Tag Archives: Truss

Rishi Sunak Wins Vote to Become U.K.’s Next Prime Minister After Liz Truss Resigns

LONDON—Former Chancellor

Rishi Sunak,

who warned that

Liz Truss

’ economic plans for Britain were a “fairy tale,” won the contest to succeed her as prime minister on Monday, taking over the world’s sixth-biggest economy at a time of deep financial and political turbulence.

Mr. Sunak will formally enter Downing Street after his only remaining rival for the job, former defense minister

Penny Mordaunt,

said on

Twitter

she would drop out of the contest. “Rishi has my full support,” she wrote.

Mr. Sunak’s rise to the top job in Britain marks a historic moment. The grandson of Indian immigrants to Britain, the 42-year-old will be the U.K.’s first person of color and the first Hindu to lead the country. But his success will be determined by how well he manages the growing challenges to Britain’s economy as high inflation and a looming recession create a sense of growing despair.

The former hedge-fund manager arrives with a mandate to bring calm to the ruling Conservative Party following a period of unparalleled chaos that will see the country run by three prime ministers in seven weeks—a first for the U.K. On Sunday night, his main rival for the job, the colorful but controversial former leader

Boris Johnson,

pulled out of the leadership race, citing the fact that he couldn’t unite the party.

Mr. Sunak takes over from Ms. Truss, who became the shortest-serving prime minister in British history after her flagship economic program to stimulate the economy with tax cuts during rising inflation was rejected by investors, causing the pound to sink to a record low and the Bank of England to intervene in bond markets to stabilize the price of U.K. government debt.

On Monday, financial markets reacted positively to Mr. Sunak’s victory. Yields on government debt fell as investors bet that Mr. Sunak, an experienced treasury official, will oversee cuts to public spending to shore up the nation’s finances.

The decision caps Mr. Sunak’s second attempt to secure his place as prime minister in months. He campaigned over the summer to become British leader but lost to Ms. Truss. During the campaign Mr. Sunak criticized Ms. Truss’s plan to borrow funds to immediately cut taxes. He said Britain’s high inflation, which is currently at 10.1%, needed to be tackled first before any taxes were cut.

“Liz’s plans are promising the Earth to everybody. I don’t think you can have your cake and eat it,” he said in August.

Mr. Sunak lost, but his arguments later won the day. Ms. Truss was forced to roll back her experiment to use unfunded tax cuts to spur economic growth.

While Mr. Sunak’s rise will placate markets for now, his government will face tough and unpopular decisions on spending. The U.K. Treasury is expected to outline plans on Oct. 31 to cut spending and potentially raise some taxes to fill an estimated 40 billion pounds, equivalent to $45 billion, deficit in the public finances. “The choice the party makes now will decide whether the next generation of British people will have more opportunities than the last,” Mr. Sunak said on Sunday.

Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Saturday, after flying back from a vacation in the Dominican Republic to canvass lawmakers.



Photo:

Gareth Fuller/Zuma Press

His fiscal caution is likely to ease pressure on the Bank of England to raise its key interest rate sharply from 2.25%. Market expectations for the peak in the BOE’s interest rate next year fell to 5% from 6% in the days after Ms. Truss’s economic plan was axed.

The broader outlook, however, is grim. Mr. Sunak will likely face a winter of discontent as inflation, fueled by rising energy costs from the war in Ukraine, increases faster than wages, and a recession takes hold that economists think could last a year. The early stages of his tenure are likely to be punctuated by worker strikes and questions about whether electricity blackouts will be needed as Russia restricts gas exports to Europe.

In contrast to most other rich countries, the U.K.’s economy has yet to return to its prepandemic size. The U.K. economy grew very slightly in the three months through June, leaving it 0.2% smaller than in the final quarter of 2019, the last before the Covid-19 virus began to spread.

“The heightened political and economic uncertainty has caused business activity to fall at a rate not seen since the global financial crisis in 2009 if pandemic lockdown months are excluded,” said

Chris Williamson,

chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Mr. Sunak also faces another potentially more intractable challenge: uniting a party that has been at war with itself for years. The Conservative Party is at a record low in the polls against the opposition Labour Party. A recent poll by Opinium has 23% of Britons voting for the Conservatives versus 50% for Labour. Pollsters think the scale of that deficit, combined with the fact that the Tories will seek a record fifth term in office at the next election in 2024, is potentially insurmountable.

Mr. Sunak, who isn’t a famed political operator, must find a way of bringing together lawmakers who have polar opposite views on the direction that the U.K. economy should take. In the wake of the U.K.’s departure from the European Union, conservative lawmakers are split between embracing low regulation, a smaller government, and free trade, or protectionism and more state intervention as an aging population puts more strain on public services.

Mr. Sunak has previously campaigned on both fiscal conservatism, tight immigration restrictions and support for tackling climate change. His foreign policy outlook is less well defined. While he has expressed support for helping Ukraine fight off Russia’s invasion, he may have to cut military spending to bring finances under control. Mr. Sunak is a euroskeptic—having supported the vote to leave the European Union in 2016—but is seen as more conciliatory toward Europe than either Ms. Truss or Mr. Johnson.

Mr. Sunak represents an unusual mix of both continuity and newness at the top of British politics. He grew up in Southern England to parents of Indian origin, his father was a doctor and his mother ran a pharmacy. Mr. Sunak attended Winchester—an elite private school that has produced several British prime ministers—before attending the University of Oxford, then finding a job at

Goldman Sachs.

He married Akshata Murty, the daughter of an Indian billionaire businessman. The pair met while Mr. Sunak was studying for an M.B.A. at Stanford. He co-founded a hedge fund called Theleme Partners.

