HomeNewsOpinionWhy there’s no immediate threat to the floundering Rishi Sunak premiership despite Conservative disarray

Why there’s no immediate threat to the floundering Rishi Sunak premiership despite Conservative disarray

The Conservative Party is lurching to near certain defeat in the next general elections, which are due before January 2025. Despite falling approval ratings, the spectre of defeat may just be helping Sunak cling to the Prime Ministership without challengers as no one wants the ignominy of helming the government at this late juncture

November 02, 2023 / 12:53 IST
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UK PM Rishi Sunak.
UK PM Rishi Sunak.

The completion of a year in office by Rishi Sunak, the first Indian-origin Hindu Prime Minister of United Kingdom, was just a blip on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government’s radar and not a momentous occasion marked by congratulatory and adulatory messaging from New Delhi. This is especially because the UK-India free trade deal that India was keenly pursuing is today just like a car stuck in a rut whose wheels keep spinning.

Importantly, Sunak too did not celebrate his first anniversary in office, which fell on October 25, clinking champagne glasses. Downing Street released the premier’s photograph sitting workmanlike at his desk with a slice of cake and a mug of coffee, deeply engrossed in what clearly looked like preparations to field tough questions from Labour Party leader, Sir Keir Starmer, in Parliament later in the day.

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Unlike India, where the PM can give the Parliament a miss for days, weeks and months and the opposition can’t do a thing about it except rave and rant, there is a constitutional convention firmly in place in UK called Prime Minister’s Questions, which compels the leader of the house to answer questions from MPs every Wednesday noon when the House of Commons is in session, whether he likes it or not. Not for nothing is Britain called the “mother of democracy” although it doesn’t even have a written Constitution.

PM For Now, But Fall Guy Soon?