The end of Boris Johnson’s run as prime minister may ease the sense of political chaos, but it won’t fix the issues plaguing the UK.
“There is a cacophony of problems on the next Prime Minister’s plate, not least the cost-of-living crisis causing voters so much financial pain,” said Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.
Whoever replaces him, by winning a vote of Tory MPs and a subsequent ballot of party members, will inherit an economy buffeted by a cost-of-living crisis as inflation accelerates the most in four decades.
Unrest among workers is already fomenting as rail staff, postal workers, teachers and trial lawyers all declare walkouts or debate doing so, prompting parallels with the 1970s and the era’s mix of runaway prices and work stoppages.
Also read: UK’s Boris Johnson agrees to quit, will be ‘caretaker PM’ till October
The new leader will also have to repair a fractured party that’s looking tired after 12 years in power and suffered as Johnson’s administration has lurched from one crisis to another. And they’ll have to mend relations with the EU that have been strained to near breaking point by Johnson’s threats to renege on the Brexit agreement he negotiated.
US President Joe Biden has also made clear his concern at Johnson’s bid to dismantle the arrangements that keep Northern Ireland in the bloc’s single market, while creating a customs border with the rest of the UK. Johnson enjoyed close relations with then President Donald Trump, yet his ties with Biden have been cooler.
In the election of that year, his Conservatives won a large majority because of Johnson’s “Get Brexit Done” messaging and his ability to attract northern English voters who had traditionally preferred Labour.
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‘Ukraine heading for tragedy…’: Putin’s warning to the West amid war
Vladimir Putin on Thursday accused the West of decades of aggression towards Moscow and warned that if it wanted to attempt to beat Russia on the battlefield it was welcome to try, but this would bring tragedy for Ukraine. The West had failed in its attempt to contain Russia, and its sanctions on Moscow had caused difficulties but “not on the scale intended,” Putin added.
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Boris puts in papers after 59 resignations over three days
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced his resignation on Thursday amid a mass revolt by top members of his government, marking an end to three tumultuous years in power in which he brazenly bent and sometimes broke the rules of UK’s politics. Months of defiance ended almost with a shrug as Johnson stood outside 10, Downing Street and announced his “painful” resignation, conceding that his party wanted him gone.
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Sunak, Patel…Meet the South Asians in the race to become UK’s next PM
The field to succeed Boris Johnson as prime minister is packed with South Asian faces, with former chancellor of the exchequer Rishi Sunak being seen as one of the favourites. Far however, polls among Tory members have favoured 42-year-old Sunak as a top contender. Son-in-law of Infosys founder NR Narayana Murthy, Sunak became a member of parliament for the first time in 2015 from Richmond, one of the safest constituencies for the Tories.
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‘Doing my best’: Elon Musk on ‘collapsing birth rate’ amid twins report
Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk once expressed concerns about the falling birth rate and said he was doing his best to help the underpopulation crisis. “Mark my words, they are sadly true,” he said in another tweet. The Billionaire tech entrepreneur made the comment after a report by Business Insider that Musk quietly welcomed twins in November with an executive at his artificial intelligence company Neuralink, Shivon Zilis.
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WHO issues snapshot of monkeypox cases
The World Health Organization issued its first situation report on the spread of monkeypox on Thursday, detailing the typical profile of those affected by the outbreak so far. From January 1 to July 4, 6,027 laboratory-confirmed cases of monkeypox and three deaths have been reported to the WHO from 59 countries. Some 82 percent of the cases are in Europe and 15 percent are in the Americas.
Brexit to exit: The rise and fall of Boris Johnson