Boris Johnson, Jeremy Hunt in runoff for UK prime minister
LONDON-The Associated Press
Britain's next prime minister will be a man in his 50s who went to Oxford University - either Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt, the two finalists selected on June 20 in a race to lead the governing Conservative Party.
Johnson, a flamboyant former foreign secretary and ex-mayor of London, topped a ballot of 313 Conservative lawmakers with 160 votes and is runaway favorite to become the party's next leader.
He has led in all five voting rounds of a contest that began last week with 10 contenders.
Hunt, Britain's current foreign secretary, came a distant second with 77 votes and will join Johnson in a runoff decided by 160,000 party members across Britain.
Johnson tweeted that he was honored to have gotten more than half the votes cast by party lawmakers. He said "I look forward to getting out across the U.K. and to set out my plan to deliver
Brexit, unite our country, and create a brighter future for all of us."
Hunt said on Twitter that he knew he was the underdog "but in politics surprises happen."
The winner of the runoff, due to be announced the week of July 22, will become the new Conservative leader and the country's next prime minister, replacing Theresa May.
Hunt edged out Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who got 75 votes, after Home Secretary Sajid Javid was eliminated earlier on June 20.
The result spares Johnson a showdown with Gove, his former ally-turned-archrival. The two men jointly led the "leave" campaign in Britain's 2016 EU membership referendum, but Gove scuttled Johnson's subsequent bid to become prime minister by deciding to run for the job himself, in a race ultimately won by May.
This time around, many in the party doubt that anyone can beat 55-year-old Johnson, a quick-witted, Latin-spouting extrovert admired for his ability to connect with voters, but mistrusted for his erratic performance in high office and his long record of inaccurate, misleading and sometimes offensive comments.
"Boris will say absolutely anything in order to please an audience," historian Max Hastings told the BBC on June 20. "Boris would have told the passengers on the Titanic that rescue was imminent."
Hunt, who has been culture secretary and health secretary, is considered an experienced, competent minister, but unexciting. The 52-year-old politician bills himself as the "serious" candidate, in an implicit contrast to Johnson. He will try to halt Johnson's momentum by picking away at his rival's plans for Brexit as the two speak to party members at meetings across the country over the next few weeks.
Both Johnson and Hunt vow they will lead Britain out of the European Union, a challenge that defeated May. She quit as Conservative leader earlier this month after failing to win Parliament's backing for her Brexit deal.
Brexit, originally scheduled to take place on March 29, has been postponed twice amid political deadlock in London.
Johnson has won backing from the party's die-hard Brexiteers by insisting the U.K. must leave the bloc on the rescheduled date of Oct. 31, with or without a divorce deal to smooth the way.
He also is supported - somewhat paradoxically - by some Tory moderates who claim Johnson has the skills to unite the party and win back voters from rival parties on both the left and the right.
Boris-backer Robert Buckland said Johnson was "a moderate, open-minded" Conservative.
"The essence of Boris Johnson is a unifier," he said.
Hunt backed the losing "remain" side in the referendum, a disadvantage in a party whose rank-and-file members are overwhelmingly pro-Brexit. Hunt now insists he is determined to go through with Brexit and says his past in business, running an educational publishing firm, gives him the experience to negotiate with the EU.
Hunt says he would seek another postponement of Brexit if that is needed to secure a deal, but only for a short time.
Critics say neither candidate has a realistic plan. The EU is adamant that it won't reopen the Brexit agreement it struck with May's government, which has been rejected three times by Britain's Parliament.
Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said on June 20 that "the withdrawal agreement is not going to be reopened."
He also said there was "enormous hostility to any further extension" of the Brexit deadline among the other 27 EU leaders.
Many economists and businesses warn that leaving the EU without a deal on divorce terms and future relations would cause economic turmoil as tariffs and other disruptions are imposed on trade between Britain and the EU.
U.K. Treasury chief Philip Hammond warned that a no-deal Brexit would put Britain's prosperity at risk and leave the economy "permanently smaller."
"The question to the candidates is not 'What is your plan?' but 'What is your Plan B?'" Hammond said in extracts from a speech he was giving on June 20 night.