Appointment as Prime Minister , 25 October 2022 Sunak was appointed
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom by
King Charles III on 25 October 2022, making him the first
British Asian{{efn|name=BA|While Sunak was the first prime minister of British Asian ethnicity, several prime ministers have been noted to have Asian ancestry.
Benjamin Disraeli came from a diverse European Jewish background, a community with historic roots in Asia.
Boris Johnson's great-grandfather
Ali Kemal Bey was Turkish.
Lord Liverpool's great-grandmother
Isabella Beizor was of partial Indian heritage.
Domestic affairs In January 2023, Sunak outlined five key priorities; halving inflation, growing the economy, cutting debt, reducing NHS waiting lists, and stopping the boats, and expected voters to hold his government and himself to account on delivering those goals.
Economy ,
Jeremy Hunt, 25 October 2022 In November 2022 the
Bank of England feared the UK would experience prolonged recession and feared unemployment would probably double to 6.5%. In mid-February 2024, official figures showed that the UK had fallen into recession at the end of 2023. The economy shrank by 0.3% between October and December 2023 whilst it was also announced that the UK's economy grew by only 0.1% in the whole of 2023.
Climate change In a reversal of his predecessor's policy, Sunak reinstated the ban on
fracking on 26 October 2022 as outlined in the
2019 Conservative manifesto. In December 2022, Sunak was faced with the need to make concessions on a proposed ban on
onshore wind farms to be contained in the government's Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill. A number of Conservative MPs, including Johnson and Truss, said they would back a rebel amendment to the bill that would remove the ban. At the same time, there was the threat of another rebellion and need to make concessions related to housebuilding targets. He also promised to bring in new laws to tackle illegal immigration, saying anyone who comes to the UK illegally will not be allowed to stay. ,
Boris Johnson,
Liz Truss, and
Keir Starmer in November 2023 On 20 September 2023, Sunak announced a major rethink of the UK government's strategy to achieve
net zero carbon output in the UK by 2050, including postponing banning the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030 to 2035. He justified the changes to the government's net zero strategy by saying that the UK government should not impose "unacceptable costs" of net zero policies on working families. Instead, Sunak announced a reallocation of funds for transport projects in the North of England. On 2 November, following pressure from MPs, environmentalist campaigners and others, Sunak announced that he would attend. Sunak attended a reception held by King Charles at
Buckingham Palace on 4 November. Sunak told the meeting of approximately 200 politicians and campaigners that the UK will continue with its environmental aims after the end of its
COP 26 presidency. The partnership aims to halt and reverse
deforestation by 2030, bringing 26 countries and the
European Union together. The following day, Sunak hosted a coronation lunch outside 10 Downing Street, which was attended by volunteers, Ukrainian refugees and youth groups, and U.S. First Lady
Jill Biden.
Immigration In 2019 the Conservative Party and
Boris Johnson pledged to reduce net migration below 250,000 per year, but Sunak said in 2023 that the priority was not to reduce legal immigration but to stop
illegal immigration. Nearly 30,000 undocumented migrants crossed the Channel in small boats to the UK in 2023. Long-term
net migration to the United Kingdom (the number of people immigrating minus the number emigrating) reached a record high of 764,000 in 2022, with legal immigration at 1.26 million and emigration at 493,000. Of the 1,218,000 legal migrants coming to the UK in 2023, only 10% were EU Nationals.
Education , 7 February 2024Sunak proposed making mathematics compulsory in schools until the age of 18. Plans to merge the educational qualifications of
A-levels with
T Levels into a proposed
Advanced British Standard qualification were put forward in his speech, which
Downing Street Press Secretary Lucy Noakes said would likely not materialise for "about ten years." Sunak additionally announced that the government intends to raise the legal age at which individuals can purchase
cigarettes by one year annually, thus ultimately making the purchasing of them entirely illegal. In August 2023 the government ordered over 100 schools to be closed down for repairs due to the presence of structurally unsound
reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC). Hundreds more buildings, including 18 hospitals, were closed down over the following months due to concerns about the possible presence of RAAC. Sunak was widely blamed for the crisis after former civil servant
Jonathan Slater revealed that Sunak, during
his tenure as
Chancellor of the Exchequer, had reduced the funds available for school repairs despite warnings over the structural integrity of RAAC. The
Labour Party tabled a motion to release all files relating to Sunak's role in the crisis but Sunak was able to defeat the motion.
