Rishi Sunak to stand for Conservative party
leader
Former chancellor throws his hat into the ring in race
to succeed Boris Johnson
Heather
Stewart, Rowena Mason and Peter Walker
Fri 8 Jul
2022 17.02 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/jul/08/rishi-sunak-to-stand-for-conservative-party-leader
Rishi Sunak
described himself as a “serious candidate for serious times” as he kickstarted
his campaign to become the UK’s next prime minister, with as many as 15
Conservative MPs expected to run for the party’s leadership.
The former
chancellor launched his bid on Friday after telling colleagues he had 80 to 100
MPs behind him. Some began declaring their support publicly, including Mark
Harper, the former chief whip, Oliver Dowden, the former party co-chair, and
Mark Spencer, the leader of the House of Commons.
Sunak’s
announcement came in a slickly edited three-minute video message posted on
Twitter under the slogan “Ready for Rishi”. “I’m standing to be the next leader
of the Conservative party and your prime minister,” he said. “Let’s restore
trust, rebuild the economy and reunite the country.”
His
declaration capped an extraordinary week in Westminster in which Boris
Johnson’s authority dramatically collapsed, with more than 50 members of his
government quitting before the prime minister finally announced his resignation
on Thursday.
Saying the
country faced “serious challenges”, Sunak strongly indicated he would resist
calls for widespread tax cuts or a spending spree. “Do we confront this moment
with honesty, seriousness and determination, or do we tell ourselves comforting
fairytales that might make us feel better in the moment but will make our
children worse off tomorrow?” he said.
Tax cuts
are expected to feature heavily in what is likely to be a chaotic and at times
bitter leadership race. Another declared candidate, the one nation Tory Tom
Tugendhat, has already called for the recent national insurance increase to be
reversed. The former equalities minister Kemi Badenoch, announcing her
candidacy in the Times, also appeared to back lower taxes, saying she wanted a
“limited government focused on the essentials”.
His
announcement came as allies of Priti Patel, the home secretary, said she was
seriously considering running, suggesting the politics of some of the other
frontrunners were unclear. “You don’t need to think about Priti: you know where
she stands,” one said, comparing her to Margaret Thatcher.
The culture
secretary, Nadine Dorries, a diehard Johnson loyalist, is also reportedly
consulting colleagues about whether she has sufficient support to run. The
defence secretary, Ben Wallace, considered a potential frontrunner, could also
declare his bid.
Arch
Brexiter Steve Baker has announced that he would not run but would support a
bid by the attorney general, Suella Braverman. On Friday evening, he tweeted:
“I considered standing for the leadership. My priorities were delivering
against our manifesto with our mandate, cutting taxes and seeing through
Brexit. Happily I no longer need to stand. Suella Braverman will deliver these
priorities and more.”
Johnson
fired the starting gun on the race on Thursday when he reluctantly quit as
Conservative leader with a defiant speech describing his colleagues’ decision
to oust him as “eccentric” and the result of “herd instinct”.
One senior
Tory with knowledge of Johnson’s mood described him as “confused” on Friday.
“Not confused in a dumb sense – he fully understands the process. But he is
confused as to their plan and strategy because there isn’t a clear way
through.”
Johnson
continued to fill the posts in his caretaker government, with loyalist Peter
Bone made deputy leader of the House of Commons and his policy chief, Andrew
Griffith, a junior trade minister.
Other
cabinet ministers are expected to declare their candidacy in the coming days,
including the new chancellor, Nadhim Zahawi, the foreign secretary, Liz Truss,
and health secretaries-turned-backbenchers Sajid Javid and Jeremy Hunt.
Zahawi is
believed to have the most organised campaign, with a team in place advised by
Lynton Crosby’s former business partner Mark Fullbrook.
The
executive of the backbench 1922 Committee will be re-elected next Monday, and
is then expected to set out the rules and duration of the leadership race,
including spending limits.
While some
MPs have been pressing for Johnson to step down as soon as possible, others are
keen to see a full-blown contest, perhaps lasting until September, to allow for
the backgrounds of the candidates to be properly scrutinised.
Johnson’s
premiership unravelled after it emerged that he appointed Chris Pincher as
deputy chief whip despite knowing of his past alleged sexual misconduct.
“I think
all of the candidates have got significant due diligence vulnerabilities –
things they are exposed on that will hit the media,” said one senior
Conservative, adding: “There’s really going to be a big field – I think there
could be 15 candidates or more.”
A former
cabinet minister said: “The worst possible thing that could happen to the Tory
party is that they appoint somebody in a hurry, and that person has another
ethical problem, whether it’s a money problem, a historic drugs problem, or a
sex problem. If that happens, however good the policies are, we’re buggered at
the next election.”
Party
insiders are warning that the race – in which the field will be narrowed down
to two MPs, ideally by the time parliament rises on 21 July, before Tory
members get the final vote – is expected to be hard-fought. “I think it will be
a very divisive contest knowing the sort of people who are involved. I think
there will be a lot of really nasty briefing,” said one senior Tory.
Speculation
at Westminster has also already turned to whether a new leader would feel
obliged to call a snap election – perhaps within six months – to give them a
personal mandate.
“If they
want to do anything big and new, it’s a 75 majority on the old manifesto and
the Boris Johnson platform, which is dead,” said a party insider. “If you
actually want to do stuff – radical things in a recession – then you have to
put it to the country.”
The Labour
leader, Keir Starmer, has made clear he will push for a general election. At a
press conference after the news that he would not be fined for an alleged
breach of lockdown rules, he said: “If there’s a general election, this
government will fall and we’ve got a plan for the country.”
As the
leadership race unfolds, there are likely to be perils and controversies ahead
for Johnson’s caretaker role in No 10.
While it
has been agreed he will not introduce new policies or major fiscal decisions,
Johnson’s spokesperson stressed that potentially contentious actions on
existing plans, such as defending court cases to deport asylum seekers to
Rwanda, and pushing through the bill to unilaterally amend the Northern Ireland
protocol, would go ahead.
Among other
tricky moves looming is the decision on a series of public sector pay awards
amid the threat of strikes. The government’s verdict on these could come as
early as next week, potentially with several awards announced simultaneously.
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