Published on Aug 05, 2022 08:40 AM IST
Rishi
Sunak scored a surprise win on Thursday with a studio audience at a key debate
with frontrunner and rival for the next PM race, Liz Truss.
Rishi Sunak, former UK chancellor
of the exchequer.(REUTERS)
AFP | | Posted by Lingamgunta Nirmitha Rao
Rishi Sunak on
Thursday appeared to score a surprise win with a studio audience at a key debate
with frontrunner Liz Truss in the race to become Britain's next prime minister.
While opinion polls back Truss to win the vote
among Conservative party members, those sitting in the audience at the Sky News
debate overwhelmingly supported Sunak in a show of hands -- after an electronic
voting system broke down.
Truss had faced acerbic questioning from presenter
Kay Burley, including a run-through of her policy U-turns and the question:
"Will the real Liz Truss please
stand up?"
Truss had earlier been forced into another U-turn
after a damaging statement by her campaign team on Monday that the government
could save £8.8 billion ($10.75 billion) a year if it paid lower salaries to
public sector workers who lived outside London.
"You wanted to cut civil servants' pay in the regions and then you said you didn't," Burley said, listing her policy U-turns.
Truss insisted the proposal was misrepresented by
media.
"Should good leaders own their mistakes, or
should they blame others?" Burley asked her.
"I'm not blaming anybody else. I'm not. I'm
not. I'm saying the policy has been misrepresented by various people,"
Truss said, appearing flustered.
Burley also challenged Truss on her comments soon
after Russia's invasion of Ukraine that she would back Brits going to fight on
the Ukrainian side.
British fighters have since been captured and
convicted as mercenaries and face a potential death penalty in the Donetsk
separatist region.
Truss stressed the travel advice was always that
British people should not go to Ukraine.
Sunak also faced tough questioning and a quip about
his taste in designer loafers.
"People feel that you can't walk a mile in
their shoes because you're walking in your Prada shoes," Burley told
Sunak, whose father-in-law is a billionaire.
She mocked Sunak's insistence on his humble roots
as he mentioned that his father was a doctor in the national health service
(NHS).
"I grew up in an NHS household, you may have
heard on this campaign," he said.
"He never mentions it!" Burley
interjected.
The final vote showed a larger number of hands for
Sunak than for Truss, as Burley admitted: "I wasn't expecting that."
The result of the vote between Truss and Sunak, to
decide who will replace Prime Minister Boris Johnson, is due on September 5.
Source: Hindustan Times.
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