The second head-to-head for the politicians on Thursday, moderated by Julie Etchingham, had an average audience 2.1 million and a peak of 2.4 million across devices, according to overnight ratings.
This includes those watching on streaming service ITVX. The BBC hosted the first multi-party debate last Friday, which had an average audience of 3.2 million tuning in across BBC One and the BBC News Channel, according to overnight ratings by the corporation.
Both showdowns featured the Conservatives’ Penny Mordaunt, Labour deputy leader Angela Rayner, SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn, Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth, Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer and Reform UK’s Nigel Farage. On Thursday night, the senior figures took questions from the audience before they debated with each other over the NHS, education, immigration and referenda. It comes as a new major opinion poll revealed that Reform UK has overtaken the Conservatives.
The YouGov survey, commissioned by The Times newspaper, has Nigel Farage’s party at 19% to the Conservatives’ 18% in voting intention, while Labour remains in the lead at 37%, with the Liberal Democrats at 14%, the Greens at 7%, the SNP at 3%, Plaid Cymru at 1% and others at 2%. Earlier in the month, ITV held the first TV debate of the election campaign which saw Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer go up against each other. It was watched by an average of five million vi.