Eight hopefuls wanting to be next UK PM face first vote to narrow field
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[July 13, 2022]
By Michael Holden and Elizabeth Piper
LONDON (Reuters) -Conservative lawmakers
will vote on Wednesday to narrow the field of eight candidates hoping to
succeed Boris Johnson as party leader and prime minister, in an
increasingly fractious contest marked by the hopefuls trading barbs.
Three of the 11 initial challengers for the premiership fell away on
Tuesday after failing to secure enough support from their colleagues,
but the contest remains crowded.
Rishi Sunak, whose resignation as finance minister last week helped
precipitate Johnson's fall, is the bookmakers' favourite and has the
most public support among lawmakers. His successor Nadhim Zahawi and
foreign minister Liz Truss are also among the remaining candidates.
Less familiar figures such as former equalities minister Kemi Badenoch
and junior trade minister Penny Mordaunt have won notable support from
other senior lawmakers and are popular with the party's members, who
will ultimately decide the winner.
On Wednesday, the remaining candidates will each have to secure 30 votes
from the party's 358 Members of Parliament (MPs) to get through to the
next round of voting, while the candidate with the fewest backers will
be eliminated regardless.
The vote is due between 1230 GMT and 1430 GMT, with the result announced
afterwards.
CHALLENGES AHEAD
Whoever wins will face a daunting in-tray while having to rebuild public
trust bruised by a series of scandals involving Johnson, from the
breaking of COVID-19 lockdown rules to appointing a lawmaker to
government despite having been told of allegations of sexual misconduct.
"I am ... proud of the leadership I have given and I will be leaving
soon with my head held high," Johnson, who is not endorsing any
successor, told parliament.
Britain's economy is facing rocketing inflation, high debt, and low
growth, leaving people grappling with the tightest squeeze on their
finances in decades. All this is set against the backdrop of an energy
crunch exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, which has sent fuel prices
soaring.
As the contest intensifies, some of the candidates have offered a series
of eye-catching tax cutting pledges, while some of their supporters have
turned on their rivals.
Sunak said on Tuesday it was not credible to offer more spending and
lower taxes, and that he was offering honesty "not fairy tales".
Culture minister Nadine Dorries, who was fiercely loyal to Johnson and
is now backing Truss, meanwhile accused Sunak's team of "dirty tricks/a
stitch up/dark arts" as part of a "Stop Liz" strategy.
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A general view of the front of 10 Downing Street following the
result of the no-confidence vote on British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson, in London, Britain June 6, 2022. REUTERS/Toby Melville
"I believe his (Sunak's) behaviour towards Boris Johnson, his
disloyalty means that I could not possibly support him," minister
for Brexit opportunities Jacob Rees-Mogg told Sky News on Wednesday.
Johnson, who won a large majority in December 2019, announced last
week that he would step down after a torrent of resignations from
ministers and with many Conservative Party lawmakers in open revolt.
His would-be successors have stressed how they would offer integrity
and trustworthiness in contrast, but face questions of their own,
such as why they backed Johnson for so long.
Sunak, one of the first ministers to quit, was - like Johnson -
fined for breaking lockdown rules.
Political opponents say the candidates have been focused only on
winning the support of the right-wing of the ruling party by talking
about tax cuts and extra defence spending while offering little
evidence of how it will be costed.
Polls also suggest that while the Conservatives argue among
themselves, they are falling significantly behind the main
opposition Labour Party, although no election is scheduled for a
couple of years.
"I am your best shot of winning that election. I am the candidate
that Labour fear," said Mordaunt as she officially launched her
campaign on Wednesday.
People really wanted "the good old stuff" of low tax, small state
and personal responsibility, said Mordaunt, the second-favourite to
win according to the latest bookmakers' odds.
Those who make it through on Wednesday will face a second vote of
Conservative MPs on Thursday, and the numbers will be whittled down
to a final two by July 21, with members then electing the new leader
who will be announced on Sept. 5.
The government has also said it would hold a confidence vote in
itself on Monday, something it is highly likely to win.
(Additional reporting by Alistair Smout, Andrew MacAskill, William
James, Faqrouq Suleiman and Muvija M; Writing by Michael Holden;
Editing by Catherine Evans, William Maclean)
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