Tag Archives: Sunak

British PM Rishi Sunak Fires Home Sec. Who Branded Pro-Palestinian Marches “Hate Crimes” – Democracy Now!

  1. British PM Rishi Sunak Fires Home Sec. Who Branded Pro-Palestinian Marches “Hate Crimes” Democracy Now!
  2. Suella Braverman sacked as home secretary as Rishi Sunak reshuffles his cabinet Al Jazeera English
  3. Suella Braverman’s Most Controversial Moments as UK Home Secretary The New York Times
  4. Suella Braverman was the pantomime villain, but don’t expect the story to change now she’s gone The Guardian
  5. Suella Braverman has gone, but she proved that hateful xenophobia is never far from the surface in Britain The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Air Quality alert: Canada wildfire smoke, Georgia carnival shooting, Sunak in US | LiveNOW from FOX – LiveNOW from FOX

  1. Air Quality alert: Canada wildfire smoke, Georgia carnival shooting, Sunak in US | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  2. Christie enters 2024 race, U.S. response to Ukraine dam collapse, more | America Decides CBS News
  3. Malibu Sniper sentenced to 119 years for killing camping father in front of kids | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  4. Air quality alert: Canada wildfires smoke floods US skies, Kilauea volcano erupts | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX
  5. 2 killed in Richmond, VA shooting, Chris Christie announces 2024 campaign & more | LiveNOW from FOX LiveNOW from FOX

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Rishi Sunak under pressure over what he knew about claims against Dominic Raab – BBC

  1. Rishi Sunak under pressure over what he knew about claims against Dominic Raab BBC
  2. No 10 refuses to deny Sunak was given informal warning about Raab’s behaviour before he made him deputy PM – as it happened The Guardian
  3. PMQs: Starmer cites Independent story while grilling Sunak over Zahawi appointment The Independent
  4. Prime Minister’s Questions should have come with a trigger warning The Independent
  5. Labour accuses Rishi Sunak of being ‘too weak’ to sack Dominic Raab over bullying claims Financial Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UK PM Rishi Sunak Gets Fined By Police For Failing To Wear Seatbelt

British police issued PM Rishi Sunak with a fine for riding in a car without wearing his seat belt.

London:

British police issued Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with a fine on Friday for riding in a car without wearing his seat belt in order to film a clip for social media.

Sunak, who apologised on Thursday for what he called a “brief error of judgement”, filmed a video in the back seat of his car while travelling in the north of England, without wearing a seat belt.

“Following the circulation of a video on social media showing an individual failing to wear a seat belt while a passenger in a moving car in Lancashire we have today issued a 42-year-old man from London with a conditional offer of fixed penalty,” Lancashire Police said on Twitter.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Rishi Sunak Snubs Pak-Origin MP Over BBC Series On PM Modi And 2002 Riots

Ministry of External Affairs also reacted to the BBC report.

London:

Defending Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the British Parliament, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak distanced himself from the BBC documentary series, saying he “doesn’t agree with the characterization” of his Indian counterpart.

Mr Sunak made these remarks on the controversial documentary that was raised in the British Parliament by Pakistan-origin MP Imran Hussain.

“The UK government’s position on this has been clear and long-standing and hasn’t changed, of course, we don’t tolerate persecution where it appears anywhere but I am not sure I agree at all with the characterization that the honourable gentleman has put forward to,” he said while responding to Hussain’s question on the BBC report.

UK’s National broadcaster BBC aired a two-part series attacking PM Narendra Modi’s tenure as Gujarat Chief Minister during the Gujarat riots of 2002. The documentary sparked outrage and was removed from select platforms.

Prominent Indian-origin UK citizens condemned the series. Prominent UK Citizen Lord Rami Ranger said the “BBC caused a great deal of hurt to over a billion Indians.”

Condemning the biased reporting of BBC, Rami tweeted, “@BBCNews You have caused a great deal of hurt to over a billion Indians It insults a democratically elected@PMOIndia Indian Police & the Indian judiciary. We condemn the riots and loss of life & also condemn your biased reporting.”

Ministry of External Affairs also reacted to the BBC report and said that this is a completely biased copy.

While addressing a weekly briefing in New Delhi, MEA Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said, “We think this is a propaganda piece. This has no objectivity. This is biased. Do note that this hasn’t been screened in India. We don’t want to answer more on this so that this doesn’t get much dignity.”

