Then there were two: Brexit campaigner
Johnson far ahead in race to lead Britain
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[June 20, 2019]
By Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - Boris Johnson, a former
foreign secretary who helped lead the 2016 Brexit referendum campaign,
is the runaway favorite to win a final pair of ballots on Thursday that
will whittle down the race to replace Prime Minister Theresa May to two
candidates.
Johnson, who served as London mayor for eight years, has cast himself as
the only candidate who can deliver Brexit on October 31 while fighting
off the electoral threats of Nigel Farage's Brexit Party and Jeremy
Corbyn's Labour Party.
Despite a series of scandals in the past and criticism about his
attention to detail, Johnson has dominated the race since May announced
a month ago that she would step down after repeatedly failing to get her
Brexit deal ratified by parliament.
Johnson, 55, has increased his share of the vote of Conservative
lawmakers at each of the three ballots so far: 114 out of 313 votes in
the first ballot on June 13, 126 on June 18 and 143 on Wednesday.
Two further ballots are taking place on Thursday, with first results
expected at 1200 GMT and the final two candidates announced at 1700 GMT.
At each ballot the candidate with the fewest votes gets knocked out
until there are two.
Then around 160,000 Conservative Party grassroots members will vote on
who will be their leader - and Britain's next prime minister - by the
end of July. Bookmakers give Johnson an 89 percent probability of
winning.
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt was in second place with 54 votes on
Wednesday, Environment Secretary Michael Gove third with 51 and interior
minister Sajid Javid fourth with 38 votes.
Johnson has pledged to leave the European Union on Oct. 31 with or
without a deal. The EU has said it will not renegotiate the divorce deal
that May agreed last year and the British parliament has indicated it
will block a no-deal exit.
He has not addressed how he will solve that riddle.
PM JOHNSON?
The rise of Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, cast by many as simply
"Boris", to pole position for leading the world's fifth largest economy
is the grandest twist so far in a career that has morphed from
journalism via TV-show fame, comedy and scandal into the brinkmanship of
Britain's Brexit crisis.
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Conservative Party leadership candidate Boris Johnson leaves his
home in London, Britain June 20, 2019. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
Born in New York, Johnson was educated at Eton, Britain's most
exclusive school, and at Balliol College, Oxford. He began his
career at a management consultancy in the City of London but dropped
out after a week.
He then turned to journalism but was sacked from The Times newspaper
for making up quotes.
Hired by The Daily Telegraph, Johnson infuriated European officials
and delighted then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher by lampooning
the European Economic Community establishment with a host of
sometimes misleading reports from Brussels.
After entering politics, he was sacked from the Conservative Party’s
policy team while in opposition for lying about an extra-marital
affair.
But his sometimes shambolic personal appearance and disarmingly
self-deprecating confidence allowed him to survive both gaffes and
scandal. He won two terms as London mayor from 2008 to 2016.
In 2016, he became one of the most recognizable faces of the Brexit
campaign which won the referendum with 52% of the votes cast versus
48% for staying in.
His bid to replace David Cameron, who resigned after the referendum,
was foiled by Gove who pulled out of his campaign saying Johnson was
unsuitable for the job.
After May won the premiership, she prompted consternation in
European capitals by appointing Johnson foreign minister. He
resigned in 2018 over May's handling of Brexit.
"We must leave the EU on October 31st, with or without a deal, so we
can begin to unite our country, restore trust in our politics, and
move beyond Brexit to focus on delivering for everyone," Johnson
said on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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