(London) The race to Downing Street has officially begun and they are eight Conservative candidates to try to succeed Prime Minister Boris Johnson after obtaining the necessary number of sponsorships on Tuesday.
Unsurprisingly, ex-Finance Minister Rishi Sunak, former Defense Minister Penny Mordaunt, Foreign Minister Liz Truss and MP Tom Tugendhat easily secured the 20 backers needed to officially run for leadership. of the Conservative Party – and therefore as Prime Minister, the 1922 Committee, the Conservative parliamentary group responsible for establishing the rules of the ballot, announced on Tuesday.
Newly appointed Finance Minister Nadhim Zahawi, Government Legal Adviser (“Attorney General”) Suella Braverman, former Equalities Secretary Kemi Badenoch and former Health Minister Jeremy Hunt are also in run.
PHOTO SIMON DAWSON, REUTERS
Former Defense Secretary Penny Mordaunt
Boris Johnson resigned Thursday after around 60 members of his executive slammed the door, tired of repeated scandals. However, he remains prime minister until his successor is known on 5 September.
As of Wednesday, the eight candidates will have to rally 30 deputies to their cause if they want to pass the first round of the vote. A second round is scheduled for Thursday and another, if necessary, for Monday.
The objective is to have only two candidates left before the parliamentary holidays which begin on July 22. The name of the future Prime Minister will be known in September after a final vote open to party members.
Tuesday morning, they were still 11 to be candidates to succeed Boris Johnson, but three of them, including the former Minister of Health Sajid Javid withdrew as the closing of the deposit of candidatures approached.
Analysts place shoulder to shoulder Mr. Sunak and Mr.me Mordaunt, followed by Mme Truss.
Tax cuts
In launching his candidacy on Tuesday, Mr Sunak was careful not to criticize Mr Johnson, refusing to “demonize Boris, exaggerate his faults and deny his efforts”.
The 42-year-old former Chancellor of the Exchequer resigned with a bang from the government last week, bringing with him around sixty other members of the executive and ultimately the resignation of the Prime Minister. He is criticized by supporters of Mr. Johnson who accuse him of having led the Prime Minister to his downfall.

PHOTO STEFAN ROUSSEAU, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak
The campaign had so far been limited to bombastic launch videos, vague promises – with most candidates assuring they will implement tax cuts without explaining how they will finance them – and polemics in everything gender.
Mr. Zahawi, 55, felt that they were trying to “smear” him when the press reported that he was the subject of a tax investigation. He promised to publish his tax return every year if he became prime minister.
Unlike his rivals, Sunak has been cautious about tax cuts amid high inflation. “It’s a question of ‘when’, not ‘if'”, he however reassured, preaching for “honesty and responsibility, not fairy tales”.
Mr Sunak had been criticized when he was finance minister for not doing enough to relieve British households strangled by the cost of living crisis.
Motion of no confidence
After a vote by members of the Conservative Party, the name of the future Prime Minister will be known on September 5.
Too late, says the Labor Party, which tabled a motion of no confidence in Parliament on Tuesday, deeming it “intolerable” that Mr Johnson remains in power until the end of the summer.
But the government refused to give Parliament debate time for such a vote to take place, Labor said, denouncing a “flagrant abuse of power”.
“Given that the Prime Minister has already resigned and a process [pour le remplacer] is underway, we do not think it is a useful use of parliamentary time, ”justified Downing Street, which believes that a Labor no-confidence motion could be debated if it did not target the Prime Minister individually.
However, it is unlikely that such a motion will be supported by many Tories. If successful, it would trigger a general election in which the Conservatives could lose the large majority they obtained in 2019, in the wake of the election of a then ultra-popular Boris Johnson.