UK: Boris Johnson’s successor to be named in September
The race to replace outgoing UK prime miner Boris Johnson is set to conclude September 5, the ruling Conservative party said on Monday. Some 11 candidates are vying for the job, with the voting process beginning this week.
“I am very keen we get this concluded as smoothly, cleanly, and rapidly as possible,” said Graham Brady, the chair of the 1922 Committee of non-minerial Tory MPs in parliament, which is leading the selection process.
Under Britain’s parliamentary system, Boris Johnson’s replacement will automatically become prime miner without the need for a general election.
The Conservative leadership contest was triggered last week when Johnson was forced to step down. A flurry of more than 50 resignations hit the prime miner in recent weeks, as his own team turned on him over his scandal-ridden premiership.
In a bid to speed up the process, candidates must have at least 20 MPs backing them in order to enter the race, up from the usual eight, and any candidate who fails to get the support of 30 MPs in the first ballot will be eliminated.
Johnson was asked directly if he would endorse any particular candidates, but he declined to do so. “The job of the prime miner at this stage is to let the party decide, let them get on with it, and to continue delivering on the projects that we were elected to deliver,” Johnson said.
Who is vying for the job?
The new Conservative leader will be chosen in a two-stage election, in which the 358 Conservative lawmakers reduce the race to two candidates through a series of elimination votes. Candidates who fail to get at least 30 votes are eliminated at each round.
Finally, the last two candidates standing are voted on party members across the country.
Within the long l of potential successors are former finance miner Rishi Sunak and former health miner Sajid Javid. Their departures from Johnson’s cabinet sparked the wave of resignations that brought down his government.
But his foreign Secretary Liz Truss and Sunak’s successor Nadhim Zahawi have also declared bids, while Home Secretary Priti Patel is reportedly deciding whether or not to run.
Sunak is considered to be a front-runner and several contenders are vocally setting themselves apart rejecting the tax increases Sunak introduced to shore up UK finances battered the coronavirus pandemic and Brexit, with candidates say they will get rid of them.
Whoever manages to win the leadership race will have a number of challenges to contend with off the bat. Britain’s economy is facing rocketing inflation, high debt, and low growth, representing the tightest squeeze on British people’s finances in decades, all during an energy crunch exacerbated the war in Ukraine which has sent fuel prices soaring.