He even raised questions on “the purpose of the exercise and the agenda behind it.”

“The documentary is a reflection of the agency and individuals that are peddling this narrative again. It makes us wonder about the purpose of the exercise and the agenda behind it; frankly, we do wish to dignify these efforts,” he added.

Referring to apparent remarks made by former UK Secretary Jack Straw in the documentary series, Bagchi said “He (Jack Straw) seems to be referring to some internal UK report. How do I have access to that? It’s a 20-year-old report. Why would we jump on it now? Just because Jack says it how do they lend it that much legitimacy.”

“I heard words like inquiry and investigations. There is a reason why we use the colonial mindset. We don’t use words loosely. What inquiry they were diplomats there…investigation, are they ruling the country? Bagchi asked.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Rishi Sunak Plans Curbs On Foreign Students To Control Migration: Report

The Sunak government has promised to cut net migration in the UK. (File)

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will be considering “all options”, including reducing the number of foreign students, in his bid to bring down the rising net migration in the United Kingdom, according to a report by the BBC.

Mr Sunak will be looking into imposing curbs on foreign students pursuing so-called “low quality” degrees and bringing in dependents, the report said, quoting a Downing Street spokesperson. The spokesperson did not, however, define what is a “low quality” degree.

The UK government’s concerns for rising migration have been set off by the latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) figures this week that showed a huge jump in the number of migrants. Net migration to the UK rose from 173,000 in 2021, to 504,000 this year – an increase of 331,000.

International students, especially Indians who took over the Chinese for the first time to make up the majority of student visas, were a big contributor to this spike.

“We’re considering all options to make sure the immigration system is delivering. The prime minister is fully committed to bringing overall numbers down,” Mr Sunak’s spokesman had said on Friday.

But controlling the number of migrants by restricting the number of foreign students presents a tricky task. British universities lean on higher fees from international students to offset the money, they lose by charging British students a lower fee, with some universities even risking bankruptcy if restrictions were imposed on so-called low-quality degrees, the report said.

An Indian community-led students’ organisation on Friday urged the government to remove international students from the country’s immigration statistics. “Students who are in the UK temporarily, should not be counted as migrants. International students, of which Indians are the biggest cohort, bring a net revenue of GBP 30 billion into the British economy,” said Sanam Arora, Chair of National Indian Students and Alumni Union (NISAU) UK.

The Sunak government has promised to cut net migration in the UK with India-origin Home Secretary Suella Braverman earlier complaining about Indian students overstaying in the country. “I have concerns about having an open borders migration policy with India because I don’t think that’s what people voted for with Brexit. Look at migration in this country – the largest group of people who overstay are Indian migrants,” she had said.

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COP27: British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pulls out of climate summit


London
CNN
 — 

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is no longer expected to attend the COP27 climate summit in Egypt next week due to “other pressing commitments,” a Downing Street spokesperson said on Thursday.

The UK will still be represented by other senior ministers, as well as by COP26 President Alok Sharma, at the climate summit in Sharm El Sheikh, the statement said.

“The government is absolutely committed to supporting COP27 and leading international action to tackle climate change and protect nature,” a Downing Street spokesperson said.

“The Prime Minister is not expected to attend the summit in Egypt due to other pressing domestic commitments, including preparations for the autumn statement.”

Sharma and the senior ministers who are attending will be working to ensure countries continue to make progress on the commitments made at COP26 in Glasgow, the statement continued.

The news comes weeks after British media reports at the beginning of October said noted environmentalist King Charles III would miss COP27 after then-Prime Minister Liz Truss advised him to drop his plans to attend.

CNN understands that the King’s attendance at COP27 had not been confirmed and, following consultations with the government, there was a joint agreement that this would not be the right occasion for Charles’s first overseas visit as a sovereign.

King Charles attended the climate change conference as Prince of Wales in 2021.

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Biden and Sunak vow to support Ukraine and counter China in first call | Rishi Sunak

The US president, Joe Biden, and Britain’s new prime minister, Rishi Sunak, agreed during talks on Tuesday to work together to support Ukraine and stand up to China, the White House said.

They spoke for the first time a few hours after Sunak became Britain’s third prime minister this year, inheriting an economic crisis after the resignation of Liz Truss whose tenure lasted 49 days.

