Conservative cabinet minister Penny Mordaunt has said the prime minister's decision to leave the D-Day commemorations early was "completely wrong". In the BBC's seven-way TV election debate on Friday, Ms Mordaunt said it was right that Rishi Sunak apologized to veterans and to the public. Mr Sunak was heavily criticized by senior political party figures for leaving the event on Thursday, which was held in France to honor the 80th anniversary of the Normandy landings. The PM left Foreign Secretary David Cameron to deputize for him and traveled back to the UK early. The first question in Friday's debate was about defense.
Leader of Reform UK Nigel Farage said Mr Sunak's "dreadful" decision to leave early showed that "we actually have a very unpatriotic prime minister". Ms Mordaunt said: "What happened was completely wrong, and the prime minister has rightly apologized for that, apologized to veterans but also to all of us, because he was representing all of us." The leader of the House of Commons added that the issue should not become "a political football" but Mr Farage, who went to Normandy himself, said it had already become one. Ms Mordaunt did not follow up, as some other Conservatives did on Friday, by praising Mr Sunak's record on veterans and on defence.
Following what has been widely seen as the biggest blunder of the general election campaign so far, Mr Sunak apologized on X, saying he hoped the "ultimate sacrifice" made by those who put their lives on the line would not be "overshadowed by politics". He admitted that "on reflection" he should have stayed for the event where world leaders, including US President Joe Biden, marked the sacrifice made by troops in 1944. Asked during the debate if she would have left Normandy early, Ms Mordaunt said: " I didn't go to D-Day. I think what happened was very wrong, I think the prime minister has apologized for that.
"But what I also think is important is that we honor their legacy, they fought for our freedom, and unless we are spending the right amount on defense we cannot honor that legacy." SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn said: "A prime minister who puts his own political career before public service is no prime minister at all. "A prime minister who puts his own political career before Normandy war veterans is no prime minister at all. "So it's incumbent upon all of us to do our national service and vote the Tories out of office." Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper said Mr Sunak's decision was "politically shameful", bringing up her grandfather, who was on the Normandy beaches on D-Day.
Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth said it "certainly wasn't a day for a prime minister to decide...that his priority should be to fight for his own political future". Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer said "it's a tragedy that so many veterans then struggle in life" after they leave the military.