Poll tracker: How the parties comparepublished at 17:06 Greenwich Mean Time 19 December 2017
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Read MoreReaction to May and Corbyn TV questioning
Labour leader pressed on foreign policy views
May defended changes to social care policy
UKIP's Paul Nuttall interviewed by Andrew Neil
Angela Harrison and Tom Moseley
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Read MoreIssue by issue, what the parties are pledging, presented in easy-to-scan bullet points.
Read MoreA guide to the additional programmes and debates for the general election campaign.
Read MoreJeremy Corbyn apologises for not knowing "the exact" cost of his party's childcare policy.
Read MoreA spokesman for Andrew RT Davies accuses Alun Cairns of being "unwilling" to take part in a TV debate.
Read MoreRenewable energy is at the heart of the Wales Green Party's election manifesto.
Read MoreIt's time for us to start a fresh Election Live page - it'll pick up exactly where this one leaves off,
Alternatively scroll down to see reaction to Jeremy Corbyn and Theresa May on the Channel 4/Sky News election special, as well as seeing the text and video clip coverage as it happened.
A quick round-up of the latest campaign developments on the morning after Monday's leaders' debate:
Today Programme
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Today Programme
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Former Labour spinner Tom Baldwin says Jeremy Corbyn is "incredibly comfortable in his own skin".
"I think things bounce off him," he says, and argues that Jeremy Paxman got it "slightly wrong" and should have asked the Labour leader about what he would do in the future, not about his long-held beliefs.
Craig Oliver, former Tory communications chief, says "the reality is that if nobody thinks you are going to be prime minister, the pressure is off."
"It's a much easier game to play," he says, adding: "If you're ahead, you're more likely to be defensive."
Today Programme
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Tom Baldwin, Labour's former communication director under Ed Miliband, says there wasn't a single moment that stood out for Jeremy Corbyn, high or low, at the TV debate.
"Overall he did very well... he won last night's debate," he argues, but there wasn't a single "take-away moment" of victory that'll be played again and again either.
Craig Oliver, former spin doctor for David Cameron, thinks Theresa May did well on Brexit and had the audience cheering along with her, but she had difficult moments on public services.
"There was a little bit of heckling and that's not great", but he thinks overall it was a no-score draw.
Today Programme
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David Davis recalls as an example of the UK government's negotiating style.
Ultimately, he claims, EU officials "backed off" and said that "Theresa May is a very good negotiator".
He tells Today: "We didn't escalate the fight. We didn't go in for a tit-for-tat but at one point or other, we drew the line."
The Brexit secretary insists that the government's aims for negotiations are clear: "What we're after is a free trade agreement with an associated customs agreement.
Quote MessageWhat we're after is a tariff-free arrangement, that's the aim, but if we can't have one then we will have to design our strategy accordingly, which is why we've said: no deal is better than a bad deal."
Today Programme
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio 4
Today Programme
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio 4
Brexit Secretary David Davis tells Today that "polls are very unreliable" after recent election polling show Labour cutting the Conservatives' lead.
Responding to Angela Rayner's comment that "Brexit is happening", Mr Davis says the real question is "how it happens".
He says: "A successful Brexit will give you the scope for a successful economic strategy, which will then give you the money to pay for good public services."
Mr Davis tells Today Ms Rayner set out "an incredibly naive view of how the Europeans are going to play this".
"We’re going to have to be quite tough with them I’m afraid," he adds.
Theresa May has insisted that "no deal is better than a bad deal" when it comes to Brexit. Angela Rayner disputed this on Today, arguing that "no deal is a bad deal".
But what might "no deal" look like? - looking at issues like money, borders, red tape, and the rights of expats and holidaymakers.
Today Programme
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Angela Rayner turns to Labour's plan to extend free childcare provision to all two to four-year-olds in England.
She describes "£2.7bn of capital investment over the Parliament" to create more places, and "a further £4.8bn a year to bring in the extended free childcare offer, and half a billion to reverse the damaging cuts that have already taken place to our flagship Sure Start centre programme".
Ms Rayner argues that the system would allow more women to enter the workplace and "GDP could go up by as much as 10% - so it will pay for itself".
She adds: "It will transform Britain. It has a massive net benefit."
Today Programme
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio 4
Shadow education secretary Angela Rayner tells Today that Labour wants to focus on the domestic agenda, while Theresa May just repeats that "Brexit means Brexit".
"The world is moving on," Ms Rayner says. "We know that Brexit is happening."
She claims that Mrs May called an election in the hope of securing a big majority in order to continue "ideological attacks on our education and health service... That's why we're talking about the domestic agenda".
However, Ms Rayner does have time to attack the PM's approach to Brexit:
"Saying you're going to be a bloody difficult woman right at the start of negotiations tends to make sure that do get a bad deal," she says.
Quote MessageNegotiation is a dialogue between two parties and unfortunately, Theresa May, in the way she's handled it, has made us look like ogres across Europe."
Today Programme
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio 4
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