Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of Britain launched into some of the politically fraught weeks of his tenure on Monday, dealing with a mutiny in opposition to his flagship immigration coverage and testifying earlier than an official inquiry into the coronavirus pandemic.
On a day of split-screen drama within the capital, Mr. Sunak expressed sorrow for Britain’s heavy dying toll from Covid-19, saying, “It’s essential that we be taught the teachings so we could be higher ready sooner or later.”
However he was cautious to not criticize his predecessor, Boris Johnson, whom he had served underneath as chancellor of the Exchequer in the course of the disaster, and who got here underneath intensive questioning final week over his personal much-faulted efficiency in the course of the pandemic.
Whereas Mr. Sunak was defending his position within the authorities’s frantic Covid response, right-wing Conservative lawmakers had been assembly a couple of blocks away to debate his revised coverage of placing unlawful immigrants on one-way flights to Rwanda. The laws has fractured the occasion, alienating each Tory centrists, who fear that it goes too far, and right-wingers, who contend it doesn’t go far sufficient.
With a parliamentary vote on the laws scheduled for Tuesday, Mr. Sunak faces the potential of a insurrection that would torpedo the Rwanda coverage. If lawmakers move the plan, it may nonetheless face a string of amendments, in addition to a hostile reception within the Home of Lords, the unelected higher chamber of Parliament.
For Mr. Sunak, it provides as much as a devilishly tough few days. He’s underneath scrutiny for each his conduct as chancellor, when he repeatedly warned of the financial harm brought on by lockdowns, and his expertise as occasion chief, making an attempt to salvage an immigration coverage that has been struck down by Britain’s prime court docket.
Mr. Sunak did his finest to decrease the temperature on the Covid listening to. He pushed again on strategies from the inquiry’s chief counsel, Hugo Keith, that there have been clashes between him and Mr. Johnson or different cupboard ministers over whether or not to impose lockdowns at a number of moments in the course of the pandemic.
“I don’t assume I ever referred to it as a conflict,” Mr. Sunak stated of the inner debates over Covid insurance policies. “It’s proper that there was vigorous debate, as these had been extremely consequential choices for tens of tens of millions of individuals.”
