The election of Rishi Sunak as the next Prime Minister of Britain has received massive support from Indians on social media. The UK-born Indian-ori✃gin Tory MP has not only become the youngest person to become British PM but also the first non-white,𒉰 Indian-origin, Hindu man to get elected to the post.
Soon after it became apparent that the Sunak would become the next PM, congratulatory messages started pouring from across states and parties. Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated Sunak on Twitter and said he is looking forward to “working closely together on global issues.” Karnataka Chief Minister ꦯBasavaraj Bommai and corporate honchos congratulated Sunak. So did Punjab CM Bhagwant Singh Mann. Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal and former J&K CM Mehbooba Mufti have also expressed their good wishes for the former British finan😼ce minister.
Indian TV channels also appear🐭ed star-struck by Sunak’s victory. Cheerful proclamations like “Indian son rises over the empire", “Battered Britain gets ‘desi’ big boss.” and 🎃others of the ilk were flashed across tv news channels.
But what🦄 does Sunak's appointmentღ as PM really mean for India?
'Make India-UK relations a two way exchange': Sunak
In his turn, Sunak, a practicing Hindu who uꦿsually makes no bones about his Indian 🦩roots and heritage, has declared that wants to change the UK-India relationship.
The statement had come earlier in August when Sunak had been competing with then Foreign🃏 Secretary Liz Truss for the post of PM, a contest that truss ultimately won. Addressing a group of British Indian Conservative Party members who were voting in the election, Sunak had said in August that he wanted to make India-UK relations more of a "two-way exchange that opens up easy access to UK studen𝓰ts and companies in India".
The Conservative leaders in support of the Tory MP for Richmond in Yorkshire h𒅌ave also claimed that Britain was not "racist" and that Sunak's Indian heritage and ethnic minority background had no part to play in the contest to succeed Boris Johnson as the Conservative Party leader and British Prime Minister.
“This♈ country is not racist. For Rishi to reach this stage, it proves that merit is valued,” said Lord Dolar Popat, a veteran Tory peer.
Organizations like the Conservati🌌ve Friends of India (CFIN) diaspora group in north London has also shown support for Sunak. In August, Sunak had greeted a gathering of the same with a mix of traditional greetings such as “namaste, salaam, khem cho and kidda” and even broke into Hindi: “aap sab mere parivar ho (you all are my family)".
Responding to a question about bilateral ties from CFIN co-chair Reena Ranger, Sunak had stated that “We know the UK-India relationship is important. We represent the living bridge between our two countries&qu๊ot;.
“We are all very aware of the opportunity for the UK to sell൩ things and do things in India, but actually we need to look at that relationship differently because there is an enormous amount that we here in t꧅he UK can learn from India.
“I want to make sure that it’s easy for our students to also travel to India and learn, that it’s also easy for our companies and In🅠dian companies to work together because it’s not just a one-way relationship, it’s a two-way relationship, and that’s the type of change I want to bring to that relationship,” he said.
'China biggest threat'
Sunak's popularity among Indians might also have to do with the fact that the Tory leader has openly called China, India's South Asian neighbour with whom it shares contentious geopolitical relation༺s, the biggest enemy of the UK.
Earlier in August, Sunak had doubled down on his ♛stand about the 𝄹need to be “very robust” in defending the UK against Beijing’s aggressiveness.
“China and the Chinese Communist Party represent the biggest threat to our economic and thereby national security that this coun🔯try has faced in a long time and we need to be alive to that,” he said.
“Be in no doubt, as your Prime Minister I will do whatever it takes to keep you, your families and our country safe because that’s the first duty of a Conservat𓃲ive Prime Minister,” he said.
Indians in UK
Meanwhile, Sunak has long been enjoying the support of the Indian diasꦑpora who treat him almost like a ro🦩ckstar.
In August during his campaign trail against Truss, Sunak had been met with d🦋hol beats and loud cheers at the Dhamecha Lohana Centre in Harrow where he spent hours interacting with hundreds of Tory members who queued up to shake hands with him.
He was showe♕red with blessings by the elderly in the crowd, patted on th𒅌e back by others and eight-year-old Tanish Sahu got a special picture as Sunak carried him in his arms.
Amita Mishra, Trustee of Shree Jagannatha Society UK, handed ove🐠r a set of gold-plated deities all th🦹e way from India.
“We are working on creating a Jagannath Temple in London and this gift is a special blessing all the way from India,” said Mishra, who was accompanied by a pandit who performed a victory shloka from the ‘Bhagavad Gita’ as the deities were handed oಞver to Sunak on sta🌳ge.
A British Sikh Tory member in the crowd waited hours to get a special bottle of 🐼Jack Daniels whisky signed by Sunak – despite both him and the former C𝔍hancellor being teetotalers.
Sunak’s handling of the Bounce Back Loan scheme introduced in the wake of the Covid-19 lockdowns ha𝔍d led to some reservations against the leader. A skeptical British Indian investment banker had told PTI in August there was discontentment regarding the scheme which he claimed had been "anused" ny many. However, all qualms seem to now have vanished after Truss's resignation and Sunak's former boss Boris Johnson dropping out of the race for PM soon after.
(With inputs from Agencies)