So Rishi Sunak is the UK’s next prime minister.
What happens now?
The first 100 days of Rishi Sunak’s Britain.
BY ELENI
COUREA
OCTOBER 25,
2022 1:18 AM
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-first-100-days-of-pm-rishi-sunak-tory-britain/
LONDON — It
took one bruising campaign defeat and six weeks of exile — but on Tuesday,
Rishi Sunak will finally become U.K. prime minister.
He faces
the toughest in-tray of any British leader since World War II, entering No. 10
Downing Street as the country hurtles into winter with energy bills, hospital
waiting lists, borrowing costs and inflation all soaring.
The
challenge has been magnified by Liz Truss’ brief crash-and-burn premiership. As
a result of her now-infamous mini-budget, which was scrapped almost in its
entirety after causing chaos in financial markets, the Conservatives are
trailing the opposition Labour Party by over 30 percentage points in opinion
polls.
On Monday,
Sunak told MPs he was ready to hit the ground running as he addressed them for
the first time since becoming Tory leader. Over the days and months ahead, he
will need to carry out his first ministerial reshuffle without further
fracturing his party; oversee the first budget since the last one wreaked havoc
on the economy; and determine what support to offer voters with their energy
bills past this spring.
Prime
ministers tend to think of their first 100 days as a way to set the tone for
their premierships. For Sunak, who has just over two years to govern before he
is required to face a general election, that first impression is going to be
particularly important.
October 25
— Meeting with the king and first speech outside No. 10 Downing Street
Sunak will
become the prime minister Tuesday after an audience with King Charles III,
where he will ask the monarch for permission to form a government.
Sunak will
then address the country for the first time as prime minister from the steps
outside No. 10 Downing Street at around 11.35 a.m.
To much of
the British public, the former chancellor is a familiar face who announced the
wildly-popular furlough scheme during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020.
His task
now will be to reassure people that the government will support them during
another difficult economic period — only this time he is in a much tougher position.
The popularity he gained during the pandemic has waned, and he is taking over
after a major government crisis — the third Tory prime minister to hold office
within three months.
October 25
— First reshuffle
The first
big political test for Sunak will be his Cabinet reshuffle. Tory MPs believe he
will learn the lesson from Truss’ first and only one, where she divvied up
roles between her allies and left almost everyone who didn’t back her out in
the cold.
“I think
his reshuffle will be more unifying, bringing in people from all wings and will
not be as destabilizing as Liz’s,” an MP who did not back Sunak predicted.
Sunak is
likely to make at least his major Cabinet appointments Tuesday afternoon, so
they are in place to line up alongside him on the House of Commons' front bench
when MPs grill him during so-called prime minister’s questions (PMQs) on
Wednesday.
His biggest
decision will be whether to keep Jeremy Hunt — who was drafted in by Truss in a
last-ditch effort to save her premiership — as chancellor. He is also likely to
hand a big job to his leadership rival Penny Mordaunt.
Close Sunak
allies who are likely to get promotions include Mel Stride, the current
chairman of the Treasury select committee, Craig Williams, Claire Coutinho and
Laura Trott. Tory big beast Michael Gove could see a return to Cabinet.
October 26
— First PMQs
Sunak will
go head-to-head as prime minister with Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, for the
first time on Wednesday.
Unlike his
predecessor, Sunak won’t have much to worry about from his own side — Tory MPs
have largely rowed behind him since he became their leader on Monday, with many
expressing relief that the perpetual state of crisis of the Truss government
has ended.
But MPs
will want him to demonstrate that he can land blows against Starmer at a time
when Labour is streets ahead in the polls. Sunak told Tory MPs on Tuesday that
their party faced an “existential threat” as a result of its low poll ratings.
October 28
— Deadline to form a government in Belfast
If a
power-sharing arrangement is not in place at Stormont by Friday, a fresh set of
elections to the Northern Irish assembly will have to be triggered.
Calling
these elections — the second set in seven months — could be one of the Sunak
government’s first acts and an indication of successive Tory prime ministers’
failure to deal with the political crisis in Northern Ireland.
The
Democratic Unionist Party issued a fresh warning on Monday night that it would
not participate in the assembly unless Sunak takes action on the post-Brexit
Northern Ireland protocol agreed with the EU.
October 31
— First budget
The next
budget was penciled in for October 31 by Kwasi Kwarteng, the Truss-era
chancellor who wanted to use it to reassure financial markets still reeling
from his last one.
The timing
of the budget — widely derided by Tory MPs because of the optics of holding it
on Halloween — was intended to give the Bank of England time to react before
its own key meeting on November 3, where it will set interest rate levels for
the weeks ahead.
In its
biggest test so far, Sunak’s government will have to decide whether to stick
with that date; what actions to take to reassure the markets; and how to fill
the enormous hole in the U.K. public finances.
Carl
Emmerson, deputy director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said: “If his
chancellor is Jeremy Hunt and Sunak is comfortable with the way things are
proceeding for next Monday, then going ahead has lots of advantages.
“You get
the announcement out before the Bank of England makes its next inflation
figure, and you get the Office for Budgetary Responsibility forecasts out
there, which helps show the markets you are serious about them.
“The case
for changing that date is much stronger if Sunak says, ‘Actually, I want to do
something different to what Jeremy Hunt has been planning, and I need more
time,’” Emmerson added.
November 3
— Bank of England rates meeting
The Bank of
England’s monetary policy committee is expected to raise interest rates at its
meeting on November 3, triggering a fresh hike in people’s mortgages.
This is the
point when many people will realize for the first time that they will have to
make much larger mortgage repayments once their current fixed-rate deals come
to an end.
Sunak made
combating inflation and keeping mortgages low a central theme of his leadership
campaign over the summer. Reacting to the rates decision and ensuring the
government works closely with the Bank of England to combat inflation will be a
key test of his premiership.