Industrial disputes Following several months of industrial disputes, public sector workers including teachers, police and doctors were offered pay rises of between 5 and 7%. Sunak said the pay rise would be funded by significantly increasing visa fees for migrants and the levy migrants pay to use the NHS. The bill would establish an independent body to support victims of major crimes and give government ministers the power to veto the parole of certain prisoners and restrict marriages from those serving
whole life orders. The bill, which also included provisions to compensate victims of the
infected blood scandal In August 2023 the government announced proposals to overhaul sentencing laws in order to make
whole life orders the starting point in murder cases involving sexual assault or sadistic conduct, only to be discounted in exceptional circumstances. The plans came in response to the murders of
Zara Aleena and
Sabina Nessa, two high-profile cases in which perpetrators convicted of rape and murder did not receive whole-life orders. The bill that would have implemented this change, known as the Sentencing Bill, was drafted but later abandoned as the government ran out of time to introduce it before the 2024 election. In the same month, Sunak announced plans to crack down on violent crime by increasing penalties for the illegal sale of
zombie knives and widening the powers of police officers to allow them to seize weapons with "no practical use" more easily.
Handling of preexisting scandals In August 2023, former neonatal nurse
Lucy Letby was convicted of murders and attempted murders of babies between 2015 and 2016, and opted not to attend the
sentencing hearing and as such heard neither the various
victim impact statements which were read out, nor her sentence being passed. This was later proposed during Starmer's premiership as a new clause to the
criminal justice bill in a 2024 parliamentary debate. After Letby's conviction the British government ordered an independent inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the deaths and other incidents. It was reported that the British government were examining how Letby's pension can be stopped.
Alex Chalk,
Secretary of State for Justice, wrote that the government will "look at options to change the law at the earliest opportunity" to compel defendants to attend their sentencing. The education minister
Gillian Keegan said that the type of inquiry would be reviewed after the chair was appointed. Health Secretary
Steve Barclay announced that the inquiry had been upgraded to a
statutory inquiry, describing it as the best way forward and meaning that witnesses would be compelled to give evidence. Former Health Secretary,
Jeremy Hunt, apologised to families of the victims during the 2025 hearing for taking "too long" to act. In December 2023, an amendment was added to the
Victims and Prisoners Bill to compensate those affected by the contaminated blood scandal in which thousands of people with
haemophilia were infected with
HIV and
hepatitis C due to receiving
contaminated clotting factor products. Sunak's government imposed a
three-line whip in an attempt to defeat the amendment, but 22 Conservative MPs broke with the government to vote in favour, successfully passing the amendment by 246 votes to 242 in Sunak's first defeat in the House of Commons. The provision remained in the bill when it passed into law as the Victims and Prisoners Act 2024. On 10 January 2024, in response to increased calls for those wrongly convicted in the
British Post Office scandal to be exonerated, Sunak announced that the government would introduce new legislation to quash all wrongful convictions resulting from the scandal and compensate some of those affected. The Post Office (Horizon Systems) Offences Act, which quashed all criminal convictions in England, Wales and Northern Ireland related to the scandal, was passed on 23 May 2024 and came into force immediately after receiving royal assent the following day, making it one of the last bills to become law before the 2024 general election.
Foreign affairs Ukraine at the
G7 Summit in Borgo Egnazia (Fasano) in
Apulia, Italy, 13 June 2024 Following the
15 November missile explosion in Poland, Sunak met U.S. president
Joe Biden and delivered a speech. Sunak later met Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and pledged to give Ukraine £50 million in aid. After meeting Zelenskyy, Sunak said: "I am proud of how the
UK stood with Ukraine from the very beginning. And I am here today to say the UK and our allies will continue to stand with Ukraine, as it fights to end this barbarous war and deliver a just peace." Sunak visited Ukraine on 12 January 2024 to sign a new U.K.-Ukraine Agreement on Security Cooperation with Zelenskyy promising £2.5 billion in military aid to Ukraine, including long-range missiles, artillery ammunition, air defence and maritime security, in addition to £200 million to be spent on military drones, making the United Kingdom the largest deliverer of drones to Ukraine out of any nation according to Downing Street.
