17 Jul 2022

Rishi Sunak: Former chancellor leading the pack to replace Boris Johnson

6:22 pm on 17 July 2022

By Tom Espiner & Lucy Hooker for the BBC

Rishi Sunak has emerged as the frontrunner to succeed Boris Johnson as Conservative leader and British prime minister, although the contest has a long way to go.

Conservative MP and Britain's former Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak gestures as he talks with Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen (unsen) during a visit to see the construction works at Teesside Freeport in Redcar, north East England on July 16, 2022, as part of his bid to become the next leader of the Conservative party. - Britain's Prime Minister, and leader of the ruling Conservative party Boris Johnson last week announced his resignation as Tory leader after a cabinet insurrection, following months of controversies. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)

Rishi Sunak has won the first two leadership ballots. Photo: OLI SCARFF

The former chancellor has won the first two ballots of MPs but faces opposition from allies of Boris Johnson, who accuse him of treachery for helping to trigger the PM's downfall when he announced his resignation from the cabinet.

His bid to replace Johnson has attracted heavyweight support from former cabinet colleagues, and he is pitching himself as someone who would not cut taxes until inflation is under control, unlike most of his rivals.

Sunak became chancellor in February 2020 and within weeks found himself having to steer the UK economy as the pandemic and its lockdowns began.

For quite a few people, this teetotal millennial - he had his 40th birthday during the first lockdown - appeared to be a reassuringly steady hand at the tiller.

When he pledged to do "whatever it takes" to help people through the pandemic in the spring of 2020 - and unveiled support worth £350bn - his personal poll ratings went through the roof.

But the UK has continued to be buffeted by stormy economic weather, and Sunak himself has had to deal with the fallout of being fined by police for breaking lockdown rules in Downing Street in June 2020.

In April this year, some Conservative critics questioned whether the millionaire had grasped the scale of the cost of living squeeze facing struggling households.

In that month, the finances of Sunak and his family came under intense scrutiny, with the tax affairs of his heiress wife Akshata Murty placed in the spotlight.

She later announced she would start paying UK tax on her overseas earnings to relieve political pressure on her husband.

Labour posed a number of questions about his finances, including: has Sunak ever benefited from the use of tax havens?

The Independent suggested he had, with a report claiming he was listed as a beneficiary of tax haven trusts in the British Virgin Islands and Cayman Islands in 2020. A spokesperson for Sunak said they "did not recognise" the claims.

A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament's Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak gesturing as he presents the Spring budget statement to MPs.

Photo: AFP

Sunak's parents came to the UK from east Africa and are both of Indian origin.

He was born in Southampton in 1980, where his father was a GP, and his mother ran her own pharmacy.

He attended the exclusive private school Winchester College - and worked as a waiter at a Southampton curry house during his summer holidays - then went to Oxford to study philosophy, politics and economics.

While studying for an MBA at Stanford University he met his wife Akshata Murthy, the daughter of Narayana Murthy, Indian billionaire and co-founder of IT services giant Infosys. The couple have two daughters.

From 2001 to 2004, Sunak was an analyst for Goldman Sachs and was later a partner in two hedge funds.

He is thought to be one of the richest MPs but he has not commented publicly on how much he is worth.

Since 2015 he has been the Conservative MP for Richmond in Yorkshire and became a junior minister in Theresa May's government before being made chief secretary to the Treasury by her successor, Boris Johnson.

He was promoted to chancellor in February 2020 and was a vocal supporter of Johnson at first, but has resigned saying he felt his own approach to the economy was "fundamentally too different" to that of the PM.

Sunak campaigned for Leave in the EU referendum, telling the Yorkshire Post he believed it would make Britain 'freer, fairer and more prosperous'.

He said changing immigration rules was another key reason for his Leave vote: "I believe that appropriate immigration can benefit our country. But we must have control of our borders."

He voted for Theresa May's Brexit deal the three times it was put to parliament.

He was rewarded with his support of Boris Johnson with a promotion in July 2019 from local government minister to chief secretary to the Treasury.

In February 2020 Sajid Javid quit as chancellor following a power struggle with Number 10, and Sunak stepped into his shoes.

'Identity matters'

Like Javid, Sunak belongs to a generation born in the UK but with origins elsewhere, and he says this identity matters to him.

"My parents emigrated here, so you've got this generation of people who are born here, their parents were not born here, and they've come to this country to make a life," he said in an interview with the BBC in 2019.

"In terms of cultural upbringing, I'd be at the temple at the weekend - I'm a Hindu - but I'd also be at [Southampton Football Club] the Saints game as well on a Saturday - you do everything, you do both."

In the interview he said he had been fortunate not to have endured a lot of racism growing up, but that there was one incident that had stayed with him.

"I was just out with my younger brother and younger sister, and I think, probably pretty young, I was probably a mid-teenager, and we were out at a fast food restaurant and I was just looking after them. There were people sitting nearby, it was the first time I'd experienced it, just saying some very unpleasant things. The 'P' word."

"And it stung. I still remember it. It seared in my memory. You can be insulted in many different ways."

However, he said he "can't conceive of that happening today" in the UK.

- BBC

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