November 6
— COP27 summit in Egypt
Sunak made
a point of telling Tory MPs on Tuesday that he is committed to the U.K.’s goal
of achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The
question now is whether he attends the COP27 climate summit in Sharm El Sheikh,
Egypt. Truss reportedly planned to go, despite her skepticism of aspects of the
net-zero agenda.
If Sunak
does go to Egypt, it could be his first foreign trip in office (unless he
decides to make a quick visit to Ukraine beforehand) and his first opportunity
to present himself on the world stage.
November 8
— Boundary changes
The
Boundary Commission for England will publish its new constituency map on
November 8.
At this
point, some Tory MPs will know with near certainty that their constituencies
are being carved up between neighboring areas, with some forced to jostle with
colleagues over who will get to stand where.
It will be
a political headache for Sunak to deal with, and any MPs whose safe seats
become marginal will sense their political careers coming to an end — and will
have less of an incentive to support him in key votes in the months ahead.
November 13
— G20 meeting in Indonesia
The next
big foreign trip coming down the track is the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia.
The meeting
will be an opportunity for Western powers to present a united front against
Russia following its invasion of Ukraine and against China’s increased
aggression toward Taiwan, but also to hold talks behind closed doors. There
have been reports that both China's Xi Jinping and Russian Vladimir Putin will
attend.
Sophia
Gaston, the head of foreign policy at the Policy Exchange think tank, said this
was shaping up to be “one of the most extraordinary summits of modern history,
with a violent war raging in Ukraine and the leading protagonist, Vladimir
Putin, on the guest list alongside other autocratic leaders and outraged
democratic allies."
“As well as
promoting free trade and the rules-based international order, Sunak would
likely see the G20 as an opportunity to build support for his proposed
‘NATO-style’ technology alliance,” Gaston said. “He may well also debut a new
U.K. message on the net-zero transition.”
Late
November or early December — Chester by-election
Labour
whips are preparing to trigger a by-election in the city of Chester in late
November or December.
The
by-election is taking place because the city’s MP Christian Matheson resigned
after a parliamentary watchdog recommended he be suspended for sexual
misconduct.
Matheson
sits on a 6,164-vote majority, and the seat has traditionally been a swing seat
flipping between the Tories and Labour. It was Conservative up until 2010.
Based on
current polling figures, Labour should win a significantly larger majority than
it currently has, though by-elections do suffer from small turnouts and so
unexpected results are not uncommon. A dramatic Tory defeat would set alarm
bells ringing in the party.
Another
by-election could be triggered in the coming months if, as expected, Boris
Johnson elevates his ally and MP Nadine Dorries to the House of Lords in his
resignation honors. That would likely be the first by-election in a Tory-held seat
fought with Sunak as party leader.
December 31
— U.K. deadline for joining trans-Pacific trade bloc
The U.K.
government has said it hopes to conclude negotiations on joining the CPTPP — a
trade agreement signed by 11 countries including Australia and New Zealand — by
the end of the year.
Securing
this deal was one of Truss’ priorities. For Sunak it would represent both a
concrete foreign policy achievement and an indication that the U.K. is
successfully building closer diplomatic ties with countries in the Indo-Pacific
after Brexit.
Talks
around the partnership have thrown up some diplomatic obstacles, with China
reacting angrily to U.K. trade officials meeting Taiwanese counterparts. Both
China and Taiwan have applied to join the CPTPP.
December or
January — Johnson's probe concludes
The Commons
privilege committee's probe into whether Johnson misled parliament over the
so-called Partygate scandal will begin taking evidence in November and is
expected to conclude in December or January — though it could drag on longer.
There have
been suggestions that the evidence against him is so damning that Johnson could
face temporary suspension from parliament or even be kicked out as an MP. The
inquiry may have formed part of Johnson's decision not to stand for the Tory
leadership contest.
If the
privileges committee says Johnson should be sanctioned once it concludes its
inquiry, Sunak will have to judge his response and decide whether to whip Tory
MPs to back its recommendations even if that provokes Johnson's ire. There is
also the risk that Sunak himself will be dragged into the probe, given he too
was fined over the Partygate scandal.
Early
January — COVID inquiry takes evidence
The
independent inquiry into the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic
could begin gathering evidence at the start of next year.
Among other
things, the probe will examine the impact of the economic policies that Sunak
designed as chancellor during the pandemic, putting his decisions under
scrutiny.
His
"Eat Out to Help Out" scheme — which encouraged people to dine in
restaurants during the post-lockdown summer of 2020 — could become a focus,
with critics claiming it drove up coronavirus-related infections and deaths.
February —
Energy support nears its end
By the time
Sunak’s first 100 days are up, there will be pressure on the government to
explain how it will support people with their energy bills past the spring if
wholesale gas prices haven't drastically fallen. Hunt has already rolled back
the Truss government's two-year guarantee and instead capped people's energy
bills at an average of £2,500 for just six months. That policy ends in April.
The
Institute for Fiscal Studies' Emmerson said: “We’ve got a big generous offer
from the government through this winter — although prices are still a lot
higher than they were last year, they will be nowhere near as high as they
would have otherwise been.
“The prime
minister and chancellor will spend a lot of time thinking about how they
replace that scheme. In some ways, it’s very similar to the kind of furlough
scheme that Sunak had during the pandemic — very generous, big scheme with lots
of crude edges to it,” he said.
“It’s
understandable wanting to get in place quickly to support people, but how do
you get out of it? Do it too quickly and that's too much pain for too many
people — keep it in place for too long, and that's very expensive to the
government.”
It's just
one of so many enormous decisions the new PM faces in his first 100 days.
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