British businessman and Conservative donor Lord Ranger has warned that the UK will be perceived as a “racist” country if Tory members do not elect former chancellor Rishi Sunak as the party leader.
The peer, whose company Sun Mark has donated £1.54 million to the Conservatives and its lawmakers since 2009, said, “if people reject him, it will be a bad name for the party and the country because this will be perceived as racist.”
“And so there is pressure on them to prove that here race does not matter,” he told Indian news network Bharat Tak, as he made a strong pitch for Sunak whose “calibre is above everyone” for the prime ministerial job.
“I am optimistic that people here will be fair and will not reject anyone on the basis of race,” Lord Ranger said.
Born in Gujranwala in British India, Lord Ranger migrated to Britain aged 27 and went on to found the international distribution and marketing company Sun Mark in London in 1995. He also credited his success to the “British sense of tolerance and fair play”.
A video he posted on Twitter said it would be a “watershed moment in British politics when a non-white candidate will prove that his country is ready for change”.
In an email to the Insider website, he said, “If the majority of members overwhelmingly reject Rishi Sunak, it will create a negative perception in the minds of ethnic communities”.
However, Sunak’s spokesperson said there was “not a shred of truth to this claim”.
Sunak, who enjoyed solid support from Tory MPs throughout a series of votes to whittle down the candidates’ list to the final leg, had highlighted that his parents were immigrants and Britain gave them and millions like them the chance of a better future.
He quit as the chancellor of the exchequer this month, triggering a mass resignation from the scandal-tarred government and the events forced prime minister Boris Johnson to step down as the Conservative leader.
Tory grassroots functionaries will choose Sunak or foreign secretary Liz Truss to lead the party and succeed Johnson as the head of the government.
US president Donald Trump speaks with the press as he meets with Indian prime minister Narendra Modi in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
US PRESIDENT Donald Trump reiterated on Sunday (19) that Indian prime minister Narendra Modi told him India will stop buying Russian oil, while warning that New Delhi would continue paying "massive" tariffs if it did not do so.
"I spoke with prime minister Modi of India, and he said he's not going to be doing the Russian oil thing," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One.
Asked about India's assertion that it was not aware of any conversation between Modi and Trump, Trump replied: "But if they want to say that, then they'll just continue to pay massive tariffs, and they don't want to do that."
Russian oil has been one of the main irritants for Trump in prolonged trade talks with India - half of his 50 per cent tariffs on Indian goods are in retaliation for those purchases. The US government has said petroleum revenue funds Russia’s war in Ukraine.
India has become the biggest buyer of seaborne Russian oil sold at a discount after Western nations shunned purchases and imposed sanctions on Moscow for its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Trade talks between India and the US are going on in a "congenial" manner, an Indian government official said on Saturday (18), declining to be identified due to the sensitivity of talks.
An Indian delegation which was in the US last week for talks has returned, the official said, declining to share further details.
An email to India's trade ministry was not immediately answered on Monday (20), which was a public holiday.
Trump last Wednesday (15) said Modi had assured him that day that India would stop its Russian oil purchases. India's foreign ministry said it was not aware of any telephone conversation between the leaders that day, but said that New Delhi's main concern was to "safeguard the interests of the Indian consumer."
A White House official said on Thursday (16) that India has halved its purchases of Russian oil, but Indian sources said no immediate reduction had been seen.
The sources said Indian refiners already placed orders for November loading, including some slated for December arrival, so any cut may start showing up in December or January import numbers.
India's imports of Russian oil are set to rise about 20 per cent this month to 1.9 million barrels per day, according to estimates from commodities data firm Kpler, as Russia ramps up exports after Ukrainian drones hit its refineries.
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