Brexit hardliner Boris Johnson yesterday won the contest to lead Britain’s Conservative Party and is to become the nation’s next prime minister, tasked with fulfilling his promise to lead the UK out of the EU.
Johnson resoundingly defeated rival Jeremy Hunt, winning two-thirds of the votes in a ballot of about 160,000 Conservative members.
He is to be installed as prime minister in a formal handover from Theresa May today.
Photo: Reuters
In a brief speech meant to rally the party faithful, Johnson radiated optimism and pledged to deliver Brexit, unite the nation and defeat the Labour opposition.
“I think we know that we can do it and that the people of this country are trusting in us to do it and we know that we will do it,” he said.
Johnson, a former London mayor, has wooed Conservatives by promising to succeed where May failed and lead the UK out of the EU on the scheduled date of Oct. 31 — with or without a divorce deal.
Several Conservative ministers have already announced that they will resign to fight any push for a “no-deal” Brexit, an outcome economists said would disrupt trade and plunge the UK into recession.
Fears that Britain is inching closer to a “no-deal” Brexit weighed on the pound once again yesterday. The currency was down another 0.3 percent at US$1.2441 and near two-year lows.
May stepped down after the British Parliament repeatedly rejected the withdrawal agreement she struck with the 28-nation bloc.
Johnson insists he can get the EU to renegotiate — something the bloc insists it will not do.
If not, he says Britain must leave the EU on Halloween, “come what may.”
Johnson will preside over a House of Commons in which most members oppose leaving the EU without a deal, and where the Conservative Party lacks an overall majority.
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