Sunak won the support of 115 Tory lawmakers, followed by Penny Mordaunt on 82 votes, Liz Truss on 71, Kemi Badenoch on 58 and Tom Tugendhat on 31
London(UK)- Former finance minister Rishi Sunak widened his lead in the latest round of voting Monday by Conservative MPs to decide Britain’s next prime minister. Still, the race to get in the final two tightened.
Sunak won the support of 115 Tory lawmakers, followed by Penny Mordaunt on 82 votes, Liz Truss on 71, Kemi Badenoch on 58 and Tom Tugendhat on 31, who dropped out as the last-place candidate, the party announced.
MPs will keep voting until only two candidates remain and the party members decide the winner.
Mordaunt had been bookmakers’ favourite before the weekend but lost votes from the previous round.
Foreign Secretary Truss closed the gap to 11 and can expect more support switching to her from Badenoch’s backers should the insurgent candidate be eliminated in the next round, promising a tense race to make the final Wednesday.
Television bosses earlier Monday scrapped a planned debate between the remaining contenders for Tuesday night after Sunak and Truss pulled out, said Sky News, which was due to host it.
“Conservative MPs are said to be concerned about the damage the debates are doing to the image of the Conservative party, exposing disagreements and splits within the party,” it added in a statement.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced on July 7 that he was quitting as Conservative leader after a government rebellion in protest at his scandal-hit administration.
He stays as prime minister until his successor is announced on September 5.
– ‘Hunger Games –
In the two previous televised debates — on Channel 4 Friday and the ITV network Sunday — the contenders clashed notably on whether to cut taxes to help ease a soaring cost of living crisis.
But Sunday’s clash turned more acrimonious — and personal — with candidates encouraged to criticise one another and their proposals directly.
Sunak called out Truss for voting against Brexit, her previous membership of the Liberal Democrats, and her tax position.
In turn, Truss questioned Sunak’s stewardship of the economy.
Badenoch attacked Mordaunt for her stance on transgender rights — a rallying call in the “culture wars” exercising the Tory right.
Paul Goodman, from the ConservativeHome website, likened the debates to a “political version of ‘The Hunger Games'” and questioned why they had agreed.
“Tory MPs and activists will have watched in horror as several of the candidates flung buckets of manure over each other,” he wrote.
He questioned why they would publicly accept to criticise the government’s record that all but one of them served in or the policies they supported as ministers.
– ‘Out of ideas’ –
The main opposition Labour party has called for Johnson to leave immediately.
Its leader, Keir Starmer, called the candidates’ withdrawal a sign of a party “out of ideas (and) out of purpose”.
“Pulling out of a TV debate when you want to be prime minister doesn’t show much confidence,” he added.
The government blocked attempts by Starmer to call a confidence vote in parliament to get rid of Johnson immediately, instead bringing forward its confidence vote on the government as a whole.
During the debate, Johnson defended his government’s record, citing Ukraine’s vaccine rollout and support.
“I believe this is one the most dynamic governments of modern times, not just overcoming adversity on a scale we haven’t seen for centuries but delivering throughout adversity.”
Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn joked that his one-time sparring partner was taking MPs on a “fantasy tour of this country”.
Starmer called the outgoing leader a “vengeful squatter” in Downing Street.