Only in recent days has Biden appeared to publicly criticise Truss’s doomed economic strategy, in a rare intervention by the US president. Relations between the two countries have also been somewhat strained in recent years amid ongoing tensions over post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland. The White House holds concerns over the impact on peace in the region.

Biden and Sunak reaffirmed the “special relationship” between the US and Britain, and said they would work together to advance global security and prosperity, the White House said in a summary of the conversation.

“The leaders agreed on the importance of working together to support Ukraine and hold Russia accountable for its aggression,” the statement said of the war triggered by the Russian invasion.

Sunak has promised the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, that Britain’s support for Ukraine will be steadfast and “as strong as ever under his premiership”, a Downing Street spokesperson has said. “The prime minister said … President Zelenskiy could count on his government to stand in continued solidarity. Both leaders agreed on the need to continue to place pressure on Putin’s barbaric regime through continued economic sanctions.”

For his part, Zelenskiy said he believed “British leadership in defending democracy and freedom” would only get stronger. “Ukraine and Britain have reached new heights in relations lately but nevertheless we still have potential to strengthen our cooperation,” he said in an evening video address, adding that he had invited Sunak to visit Ukraine.

The White House said Biden and Sunak also agreed to “address the challenges posed by China”, which Washington has identified as its top geopolitical and economic rival on the world stage.

Downing Street had earlier released its own summary of the call, in which it referred to efforts to “counter China’s malign influence”.

The statement read: “President Biden congratulated the prime minister on his appointment and the leaders looked forward to working closely together. President Biden said that the UK remains America’s closest ally, and the prime minister agreed on the huge strength of the relationship.

“The leaders discussed the extent of UK-US cooperation, both bilaterally and in regions such as the Indo-Pacific where the Aukus pact forms part of our efforts to enhance stability and counter China’s malign influence.

“They reflected on the leading role our countries are playing in supporting the people of Ukraine and ensuring Putin fails in this war.

“The prime minister and President Biden also agreed on the need to ensure the people of Northern Ireland have security and prosperity through preserving the Belfast (Good Friday) Agreement.”

The two leaders are expected to meet in person at the G20 Summit in Indonesia next month.

Britain has been a key European ally of the US in arming and supporting the Ukrainian military as it tries to repel the Russian invasion, which began in February.

Earlier on Tuesday, Biden had congratulated Sunak in a tweet.

On Monday, Biden described the naming of Britain’s first non-white prime minister as “pretty astounding, a groundbreaking milestone”.

With Agence France-Presse, Press Association and Reuters

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Rishi Sunak Becomes U.K. Prime Minister Amid Economic, Political Crisis

LONDON—

Rishi Sunak,

a former hedge-fund manager and U.K. Treasury chief, formally became Britain’s prime minister on Tuesday after he was appointed by

King Charles III,

vowing to steer the U.K. through a period of growing political and economic troubles.

In his first speech as prime minister, Mr. Sunak warned of a “profound economic crisis” facing the country, which is suffering from stagflation and has recentlyplunged into deeper political uncertainty with three different prime ministers in seven weeks.

Mr. Sunak said he would keep the current chancellor of the Exchequer,

Jeremy Hunt,

who stepped in to undo Ms. Truss’s tax-cut plan and regain market confidence.

Britain’s first Hindu leader pledged to repair the damage caused by the ill-fated experiment in British Reaganomics of his predecessor,

Liz Truss,

who was forced from office after markets were spooked by large unfunded tax cuts and a generous subsidy for household energy costs.

“Some mistakes were made. Not born of ill will or bad intentions. Quite the opposite in fact, but mistakes nonetheless. And I have been elected as leader of my party and your prime minister, in part to fix them,” said Mr. Sunak, as he stood in front of Downing Street. “I will place economic stability and confidence at the heart of this government’s agenda.”

King Charles III welcoming Britain’s new prime minister, Rishi Sunak, at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday.



Photo:

POOL/via REUTERS

Mr. Sunak takes control of a Conservative Party that has its lowest rating in the polls in decades. He will have to orchestrate one of the great political rebrands of recent British political history if he is to lead them to a victory during an election expected in 2024, analysts say.

