Estonian Free PressEstonian Free Press
  • National Security
    • United States
    • United Kingdom
    • Europe
    • Estonia
    • Latvia
    • Lithuania
    • Moldova
    • Poland
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
  • Counterterrorism
  • Cybersecurity
  • Intelligence

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest National Security News directly to your inbox.

What's Hot

A.Zuokas: vargu, ar po ketverių metų kandidatuosiu į Vilniaus merus

March 20, 2023

The World of Saint Javelin

March 20, 2023

One of the Dark Web’s Largest Cryptocurrency Laundromats Taken Down

March 20, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Monday, March 20
Estonian Free PressEstonian Free Press
  • National Security
    • United States
    • United Kingdom
    • Europe
    • Estonia
    • Latvia
    • Lithuania
    • Moldova
    • Poland
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
  • Counterterrorism
  • Cybersecurity
  • Intelligence
en English
en Englishet Estonianlv Latvianlt Lithuanianpl Polishro Romanianru Russianuk Ukrainian
Trending
  • A.Zuokas: vargu, ar po ketverių metų kandidatuosiu į Vilniaus merus
  • The World of Saint Javelin
  • One of the Dark Web’s Largest Cryptocurrency Laundromats Taken Down
  • Food tsar blames Tory approach to obesity will cause ‘huge harm’ as he quits
  • Usatîi: Moldova trebuie să trăiască cu propria minte
  • V.Blinkevičiūtė apie konservatorių pasirodymą rinkimuose: tai yra pralaimėjimas
  • Keir Starmer accuses Boris Johnson of attempting to ‘intimidate’ MPs probing Partygate scandal
  • Connection Protection
Subscribe
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Estonian Free PressEstonian Free Press
Home » Tory leadership: Rishi Sunak woos Brexit supporters with vow to fast-track ripping up of EU rules

Tory leadership: Rishi Sunak woos Brexit supporters with vow to fast-track ripping up of EU rules

July 16, 20224 Mins Read United Kingdom
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Rishi Sunak is making a fresh pitch to Brexit-backing Tories in the party’s leadership race, with a vow to rip up EU rules on financial services, data and clinical trials.

The former chancellor said that he would decide within 100 days of becoming prime minister which of a mountain of 2,400 outstanding laws and regulations should disappear. He is also promising a “Big Bang 2.0” for the City of London.

Mr Sunak’s rejection of immediate tax cuts is a risk, given that the Conservative grassroots are to pick the party’s new leader, but he is pointing out that – unlike his Remain-backing rival Liz Truss – he campaigned for Leave despite being warned “my political career would end”.

And he said: “As prime minister, I would go further and faster in using the freedoms Brexit has given us to cut the mass of EU regulations and bureaucracy holding back our growth.”

The move comes as new polling by JL Partners found that Mr Sunak is the overwhelming choice of voters in the constituencies the Conservatives must retain in order to win the next general election.

The public prefer him in 76 per cent of the 365 seats the party won in 2019, the survey suggests – leaving rivals Tom Tugendhat and Penny Mordaunt trailing badly, at 19 per cent and 5 per cent respectively.

Ms Truss – who is floundering in the race after being judged to have lost the first TV debate – failed to top the table in any of the seats, as did Kemi Badenoch.

The policy was unveiled after Mr Sunak scored a success with an endorsement from the figure seen as the party’s “Mr North”, the influential Tees Valley mayor Ben Houchen.

However, the promised assault on EU laws will trigger a fresh clash with Brussels if it leads to lower regulatory standards, flouting pledges made when the Brexit trade deal was signed.

Last month, the European Union’s Brexit negotiator, Maros Sefcovic, warned of “consequences” if the promised level playing field is tilted, saying that the EU would “be watching developments closely.”

In other developments in the race, ahead of a second TV clash on Sunday evening:

  • Ms Truss floated another big tax cut, to help people take work breaks for childcare or as carers, despite Mr Sunak’s criticism that her economic plans are “a fairytale”
  • Mr Tugendhat – the contender most likely to fall in Monday’s third ballot – insisted he would not drop out before then, saying: “I have never turned down a challenge because the odds were against me. I don’t plan to start now.”
  • Labour demanded that the candidates come clean on the spending cuts required to deliver the promised “billions of pounds of unfunded tax cuts”
  • The Liberal Democrats urged the candidates to rule out a cabinet role for Boris Johnson, to ensure that they can begin “mending our broken politics”

Mr Sunak remains the favourite candidate among Conservative MPs, ahead of further ballots that will take place from Monday to whittle down the five survivors to a final two by Wednesday.

But the winner – and the next prime minister – will then be chosen by the 180,000-odd Tory party members before Mr Johnson leaves Downing Street on 6 September.

The outgoing government is already planning a bonfire of EU “retained law” in a controversial move that involves using backstage regulations instead of allowing full scrutiny and votes.

The former chancellor said he would accelerate the process, pointing to “burdensome” financial services regulations and promising to “make London once again the world’s leading financial centre by 2027”.

Mr Sunak would also “remove the burdens” of EU data laws that he argued are “stopping British tech companies from innovating, and public services from being able to share data to clamp down on crime”.

Further, he would “speed up our clinical trials approval process” by creating a single approval service, pointing to the success of the UK’s Covid vaccine rollout.

Mr Sunak said: “In 2016, I was told by my party leadership that if I backed Brexit, my political career would end before it had even begun. I backed Brexit regardless because I knew it was the right thing for the country.

“We need to capitalise on these opportunities by ditching the mass of unnecessary regulations and low-growth mentality we’ve inherited from the EU.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Articles Liés

Food tsar blames Tory approach to obesity will cause ‘huge harm’ as he quits

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom

Keir Starmer accuses Boris Johnson of attempting to ‘intimidate’ MPs probing Partygate scandal

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom

So where were they, Mr Blair? How the Independent exposed the lie of Saddam’s WMD and the justification for an illegal war

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom

Boris Johnson news – live: Ex-PM to defend himself over Partygate as he’s urged to ‘tell the truth’

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom

Boris Johnson to reveal official partygate defence ahead of inquiry showdown

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom

Tories oversaw longest and deepest squeeze of family budgets in history, TUC says

March 20, 2023 United Kingdom
Don't Miss
Europe

The World of Saint Javelin

By woe whMarch 20, 20230

In the course of 2022, an unofficial new female saint joined the Ukrainian pantheon. Her…

One of the Dark Web’s Largest Cryptocurrency Laundromats Taken Down

March 20, 2023

Food tsar blames Tory approach to obesity will cause ‘huge harm’ as he quits

March 20, 2023

Usatîi: Moldova trebuie să trăiască cu propria minte

March 20, 2023
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Our Picks

Keir Starmer accuses Boris Johnson of attempting to ‘intimidate’ MPs probing Partygate scandal

March 20, 2023

Connection Protection

March 20, 2023

A.Vaitkus apie konservatorius: ši politinė jėga yra etikečių klijavimo specialistai

March 20, 2023

The Art of Logistics

March 20, 2023

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest National Security News directly to your inbox.

© 2023 Estonian Free Press. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.