Matthew Lynn Matthew Lynn

How Sunak can save his stumbling campaign

(Photo: Getty)

He has the widest support among MPs. He easily beats any other candidate with the voters, and is the only one consistently ahead of Sir Kier Starmer in the polls. He has experience, a fluent manner on TV, and as his slick campaign has reminded everyone, he is the most professional campaigner among the politicians left in the race. Against an often underwhelming, inexperienced group of rivals, the former Chancellor Rishi Sunak should be a certainty to become leader of the Conservative party, and so Prime Minister, by the autumn. There is just one catch: his stubborn attachment to raising corporation tax – when in truth, ditching that policy would be the one sure way of rescuing his stumbling campaign.





If Sunak wants to cut a tax, it is the levy on business that should be scrapped first

The Tory leadership contest has so far been dominated by promises of tax cuts, more tax cuts, and, er, a few more tax cuts on top of that.

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