Mr. Sunak moved quickly Tuesday to steady the Conservative Party. He appointed lawmakers from across warring factions to senior government roles in an effort to rebuild some unity in a party that has ousted its past three prime ministers in as many years. Nearly all the top appointments were cabinet members of former Prime Minister

Boris Johnson,

who was pushed to resign in July by a party rebellion.

In a sign of the challenges facing Mr. Sunak, the new prime minister broke with tradition and didn’t have allies in Downing Street clapping him into the building, underscoring the dark economic times the nation faced as he prepares to oversee some difficult decisions to plug a government budget deficit that is estimated to be 40 billion pounds, equivalent to $45 billion.

“I will unite our country not with words, but with action,” Mr. Sunak said. “I will work day in and day out to deliver for you.”

President Biden spoke Tuesday with Mr. Sunak to congratulate him on his appointment as prime minister, according to a U.K. government readout. The two men discussed bilateral cooperation, including efforts to counter China’s “malign influence,” as well as efforts to bolster Ukraine in its war against Russia.

Mr. Sunak, who at 42 years old is Britain’s youngest leader in more than 200 years, faces a daunting inbox. The British population is struggling with a cost-of-living crisis as inflation runs at 10.1%, fueled by high energy costs because of the war in Ukraine. With financial markets now wary of the stability of U.K. government finances, Mr. Sunak will have to regain market confidence through a combination of politically damaging spending cuts and tax increases, likely aggravating a recession and hurting incomes further, analysts say.

The government is set to outline spending cuts on Monday, only days before the Bank of England is expected to also raise interest rates.

“It’s going to be a terrible time for the economy whoever is in power,” said Jill Rutter, a former government official and a senior research fellow of U.K. in a Changing Europe, a think tank. “It will be very difficult with any government to come through that with the voters saying, ‘That was great.’ ”

Investors have welcomed the end of Ms. Truss’s government and the shift in policy toward more fiscal caution. The pound has fully recovered from its selloff following the tax-cut announcement on Sept. 23, which saw sterling briefly hit a record low of $1.0349. The pound traded at $1.1480 on Tuesday, roughly 2% above its prebudget level.

U.K. government bonds, which were at the heart of the recent U.K. market turmoil, have also staged a strong rally that continued Tuesday as Mr. Sunak took office. The yield on a 10-year U.K. gilt was at 3.647% Tuesday, well below a high of 4.643% set earlier this month, according to Tullett Prebon data. Yields rise as prices fall.

“It’s helpful that we have a resolution, at least for now, to the craziness of the last few weeks,” said Fraser Lundie, head of fixed income for public markets at Federated Hermes in London. “Today and yesterday is the first time where you could start thinking in weeks instead of days. Perhaps in the weeks to come you can start thinking in months.”

But as investors start to take the longer view, they may not like what they see in the U.K. economy, he added. “As the days go on I think people will pretty quickly change their attention from that crazy crisis period back to watching the Bank of England, watching the economic picture. It doesn’t look great to be honest,” he said.

Mr. Sunak’s opening statement came just over an hour after Ms. Truss defended her vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy.

Mr. Sunak takes control of a Conservative Party that has its lowest rating in the polls in decades.



Photo:

HENRY NICHOLLS/REUTERS

“As the Roman philosopher Seneca wrote: ‘It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare. It is because we do not dare that they are difficult,’ ” she said in a farewell speech outside Downing Street before handing her resignation to King Charles. “We simply cannot afford to be a low-growth country where the government takes up an increasing share of our national wealth.”

Polls this week showed that Ms. Truss had the lowest approval rating of any prime minister in modern times, with one survey giving her a 6% approval rating.

The Conservative Party “is in free fall and I don’t know if it has a parachute or not,” said Matthew Goodwin, a politics professor at the University of Kent.

In his cabinet shuffle, Mr. Sunak kept Defense Secretary

Ben Wallace

in his post as well as Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.

Suella Braverman,

who is popular on the libertarian wing of the party and advocates tough migration restrictions, was named as home secretary.

Mr. Sunak inherits a political machine that is accustomed to rapid rebrands. The Conservative Party, which was founded in 1834, is one of the world’s oldest and most successful electoral franchises. Its success lies in its ability to repeatedly shed its skin and emerge anew to appeal to the ever-changing needs of its electorate.

