UK leadership candidate Sunak: we can't promise lower taxes and more
spending
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[July 12, 2022]
LONDON (Reuters) -Britain's former finance
minister, Rishi Sunak, set out his leadership campaign pitch on Tuesday,
offering himself up as an "honest" prime minister who would balance the
books, reduce the role of the state and grow the economy.
A frontrunner who received a further boost from two senior ministers,
Sunak said he was the one candidate to replace Prime Minister Boris
Johnson to have a plan for the economy, saying he would tackle inflation
before turning to tax cuts.
He was met by cheers from a crowd of Conservative lawmakers who were
backing him, and received endorsements from Deputy Prime Minister
Dominic Raab and transport minister Grant Shapps, who said he had
abandoned his own bid for the leadership.
Opposition to Sunak from within Conservative Party ranks focuses on his
strategy of higher taxes. "It is not credible to promise lots more
spending and lower taxes," Sunak said in a speech that touched on broad
issues but avoided getting into the nitty gritty of concrete policies.
"We need to have a grown up conversation about the central policy
question that all candidates have to answer in this election: Do you
have a credible plan to protect our economy and get it growing?"
He also addressed his former support for Johnson, saying he would not
allow people to rewrite the prime minister's role in politics by
demonizing him and that he would not engage in some of the hostile
briefings that have marked the campaign so far.
"I will have no part in a rewriting of history that seeks to demonize
Boris, exaggerate his faults, or deny his efforts," said Sunak, whose
resignation last week helped provoke the rebellion that forced Johnson
out after a series of scandals.
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Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak speaks to the media
at an event to launch his campaign to be the next Conservative
leader and Prime Minister, in London, Britain, July 12, 2022.
REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
"I am running a positive campaign focused on what my
leadership can offer our party and our country. I will not engage in
the negativity ... If others wish to do that, then let them. That's
not who we are."
Sunak himself was fined by London police for attending a party in
the prime minister's Downing Street office that broke coronavirus
lockdown rules, one of number of events held there that turned much
of the public against Johnson.
He also came under scrutiny when it emerged that his
multi-millionaire Indian wife held a status that allowed her to
avoid paying tax in the United Kingdom.
Sunak said he did not want to distance himself from the fiscal
decisions he made during the COVID-19 pandemic and how to deal with
the ensuing additional debt and borrowing.
"Whilst that may be politically inconvenient for me, it is also the
truth. As is the fact that once we've gripped inflation, I will get
the tax burden down," he said.
"It is a question of when, not if."
(Reporting by Elizabeth Piper and Kylie MacLellan, writing by
William James; editing by William Schomberg and Angus MacSwan)
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