Brexit in January 2023 In January 2023, Sunak confirmed that the deadline for removal of
EU legislation from the UK statute book would remain the end of that year, saying that it should be a "collective effort". This ultimately did not come to fruition. In February 2023, Sunak negotiated a proposed agreement with the EU on
Northern Ireland's trading arrangements which was published as the "
Windsor Framework". On 27 February, Sunak delivered a statement to the House of Commons, saying that the proposed agreement "protects Northern Ireland's place in our Union. The Framework came into effect on 1 October 2023. The Windsor Framework was however opposed by the
Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) who, for 22 months, refused to nominate a deputy First Minister to restore the
Northern Ireland Executive. The DUP eventually returned to Stormont in February 2024 after reaching a deal with Sunak's government. The UK Government published a command paper laying out the deal. The deal will end the alignment of
EU law in Northern Ireland. Due to the
Brexit withdrawal agreement,
internal trade was disrupted between the
British Isles. A DUP agreement with the
Sunak ministry will reportedly reduce checks and paperwork on goods moving from
Great Britain to
Northern Ireland. This involves the creation of a "
UK internal market" in order to ease unionist fears over de-facto border in the
Irish Sea.
Migrant crossings , April 2024After 45,000 people had crossed the Channel on small boats in the previous year, Sunak announced that stopping these boats would be one of his five priorities for 2023, adding: "We will pass new laws to stop small boats, making sure that if you come to this country illegally, you are detained and swiftly removed." Sunak adopted the slogan "stop the boats" which was previously used by the Australian prime minister
Tony Abbott during his 2013 election campaign. The home secretary would have a duty to remove the migrants who arrive without prior permission. Questions also arose on the feasibility of the policy such as if there was adequate capacity to hold the people for 28 days or if there were enough agreements with safe countries already in place. In June 2023, the
UK's Court of Appeal ruled the Rwanda asylum plan was unlawful, for which Sunak's government appealed. In November 2023,
UK's Supreme Court upheld the ruling. In response to the ruling, Sunak first sent Foreign Secretary
James Cleverly to sign a second treaty with Rwanda which would ensure that migrants sent to Rwanda cannot be sent to other countries, only back to the United Kingdom, in order to address the court's concerns over
refoulement. His government then introduced the
Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill, which would allow them to disapply certain aspects of international law and the
Human Rights Act 1998 in order to declare Rwanda a safe country under UK law. However, despite calls from the party's right, the government resisted completely disapplying the
European Convention on Human Rights due to the Rwandan government opposing such measures. The bill faced criticism from both the left and the right of the Conservative Party, with immigration minister
Robert Jenrick resigning in protest at what he saw as the bill not going far enough. Despite opposition from every other party and large sections of the Conservatives, the government managed to secure a majority of 44 at the bill's
second reading, with many on the right of the party abstaining from voting. The
Safety of Rwanda Bill passed its
third reading on 17 January 2024, with Sunak resisting attempts by Conservative MPs to "toughen up" the bill, which now faces a "titanic battle" in the House of Lords. On 23 January Sunak suffered his first defeat in the House of Lords ahead of the Rwanda bill vote when peers voted against ratifying the U.K.–Rwanda treaty signed the previous year guaranteeing non-refoulement, a central part of Sunak's asylum plan. While the vote is not binding, it was seen by observers as a major blow to Sunak which could signal that the Safety of Rwanda Bill may be defeated in the upcoming vote. Sunak was criticised by a number of Conservative MPs when it was revealed that the government had allowed around 16,000 asylum seekers to work in occupations with staff shortages such as care, construction and agriculture. The government was accused of creating a "pull factor" which could encourage migrants to come to the U.K. illegally in order to seek work. The
Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Act 2024 declared Rwanda a safe country.
Sudan With the outbreak of the
War in Sudan in April 2023, Sunak's government was widely criticised for its perceived failure to evacuate British nationals, with Sunak prioritising evacuating British embassy staff while thousands of British nationals remained trapped in Sudan. During a 72-hour ceasefire the government authorised RAF airlifts to evacuate British citizens from the Wadi Saeedna airstrip in
Khartoum; however on 27 April the government announced that thousands of British visa holders, including a number of NHS doctors who had lived in the U.K. for years, would not be included in the evacuation as they did not possess British citizenship, and would instead be expected to make their way to alternative evacuation routes.
