Rishi Sunak responds to trollers after being trolled for mistaken spelling
16 July, 2022 | Pravina Srivastava

Rishi Sunak received the most votes in the second round of voting to succeed Boris Johnson.
After receiving criticism for the incorrect spelling on the campaign banner displayed during his first televised debate, Rishi Sunak, a former chancellor of Indian descent, replied by saying, “Ready for spellcheck,” which rhymed with his campaign slogan, “Ready for Rishi.”
On the campaign poster for Rishi Sunak, viewers on television spotted a typographical error in the backdrop. The word “campaign” was spelled incorrectly as “campiagn.”
This roasting follows harsh criticism of Sunak’s tax decisions made during the outbreak. Tax evasion case involving Akshata Murty, wife of Rishi Sunak. She is also Narayana Murthy, the founder of Infosysdaughter.
“Rishi Sunak’s final address bragging of his own “competence” and “seriousness” would have been more powerful were he not seated in front of a sign which misspells the word “campaign,” said Adam Bienkov, Political Editor and Correspondent of Byline Times, on Twitter.
Another unnamed user said “Just hold off until you learn who designed his campaign website. Then you’ll see how absurd Sunak’s pro-Brexit attitude is.”
Rishi Sunak claims to be a perfectionist but permits CAMPAIGN to be spelled incorrectly on his QR code, according to another Twitter account.
Rishi Sunak received the most votes in the second round of voting to succeed Boris Johnson.
Sunak won with 101 votes, followed by Penny Mordaunt, the trade minister, with 83 votes, and Liz Truss, the foreign secretary, with 64 votes.