Berliner Boersenzeitung - Sunak or Truss to be Britain's next PM

EUR -
AED 4.100177
AFN 76.484217
ALL 98.779725
AMD 431.696746
ANG 2.01047
AOA 1053.265907
ARS 1078.895129
AUD 1.610886
AWG 2.012123
AZN 1.896413
BAM 1.95441
BBD 2.252398
BDT 133.305163
BGN 1.956018
BHD 0.420591
BIF 3232.742221
BMD 1.116296
BND 1.430956
BOB 7.708516
BRL 6.066735
BSD 1.115506
BTN 93.348426
BWP 14.582626
BYN 3.650703
BYR 21879.398404
BZD 2.2486
CAD 1.507708
CDF 3198.1877
CHF 0.93977
CLF 0.03642
CLP 1004.945597
CNY 7.828248
CNH 7.808127
COP 4667.299872
CRC 578.988092
CUC 1.116296
CUP 29.58184
CVE 110.187597
CZK 25.13329
DJF 198.648676
DKK 7.456516
DOP 67.082276
DZD 147.564097
EGP 54.028383
ERN 16.744438
ETB 131.359048
FJD 2.432072
FKP 0.850125
GBP 0.834085
GEL 3.036591
GGP 0.850125
GHS 17.58065
GIP 0.850125
GMD 76.470095
GNF 9632.974253
GTQ 8.628938
GYD 233.353986
HKD 8.672508
HNL 27.777239
HRK 7.589708
HTG 147.012777
HUF 396.708958
IDR 16881.295424
ILS 4.128436
IMP 0.850125
INR 93.523991
IQD 1461.360349
IRR 47001.636014
ISK 150.889553
JEP 0.850125
JMD 175.262958
JOD 0.791117
JPY 158.258403
KES 143.62256
KGS 93.996263
KHR 4529.696296
KMF 492.984211
KPW 1004.66562
KRW 1456.900449
KWD 0.340459
KYD 0.929639
KZT 535.07933
LAK 24632.475791
LBP 99896.930622
LKR 333.103022
LRD 215.858366
LSL 19.157271
LTL 3.296131
LVL 0.675236
LYD 5.291236
MAD 10.821002
MDL 19.427179
MGA 5051.406293
MKD 61.596561
MMK 3625.685334
MNT 3793.173204
MOP 8.932945
MRU 44.073645
MUR 51.239785
MVR 17.145977
MWK 1934.32387
MXN 21.988293
MYR 4.582431
MZN 71.303413
NAD 19.157271
NGN 1862.528669
NIO 41.05006
NOK 11.712277
NPR 149.355744
NZD 1.752746
OMR 0.429669
PAB 1.115506
PEN 4.157942
PGK 4.435765
PHP 62.503073
PKR 309.674989
PLN 4.271076
PYG 8707.805032
QAR 4.067443
RON 4.975439
RSD 117.068169
RUB 105.238739
RWF 1508.227007
SAR 4.187118
SBD 9.256821
SCR 16.40845
SDG 671.452502
SEK 11.263609
SGD 1.428842
SHP 0.850125
SLE 25.504349
SLL 23408.159813
SOS 637.546432
SRD 34.270839
STD 23105.070033
SVC 9.761056
SYP 2804.726708
SZL 19.151375
THB 35.992166
TJS 11.875841
TMT 3.907035
TND 3.372631
TOP 2.614476
TRY 38.167349
TTD 7.577609
TWD 35.304006
TZS 3047.487216
UAH 45.924428
UGX 4121.068161
USD 1.116296
UYU 46.799345
UZS 14207.892121
VEF 4043840.313332
VES 41.149433
VND 27428.50501
VUV 132.528884
WST 3.122796
XAF 655.490666
XAG 0.035325
XAU 0.00042
XCD 3.016845
XDR 0.825213
XOF 655.490666
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.43681
ZAR 19.028546
ZMK 10048.002056
ZMW 29.501012
ZWL 359.446804
  • BCC

