The Sentinel-Record

U.K. hopeful asks for positive runoff

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — A contender to replace British Prime Minister Boris Johnson accused opponents of “mudslingin­g” as the Conservati­ve Party contest ended its first week on Friday with five candidates remaining.

Penny Mordaunt, a junior government minister and Royal Navy reservist, has surged to become the bookies’ favorite to become Britain’s next prime minister. Former Treasury chief

Rishi Sunak remains the of- ficial frontrunne­r, with the most support from Conservati­ve lawmakers in the voting so far.

Voting by Conservati­ve legislator­s is due to continue next week until there are two candidates, who will face a runoff vote among all Conservati­ve party members. The winner of the party race is to be announced on Sept. 5 and will automatica­lly become prime minister.

Mordaunt is second, while Foreign Secretary Liz Truss is in third place and seeking to become the unity candidate for those on the party’s right wing who worry that Sunak lacks commitment to cutting taxes.

The contest has turned nasty.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, a Cabinet minister who supports Truss, called Sunak a “socialist” because of the billions he spent to keep the economy afloat during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mordaunt urged the party to run “a positive contest.”

“I don’t want mudslingin­g,” she said, adding that opponents were “trying to stop me getting into the final two,” when a winner will be decided by Conservati­ve Party members.

Sunak, whose resignatio­n as finance minister last week helped topple Johnson, is running as an experience­d minster who can guide the country through the economic turbulence caused by the pandemic and the war in Ukraine. But he is facing attacks from Johnson allies who consider him a turncoat.

Truss is touting her internatio­nal experience, as Britain’s top diplomat and a former trade secretary, and is vowing to take a tough line with the European Union in post-Brexit trade spats.

Mordaunt’s chief selling points are an air of normality and a distance from the scandal-tarnished Johnson administra­tion. She did not serve in Johnson’s Cabinet.

Also in the race are former Equalities Minister Kemi Badenoch, a rising star of the party’s libertaria­n right, and centrist backbench lawmaker Tom Tugendhat. Both are under pressure to drop out and throw their support behind one of the three frontrunne­rs but say they will fight on and try to build support through televised candidates’ debates over the weekend.

Johnson won the Conservati­ves a commanding parliament­ary majority in 2019, but has been beset by accusation­s that he was too close to party donors, protected supporters from bullying and corruption allegation­s, and misled Parliament about government office parties that broke covid-19 lockdown rules.

None of the contenders is seeking closer ties with the EU, and none has renounced Johnson’s most contentiou­s policies: legislatio­n to rip up parts of the U.K.’s Brexit deal with the bloc, and a plan to send some asylum-seekers arriving in Britain to Rwanda that is being challenged in the courts.

Tim Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London, said the issues most important to Conservati­ves — above all Brexit — did not reflect the priorities of the country as a whole. That could be a problem for the party at the next national election, due by 2024.

“There’s always a potential mismatch between what a party wants — because a party is much more ideologica­l — and what voters want,” Bale said. “[The Conservati­ve Party] has elevated Brexit to sacred levels, and I think that sometimes blinds them to the economic realities that this country is facing.”*

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Mordaunt
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Sunak
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Truss

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