It takes a brave — some may say reckless — leader to call a general election when trailing in the polls by 20 percent.
With three weeks to go to polling day on July 4, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s gamble looks like it will backfire, possibly spectacularly so, with perilous consequences for the country’s oldest political party, the Conservatives. For one of the most powerful members of his Cabinet, the Chancellor — Britain’s top finance minister — Jeremy Hunt, it means a fight for his political life.
Host Anne McElvoy joins him on the campaign trail in his Surrey constituency, a place which used to be rock solid territory for the Conservatives. Hunt concedes that voters feel “battered” by the cost of living crisis and “quite understandably hold the guys at the top to account.”
Anne is also joined by POLITICO’s deputy U.K. editor Rosa Prince for her reflections on the state of the campaign and Hunt’s warning that a vote for Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party could mean an “even bigger majority for Labour.”