Wales On Sunday

Abbott’s gaffe over age for army combat

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SHADOW home secretary Diane Abbott has wrongly claimed 16-yearolds can fight for their country.

In a video posted on Facebook calling for the voting age limit to be lowered from 18, she says: “I believe in votes at 16. If you are old enough to fight for your country you are old enough to vote.”

A teenager can sign up at the age of 16 but they would not be able to go into combat until they are 18, according to the Ministry of Defence (MoD).

A spokesman said: “You can join at 16 but between 16 and 18 you will be training but not deployed. You need to be 18 to be deployed.”

Ms Abbott was speaking after a call for 16- and 17-year-olds to be able to vote in UK parliament­ary elections, local elections and referendum­s was debated in the Commons on Friday.

Debate on the proposal was adjourned at 2.30pm, with Labour’s Jim McMahon asking for it to return on December 1, although it is unlikely to receive time for further considerat­ion on that day.

During this year’s General Election campaign Ms Abbott said she “misspoke” when she gave a string of incorrect figures during a radio interview about policing policy. She stumbled over the cost of plans to put 10,000 extra police on the street in awkward exchanges with LBC’s Nick Ferrari.

She later told BBC Two’s Daily Politics: “I do know my figures.”

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