Calls grow for general election after Rishi Sunak
becomes Tory leader
Labour, Lib Dems, SNP and Johnson supporters say
former chancellor has no mandate to run country
Ben Quinn
@BenQuinn75
Mon 24 Oct
2022 15.09 BST
Calls for a
general election by voices ranging from Labour to Boris Johnson
ultra-loyalists, such as Nadine Dorries, are growing louder after Rishi Sunak
won the Tory leadership race.
Sunak was
accused by Labour’s deputy leader, Angela Rayner, of “dodging scrutiny” as she
called for voters to have a say after the former chancellor was officially
declared the new Conservative leader on Monday.
“The Tories
have crowned Rishi Sunak as prime minister without him saying a single word
about how he would run the country, and without anyone having the chance to
vote,” she said in a statement.
“This is
the same Rishi Sunak who as chancellor failed to grow the economy, failed to
get a grip on inflation, and failed to help families with the Tory cost of
living crisis.”
Nicola
Sturgeon, Scotland’s first minister and Scottish National party leader,
congratulated Sunak, but added: “I’d suggest one immediate decision he should
take and one he certainly should not.”
“He should
call an early general election. And he should not – must not – unleash another
round of austerity. Our public services will not withstand that.”
Ed Davey,
the leader of the Liberal Democrats, added his voice to the fresh calls for an
election after Sunak became leader following the withdrawal of Penny Mordaunt
from the race.
“The
Conservatives have trashed our economy, pushed health services to the brink,
and added hundreds of pounds to people’s mortgage payments,” Davey said. “Now
Conservative MPs have installed another out-of-touch prime minister without
giving you a say. We need a general election now.”
Election
calls were coming from the right as well, with the leader of the Reform UK
party, Richard Tice, seeking to capitalise on discontent among Conservative
party members aggrieved at missing out on a chance to vote for their leader.
“We have a
prime minister appointed by acclamation. His party members rejected him.
Democracy is in peril,” he claimed.
Dorries, a
culture secretary during Johnson’s government, had called on Sunday for a
general election after he decided not to enter leadership race. She tweeted
that the former prime minister would have won the votes of Tory members and
“already had a mandate from the people” in the form of his 2019 election win.
“Rishi and
Penny, despite requests from Boris, refused to unite, which would have made
governing utterly impossible. Penny actually asked him to step aside for her.
It will now be impossible to avoid a GE,” she said.
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