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Race for UK PM: Liz Truss favourite to win as voting ends

The gruelling race to replace Boris Johnson as the Conservative Party leader and the British Prime Miner closed on Friday evening, the deadline for Tory members to reger their choice between Indian-origin former Chancellor Rishi Sunak or Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.
Sunak, 42, and Truss, 47, have gone head-to-head in a dozen hustings up and down the UK over the past month to win over the votes of an estimated 160,000 Tory electorate.
With the ballots now closed, the result will be declared at 12.30pm local time (17.00 pm ) on Monday returning officer Sir Graham Brady, the Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ) said.
“This hustings programme has shown the strength of our party across the UK, with sold out events filling Wembley Arena to Perth Concert Hall,” said Conservative Party Chairman Andrew Stephenson.
“I’d like to thank Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss for participating in what, at times, must have been a gruelling schedule in good spirits and giving our members the opportunity to question them up front and personal, answering over 600 questions and putting themselves under the spotlight… Whatever the result come Monday, I know our party is ready to unite around a new Leader and tackle the challenges we face as a country ahead,” he said.
The CCHQ said 19,859 attended the 12 hustings events and a total of 2.2 million people viewed them across online platforms.
The contest began in mid-July, when Prime Miner Johnson was forced out a minerial revolt over a string of scandals amidst the Covid-19 lockdown.
The original field of 11 contenders was whittled down to two in a series of Tory MP ballots, with the final two going into a run-off to be decided the membership, which stands at around 160,000.
While the British Indian former miner pegged his campaign on getting a grip on soaring inflation as an immediate priority, the foreign miner has pledged tax cuts from day one in office.
Overall, it is how they plan to tackle the cost-of-living crisis faced the British public that has dominated the debates even as the duo addressed their final hustings in London on Wednesday night, where they reiterated many of their pledges.
“I have put restoring trust at the heart of the campaign,” said Sunak, in response to a question about integrity and ethics.
While he was the clear frontrunner in the leadership contest in the first round of voting – when Tory MPs voted to select the two finals in the contest, the Indian-origin finance miner has been on the back foot in the pre-poll surveys of Tory members who have a vote in this election.
Fierce loyalty to outgoing Prime Miner Boris Johnson is being cited as a key motivating factor in the choice of a majority for Truss, who was not among the miners who resigned in the days before Johnson’s forced exit from 10 Downing Street.
A staunchly low-tax favouring Conservative Party’s attraction to Truss’ tax cutting promises is the other key factor behind her as the frontrunner to succeed Johnson.
However, Sunak’s supporters will be hoping for a repeat of the Brexit referendum result from June 2016 when Britain voted in favour of leaving the European Union (EU) and confounded most forecasts pre-referendum surveys.
The 2019 general election, which brought Johnson to power with a thumping majority, was also against the forecasts of many poll pundits, who were predicting a less definitive result and anti-incumbency factor going against the Tories.
The winner of the online and postal ballots being cast since voting opened in early August will be announced on Monday, with the new leader heading for Scotland for an audience with the Queen at her summer residence of Balmoral Castle. Either Sunak or Truss will then address their first Prime Miner’s Questions in the House of Commons on Wednesday.
Johnson, who led the Tories to a landslide victory at the 2019 election, will remain in office until the transfer of power is complete.

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