Deccan Chronicle

If Boris goes, who’s next: Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak?

- Katy Balls By arrangemen­t with the

Even Boris Johnson’s longest-standing supporters now think he might be on the way out. His admission that he attended a Downing Street garden party as the rest of the country was living under strict Covid-19 rules has proved the final straw for politician­s ground down by months of negative headlines. MPs complain they’ve had enough, and don’t think he can recover. But there are two outstandin­g questions that are much harder to answer: when does he go? And who exactly will replace him?

Until now, ministers had been talking up the May local elections as the crunch point. If it was a disaster for the Conservati­ves then a confidence vote could be brought against Johnson, with a leadership contest to follow in the summer and the winner in place by the time of the party conference in Birmingham. But after his admission, several MPs think they can’t wait so long for a new leader. The damage keeps accumulati­ng.

While some MPs are still keen to hold on until Sue Gray publishes the findings of her inquiry into illicit Downing Street parties — which could still take weeks — there is a growing sense that the current situation is untenable.

An end to Covid restrictio­ns — which come up for renewal at the end of the month — could offer the PM an opportunit­y to depart with dignity. One former minister argues Johnson should use the lifting of all restrictio­ns in England to say he has led the nation through Brexit and Covid and it is someone else’s turn to rebuild the country.

One veteran MP says those close to Johnson should persuade him to leave on his own terms rather than risk being forced out. “There is a onein-five chance he walks,” says an MP. But if he clings on, there is one obstacle that has the potential to keep him in Downing Street for some time to come: working out who his successor should be.

There is little consensus on who would make for a better PM. “There is no unity candidate so it has the potential to get very messy,” says a minister. As one former minister puts it: “I am very angry at Boris but if the answer is Liz Truss, I will keep him in position.”

Various would-be campaigns have begun quietly sounding out supporters. “There is a lot of soft tapping-up going on,” says one member of government. “No one is doing drinks parties really — no one wants to go to them particular­ly after the Downing Street debacle. Instead, it’s roundtable­s with supporters of the candidates.”

Parties always go for the opposite when replacing a leader and the ultra-organised Rishi Sunak is a clear contrast to Johnson. The chancellor of the exchequer could bring a seriousnes­s to the role that Johnson has lacked. The fact that he has not been embroiled in any serious party rows — despite living next door to the PM — works in his favour. He has spent the past week meeting with MPs to discuss the cost-of-living crisis, and using these meetings to underline his credential­s as a low-tax Tory who is only raising taxes under duress.

However, Sunak’s critics are already preparing their own attack lines. Expect to hear other campaigns say that the chancellor is the “Dom Cummings” candidate. Johnson’s former senior adviser has played a key role in weakening the PM’s position, with disclosure­s over the Downing Street refurbishm­ent and parties, yet he only has good things to say about the chancellor. “Dom is a dirty word in the Tory party. So, any associatio­n would be toxic,” says one government aide.

Sunak’s main rival in any contest will be Liz Truss. The foreign secretary is viewed as the lowtax libertaria­n and is the favourite among the grassroots, topping an opinion poll of Tory members. She is also the favourite among red wall MPs. In Westminste­r, though, she is seen as the Marmite candidate: she has passionate critics as well as fans.

But this wouldn’t simply be a two-horse race. As the runner-up in the 2019 leadership contest,

Jeremy Hunt could return as the anti-Johnson candidate — untainted by the past few years. One of those who knows the parliament­ary party best notes that his campaign “never stopped”. The dark horse candidate is Nadhim Zahawi. Promoted to Cabinet in the autumn reshuffle, the education secretary is a new face. His supporters are making a three-pronged pitch to MPs: he was vaccines minister during the rollout so can take some of the credit. He polls well with the public and his backstory sets him apart: arriving in Britain as a refugee aged nine speaking no English.

On the right of the party, Mark Harper, former chief whip, is attracting some support for his work opposing restrictio­ns through the Covid Recovery Group. Others such as Priti Patel could well throw their hats into the ring. Already talk has turned to who former chief whip Gavin Williamson would support: he played a key role in the parliament­ary manoeuvrin­gs of both Theresa May and Boris Johnson. He tends to back winners.

The Tory majority was achieved due to an electoral coalition built more by Johnson’s personal brand than the Conservati­ve party more broadly. That means predicting who could succeed Johnson is an even harder task than normal.

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