Gaza war in Jerusalem, 19 October 2023 In October 2023,
Hamas launched a
surprise attack on Israel that
devolved into a war and a growing
humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. Sunak pledged the UK's support for Israel and declared that Israel "has an absolute right to defend itself". Sunak backed calls for humanitarian pauses to allow for aid to be brought into Gaza, although he initially rejected calls for a full ceasefire as he argued that this would only benefit Hamas. However, Sunak later condemned the high number of civilian casualties during the Israeli bombardment of Gaza and called for a "sustainable ceasefire" in which all Israeli hostages are returned to Israel, attacks against Israel cease and humanitarian aid is allowed into Gaza. His government supports the
two-state solution as a resolution to the conflict. Since the outbreak of the war, Sunak's government pledged millions of pounds in humanitarian aid to civilians in the Gaza strip and pushed for the opening of the
Rafah Border Crossing to allow for the evacuation of British nationals and the provision of aid to civilians. Sunak also deployed
Royal Navy and
Royal Air Force assets to patrol the eastern
Mediterranean Sea with the stated purpose of supporting humanitarian efforts and monitoring threats to regional security. Sunak's administration has implemented sanctions against leading figures in Hamas and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, including Hamas co-founder
Mahmoud al-Zahar, as well as imposing travel bans against Israeli settlers involved in violent activities in the
West Bank. in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, 19 October 2023 in Cairo, Egypt, 20 October 2023 Sunak reaffirmed his support for humanitarian pauses and an eventual ceasefire in the war in Gaza ahead of a debate on the subject on 21 February 2024, but argued that an immediate ceasefire would not be successful and would not be in anyone's interest. The following day, the
Scottish National Party tabled an
opposition day amendment calling for an immediate ceasefire. Sunak's government tabled an amendment supporting an eventual ceasefire while emphasizing its support for Israel's right to self-defence and opposition to Hamas. However, in a break with Parliamentary convention, Speaker of the House
Lindsay Hoyle chose to select a non-binding Labour Party amendment calling for an immediate ceasefire to be voted on first, which led to the government withdrawing its amendment and the Labour amendment being passed without a vote taking place. Amidst the ensuing controversy, Sunak described Hoyle's actions as "very concerning" but did not support calls from within the Conservative Party for the Speaker to be ousted. The British government continued its policy of providing humanitarian aid to civilians in Gaza. On 21 February 2024, the U.K. delivered aid to northern Gaza, inaccessible by land or sea, for the first time via air-drops by the Jordanian air force, having reached an arrangement with Jordan to deliver aid into Gaza on the U.K.'s behalf. On 25 February the government pledged a further £4.25 million in sexual and reproductive aid to Palestinian women, projected to reach around 1 in 5 women in Gaza. When the
International Criminal Court prosecutor
Karim Ahmad Khan announced that he would seek to charge Israeli president
Benjamin Netanyahu with war crimes, Sunak denounced the move as "unhelpful" and accused Khan of drawing a moral equivalence between Israel and Hamas.
Sanctions On 8 December 2023, ahead of the 75th anniversary of the
United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, Sunak's government unveiled a set of 46 sanctions against individuals linked to
human trafficking and authoritarian governments around the world. The individuals targeted by the sanctions included 17 members of the Belarusian judiciary, two Haitians linked to the
2018 La Saline attacks, eight accused of atrocities during the
Syrian Civil War and five from the Iranian authorities targeted for their involvement in enforcing mandatory hijab law, as well as 14 individuals and entities linked to human trafficking in
Myanmar,
Laos and
Cambodia.
Boycotts Sunak experienced a minor rebellion in the House of Commons on 10 January over the
Economic Activity of Public Bodies (Overseas Matters) Bill, a bill that would prevent publicly funded bodies from imposing their own boycotts against a particular international territory without the backing of the government. The bill, which was introduced by communities secretary
Michael Gove the previous year, was widely seen as intended to prevent councils from imposing sanctions on
Israel amidst widespread outrage over
accusations of war crimes in the ongoing war against Hamas, with many terming it the "anti-
BDS bill". The bill was widely criticised for measures termed as "draconian" by critics which included making it illegal for members of public bodies to say they would support a boycott if it were legal. The bill was later abandoned after the government ran out of time to introduce it to the House of Lords before the 2024 election. The strikes reportedly killed five Houthi fighters and injured six others. Sunak defended the airstrikes as being self-defence against Houthi aggression, although the
Liberal Democrats and
Green Party criticised the fact that Sunak had unilaterally ordered military action without consulting Parliament. On 22 January Sunak and Biden launched a second round of strikes against Houthi targets. In a statement to the House of Commons the following day Sunak said that the strikes were intended as a warning to the Houthis to cease their attacks on shipping in the Red Sea and warned that the United Kingdom would not hesitate to strike again in self-defence. The U.K. launched two further rounds of strikes in conjunction with the U.S. on 3 February and 24 February.
