Boris bravado boosts odds of no-deal Brexit
AS THE final leg of the UK Tory leadership race ends its first week proper, Boris Johnson remains the favourite to become the UK's next prime minister, despite recent allegations over a domestic incident last week with his girlfriend. The maverick former foreign secretary is facing off against current Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt in a clash that is seeing no-deal Brexit as the centrestage of debate within the electorate of 160,000 Tory party members - despite the fact that this disorderly outcome to the UK's exit from the EU is still widely misunderstood.
Mr Johnson - who easily finished top this month in polls of Tory MPs in the House of Commons - put this issue upfront again on Tuesday when he challenged Mr Hunt to pledge to leave the EU on Oct 31, come what may. Mr Johnson knows that his "do or die" hard-line stance on this issue will resonate with party members who - as polls indicate - now overwhelmingly want to leave the Brussels-based club. And this comes even if it means major political damage such as the end of the c…
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Columns
‘Competition for talent’ a poor excuse to keep key executives’ pay under wraps
OCBC should put its properties into a Reit and distribute the trust’s units to shareholders
Why a stronger US dollar is dangerous
An overstimulated US economy is asking for trouble
Too many property agents? Cap commissions on home sales
Time to study broadening of private market access