Rishi Sunak is next UK prime minister

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LONDON – Rishi Sunak was declared the next leader of Britain’s Conservative Party by the head of the 1922 Committee of Conservative lawmakers on Monday, placing him on course to be the country’s next prime minister.

The committee sets the rules for selecting and changing the party’s leader.

Sunak’s rival, Boris Johnson quit the race, admitting he could no longer unite their party following one of the most turbulent periods in British political history.

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Sunak, the 42-year-old former finance minister, will be Britain’s third prime minister in less than two months, tasked with restoring stability to a country reeling from years of political and economic turmoil.

The multi-millionaire former hedge fund boss would be expected to launch deep spending cuts to try to rebuild Britain’s fiscal reputation, just as the country slides into a recession, dragged down by the surging cost of energy and food.

“The United Kingdom is a great country but we face a profound economic crisis,” Sunak said in a brief statement declaring his candidacy to lead the Conservative Party, and thereby become prime minister.

Britain has been locked in a state of perma-crisis ever since it voted in 2016 to leave the European Union, unleashing a battle at Westminster over the future of the country that remains unresolved to this today.

The latest bout of drama has drawn dismay in foreign capitals and ridicule from the world’s press.

Johnson, the face of the Brexit vote, led his party to a landslide victory in 2019, only to be driven out of office less than three years later after a series of scandals. His successor Liz Truss lasted just 44 days before she quit over an economic policy that trashed the country’s economic credibility.

Sunak, who has not said how he plans to govern, will inherit a party riven by ideology and with some lawmakers still blaming him for the demise of Johnson after he quit in the summer, triggering a ministerial rebellion.

The withdrawal of the former prime minister late on Sunday also left some ministers and lawmakers feeling angry for looking foolish after they backed him to return to Downing Street, only to have to change course and endorse Sunak hours later.

CHURN AND INSTABILITY

“Since the modern era of politics began in 1832, it’s quite without precedent to see so much churn and instability,” Anthony Seldon, a historian and political biographer, told Sky News.

Penny Mordaunt, leader of parliament’s House of Commons, has received the backing of around 90 politicians, according to a source in her team. Nearly 190 have backed Sunak, Sky reported.

Britain’s borrowing costs eased on Monday after Johnson pulled out of the race. However economists have questioned whether he can tackle the country’s finances while holding the party’s multiple warring factions together.

Finance minister Jeremy Hunt – the fourth in four months – is due to present a budget on Oct. 31 to plug a black hole in the public finances that is expected to have ballooned to up to 40 billion pounds.

Guy Hands, a private equity boss, said Britain’s dominant political party was no longer fit to run the country.

“It’s got to move on from fighting its own internal wars,” he told BBC Radio, urging the Conservatives to admit that they had put the country on a “path to be the sick man of Europe” and that millions of people were now poorer.

PARTY UNITY

Investors have at least been given some reassurance that Johnson will not contest the crown.

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The former prime minister, who raced home from a holiday in the Caribbean, said on Sunday that while he had sufficient support, he realized he could not govern effectively while the party remained fractured along ideological lines.

“Boris has bottled it,” the Metro newspaper said on its front page as many lawmakers questioned whether he had actually secured the backing of 100 lawmakers. By Sunday just over 50 said publicly they would back Johnson.

Sunak came to national attention when, aged 39, he became finance minister under Johnson just as the COVID-19 pandemic hit Britain, developing the successful furlough scheme.

If chosen, the former Goldman Sachs analyst would be the United Kingdom’s first prime minister of Indian origin.

His family migrated to Britain in the 1960s, a period when many people from Britain’s former colonies moved to the country to help it rebuild after the Second World War.

After graduating from Oxford University, he went to Stanford University where he met his wife Akshata Murthy, whose father is Indian billionaire N. R. Narayana Murthy, founder of outsourcing giant Infosys Ltd. — Reuters

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