Party management Scandals Sleaze scandals involving MPs A number of scandals involving Conservative MPs (widely known as "sleaze") have occurred during Sunak's premiership.
Gavin Williamson resigned in November 2022 after allegations that he had used improper language to
Wendy Morton and had bullied several staffers during his time as a cabinet minister under
Theresa May, to avoid being a distraction for Sunak's government. At
Prime Minister's Questions on 9 November, Sunak said it was "absolutely right" that Williamson had resigned and said: "I obviously regret appointing someone who has had to resign in these circumstances".
Nadhim Zahawi's tax arrangements attracted public attention in January 2023. Sunak asked
Laurie Magnus, the
Independent Adviser on Ministers' Interests, to investigate Zahawi's personal financial arrangements and declarations. The report identified seven breaches of the Ministerial Code and was published on 29 January 2023. Sunak dismissed Zahawi immediately after he was found to have breached the
Ministerial Code by failing to disclose that he was being investigated by
HM Revenue and Customs while he served as chancellor under Johnson. The
Cabinet Office told officials at No 10 there were informal complaints about
Dominic Raab's behaviour before Sunak made him deputy prime minister according to
The Times. In 2023, Raab faced an independent investigation into complaints arising from his prior tenures as Lord Chancellor and foreign secretary under
Boris Johnson while eight complaints were being formally investigated over his bullying. Sunak stated he did not know about formal complaints but his press secretary did not confirm or deny whether Sunak knew of informal complaints. On 14 December 2022, eight accusations of bullying were being formally investigated. On 21 April 2023, Raab resigned as deputy prime minister the day after Sunak received the report into Raab's behaviour, which found that he had bullied civil servants. On 25 October,
Suella Braverman was reappointed as the
Home Secretary by Sunak upon the formation of the
Sunak ministry. Braverman's reappointment was challenged by
Labour Party MPs,
Liberal Democrats,
Scottish National Party MPs and some Conservatives. The
Labour leader and
Leader of the Opposition,
Keir Starmer, raised it as the subject of his first question to Sunak at Sunak's first
Prime Minister's Questions on 26 October 2022. Sunak said Braverman "made an error of judgment but she recognised that she raised the matter and she accepted her mistake". Following the
2023 Hamas attack on Israel, Braverman was sacked as home secretary in the
cabinet reshuffle of 13 November 2023, and was replaced by
James Cleverly, who had been the foreign secretary. According to
The Guardian, the trigger for her sacking was an article written by her and published in
The Times on 8 November 2023, which included a statement that there was "a perception that senior police officers play favourites when it comes to protesters" and were tougher on rightwing extremists than pro-Palestinian "mobs".
The Guardian reported that the prime minister's office had asked for changes to be made to the article, but not all were implemented. The Labour Party and some police officers said that Braverman's writing had led to far-right supporters attacking police on 11 November 2023.
Seat belt FPN In January 2023, Sunak was issued a
fixed penalty notice by
Lancashire Constabulary after a social media video of him failing to wear a
seat belt in a moving vehicle was published. Sunak apologised for the incident and said he made a "brief error of judgment". It was the second time Sunak got a fixed penalty notice while in government. During
his chancellorship in April 2022, he received one in relation to
Partygate.
Sunak and Starmer's PMQs exchange about transgender rights In February 2024, in response to Keir Starmer's alleged backtracking on "
defining a woman" at
Prime Minister's Questions, Sunak said that "in fairness, that was only 99% of a U-turn", referring to previous comments made by Starmer that "99.9% of women" do not have a penis. This was said on the same day that the mother of
murdered transgender teenager Brianna Ghey was present at the Commons, and was harshly criticised by Starmer, LGBT groups (including
Stonewall) and relatives of Ghey. Starmer reacted by deriding Sunak for including that in his answer while Ghey's mother was "in this chamber". In response to Ghey's father's request for an apology, Sunak said it was Starmer's linking the comments to the murder that was "the worst of politics". Esther Ghey, who was not in the public gallery to hear Sunak's remark, later declined requests for comment adding that she was concentrating on "creating a lasting legacy" for her daughter. Both Sunak and Starmer were criticised. Sunak's response was called a joke by some media outlets, and was criticised by some opposition MPs and Conservatives. Starmer's response was criticised by minister for women and equalities,
Kemi Badenoch, who said it showed Labour were "happy to weaponise" Ghey's murder. == Local election results and opinion polling ==