LONDON - Former finance minister Rishi Sunak said Tuesday his campaign to be Britain’s next prime minister would avoid any attempt to “demonise” Boris Johnson, despite having helped trigger his dramatic downfall.
Sunak, 42, and another minister quit last week in protest at Johnson’s scandal-hit administration, setting off a wave of government resignations that forced him to step down as Conservative leader.
Johnson is staying on in Downing Street as prime minister until an internal party contest finds his successor. The result is due on September 5. But the main opposition Labour party said it would try to force a vote of no confidence in the government to try to get him out of office sooner.
Labour leader Keir Starmer said that by their actions last week, the Tories had “concluded that the prime minister is unfit for office”. “They can’t now let him cling on for weeks and weeks and weeks until September 5,” he argued. “It would be intolerable for the country.”
The no-confidence motion is expected to be voted on by the House of Commons on Wednesday. Sunak, who was appointed chancellor of the exchequer in early 2020 just as the Covid pandemic hit, is seen as one of the frontrunners for the Tory leadership.
But he refused to distance himself from Johnson’s administration, in which he played a key role supporting businesses and workers during the pandemic.
He called Johnson “one of the most remarkable people I’ve met”. “Whatever some commentators may say, he has a good heart,” he told cheering supporters, after one Johnson ally accused Sunak of being a treacherous “snake”. “But did I disagree with him? Frequently. Is he flawed? Yes, and so are the rest of us. Was it no longer working? Yes, and that’s why I resigned.
“But let me be clear, I will have no part in a rewriting of history that seeks to demonise Boris, exaggerate his faults or deny his efforts.” Johnson’s departure was a spectacular fall from grace for a politician who secured a landslide election win in December 2019.
Sunak, 42, and another minister quit last week in protest at Johnson’s scandal-hit administration, setting off a wave of government resignations that forced him to step down as Conservative leader.
Johnson is staying on in Downing Street as prime minister until an internal party contest finds his successor. The result is due on September 5. But the main opposition Labour party said it would try to force a vote of no confidence in the government to try to get him out of office sooner.
Labour leader Keir Starmer said that by their actions last week, the Tories had “concluded that the prime minister is unfit for office”. “They can’t now let him cling on for weeks and weeks and weeks until September 5,” he argued. “It would be intolerable for the country.”
The no-confidence motion is expected to be voted on by the House of Commons on Wednesday. Sunak, who was appointed chancellor of the exchequer in early 2020 just as the Covid pandemic hit, is seen as one of the frontrunners for the Tory leadership.
But he refused to distance himself from Johnson’s administration, in which he played a key role supporting businesses and workers during the pandemic.
He called Johnson “one of the most remarkable people I’ve met”. “Whatever some commentators may say, he has a good heart,” he told cheering supporters, after one Johnson ally accused Sunak of being a treacherous “snake”. “But did I disagree with him? Frequently. Is he flawed? Yes, and so are the rest of us. Was it no longer working? Yes, and that’s why I resigned.
“But let me be clear, I will have no part in a rewriting of history that seeks to demonise Boris, exaggerate his faults or deny his efforts.” Johnson’s departure was a spectacular fall from grace for a politician who secured a landslide election win in December 2019.