Sunak labels himself ‘underdog’
British PM candidate Truss takes advantage in latest poll
By Reuters Published: Jul 24, 2022 08:53 PM
Former British finance minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday described himself as the underdog in the contest to become Britain's next prime minister.
Sunak's resignation helped trigger a revolt that saw Prime Minister Boris Johnson agree to step down after a series of scandals. Members of the ruling Conservative Party will vote for a successor over the summer, with an announcement due on September 5.
Sunak led all rounds of the voting among party lawmakers to reduce the field to two candidates.
But it is Foreign Secretary Liz Truss who seems to have gained the advantage so far among the 200,000 members of the governing party who will ultimately choose the winner.
Truss held a 24-point lead over Sunak in a YouGov poll of Conservative Party members published on Thursday.
"Be in no doubt, I am the underdog," Sunak said in a speech in the central England town of Grantham, the birthplace of former prime minister Margaret Thatcher.
"The forces that be want this to be a coronation for the other candidate, but I think members want a choice and they are prepared to listen."
Truss would be only Britain's third female prime minister after Thatcher and Theresa May, while Sunak would be the country's first leader of Indian origin.
So far the campaigning focus has been on pledges, or non-pledges, to cut taxes at a time when many people are struggling, as well as defense spending and energy policy.
In his speech, Sunak laid out what he called "common sense Thatcherism," promising careful management of the economy before tax cuts.
He questioned the morality of immediate tax cuts, proposed by Truss, at a time of soaring inflation and criticized as arbitrary her pledge to increase defense spending to 3 percent of the GDP by 2030.
Truss says tax cuts are needed to stimulate growth.
"It is wrong to take money from people that we don't need to take when people across the country are struggling with the cost of living crisis," she told reporters in Kent, south east England, after meeting party members.
In an interview for Saturday's Times newspaper, Sunak said he would put the government on a crisis footing upon taking office.
Truss has also promised to scrap all remaining European Union laws that still apply in Britain by 2023.