Rishi Sunak has resigned as Prime Minister following his historic loss to the Labour Party. The leftist party has earned a landslide legislative majority, despite earning a lower vote share than in 2017, due to a collapse in Conservative (Tory) Party support.
Sunak began his resignation speech outside 10 Downing Street with a blunt “I’m sorry,” telling voters: “I have heard your anger, your disappointment, and I take responsibility for this loss.” He also confirmed he is standing down as Conservative Party leader, “not immediately” but once the arrangements for a successor are finalized.
Sunak praised Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer as a “decent, public-spirited man, who I respect.” He offered no remarks on Reform Party leader Nigel Farage, who won over a huge number of the Conservatives’ former voters, facilitating their historic defeat.
Sunak did not lead the Conservatives into their general election victory in 2019, when Boris Johnson was premier. After Johnson was ousted, he stood for the party leadership, and was heavily rejected by party members in favor of Liz Truss.
Nevertheless, he was installed as party leader and, by extension, Prime Minister within a matter of weeks by party politicians after Truss was ousted, too. Regular party members were not given an opportunity to vote against him a second time.
Conservative MPs’ insistence on forcing Sunak on the country appears to have been a mistake. His managerial, managed decline style of government, which has failed to stop illegal immigration or reduce legal mass migration, despite promises to do so, has ended in the party’s largest-ever loss of parliamentary seats.