    1.1800

    141.49

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.5600

    77.62

    -0.72%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    13.25

    +0.3%

  • RIO

    0.4800

    71.23

    +0.67%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    40.71

    -0.47%

  • BTI

    -0.2369

    36.84

    -0.64%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    25.08

    -0.12%

  • BCE

    0.3600

    35.19

    +1.02%

  • RBGPF

    64.7500

    64.75

    +100%

  • RELX

    -0.5300

    47.56

    -1.11%

  • NGG

    -0.3300

    69.73

    -0.47%

  • BP

    0.6300

    31.42

    +2.01%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.58

    +0.88%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    10.09

    +0.5%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    7.05

    +0.14%

Sunak or Truss to be Britain's next PM
Sunak or Truss to be Britain's next PM / Photo: Daniel LEAL, Tolga Akmen - AFP

Sunak or Truss to be Britain's next PM

Conservative rivals Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss, offering competing answers to Britain's multiple crises, will duel in the coming weeks to become the next prime minister after the party's lawmakers held a concluding vote Wednesday.

Text size:

Former finance minister Sunak, running on a centrist platform of fiscal rectitude allied with "green levies" to fight climate change, again headed the field with 137 votes in the MPs' fifth and final elimination ballot.

The crucial race for second place was narrowly won by Foreign Secretary Truss on 113 votes, against 105 for former defence secretary Penny Mordaunt.

Sunak and Truss now take their case to Conservative party members, who will decide the new leader and prime minister after a series of nationwide hustings in August.

The result will be announced on September 5. But Britain is already guaranteed to get either its first prime minister of colour or its third woman leader.

"We need to restore trust, rebuild the economy, and reunite our country," Sunak said after his win, as Britain contends with its worst slump in living standards in decades on top of the economic fallout of Brexit.

"We've got a really positive message to take out to all our members now: crucially, who is the best person to beat Keir Starmer and the Labour party in the next election?" he said, referring to the UK's main opposition party and its leader.

"I believe I'm the only candidate who can do that."

Truss tweeted that she was "ready to hit the ground running from day one", after writing in the Daily Telegraph that her economic revival plan was "based around tax cuts, deregulation and tough reform".

- 'Hasta la vista' -

Sunak's resignation as finance minister this month helped to topple outgoing leader Boris Johnson after months of scandal including "Partygate", and Downing Street is reportedly running an "anyone but Rishi" campaign.

At his last session of Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons earlier, Johnson bowed out by saying "Hasta la vista, baby!".

In a hint of support for Truss's Thatcherite platform, the premier urged his successor to "cut taxes and deregulate where you can to make this the greatest place to live and invest".

He urged the contenders to continue his strident backing for Ukraine, and "stay close to the Americans".

But whoever wins the Tory race, "like some household detergent, would wipe the floor" with Starmer's Labour, Johnson predicted.

Mordaunt -- the one-time bookmakers' favourite -- lapsed to outsider status after Truss's fellow right-winger Kemi Badenoch was eliminated on Tuesday.

Former minister David Davis, a backer of Mordaunt, accused Sunak of lending votes to Truss so he could face her in the run-off.

"He wants to fight Liz, because she's the person who will lose the debate with him," he told LBC radio.

A YouGov poll published before the vote indicated that, despite his popularity with colleagues, Sunak was the least appealing candidate to the members.

The BBC plans to host a live televised debate with the final two candidates on Monday. Sunak won the two previous debates, according to snap polls, and the second one featured a no-holds-barred clash with Truss.

- 'Fantasy economics' -

Sunak's popularity with the Tory grassroots has faded since questions were raised over his family's tax arrangements, and as he presided over sky-rocketing inflation, which hit a new 40-year high of 9.4 percent in June.

In a new policy announcement, Sunak vowed an "ambitious new plan to make the UK energy independent" by 2045 to prevent future energy-driven inflation spikes, after Russia's war in Ukraine sent gas prices rocketing.

Mordaunt had headed the same YouGov poll of Tory members previously.

But she slipped after a damaging few days in which her former boss, one-time UK Brexit pointman David Frost, slammed her work ethic and questions were raised over her stance on transgender rights.

Johnson announced on July 7 he was quitting as Conservative leader after a government rebellion in protest at his scandal-hit administration.

Under Britain's parliamentary system, the leader of the biggest party is prime minister and can be changed mid-term without having to call a general election.

Labour's Starmer accused the Tory candidates of "fantasy economics" before turning his fire on the outgoing Johnson.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)