Rishi Sunak “Excited To Keep Going” As Polls Show Liz Truss As PM
The hope that the British Prime Minister Rishi Sung on Thursday said he was eager to continue to follow the conservative party leadership campaign even when the party voter survey predicted company leaders for his rival, Foreign Minister Liz Truss. In an interview with the ITV Channel program ‘This Morning’, the former Indian-Origin Chancellor said he was “surely” to victory when he reiterated his attitude that the plan to cut off his rival instant tax would be proven to be inflation for the economy.
“I am very happy to keep going, I think my ideas are the right,” he said. Earlier on Thursday, the new Yougov poll for ‘Sky News’ showed the framework to hold on to 32 solid points in the competition and other surveys of Tory members who would vote in this election had shown the same slope for the sake of Mr. S he was the opponent. During a broad discussion about ITV, the former minister in the Boris Johnson cabinet admitted that it was “rather strange” that his former boss took a few days before announcing his resignation as the leader of Tory and the British Prime Minister last month after the flood of the Minister’s resignation flood after being out of his own.
“In the end it lasted for several days -it was rather strange. I thought people watching it wondered what was happening,” he said, referring to a high political drama in Downing Street in early July which finally ended with Johnson announced his decision to stop and trigger leadership selection.
Minister Mr Johnson resigned one by one early last month after weeks of crisis over the ‘party’ scandal from the parties to violate the laws that locked under his supervision and several other scandals involving close assistants. While S was acknowledged that his chancellor stopped was a big blow to Johnson’s leadership, he stressed that it was “not the end of the world”.
“The thing that changed it was when 60 members of the government all resigned and it happened for a day,” he said. The former Minister of Finance, who previously also admitted that his former boss had not received his call or message, said his reaction could be understood. “I have reached him but it can be understood that he did not answer. It’s fair but it is not only me, in the end, 60 other government members all pairs too,” he said.
In the main campaign problem to deal with the country’s cost of living cost, Mr S was also renewed another statement that he would “prefer to lose” rather than “saying things that could not be conveyed”. “I have not made my life easy, saying things that might not want to be heard by some people. It should be about that is not promising and delivering excessively, that’s how you restore trust in the government and politics,” Sakah said. “We may not have enough enough. That is why in this leadership race I have not made many easy promises that I think are wrong, I prefer to lose than saying things that I think cannot be conveyed, I prefer to be honest with people – People, “he said.