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After an Alice In Wonderland campaign, our new PM must now tell us how he will fix Britain’s grim realities

WAS the election campaign of 2024 the most bizarre ever?

It began with Rishi Sunak getting drenched in the rain in Downing Street as he announced the snap poll — his words nearly drowned out by protesters blaring out Labour’s 1997 anthem Things Can Only Get Better.

Dan Charity
Sir Keir must tell us frankly what his plans are to fix Britain[/caption]
Getty
The election campaigning began with Rishi Sunak getting drenched in the rain in Downing Street as he announced the snap poll[/caption]

And it ended with the surreal sight of Rishi appearing on the This Morning TV sofa alongside Britain’s bikini-clad most-tattooed woman.

In between we had Lib Dem leader Ed Davey’s absurd stunts, and Nigel Farage being milk-shaked by a woman with an Only Fans channel.

At times it has felt this election was more like a scene from Alice In Wonderland than a serious contest for who should govern our country.

We had followed our political leaders down the rabbit hole, and they didn’t give us straight answers.

Trading blows

When Sir Keir Starmer moves into No10 this morning, the head honchos at the civil service will greet him with one of the biggest in-trays of any Prime Minister in peacetime.

Top of the list will be our prisons.

Jails are bursting and we are literally running out of cells to lock convicts in.

The Tories started letting some criminals out early and Sir Keir says he will carry on doing this.

But if someone does the crime, we expect them to do the time.

And what happens when a prisoner released early ends up committing another offence — such as raping someone or beating someone up?

There are also huge ­structural challenges facing the nation.

Our economy is sluggish and just emerging from one of the worst inflation crises in decades.

People feel poorer. Taxes are at their highest level since the war. Our Covid- ravaged NHS is buckling and at risk of collapse.

Some 6.3million people are stuck on waiting lists — one of the biggest numbers in history.

Getting a GP or NHS dentist appointment is almost impossible in some parts of the country.

In Bristol, patients queued for six hours in the February cold when a new dental practice opened so they could register. Police ended up being called.

Our borders are as leaky as a bucket of water with holes in.

EPA
Nigel Farage was milk-shaked in Clacton by a woman with an OnlyFans account[/caption]
PA
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey made tons of absurd stunts during the campaign[/caption]

More than 13,000 migrants have washed up on our coast so far this year, and that number is only going to get much bigger.

These are serious problems.

The new Prime Minister needs big ideas to solve them.

But the issues did not get the attention they deserved during this campaign.

Instead we had six weeks of Labour and the Tories trading blows but ducking the big issues.

There was a frenzy of emergency press conferences from both sides.

Labour accused the Tories of promising “Trussite” unfunded tax cuts and gambling with our pensions.

Watch our election special with Piers Morgan

PIERS Morgan will join our star-studded Never Mind The Ballots panel just moments after the exit poll drops tonight.

Our Political Editor Harry Cole will host the Piers Morgan Uncensored host and a panel of experts at 10.15pm for a snap reaction to the first indication of the election results.

You can watch it live here.

Legendary Sun columnist Piers, who has interviewed Rishi Sunak twice, will give his candid takes on the most important election in a generation.

We’ll be back again at 8am tomorrow to chew over the full results and fallout from the race for No10.

For the very best analysis tune in on The Sun’s YouTube page or thesun.co.uk. You won’t want to miss it.

The Conservatives said Labour will drop a tax bomb on Brits “like night follows day”.

In dizzying scenes, a roll call of big ­hitters doled out increasingly alarmist warnings about the bone-chilling dangers of “the other lot”.

It was hard to keep up as one breathless frontbencher after another warned of Armageddon unless their side was handed the keys to No10.

But economists combing the books were unimpressed.

Manifesto promises by Labour and the Tories were pie in the sky, they warned, with neither side being honest about the cost of improving public services.

But that stark warning was lost in the noise of battle.

It looks like Sir Keir Starmer will end up in No10 with a thumping majority.

But Sir Keir does not have the rock star appeal that Sir Tony Blair had.

Walk down any High Street and you will find people saying the same thing — we are not sold on Keir.

We don’t know what he stands for. We are not sure we like him very much.

Deafening scream

Some don’t even recognise him.

Meanwhile, people are angry — their trust in politicians battered and bruised.

This quiet fury could grow into a deafening scream that shatters confidence in our political process altogether if we are not careful.

Sir Keir is often accused of failing to come clean about what he actually thinks and is planning when in No10.

He says he wants to stop the boats and smash the criminal gangs behind them.

Yet he dodges and obfuscates when asked plainly how he will do this without the deterrent of the Rwanda scheme.

But the time for doublespeak is over.

On her adventures in Wonderland, Alice meets Humpty Dumpty — who famously speaks nonsense to her.

Sir Keir must tell us frankly what his plans are to fix Britain.

If he doesn’t, there is a danger that he will end up like Humpty Dumpty, and have a big fall.

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