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Rishi Sunak: The Tory golden boy whose crown slipped

Feted for saving the jobs of millions during Covid, the ex-chancellor has be denounced for bringing down Boris Johnson.

Gavin Cordon
Monday 18 July 2022 04:34 EDT
Rishi Sunak delivers the Mansion House speech (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Rishi Sunak delivers the Mansion House speech (Stefan Rousseau/PA) (PA Archive)

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Once the golden boy of the Tory Party, Rishi Sunak enjoyed a meteoric rise under Boris Johnson and for so long appeared to be his most likely successor.

At the start of the pandemic, he was the most popular politician country as he rolled out an unprecedented furlough scheme which saved millions of jobs as the economy ground to a halt.

But now the former chancellor faces a fierce fight to gain the keys on No 10, denounced by allies of the Prime Minister as a treacherous ā€œsnakeā€ who brought down his former mentor.

Born in 1980 in Southampton, the son of parents of Punjabi descent ā€“ Mr Sunakā€™s father was a family doctor and his mother ran a pharmacy, where he helped her with the books.

After private schooling at Winchester College, where he was head boy, and a degree in politics, philosophy and economics at Oxford, he took an MBA at Stanford University in California where he met his wife, Akshata Murty, the daughter of Indiaā€™s sixth richest man.

A successful business career, with spells at Goldman Sachs and as a hedge fund manager, meant by the time he decided to enter politics in his early 30s he was already independently wealthy.

In 2014, he was selected as the Tory candidate for the ultra safe seat of Richmond in North Yorkshire ā€“ then held by William (now Lord) Hague ā€“ and was duly elected in the general election the following year.

In the 2016 Brexit referendum he supported Leave, to the reported dismay of David Cameron who saw him as one of the Conservativesā€™ brightest prospects among the new intake.

Given his first government post ā€“ as a junior local government minister ā€“ by Mr Cameronā€™s successor, Theresa May, he was an early backer of Mr Johnson for leader when she was forced out amid the fallout over Brexit.

When Mr Johnson entered No 10 in July 2019, there was swift reward with a dramatic promotion to the cabinet as treasury chief secretary.

An even bigger step up followed in February 2020 when chancellor Sajid Javid quit after rejecting a demand to sack all his advisers and Mr Sunak was put in charge of the nationā€™s finances at the age of just 39.

The increasingly rapid spread of Covid-19 meant his mettle was swiftly tested. Within a fortnight of his first Budget he was effectively forced to rip up his financial plans as the country went into lockdown.

The new chancellor, who saw himself as a traditional small state, low tax Conservative, began pumping out hundreds of billions in government cash as the economy was put on life support.

But as the country emerged from the pandemic, some of the glossĀ began to wear off amid growing tensions with his neighbour in No 10 and anger among Tory MPs over rising taxes as he sought to rebuild the public finances.

To add to his woes, he was caught up in the ā€œpartygateā€ scandal receiving a fine, along with Mr Johnson, for attending a gathering to mark the Prime Ministerā€™s 56th birthday, even though he claimed only to have gone into No 10 to attend a meeting.

There were more questions when it emerged his wife had ā€œnon domā€ status for taxes purposes ā€“ an arrangement which reportedly saved her millions ā€“ while he had retained a US ā€œgreen cardā€, entitling him to permanent residence in the States.

For a man known for his fondness for expensive gadgets and fashionable accessories ā€“ and who still has an apartment in Santa Monica ā€“ it all looked dangerously out of touch at a time when spiralling prices were putting a financial squeeze on millions across the country.

His frustrations with Mr Johnsonā€™s chaotic style of government ā€“ as well as a deepening rift over policy ā€“ finally spilled over when he dramatically resigned, prompting the rush for the door by other ministers that forced the Prime Minister to admit his time was up.

It now remains to be seen whether the one-time heir apparent can claim his crown.

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