After being hospitalized with a Coronavirus infection, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson instructed his Foreign Secretary, Dominic Rap to manage the affairs of the Ministry, Rap became the de facto Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and the country was in the hands of a man with just over a year of experience in the Cabinet.

Rap is married to a Brazilian marketing expert who works in Google. Her name is Erika, and he has two children. His website is proud to be a "black belted karate, a former champion of the southern regions of the UK, and a member of a British sports team." He led the karate club at Oxford University where he studied law. He was also a famous boxing boxer in this educational institution.

Rapp is clearly proud to be a college boxer, after he handed a picture of him in his short sportswear and jacket to a TV company for use on his profile. He is still training at a boxing club in Times Dayton, in Surrey, where he lives with his family, and has a poster for the famous American boxer, Muhammad Ali Clay, in his House of Commons.

In 2006, when he was appointed chief of staff to the deputy, David Davis, this lawmaker said he liked the black belt in Karate that Rapp bore more than liking his degree from Oxford and his Master's degree from Cambridge.

Rapp says that karate helped him cope with the death of his father, Peter, who had fled to the United Kingdom from Czechoslovakia at the age of six in 1938 to escape the Nazis. Rap was twelve years old when his father died of cancer and later lost his mother after her suicide. He said in May last year: "Sports helped me regain my confidence, and this has greatly benefited my attitude to study and to life."

He also says: “There is a real strong role model, friendship and respect that I gained from sport as sports practices taught me discipline and focus in my career - and I think this approach has been vital to the success of the Brexit negotiations and to getting a fairer deal from Brussels.”

Rapp described how his father, Peter Rapp, fled his homeland, but left most of his family members who died later. His father learned English, worked for Mark & ​​Spinner as a food manager and met his wife Jean, or Rap, who was staying in Bromley, Kent.

Rapp was born in Buckinghamshire, grew up in Gerrards Cross, and enrolled at the Chaloner School of Grammar, before joining Oxford University. Despite possessing a black belt in karate, Rapp is known for his kindness, and he is upset when civil servants, who worked with him as Britain’s exit minister from the European Union, described him as a bully.

His appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs is a huge step for him after he held only one ministerial post before this major upgrade. Rapp, who was first elected a member of the Escher Walton area in 2010, had to wait five years before getting a suitable ministerial job.

After climbing slowly up Whitehall, he finally broke into the cabinet in July 2018 after receiving a phone call from former Prime Minister Theresa May to be Britain's exit minister from the European Union after David Davis resigned. However, it lasted until November of the same year as he also resigned in protest of May's Brexit plans.

Upon entering the competition to lead the Conservative Party in late May 2019, he was quickly dismissed but announced that he supported Johnson's candidacy. He was subsequently appointed as Minister of Foreign Affairs and First Minister on July 24, 2019. This means that when he took over the leadership of the Council of Ministers on this day he had political experience in this area little more than one year - eight months in the Johnson administration and five in the May era. Some members of the government have been lobbying recently to assign Michael Goff, secretary of the Cabinet Office, to take on this responsibility.