The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Boris doesn’t hold grudges say friends of Zahawi as Chancellor joins the fray

- By Brendan Carlin and Anna Mikhailova

NADHIM ZAHAWI launched his pitch for the Conservati­ve leadership last night with a thinly veiled swipe at his rival Rishi Sunak, saying that ‘we cannot tax our way into prosperity’.

Mr Zahawi appeared to take aim at the man he replaced as Chancellor in dramatic circumstan­ces last week by declaring that ‘the burden of tax is too high’.

The comments will be seen as a bid to woo Tory MPs who accuse Mr Sunak of trashing the Tories’ low-tax credential­s.

But The Mail on Sunday was told that Mr Zahawi began distancing himself from his predecesso­r within 24 hours of replacing him.

Sources said Mr Zahawi told a Tory fund-raising event on Wednesday that ‘being Conservati­ve Chancellor with Conservati­ve values meant being the party of low tax’.

Coincident­ally, the new Chancellor was speaking at the same Carlton Club venue where a week earlier the ex-Tory deputy whip Chris Pincher was accused of groping two men in an incident that ultimately led to Boris Johnson’s resignatio­n.

Guests said Mr Zahawi, who had replaced Mr Sunak as the guest at a fund-raiser for Bolsover Tory MP Mark Fletcher, also aimed a gentle dig at Mr Johnson by saying ‘the party is bigger than one person’.

But former education secretary Mr Zahawi’s leadership launch came amid claims that he did himself ‘immense damage’ last week by accepting promotion from Mr Johnson only to then call on him to step down.

One fellow Minister and Johnson loyalist said last night: ‘Nadhim’s behaviour last week has put a lot of people off him.’

However, sources close to Mr Zahawi told The Mail on Sunday that the Prime Minister ‘holds no grudges’ over his behaviour last week and wants him to deliver ‘a Conservati­ve economic strategy’ as Chancellor.

Mr Zahawi, who also served as the Covid vaccines minister during the pandemic, put reducing taxes at the heart of his pitch to succeed Mr Johnson.

The millionair­e ex-businessma­n, who co-founded the polling company YouGov, said: ‘The burden of tax is simply too high.

‘As an entreprene­ur and businessma­n, I know that lower taxes are how we create a thriving and dynamic economy.’

Insisting that ‘taxes for individual­s, families and business’ would be lower ‘on my watch’, Mr # Zahawi added: ‘Overseeing the highest tax burden since 1949 is not the Conservati­ve way. We cannot tax our way into prosperity.’

As a Kurd who was born in Iraq and arrived in the UK at age 11 speaking no English, he has previously hailed Britain as the ‘best country in the world’.

But yesterday Mr Zahawi – who also said ‘the Conservati­ve Party has made me who I am today’ – warned that the Britain of ‘boundless optimism and opportunit­y’ that existed under Margaret Thatcher had been lost.

Reaching out to Conservati­ve Brexiteers, however, he appeared to raise Britain’s departure from the EU as one way to restore those lost opportunit­ies. He said: ‘Thanks to Brexit, we are now a free nation. Let’s not just talk about the opportunit­ies that follow, let’s take them.’

Mr Zahawi also vowed to increase defence spending and continue with his education reforms.

 ?? ?? TAKING AIM: Nadhim Zahawi, who has taken a swipe at Rishi Sunak
TAKING AIM: Nadhim Zahawi, who has taken a swipe at Rishi Sunak

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