3:43 p.m. ET, November 19, 2019
Leaders clash over NHS, while Johnson calls Corbyn's four-day week plan "crackpot"
The debate moves to the NHS, which Corbyn would likely consider his home turf.
He responds to a question about the service with a personal story about a woman he knew, who waited for eight hours to see a doctor before passing away in recent days.
"It's one of the most civilized things about this country," he says of the NHS -- but it is under significant strain.
Johnson says the NHS is one of the most "beautiful" things about Britain and his government would continue to fund it. He claims he will build 40 new hospitals, a figure which has been disputed since he started making it during the summer.
"We can achieve that only if we have a strong economy," he adds.
But Corbyn cites recent figures showing that emergency room performance is at its worst rate ever. "Let's end the privatization within the NHS," he says, raising perhaps the biggest cheer from the audience so far.
"Of course we're not privatizing the NHS," Johnson replies, but he's stumbling over his answer and raising several different points at once.
He calls Labour's plan for a four-day week is "crackpot," but Corbyn says a shorter worker week is a "good thing for their health and wellbeing."
He then takes on that murky claim of 40 new hospitals -- saying it's only six new hospitals.
"Yes it is true we are starting with six," he says, but funding will follow for more. "So where does the 40 come from then?" asks Corbyn.
Then Johnson again brings up Brexit before being cut off by Etchingham. He likely won't be too pleased with his responses to this question.