Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer have squared off in their first televised encounter of the general election campaign so far.
Here’s what you need to know from the hour-long debate on ITV.
Rishi Sunak has been in office for over a year and a half, and his party has been in power for 14 years.
But at times Mr Sunak sounded like the man in opposition, repeatedly challenging his Labour counterpart for answers over how he would enact his policies.
This included questions about how Sir Keir would resolve the NHS junior doctors' strike and lower levels of illegal migration.
At times it got quite heated, with the prime minister speaking over Julie Etchingham, the ITV host, to ask his own questions of his opponent.
In response, the Labour leader tried to pull the focus back to the Tory record in government, adding Mr Sunak was "ashamed of the last 14 years".
He was also very keen to talk about someone not in the studio: Mr Sunak's immediate predecessor in No 10, Liz Truss.
The Labour leader brought up the former PM's ill-fated 49-day premiership just seven minutes in, and made regular references to it as the debate continued.
This included talking about her during a section of the debate when he was asked how he would resolve the long-running NHS doctors' strike.
But Sir Keir also sought to highlight frozen tax thresholds under the current government, branding the prime minister the "British expert on tax rises”.
The two leaders traded barbs over what they did before politics - with Sir Keir attacking the PM's former career at a hedge fund, and Mr Sunak responding in kind with a dig over the Labour leader's time as a lawyer.
But they were also keen to talk about their own backstories, as they tried to empathise with members of the audience and strike a chord with viewers at home.
Mr Sunak talked about the fact his dad was a GP and his mum a pharmacist during a section on the NHS. The Labour leader also brought up the fact his mum was a nurse.
Sir Keir also deployed his background when asked about the cost of living, talking about how the phone in his home was cut off when he was young.
And there was also a reference to the prime minister's wealth - telling the audience at one point he “lives in a different world”.