First British Prime Minister of Indian origin, Rishi Sunak, suffers humiliating defeat

AS had been expected, Rishi Sunak, the first British Prime Minister of Indian origin, suffered a humiliating defeat as his Conservative Party had won only 115 seats (a loss of 247 seats) of 650 seats in the general election as compared to the Labour Party’s 410 seats (a gain of 210 seats) at 11 p.m. Pacific Time.

Sunak acknowledged the defeat and called Labour’s Leader Keir Starmer to congratulate him on becoming the next prime minister.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted:”Congratulations, @Keir_Starmer, on a historic U.K. election victory. Lots of work ahead to build a more progressive, fair future for people on both sides of the Atlantic. Let’s get to it, my friend.”

Keir Starmer and Justin Trudeau.
Photo: Trudeau’s X

 

IANS reports:

“Today power will change hands in a peaceful and orderly manner with goodwill on all sides,” said Sunak.

“The Labour Party has won this general election, and I’ve called Keir Starmer to congratulate him on his victory,” he said at the announcement of his own election from a constituency in Yorkshire.

Apologising to his party, he said somberly: “I am sorry.”

“I take responsibility for the loss to the many good hardworking Conservative candidates who lost despite their tireless efforts, their local records of delivery and their dedication to their communities,” he said.

“The British people have delivered a sobering verdict tonight,” Sunak said.

“There is much to learn and reflect on,” he added.

Although the current House of Commons term ran till December, Sunak called early elections in the face of mounting problems for the party and the country.

It was either a strategic error or a fatalistic submission to realities.

The writing on the wall was clear this year when the Conservatives lost 10 city councils and about 400 councillors in local body elections in May after a string of losses in parliamentary byelections.

The latest string of Conservative rule began in 2010 with a resounding rout of the Labour Party but it descended into chaos that Sunak could not stem in the less than two years in power.

The Conservatives saw five Prime Ministers, David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Elizabeth Truss, and Sunak, the last three in the last five years marked by vicious in-fighting, with Truss being in office for only 49 days.

It spilled over into the campaign.

“I think we’ve seen in this election astonishing ill-discipline within the party,” former Justice Minister Robert Buckland told the BBC after losing to a Labour candidate.

Sunak’s future is at stake after holding the job of Prime Minister, which he won on his second try.

The tremendous loss by the Conservative Party casts a shadow on the technocrat’s attempts to become the leader of the opposition at the head of an emaciated party.

In a sign of the rising recriminations, Suella Braverman, the former Home Secretary dismissed by Sunak, said after her re-election: “The Conservative Party did not keep our promise.”

The leader of Indian origin, who belongs to the right wing of the Conservative Party and once ran for Prime Minister, added: “I am sorry my party didn’t listen to you, Conservative Party has let you down.”

Brexit – the momentous decision for Britain to leave the European Union in 2020 after a 2016 referendum – was the most significant marker of the Conservative rule.

The party led the country through the Covid pandemic, the economic crisis it caused, and the mounting immigration problem – mostly failing to live up to the voters’ expectations in the confluence of adversities.

 

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