Sunak vs Truss: is race a factor in the UK leadership race?
- Rishi Sunak trails Liz Truss in the race to be Conservative Party leader and UK prime minister
- Some supporters say Indian-origin Sunak is a victim of ‘latent racism’ within his own party
Come September 5, the UK will either get its first prime minister of colour, Rishi Sunak, or third woman prime minister, Liz Truss.
The decision won’t be made by an ethnically diverse electorate, but by 180,000 or so Conservative Party members, 97 per cent of whom are white.
A victory for Sunak would be historic, as he would be the first person of South Asian heritage to lead the UK, the world’s fifth-biggest economy.
But the 42-year-old former chancellor of the exchequer trails rival Truss, the UK’s foreign secretary, who this week held a 34-point lead over him in a YouGov survey of party members to replace Boris Johnson as leader.
Johnson was forced to announce his resignation on July 7 after a series of scandals and missteps.
Sunak said it’s still “early days” in the leadership contest, and has pitched his patriotic credentials by pledging to treat anyone who “vilifies” Britain as a potential terrorist.