The past 12 years of Tory government is a prime example. Under Mr. Sunak, the party will have completed an ideological full circle that started when

David Cameron

came into office in 2010 as a social liberal and fiscal conservative, as his government tried to repair the nation’s finances after the 2008 financial crisis. After the Brexit vote in 2016, Theresa May tried to launch the party in a new socially conservative direction. Her successor, Mr. Johnson, remodeled it into a more populist franchise as he bulldozed through Brexit and ushered in a period of state intervention and high taxes. Ms. Truss took over and tried to rapidly dismantle that with an unsuccessful shift toward free markets and lower taxes.

Mr. Sunak is now expected to take it back to the Cameron-era focus on deficits with a degree of social liberalism, embracing issues such as climate change. It is unclear whether the electorate will buy the Conservative Party’s latest rebrand.

Ms. Rutter recalls being in government when the Conservatives successfully retooled their economic policies after the 1992 “Black Wednesday,” when speculator

George Soros

and other hedge funds forced the pound to break its peg to European currencies. Despite their best efforts, the Tories were never fully forgiven by voters and later spent 13 years out of office. Having worked hard to rebuild their brand as competent on the economy after 2010, the Conservatives “had an economic competence premium, and Truss managed to burn through that,” Ms. Rutter said.

In a February speech, Mr. Sunak, then chancellor, laid out his views on the challenges facing the U.K. and other Western economies where economic growth is slowing and productivity is stagnant. He warned that failure by politicians to create the conditions for faster growth would undermine public support for free-market economies and democracy in a world where autocracies such as China are on the march.

Rishi Sunak will become Britain’s new prime minister and the first person of color to lead the country. WSJ’s David Luhnow explains how the former investment banker quickly rose through the ranks to head one of the world’s largest economies. Photo illustration: Ryan Trefes

But he also warned against what he described as two false ideas on how to spur growth. The first was more government spending, regardless of its impact on borrowing and debt. The second was unfunded tax cuts, the idea that slashing taxes will unleash growth that will eventually give the government more money from a dynamic economy to spend on social services and investment. The latter idea is precisely what his predecessor, Ms. Truss, tried and failed to carry out some seven months after Mr. Sunak’s speech.

“The trap of both those ideas—that we can simply boost the economy with public spending, or supposedly self-funding tax cuts—is that they are both highly seductive, easy answers,” he said. “Neither are serious or credible; neither on their own will transform growth; and because they ignore the trade-offs inherent in economic policy, both are irresponsible.”

Instead, Mr. Sunak outlined three areas he called capital, people and ideas aimed at getting businesses to invest more. He said capital invested by British companies averages 10% of annual economic output versus a 14% average in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development club of rich countries. He pledged to help drive innovation by creating the right tax and regulatory environment for business to boost capital investment and spending in research and development, called for more vocational training of employees already in the workforce, and a visa system to attract entrepreneurs and high-skilled workers.

“Less ‘build it and they will come’ and more ‘let them come and build it,’” he said.

Mr. Sunak will have to navigate opposition from lawmakers within his own party to increased immigration of any kind.

On Monday, Mr. Sunak warned lawmakers during a private meeting that they had no option but to cooperate if they wanted to avoid losing the next election, according to people present. He is hoping that the Tory lawmakers’ desire for self-preservation will trump their personal ideological leanings, one person added.

Mr. Sunak inherits a healthy majority in Parliament following Mr. Johnson’s 2019 electoral victory and so should be free to push through legislation as long as he can contain rebellions.

Mr. Sunak said he would stick to the 2019 manifesto that helped Mr. Johnson secure his electoral victory. It included a pledge to help left-behind parts of the country and crack down on illegal migration. “I will deliver on its promise,” he said.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com and David Luhnow at david.luhnow@wsj.com

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New PM Rishi Sunak pledges to lead Britain out of economic crisis

  • Sunak meets King Charles on Tuesday morning
  • Vows to rebuild trust in the country
  • Expected to start forming a cabinet
  • Sunak faces huge challenge to rebuild stability

LONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) – Rishi Sunak became Britain’s third prime minister in two months on Tuesday and pledged to lead the country out of a profound economic crisis and rebuild trust in politics.

Sunak quickly reappointed Jeremy Hunt as his finance minister in a move designed to calm markets that had balked at his predecessor’s debt-fuelled economic plans.

