August 24, 2022
2 mins read

Sunak attempts to catch up with Truss at Birmingham  

A recent survey of Tory voters said Truss has consolidated her lead over former chancellor Rishi Sunak in the race to become the Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party…reports Asian Lite News

As the result of the Prime Minister race nears, Rishi Sunak made his last bit of efforts to salvage the contest for the Conservative party leadership that most surveys favour Liz Truss to win.

During the 10th round of hustings in Birmingham, Sunak pitched values like patriotism, family, hard work and service to build a better Britain. “We need to do three things. First, we need to build trust. We need to rebuild our economy and then reunite our country,” he said.

Speaking to the Tory members on the economy, the former British chancellor said that he will reform the publicly funded healthcare system in England to prevent constantly throwing more money.

Rishi Sunak, who claims to have chosen an honest way, said, “I have not chosen to say what people want to hear but I have said things that I believe the country needs to hear.”

With the final results due in the first week of September, several surveys indicate that Sunak is bound to lose to Foreign Secretary Liz Truss in the Conservative party leadership race.

The result of the vote to decide who will replace Boris Johnson as the next British Prime Minister is due on September 5.

A recent survey of Tory voters said Truss has consolidated her lead over former chancellor Rishi Sunak in the race to become the Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party.

The latest Conservative Home survey released last Wednesday has produced much the same result as it did when it was last published earlier this month.

“Then, Rishi Sunak was on 26 per cent, Liz Truss was on 58 per cent and 12 per cent were undecided. Now, those figures are 28 per cent, 60 per cent and nine per cent. We have rolled Neither and Won’t Vote into the same column this time round,” said the Conservative Home survey of 961 party members, who either already have or will be casting their ballots in the leadership race.

Once members who fall under the “don’t know” category are equally distributed between the two contenders, Truss maintains a 32-point lead over the former Minister Sunak.

“If our don’t knows are divided evenly between the two candidates, an exercise we carried out last time, Truss goes up to 64 per cent and Sunak to 32 per cent – and so maintains the 32 point lead she had last time round. YouGov’s last poll, which closed on August 2nd, the day our last survey went out, gave her a 38-point lead. Opinium’s latest poll, conducted last week, gave her a 22-point lead,” the survey added.

The sum of Opinium, YouGov and Conservative Home surveys is that Truss is set to win by a margin roughly between 70-30 and 60-40 – perhaps a bit higher, perhaps a bit lower.

ALSO READ-Sunak signals he wouldn’t serve in Truss govt

Previous Story

Doraiswami is India’s new High Commissioner to UK

Next Story

UK, Ukraine launch talks on digital trade deal  

Latest from -Top News

US Blacklists BLA, Majeed Brigade

US designates Balochistan Liberation Army, Majeed Brigade as terror organisations…reports Asian Lite News US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has formally listed the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and its affiliate, the Majeed

Highway Protest Halts PoGB-China Trade

The protestors have called for exclusion of residents of Pakistan-occupied Gilgit Baltistan from income, sales and other federal taxes on products imported from China via Khunjerab Pass, Trade and travel between Pakistan-occupied

Dhaka’s Ruling Party Rejects Kolkata Link

Slamming the Yunus administration, the Awami League alleged that “the illegal usurper government is actively spreading these baseless rumours….reports Asian Lite News Bangladesh’s Awami League has rejected media reports that it opened
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Macron, Sunak agree to tackle Channel boats

It’s the latest and biggest measure in years of efforts

Legislation to pave way for new National Holocaust Memorial in UK

Located next to the Houses of Parliament, the memorial will