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Rishi Sunak is feeling political pressure as all five major pledges appear to be at stake just six months after their pledge.
The prime minister believes the middle of this year will likely be the most difficult of his premiership, with a weak economy and little progress in reducing boat crossings across the English Channel, but the situation is improving. He then adamantly claims. I understand.
Sunak, who attended the latest Ash match at Lords over the weekend, told the BBC. test match special: “When I got this job, I knew it wasn’t going to be easy. We all knew that. It was like the worst tray for a new job anyone could imagine.” .”
He is believed to have told aides months ago that he would be at his most vulnerable after local elections in May and before the party convention in the fall. Inflation has fallen more slowly than previously expected, public debt continues to rise, and a series of aggressive interest rate hikes could reverse fragile economic growth.
“We’re just putting on our helmets and working on it. Things will get better, though not as soon as we thought,” a senior government official said. Sunak told his friends that he likes watching movies to relax. Inheritance – a drama about power-hungry aspirants desperate for top jobs – and night agenta thriller depicting advanced politics.
The prime minister will spend much of this week attending events to mark the NHS’s 75th anniversary before embarking on a new round of global diplomacy with Joe Biden’s short visit to the UK and next week’s NATO summit in Lithuania. He privately said that as he travels the world, he despairs at the self-deprecating language of the British. He told one ally, “We love talking about how shit we are. We’re not shit!”
Mr. Sunak’s promise to ‘stop the boats’ and cut NHS waiting lists has been as volatile as his economic promises. A record number of refugees crossed the strait in June, but there are few signs that the pressure on health services will ease.
A spokesperson for No. 10 said: “The prime minister set his ambitious priorities right. He makes it clear that these are national priorities and that he spends most of his time there.”
He added that while Germany and other European countries are experiencing recessions, the UK has just managed to avoid one, saying: “We were predicted to be in a recession, but in reality It didn’t happen. These things don’t happen by chance.”