The former hedge fund boss said he would unite the country and was expected to name a cabinet drawn from all wings of the party to end infighting and abrupt policy changes that have horrified investors and alarmed international allies.

Speaking outside his official Downing Street residence, Sunak praised the ambition of his predecessor Liz Truss to reignite economic growth but acknowledged mistakes had been made.

“I have been elected as leader of my party and your prime minister, in part to fix them,” said Sunak, who broke with the tradition of standing beside his family and cheering political supporters.

“I understand, too, that I have work to do to restore trust, after all that has happened. All I can say is that I am not daunted. I know the high office I have accepted and I hope to live up to its demands.”

Sunak said difficult decisions lay ahead as he looks to cut public spending. Hunt, who Truss appointed to calm markets roiled by her dash for growth, has been preparing a new budget alongside borrowing and growth forecasts due out on Monday, and repeated his warning on Tuesday that “it is going to be tough”.

The new prime minister also restored Dominic Raab to the post of deputy prime minister, a role he lost in Truss’s 44 days in office, but reappointed James Cleverly as foreign minister and Ben Wallace at defence.

Penny Mordaunt, who ended her bid to win a leadership contest against Sunak on Monday, also retained her position as leader of the House of Commons, a role that organises the government’s business in the lower house of parliament.

Sources had said she wanted to become foreign minister.

With his new appointments, Sunak was seen to be drawing ministers from across the Conservative Party while leaving others in post – a move that should ease concerns that Sunak might appoint loyalists rather than try to unify the party.

TOUGH DECISIONS

Sunak, one of the richest men in parliament, is expected to slash spending to plug an estimated 40 billion pound ($45 billion) hole in the public finances created by an economic slowdown, higher borrowing costs and an energy support scheme.

He will now need to review all spending, including on politically sensitive areas such as health, education, defence, welfare and pensions. But with his party’s popularity in freefall, he will face growing calls for an election if he ditches too many of the promises that the Conservatives win election in 2019.

Economists and investors have welcomed Sunak’s appointment – Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary said the adults had taken charge again – but they warn he has few options to fix the country’s finances when millions are battling a cost of living crunch.

Sunak, who ran the Treasury during the COVID-19 pandemic, promised to put economic stability and confidence at the heart of the agenda. “This will mean difficult decisions to come,” he said, shortly after he accepted King Charles’s request to form a government.

Sunak also vowed to put the public’s need above politics, in recognition of the growing anger at Britain’s political class and the ideological battles that have raged ever since the historic 2016 vote to leave the European Union.

Workers heading towards London’s financial district said Sunak, at 42 Britain’s youngest prime minister for more than 200 years and its first leader of colour, appeared to be the best of a bad bunch.

“I think he was competent, and that’s really what we should hope for at the moment,” said management consultant, James Eastbook, 43.

With two prime ministers appointed in two months without a popular vote, some called for a general election now but others hoped Sunak would stay until the next scheduled election, due by January 2025.

POLITICAL MACHINATIONS

Sunak, a Goldman Sachs analyst who only entered parliament in 2015, faces a challenge ending the factional infighting that has brought his party low. Many Conservatives remain angry with him for quitting as finance minister in July and triggering a wider rebellion that ended Boris Johnson’s premiership.

Others question how a multi millionaire can lead the country when millions of people are struggling with surging food and energy bills.

“I think this decision sinks us as a party for the next election,” one Conservative lawmaker told Reuters.

Historian and political biographer Anthony Seldon said Sunak would also be constrained by the mistakes of his immediate predecessor.

“There is no leeway on him being anything other than extraordinarily conservative and cautious,” he told Reuters.

Many politicians and officials abroad, having watched as a country once seen as a pillar of economic and political stability descended into brutal infighting, welcomed Sunak’s appointment.

Sunak, a Hindu, also becomes Britain’s first prime minister of Indian origin.

U.S. President Joe Biden described it as a “groundbreaking milestone”, while leaders from India and elsewhere welcomed the news. Sunak’s billionaire father-in-law, N.R. Narayana Murthy, said he would serve the United Kingdom well.

“We are proud of him and we wish him success,” the founder of software giant Infosys said in a statement.

($1 = 0.8864 pounds)

Writing by by Kate Holton and Elizabeth Piper; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Jon Boyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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