Even his juvenile smoking ban, taken up by Labour, is opposed by his Tory successor.
Together with his investor wife Akshata Murty, Sunak is about to set up a private office to pursue initiatives they believe will secure his legacy. “They are both very focused people who are not going to let their ideas go to waste,” says a former staffer. “This isn’t a vanity project – they believe they can make impact in areas that mean a lot to both of them.”
The new office will plant a flag for the next stage of his career – at only 44, he has a long stretch ahead (Tony Blair and Boris Johnson were in their mid-50s when they left office, and David Cameron was 50 – so Sunak will be the youngest ex-PM on the block).
He still operates in a close circle of confidants: James Forsyth, his old Winchester schoolfriend, former journalist and political counsellor in Downing Street, is helping with the transition. So, intriguingly, is Andy Coulson, the former editor of the News of the World, who subsequently advised the Conservative Party and David Cameron, but who had to quit politics after being found guilty in 2014 of a phone-hacking charge relating to his time as a tabloid editor. He served five months of an 18 month sentence and since his release, has grown a strategic advice company, Coulson Partners, which offers “trusted, high impact counsel, advice and crisis management” and also has experience of the life sciences and tech worlds that fascinate the Sunaks.
Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty at the Conservative Party’s annual conference. (Photo: Toby Melville/Reuters)The Sunaks still get the “political royalty” treatment – security presence is inevitable and they were ushered into a private meeting with Hoffman and placed in the front row – both exquisitely tailored in sharp black coats and Akshata, a fashion maven, in a silky patterned shirt and boots. The look is definitely more wealth than stealth – two sleek public figures – in contrast to the billionaire tech entrepreneur, who was in a baggy sweatshirt and creased chinos, who joked that he should “get some wardrobe tips from my two British friends here”.
After a few months reflecting and rest (in so much as a man who fasts weekly, sends emails at 6am and works out almost every day takes time out), Sunak now cuts a more relaxed figure, mingling with VIPs in the modest synagogue community centre, while turning down crisps and being resolutely teetotal).
Insiders believe Sunak want to remain in the country to make his mark on the UK. (Photo: Aaron Chown/PA)He still feels he has a central role to play in the UK’s debate on the ups and downsides of technology, which is expected to be one sphere of operations of his new office. But will Labour – or his prickly successor, Kemi Badenoch, much enjoy having a back seat driver on this issue? “He will take part in debates and wants to use his knowledge,” says a minister who served under him. “But he will be careful not to behave as if he is still in charge.”
Technology, its applications – and wealth-enhancing potential for those who find the right business models – has fascinated Sunak since he went to Stanford in California after his PPE degree at Oxford. As a student, he was, according to a friend at the time, “obsessed by getting to Goldman Sachs” and ended up with a job as an analyst for the bank and a hedge fund. But it was his time at Stanford business school, where he completed a Masters degree in 2006, which “changed my life,” he told an interviewer.
The private office structure means that the company will be able to direct its financial efforts without the scrutiny of launching a foundation or a company. Sunak and Murty have handled family wealthy before – she is the daughter of the Infosys founder NR Narayana Murty and holds a 0.91 per cent stake in the tech and services empire. The couple also have experience of working together: Sunak was a director of the investment firm Catamaran Ventures UK, owned by his father-in-law from 2013 and 2015.
Rishi Sunak delivering a speech at Number 10 Downing Street, following the results of the general election (Photo: Phil Noble/Reuters)But she is insistent, when asked about her plans, that she remains “an entrepreneur at heart”, having begun her career selling LED light bulbs to Google in a green-tech start up in California. The couple share an enthusiasm for education projects (as does Akshata’s mother Sudha, a well-known writer and educator in her native India).
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Read MoreNeither will he set up new academies or free school chains, one of the ways that wealthy donors like Lord Harris, the Carpet Warehouse entrepreneur who set up the Harris academies, and Paul Marshall, the hedge funder and Spectator owner, who sits on the board of the ARK academy schools chain, have funnelled money to innovations in state education.
The mother of two girls, Krishna and Anoushka, presently at (a top private) boarding school, Murty is good with children and was happiest in her largely reticent Downing Street incarnation entertaining pupils for visits with “Lessons at 10” including subjects from chemistry and business to coding. The likely route for the couple is a form of “venture philanthropy” – boosting the impact of charitable pursuits by applying the discipline of business ventures.
How this will go down with a “trad Labour” approach to education that seems sceptical about public-private sector co-operation and has riled private schools with the VAT rise on ...
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