When Rachel Johnson looked at her phone as she campaigned for the European Parliament elections, she saw news that her brother, the former Secretary of State for Brikast, Boris Johnson, had announced his candidacy for prime minister.

Although this somehow stole the media spotlight, it did not bother Rachel, a 53-year-old veteran journalist who was once a television star who wanted Britain to stay in the European Union.

Her brother Boris's aspirations to reach the premiership have not been secret since he resigned from Prime Minister Teresa Mae's government in protest at her strategy on BRICEST last July.

If Boris becomes the next leader of the Conservative Party, as polls predict, he will lead a pro-European withdrawal agenda, which is completely against his sister's beliefs.

"I understand the feelings of those who do not want others to dictate what they do, especially if they have not voted for them," says Richelle. "But I think we are stronger by joining the EU and I think the EU is stronger."

"So I think this is an existential issue," she said.

This controversy, which divides the Johnson family, has sparked controversy among families across Britain since a vote to withdraw from the European Union in a 2016 referendum after decades of membership.

And Boris Egypt that the exit from the Union will be the beginning of a bright and independent future. But Rachel is alarmed at the loss of Britain's European identity.

"I can not imagine my grandchildren asking me, my grandmother, what did you do when Nigel Faraj took over the country?" She says.

The new Precast party led by Faraj, the former leader of Britain's independence party, is campaigning to enter the European Parliament with a single-issue agenda - to get Britain out of the EU in any way and as quickly as possible.

Polls show the Faraj party tops the list and get a third of the vote when the British vote on Thursday.

In contrast, the new UK-led "Change of the Union" party led by Richelle was at the bottom of the list.

The party formed a small group of former labor and conservatives who are trying to fill the vacuum created by the split on the BRICEST. This party finds it difficult to achieve a breakthrough.

But Rachel's chances of winning the European Parliament elections look good.

Its party has the highest popularity in the southwestern province of Southwest England, where it has nominated itself.

The chances for Rachel, the mother of three children, to win are her last name.

She is one year younger than Boris and has the same blond hair that falls down on her eyes just like him.

Both have a charismatic personality and a youthful energy that attracts people around them.

If her brother became prime minister and she was elected to the European Parliament, could this spark political rivalry with a unique diplomatic dimension?

Some say Monday's victory could turn Rachel into an informal mediator between Brussels and the British government headed by Boris amid historic BRICST talks.