The race to replace Boris Johnson as UK prime minister is getting more crowded, and the big beasts are muscling in.
Sajid Javid, the former Health Minister whose resignation last week helped spark Johnson’s abrupt downfall, and former Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, who lost to Johnson in the 2019 leadership runoff, used interviews in the Telegraph late Saturday to announce their campaigns. Both put cutting taxes, a red-meat topic for the Conservative Party core, at the heart of the respective agendas.
In separate interviews with the newspaper, they said they’d cancel a planned rise in corporation tax and reduce it to 15% from 25%. Javid went a step further, pledging to reverse a payroll tax that was introduced by his successor as Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak.
The other two declared candidates from outside Johnson’s cabinet are pro-Brexit Attorney General Suella Braverman and Kemi Badenoch, minister of state for equalities.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, initially seen as a favorite to succeed Johnson, said Saturday that he decided not to run.
Meanwhile, Johnson will stay on until his successor is announced, which the party said will be in September. He’s appointed a caretaker government which he insists will not “make major changes of direction.”
The 1922 Committee of rank-and-file Tory MPs is drawing up plans for an accelerated leadership contest. The two finalists will then embark on a six-week tour of the UK, and more than 100,000 Conservative party members will decide who moves into 10 Downing Street.