The United Kingdom’s prime ministerial candidate Rishi Sunak has insisted that he would rather lose the Conservative Party leadership race to replace Boris Johnson, than win on a false promise on how he plans to tackle the economic crisis.
In an interview with the BBC, the British Indian former Chancellor said he was committed to helping the most vulnerable families with the cost-of-living crisis, and felt a "moral responsibility to go further", and provide "extra help" over the winter, reports Khaleej Times.
The issue has become the key dividing line between him and his rival, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, who has pledged tax cuts that the former finance minister insists will benefit wealthier households, rather than those who need it most.
“I would rather lose than win on a false promise,” explained Sunak.
"What I'm determined to do is help people across this country through what will be a very difficult winter. My first preference is always not to take money off people in the first place," he added.
As the candidates continue to be grilled by Conservative Party members, who will be voting in the election in hustings throughout the UK, the issue of soaring inflation and prices has dominated the agenda.
"People can judge me on my record,” reiterated Sunak in his BBC interview on Wednesday night, referring to his work as Chancellor through the Covid-19 lockdown.
He pointed out that "when bills were going up by around 1,200 pounds earlier this year", he "made sure the most vulnerable received around 1,200 pounds".
Bd-pratidin English/Golam Rosul