Increasingly bitter race to replace UK PM Johnson set to narrow down
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[July 18, 2022]
By Elizabeth Piper
LONDON (Reuters) - Another leadership
hopeful will be knocked out of the race to become Britain's next prime
minister on Monday, leaving four remaining candidates in what has become
an acrimonious and divisive contest to replace Boris Johnson.
Since Johnson said he would resign earlier this month after his
scandal-ridden administration lost the support of many in his ruling
Conservative Party, the race to replace him has taken an ugly turn with
several contenders turning their fire on the frontrunner, former finance
minister Rishi Sunak.
He has faced criticism on everything from his record in government to
the wealth of his wife by those vying to make it to a run-off between
the final two candidates, with foreign secretary Liz Truss and Penny
Mordaunt, a junior trade minister and former defence minister, his most
likely opponents.
The race has become focused on pledges, or non-pledges, to cut taxes, at
a time when Britain's economy is beset with spiralling inflation, high
debt and low growth that have left people with the tightest squeeze on
their finances in decades.
At a televised debate on Sunday, the five candidates, including former
equalities minister Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat, chair of
parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee, attacked each other over their
records.
"It is inevitable that the debate will become increasingly heated. There
is, after all, rather a lot at stake," Conservative former minister
David Jones told Reuters.
"But the nature of the Conservative party is to have vigorous debate and
then coalesce once a new leader is selected. I have no doubt that the
same will happen on this occasion."
The ruling Conservative Party's 358 lawmakers will whittle the field
down to the final two this week, staging votes which will eject the
candidate with the fewest votes each time. Monday's vote results will be
announced at 1900 GMT.
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Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks to CEOs as he attends
the Farnborough International Airshow, in Farnborough, Britain, July
18, 2022. Frank Augstein/Pool via REUTERS
The party's 200,000 members will then select the
winner, who will become Britain's fourth new prime minister in six
years.
Sunak still holds the largest number of votes among Conservative
lawmakers, but Truss is catching up and Mordaunt is trying to
reignite her campaign that took off in the early days, making her
the initial favourite with bookmakers, but which has somewhat
stalled in the face of hostile briefings to the media.
Truss took aim at Sunak on Sunday by accusing him of raising taxes
to "their highest level for 70 years" and choking off economic
growth. Sunak retorted that Truss's tax cuts were more socialist
than they were Conservative.
Truss's campaign tried to buttress their argument by pointing to a
report by the CEBR, The Centre for Economic and Business Research, a
private sector think tank, showing there was more room for manoeuvre
from higher tax receipts.
"Liz (Truss) is the only candidate for PM with a clear plan to get
the economy moving and help hard-working families. Now is not the
time for business as usual on the economy," a spokesperson for Truss
said.
"The CEBR analysis shows that there is money for tax cuts whilst
still bringing debt down."
But Citi said in a note that Truss's "policy platform still poses
the greatest risk from an economic perspective in our view with an
unseemly combination of pro-cyclical tax cuts and institutional
disruption".
(Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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