Dominic Raab: Everything You Need To Know About Britain's New De Facto PM

While the role of prime minister is the dream of every ambitious politician, none would want to take the reins of government in the way Dominic Raab did on Monday night.

The foreign secretary found himself de facto leader of the country after Boris Johnson was taken into intensive care due to the worsening of his coronavirus symptoms.

As soon as the news broke, a No.10 spokesperson confirmed Raab would “deputise where necessary” and on Tuesday he would dial in to cabinet and lead at one of the most turbulent times in modern history.

The 46-year-old foreign secretary has spent much of the last month trying to get Britons repatriated from various far-flung corners of the globe amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The intricacies of negotiating border closures, grounded planes and stubborn international authorities has seen the Foreign Office come under increasing pressure to get its stranded citizens home, PA Media reports.

But, in his dual role as first secretary of state, Raab will take on the added responsibility of caretaker prime minister while his boss, Boris Johnson, is unable to lead the country from the intensive care unit at St Thomas’ hospital in central London.

Upon being appointed foreign secretary last summer, Raab was soon thrust into handling the transatlantic fallout over the death of British teenager Harry Dunn, who was killed when his motorbike crashed into a car outside RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire on August 27 last year.

The fact Dunn’s parents tried to heckle Raab at a constituency hustings event was indicative of how well the family felt he dealt with obtaining justice for their son.

Raab also had to manage the thorny issue of repatriating children of British jihadis.

By then, he had already established himself as an uncompromising figure in politics following his election to the seat of Esher and Walton in David Cameron’s sweeping Conservative victory of 2010.

He said he would “probably not” describe himself as a feminist, and rarely...

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