Rishi Sunak will stick to 2019 Tory party manifesto, says MP

Former Home Office minister Victoria Atkins says levelling up, NHS and crime will be focus

Rishi Sunak will return the Conservative party to the policies of the 2019 manifesto, one of his key allies has said, acknowledging it had been a “brutal six weeks in politics”.

The former Home Office minister Victoria Atkins, tipped to get a high-profile role in Sunak’s administration, said the outgoing prime minister, Liz Truss, would agree she “stepped away from the 2019 manifesto” that won the Tories an 80-seat majority.

Truss will depart No 10 for Buckingham Palace on Tuesday morning after her final speech as prime minister and the king is expected to make Sunak prime minister shortly afterwards.

Atkins told Sky News: “Rishi said we will stick to the 2019 manifesto. It’s as simple as that,” adding it meant a focus on levelling up, the NHS and crime, continuing with the legislation started under Boris Johnson.

“We want to continue all of these pieces of work as we deal with this very, very difficult issue of our domestic economy in the context of the international problems that other countries are facing as well,” she said.

Victoria Atkins
Victoria Atkins: ‘We will see more of Rishi ... reassuring us.’ Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock

“So I appreciate that … it’s been a brutal six weeks in politics for lots of people. It’s been a very fast pace. But we now, behind Rishi, will have a stability and confidence and reassurance that I hope will begin to make a real difference to people’s lives over the coming weeks and months.”

Atkins told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the public would hear much more of Sunak’s agenda in the coming hours, after he was criticised for a very short public statement on Monday and giving a speech only behind closed doors to Conservative MPs.

“The thing I hope that we have learned over the last few weeks is that some of these things do take time. We need to deal with these various economic challenges methodically and step by step. We have the [financial statement] on 31 October still in the diary, he will be doing everything he can to make that happen.”

“This is an enormous set of challenges. We have people listening at home who will be very, very worried about paying their bills, about the cost of food, of energy and so on.

“And so we have got to try to bring a bit of stability and calmness to this situation so that people know that Rishi – having looked after us all during the pandemic – will be able to bring those skills to this current set of challenges as well.”

She said Sunak had offered a comforting image to Conservative MPs, similar to his persona through the Covid crisis, when he promised the government would take care of citizens in financial difficulty – though the furlough and support schemes did exclude certain groups.

“We will see more of Rishi in that mode … reassuring us,” Atkins said. “We’ve seen it as we were all huddled around our televisions during lockdown and were reassured by Rishi saying, ‘This is what I’m going to do for you, we’re going to put our arms around you’, and so I’m very confident that we will see more of Rishi in that mode, if you like, reassuring us, stabilising the markets.”

Sunak’s ascent to the leadership, which did not involve a vote in parliament or in the party because his rivals failed to reach the nomination threshold, has been divisive.

Tamara Wood, the chair of the Telford Conservative Association, said there was some bad feeling among the grassroots about his resignation from Johnson’s cabinet, citing a leadership website that had been created that year.

“My membership, the officers and some of our current councillors and candidates are very unhappy,” she told Today. He did get the support of a large number of MPs in parliament.

“But those MPs are reliant on the grassroots of the party … they have made the grassroots of the party feel used, not needed. The Conservative party is a very big machine, and they have excluded a very large part of it.”

Wood said she did not believe Sunak had integrity as leader. “I do not think he will unite the party and I do not think, based on public opinion that I’m seeing, on a lot of media that he has the confidence of the country.”

But Daphne Bagshawe, the chair of the Wealden Conservatives, said the process had been followed “absolutely properly” and it was right the new prime minister “can now get on with the job that needs to be done, and I really think the country wants us to get on with that job”.

She added: “From what people are saying to me, they are determined to unite behind Rishi Sunak and I think the country will be too. I sense that the country trusts Rishi Sunak, they know that he is kind … they know he is competent, they saw what he did during the pandemic, and we are going to need that type of control.”

Contributor

Jessica Elgot Deputy political editor

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
New Tory leader Rishi Sunak says party facing ‘existential threat’
Incoming prime minister says Tories must ‘unite or die’ and rules out early general election

Jessica Elgot, Peter Walker and Rowena Mason

24, Oct, 2022 @3:40 PM

Article image
Rishi Sunak will face ‘ungovernable’ Tory party, warns Johnson supporter
MP Christopher Chope says there will be continuing rebellions unless Sunak holds general election if he becomes PM

Peter Walker Political correspondent

24, Oct, 2022 @7:55 AM

Article image
Rishi Sunak hints he would vote for Liz Truss tax cut strategy
Former chancellor admits if were defeated he would back emergency budget put forward by rival Truss

Aubrey Allegretti Political correspondent

25, Aug, 2022 @5:27 PM

Article image
Calls grow for general election after Rishi Sunak becomes Tory leader
Labour, Lib Dems, SNP and Johnson supporters say former chancellor has no mandate to run country

Ben Quinn

24, Oct, 2022 @2:09 PM

Article image
Truss poised to plunge UK economy into ‘inflation spiral’, says Sunak
Truss cannot deliver £50bn tax cuts and support packages without pushing debt to dangerous levels, says Tory leadership rival

Tobi Thomas and Rowena Mason

22, Aug, 2022 @7:50 AM

Article image
Tory leadership race: Rishi Sunak calls himself ‘common sense’ Thatcherite – as it happened
Former chancellor says UK ‘needs to control borders’ and again references Margaret Thatcher

Nadeem Badshah (now) and Andrew Sparrow (earlier)

21, Jul, 2022 @7:42 PM

Article image
Sunak pledges £10bn to help vulnerable with soaring energy bills
Former chancellor outlines support package for up to 16 million vulnerable people

Ben Quinn

12, Aug, 2022 @7:40 AM

Article image
Nearly man to next PM: Rishi Sunak’s rapid change of political fortune
Former chancellor looked finished when he lost to Liz Truss – but out of chaos has come a ‘coronation’

Peter Walker and Pippa Crerar

24, Oct, 2022 @6:15 PM

Article image
Rishi Sunak reveals favourite McDonald’s food … which no longer exists
Former chancellor talks about favourite breakfast meal, which went off menu in 2020

Peter Walker Political correspondent

18, Aug, 2022 @12:28 PM

Article image
Coke, car trouble and class: some awkward Rishi Sunak moments
Incoming PM presents smart, impeccably turned out exterior but seems prone to more than the odd gaffe

Lisa O'Carroll

24, Oct, 2022 @4:01 PM