HomeNewsOpinionWe may soon meet the ‘real Rishi’

We may soon meet the ‘real Rishi’

The prime minister’s spin doctors aim to define a new persona for the man who’s been in charge for a year

October 02, 2023 / 11:41 IST
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UK rishi sunak
British Prime Minster Rishi Sunak meets a local group last week in Wormley, England. (Source: Bloomberg/Getty Images Europe)

The Conservative Party is determined to introduce “the real Rishi” to the electorate.

Almost a year since he took over as prime minister, Rishi Sunak still has to define himself in the eyes of the British public. He succeeded two vivid personalities: Boris Johnson is the center of attention wherever he goes, and Liz Truss is one of the oddest people to have held high office. Sunak also inherited such a complete mess that he had to devote most of his time to cleaning up and fixing the Downing Street machinery. To most voters he remains a blur.

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In the normal run of things, prime ministers get years to introduce themselves to the public. They do their time as leader of the opposition. They lead their party in a general election with all the razzmatazz that entails—a manifesto that encapsulates their political vision, a leader’s debate, a pack of journalists following you 24 hours a day. Sunak was a deus ex machina.

The Truss administration imploded so spectacularly that the party anointed Sunak without the formality of holding an election of party members let alone consulting the country. The chaos was such that he took part in his first Prime Minister’s Questions time on the very day that he took office. Before that, his rise had been so rapid that he didn’t have time to establish a political personality: He entered parliament in 2015 after a career in finance—not for him the decades of traipsing from one unwinnable seat to another and getting to know the party and its voters. At 42, he was the youngest prime minister since Lord Liverpool came to power in 1812, and he had only served in one government department, the department of communities and local government, before moving to the notoriously inward-looking and technocratic Treasury.