While the two candidates will make their arguments in televised debates and in front of voters across the country, postal ballots from approximately 180,000 conservative campaigners are expected to be received next week and returned until September 2, when the three will announce the winner and the next British head of government.
Here are some of the facts that have come to light in recent weeks as former Finance Minister Rishi Sunak and current Foreign Secretary Liz Truss have moved from second-tier figures to the forefront of British politics. SupportersBy staying in government rather than riding the wave of resignations that toppled Boris Johnson, Liz Truss was seen as a natural successor, a succession candidate. This loyalty earned him the support of heavyweights such as Jacob Rees-Mogg, Nadine Dorries or Iain Duncan Smith, and die-hard Eurosceptics such as Steve Baker and defeated candidate Suella Braverman.
Rishi Sunak, at one point seen as Boris Johnson’s ‘dolphin’, was one of the first to ‘jump ship’ within minutes of minister Sajid Javid’s resignation. Of the eight candidates, he has the most support within the parliamentary group, including Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab, Transport Minister, Grand Shops, former Brexit minister David Davis and deposed candidate Jeremy. Hunting.. Surveys and bookmakersWith the parliamentary committee and the government effectively fragmented between the two candidates, it is up to the rank and file to decide the winner of the election. A poll published by YouGov on July 21 found Liz Truss with 62% of the vote and Rishi Sunak with 38% among conservative activists, although 20% indicated they were undecided or did not intend to vote.
The first two-way debate on the BBC on July 25 did not help the former finance minister either. A YouGov survey indicated that 50% of a sample of enthusiasts who watched the show thought Druss was better, while only 39% liked Sunak, who were accused of “masculinizing” (making or explaining something to a woman). Often interrupts the female contestant.
Rishi Sunak’s defeat is almost a foregone conclusion with bookmakers, recovering from a disadvantage to beaten rival Benny Mordant but unable to keep up with Truss’s rising odds. The Daily Telegraph, based on the Oddschecker barometer, which compares offers from various bookmakers, gives the Foreign Minister an 80% chance of winning and Sunak only a 20% chance of winning.
Inconvenient truths Since 2014, the video has been circulating on social media as a joke, when Liz Truss scoffed that it was a “disgrace” that Britain imports so much of the pears and cheese it consumes.
But more embarrassing than the Conservative Party’s congressional speech or campaigning against Brexit in 2016 is Lis Truss’s background as an anti-monarchy activist for the Liberal Democrats, recorded by the BBC in 1994, when the Foreign Secretary was 19.
In the “treasure box” of a British public station, a 2007 video of Rishi Sunak was also discovered, in which he was interviewed about his middle-class family sending him to an elite private school. Class friends, but “not of the working class”.
This episode contributed to a profile that emerged during his tenure as Finance Minister. Last year, Sunak posted a photo on social media of herself going budget with a bar of chocolate and soda, but wearing sandals by an Italian designer that cost around £95 (€113).
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