5900

    62.48

    +0.94%

  • CMSC

    0.1214

    23.78

    +0.51%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    45.82

    +0.83%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    24.53

    +0.41%

  • BP

    -0.7700

    34.46

    -2.23%

  • AZN

    1.9200

    82.11

    +2.34%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.54

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.7

    -0.17%

UK's Sunak attacked by rivals after apology for skipping D-Day event

UK's Sunak attacked by rivals after apology for skipping D-Day event

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was roundly criticised by political rivals on Friday, hours after apologising for leaving D-Day commemorations in France early in the latest self-inflicted setback to his stuttering general election campaign.

Text size:

Political opponents at a live TV debate derided Sunak's decision to skip the major ceremony with world leaders on Thursday, with even one of his own senior Conservatives branding it "completely wrong".

The Tory leader had earlier apologised repeatedly -- in a social media post and then subsequent interviews -- calling his premature return to the UK to give a domestic television interview "a mistake".

Two polls on Friday showed Britons agreed, with around two-thirds in both calling it "unacceptable" -- another ominous sign for the beleaguered Sunak ahead of the July 4 ballot. Surveys show his Conservatives are set for a heavy defeat.

"(It) was a complete and utter disgrace and shows us we actually have a very unpatriotic prime minister," Brexit figurehead Nigel Farage, who heads the anti-immigration Reform UK party, said at Friday evening's BBC debate.

Scottish National Party leader Stephen Flynn accused Sunak of putting "his own political career before Normandy war veterans", as other opposition parties joined in the chorus of criticism.

Even the ruling Tories' representative on stage, Penny Mordaunt, offered no defence for the blunder.

"What happened was completely wrong and the prime minister has rightly apologised," she said, before adding it should not become "a political football".

- 'I apologise' -

The scandal erupted after Sunak attended a UK-organised memorial in northern France but then skipped the main Normandy ceremony attended by France's President Emmanuel Macron, US President Joe Biden and Ukraine leader Volodymyr Zelensky.

The British leader instead sent Foreign Secretary David Cameron, who was pictured alongside other world leaders.

It soon emerged Sunak, 44, had returned home to be quizzed in a TV interview not due to air until Wednesday.

One D-Day veteran told Sky News that the prime minister's absence "lets the country down".

Sunak's main election opponent, Labour leader Keir Starmer, did attend the event and was photographed meeting Zelensky.

Starmer said on X he told the Ukrainian president that "there will be no change in Britain's support for Ukraine" if he becomes the next UK prime minister.

He later told reporters his rival would "have to answer for his own actions", adding: "For me there was nowhere else I was going to be."

In his apology, Sunak insisted he "cares deeply about veterans" and noted his attendance at two D-Day memorial events this week.

"On reflection, it was a mistake not to stay in France longer –- and I apologise," he conceded.

- 'Prime ministerial'? -

Commentators suggested it showed Sunak's lack of political nous.

"It's a very important moment for the country. But it's also a very important moment to show that you're being prime ministerial," Craig Oliver, the former adviser to Cameron when he was prime minister, told BBC radio.

Sunak, an internal Tory appointee as prime minister in October 2022, called the election in a widely-mocked, rain-sodden speech from Downing Street last month.

He has since visited the site in Belfast where the Titanic was built, drawing comparisons between his leadership and captaining a sinking ship.

Sunak was also ridiculed for asking Welsh people if they were looking forward to the European Championships football tournament, when Wales have not qualified.

Earlier this week he faced accusations of lying about Labour's tax plans during a head-to-head debate with Starmer.

Eyeing a first taste of power since 2010, the opposition party's ruling executive finalised its manifesto on Friday ahead of its release next week.

Starmer confirmed that recognition of Palestinian statehood as part of any Middle East peace process would be included.

Friday's seven-way debate saw the main parties' representatives clash on various issues, from immigration to healthcare.

In a sign of Labour's ascendant position, Mordaunt repeatedly attacked its policies, following in Sunak's footsteps by arguing taxes will rise on households -- despite firm Labour denials.

Deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner, who also fended off attacks from Farage and other opposition parties, remained focused on the Conservatives' record over 14 years in charge.

"You have failed the British people, and people can see that" she argued.

K.Pokorny--TPP