
Former London mayor Johnson is the runaway favourite to win the governing Conservative Party’s leadership contest on Tuesday and then replace Prime Minister Theresa May when she quits the premiership on Wednesday. Observers say Hammond would never have expected to remain as Chancellor of the Exchequer under Johnson anyway. But the fact that the second most senior figure in the government is pre-empting his removal in any cabinet reshuffle by the incoming prime minister is seen as significant.
“I’m sure I’m not going to be sacked because I’m going to resign before we get to that point,” Hammond told BBC television. “I understand that his conditions for serving in his government would include accepting a no-deal exit on the 31st of October. “That is not something that I could ever sign up to.” The postal ballot of 160,000 grassroots party members is expected to return Johnson, 55, as the new Conservative leader over his contender, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt. Any remaining ballots must be delivered by Monday at 5 pm. Bookmakers give Hunt around a one-in-15 chance of victory.
THREAT TO MAJORITY
The centre-right Conservatives command a razor-thin majority in parliament’s lower House of Commons and Johnson’s opponents — both within and outside the party — are keen to scupper his leadership. Johnson has vowed to take Britain out of the European Union on October 31, with or without a divorce deal. Opponents of Brexit, and especially of a no-deal departure, are plotting moves against Johnson. Some Conservatives, Hammond included, have hinted they are prepared to bring down their own government rather than accept leaving the EU without an agreement. — AFP
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