Exact Moment Rishi Sunak Iced Out Matt Hancock, Caught On Camera

"You can actually pinpoint the second when his heart rips in half."
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Rishi Sunak seemed to blank Matt Hancock at the Conservative Party HQ
BBC

Rishi Sunak gave his former colleague Matt Hancock the cold shoulder just after winning the Tory leadership contest on Monday.

The new prime minister was met by an applauding crowd upon pulling up to Conservative HQ, and proceeded to shake the hands of his happy colleagues one by one, putting his arm around a few of them.

He went first to close ally Mel Stride, then Jake Berry, Tory Party chair, before moving onto other close aides.

Until he came face to face with Hancock, who served in Boris Johnson’s cabinet as health secretary alongside Sunak, who was chancellor at the time.

Sunak swiftly avoided Hancock’s excited gaze, dodges any handshake and moves on to the person besides him – making his former colleague the only Tory at  the front of the crowd not to be greeted directly by the new party leader.

Hancock doesn’t pause his clapping during this painful and very public snub, but the camera does catch his faltering expression.

And it seemed everybody noticed...

To recap, while Sunak left Johnson’s cabinet by resigning in July, triggering a mass exodus of ministers from the government, Hancock left under a cloud in July 2021.

Leaked CCTV footage of Hancock kissing one of his aides, Gina Coladangelo, while in his office against the strict social distancing measures his own department had been preaching forced him out of the cabinet.

It was quite the fall from grace for one of the leading figures in government during the height of the pandemic.

Hancock and Sunak used to sit next to each other in cabinet, and the former health secretary was one of those who nominated his colleague for the leadership role.

Sunak’s decision to blank him does not bode well for Hancock’s chances of returning to cabinet. The new prime minister is set to appoint the top jobs on Tuesday, when he will be officially invited to form a government by the King.