Foreign Minister Liz Truss, a pioneer to replace British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, has a smaller advantage over his rival Rishi Suna than previously thought, according to a poll of party members.Truss is supported by 48% of conservative party members compared to 43% for former Minister of Finance MR MR, according to 807 opinion of the Italian data company Technic, which was carried out on July 19-27.

This shows a race that is far more stringent than the previous conservative members’ opinion conducted by Yougov on July 20-21 which shows the truss with a 24-point advantage above Mr. Suna.

Mr S was siased and Truss competed on a summer tour around England with a vote of around 200,000 conservative members, who would choose the next prime minister with the winner announced on September 5.

The tax has dominated the race so far. Mr S was heard accusing the truss “dishonest” with voters with promises -the massive tax cuts -a massive -massive as soon as he entered the office. Mr S was spelled out he would ensure that inflation was under control before cutting taxes, something that Truss said would push the country into a recession.

More than 60% of conservative members in Techne’s polls say Truss has a better idea about taxes than Mr. Suna, and they also support their plans to handle inflation and handle immigration. However, respondents said Mr S was more trusted to meet Brexit and had a better policy about education.

John Curtice, a political professor at the University of Strathclyde and one of the leading British voting experts, said on Monday that he was not sure that the race had ended.

We must remember that since the Tory MPs decided that this was a contest between Rishi Slahak and Liz Truss, we had it, I repeat one, the opinions of people who really will have a voice,” he told GB News.

Truss was criticized by the main opposition party and several conservative parliament members on Tuesday after he vowed to save billions of pounds per year by adjusting public sector salaries to living expenses in the region where people work rather than having a national payment agreement.

Supporters of Mr S were inhabited, Ben Houchen, conservative mayor Tees Valley, said he was “unable to say” on the Truss’ plan.

It is impossible for you to do this without a large salary discount for 5.5 million people including nurses, police officers and our armed forces outside London,” he said.

Deputy labor leader, Angela Rayner, said Truss’s plan showed a conservative government’s commitment to reduce inequality between the north and southern Britain “dead”.