Rishi Sunak, heir apparent who ran afoul of Boris Johnson

Full Screen
1 / 3

FILE - Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak attends a cabinet meeting at 10 Downing Street, London, May 24, 2022. Britains Conservative Party will choose two finalists on Wednesday, July 20, 2022, in the contest to replace Boris Johnson, as the divisive, unrepentant leader makes his final appearance in Parliament as prime minister. (Daniel Leal/Pool via AP, File)

LONDON ā€“ Rishi Sunak was seen as Boris Johnsonā€™s natural heir, until he turned on the prime minister who put him in charge of Britainā€™s economy.

The former Treasury chief, who quit earlier this month after questioning Johnsonā€™s competence and ethics, is one of the two final contenders to replace Johnson as Conservative Party leader and prime minister ā€” but he faces fierce opposition from Johnson and his allies, who consider him a turncoat.

Recommended Videos



Either Sunak or Liz Truss, who has led the U.K.ā€™s response to Russiaā€™s invasion of Ukraine as foreign secretary, will be chosen in a ballot of 180,000 Conservative members to be the partyā€™s new leader. The winner will be announced Sept. 5 and will automatically become Britain's new prime minister.

At 42, Sunak would be the youngest prime minister in more than 200 years and the countryā€™s first South Asian leader.

Sunak was born in Southampton, on Englandā€™s south coast, in 1980 to Indian parents who were both born in East Africa. He grew up in a middle-class family, his father a family doctor and his mother a pharmacist. He has described how his parents saved to pay for a private education, and he attended Winchester College, one of Britainā€™s toniest and most expensive boarding schools.

There, he mingled with the elite. Rivals recently dug up a clip from a 2001 TV documentary about the class system in which the 21-year-old Sunak said he had ā€œfriends who are aristocrats, I have friends who are upper class, I have friends who are, you know, working class ā€” well, not working class.ā€

After high school Sunak studied philosophy, politics and economics at Oxford University ā€” the degree of choice for future prime ministers ā€” then got an MBA at Stanford University.

He worked for the investment bank Goldman Sachs and as a hedge fund manager and lived in the U.S., where he met his wife, Akshata Murty. They have two daughters.

Returning to Britain, Sunak was elected to Parliament for the safe Tory seat of Richmond, in Yorkshire, in 2015 and served in several junior ministerial posts before being appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer by Johnson early in 2020, just before the pandemic hit.

An instinctive low-tax politician who idolizes former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, he nonetheless forked out billions in government money to keep people and businesses afloat during the pandemic.

His furlough program, which paid the salaries of millions of workers when they were temporarily laid off, made him the most popular member of the government ā€” a status ā€œDishy Rishiā€ burnished with slick social media messages that stressed his own brand more than the governmentā€™s.

Sunakā€™s sure-footedness has wobbled over the years. Critics said a campaign to get people to eat in restaurants after lockdown restrictions were eased in the summer of 2020 contributed to another wave of COVID-19.

He also has faced questions about his wealth and finances. His wife is the daughter of the billionaire founder of Indian tech giant Infosys, and the couple is worth 730 million pounds ($877 million), according to the Sunday Times Rich list. In April it emerged that Murty did not pay U.K. tax on her overseas income.

The status was legal but it looked bad at a time when Sunak was raising the taxes of millions of Britons. Sunak also was criticized for holding onto his American Green Card ā€” which signifies an intent to settle in the U.S. ā€” for two years after he became Britainā€™s finance minister. Sunak was cleared of wrongdoing, but the revelations still hurt.

Sunak also was fined by police, along with Johnson and more than 80 others, for attending a party in the prime ministerā€™s office in 2020 that broke coronavirus lockdown rules. He said he had attended inadvertently and briefly.

Sunak's leadership campaign has been the most professional of any contender, from a slick launch video to a coterie of aides to marshal support.

He has depicted himself as the candidate of grown-up decisions and fiscal probity, calling rivalsā€™ tax-cutting plans reckless and vowing to get inflation under control. He frequently mentions his political idol, Thatcher, but has nonetheless been cast by rivals as a left-wing, tax-and-spend politician, and has been subjected to mudslinging by Johnsonā€™s allies.

Sunak is a popular candidate among Tory lawmakers, but now must win over the wider party, where his slick image could be an asset, or a liability.

Steven Fielding, professor of political history at the University of Nottingham, says Sunak ā€œhas got the demeanor of a daytime chat show host.ā€

ā€œHeā€™s plausible, heā€™s glib,ā€ Fielding said. ā€œHeā€™s very like (former Prime Minister) David Cameron in that regard. Heā€™s plausible, and yet somehow you think youā€™re being lied to.ā€

___

This version corrects the number of people fined over ā€œpartygateā€ to more than 80, not 50.

___

Follow all of APā€™s coverage of British politics at https://apnews.com/hub/boris-johnson


Recommended Videos