As the wealthiest member of the House of Commons, Mr. Sunak could find himself in the uncomfortable position of explaining support for spending cuts that could make life harder for the working classes. Backers say he will argue that sound finances will allow Britain’s economy to improve competitiveness to create broader prosperity down the road.

In 2015, Mr. Sunak was elected to parliament in Yorkshire, a northern English and mostly white agricultural district. Mr. Sunak took his parliamentary oath to the monarch on the Hindu scripture, The Bhagavad Gita, and had to explain to many of his farming constituents that he didn’t eat beef. But he quickly proved popular and moved to a Yorkshire manor.

Mr. Sunak’s star rose quickly in the Conservative Party. He came out in favor of Brexit, which he argued could allow Britain to become more internationally competitive outside the EU. The move went against the prime minister at the time,

David Cameron,

but put him in good stead with Mr. Johnson, who identified Mr. Sunak as a rising star. In 2019, he was given a senior role at the Treasury and placed his wealth in a blind trust to avoid allegations of impropriety. A year later he was made chancellor of the exchequer.

It was during the 2020 Covid-19 pandemic that Mr. Sunak came to the nation’s attention as he set up a job-protection program in a matter of days. The decision to have the government pay a percentage of people’s wages while they were unable to work during lockdown was well-received.

The former financier proved a good foil to the larger-than-life Mr. Johnson. Unlike Mr. Johnson, Mr. Sunak brought attention to detail. People who have worked with him say that he assiduously reads briefing notes and cross examines civil servants. During the pandemic, he repeatedly questioned the need for lockdowns. Mr. Sunak also has a nerdy side. The Star Wars fan once surprised a group of school children by telling them he has a “coke problem.” He then went on a minute-long monologue about his favorite type of

Coca-Cola,

which is made from cane sugar in Mexico.

By last summer, however, Mr. Sunak and Mr. Johnson were at odds. Mr. Sunak had successfully lobbied for taxes to rise to help pay for Britain’s struggling nationalized healthcare system. But many in Tory ranks questioned the fact that the tax burden was at its highest level in 70 years. Mr. Johnson meanwhile became embroiled in a “partygate scandal” where he was fined by police for attending his own birthday party in Downing Street during a Covid-19 lockdown. Mr. Sunak was fined for attending too.

Mr. Sunak was caught up in a scandal of his own. His wife Ms. Murty this year had to change her tax arrangements after admitting she benefited from tax rules that allowed her to pay no U.K. tax on her worldwide income. She says she changed that status and now pays U.K. tax on that worldwide income. The debacle made some Tory lawmakers question whether Mr. Sunak was too wealthy to connect with the party’s blue-collar voters.

But as more scandals washed over Mr. Johnson, Mr. Sunak moved to oust him. Last July he announced his resignation, which triggered an avalanche of further resignations making Mr. Johnson’s position untenable. Within days a polished website “Ready4Rishi” was online.

Mr. Sunak’s apparent eagerness to turf out Mr. Johnson soon played against him. In the ensuing leadership contest, Mr. Sunak racked up the biggest support from lawmakers but failed to convince the Conservative Party’s 170,000 members.

This time around, after Ms. Truss quit, many key lawmakers were quick to announce their support for Mr. Sunak and prevent another vote among party members.

Write to Max Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com and Paul Hannon at paul.hannon@wsj.com

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Truss quits, Twitter job cuts?

Traders on the floor of the NYSE, Oct. 20, 2022.

Source: NYSE

Here are the most important news items that investors need to start their trading day:

1. Weak end?

The good news: Stocks are on pace to have their best week since early last month. The bad news: U.S. markets are on a two-day losing streak, and things didn’t look so great before the bell Friday, either. After a promising start to the week, when stocks were fueled by relatively strong earnings reports from big banks and others, bond yields shot up, sending equities down. On Thursday, the 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.239% for the first time in 14 years. Yields for the 2-year and the 30-year also hit levels not seen in more than a decade. Read live market updates here.

Read more: An often-overlooked economic measure is signaling serious trouble ahead

2. Snapped again

Co-founder and CEO of Snap Inc. Evan Spiegel attends the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups, at the Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France June 17, 2022.

Benoit Tessier | Reuters

It didn’t matter that Snap posted adjusted earnings per share while Wall Street was expecting a loss. Or that its revenue grew, or that its user count increased. It all just wasn’t good enough, and it doesn’t look like it’s going to get any better as the advertising market gets tighter. Snap shares, already down 77% as of Thursday’s close, plummeted 25% in off-hours trade. The company’s 6% year-over-year revenue gain was the first time quarterly sales growth fell into single digits since the social media company went public in 2017. Its user gain was offset by a decline in revenue per user. “We are finding that our advertising partners across many industries are decreasing their marketing budgets, especially in the face of operating environment headwinds, inflation-driven cost pressures, and rising costs of capital,” Snap told shareholders.

3. More twists in the Twitter saga

In this photo illustration, the image of Elon Musk is displayed on a computer screen and the logo of twitter on a mobile phone in Ankara, Turkiye on October 06, 2022.

Muhammed Selim Korkutata | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

The Washington Post reported Thursday evening that Elon Musk is planning to eliminate 75% of Twitter‘s 7,500-person workforce if he takes over the company. One former executive said the cuts would be so drastic, it could leave users exposed to security threats and images of children in sexually abusive situations. But, the Post added, the current Twitter regime is planning on dramatic layoffs of its own – about a quarter of the company’s workforce – and the completion of Musk’s $44 billion deal to buy the social network would spare them from making painful decisions. Twitter’s top lawyer, in response to the Post article, told employees in an email that the company’s plan was put on hold after the merger agreement was signed. Musk has until Oct. 28 to finish the deal. Elsewhere, Bloomberg reported that the Biden administration was considering national security reviews for Musk’s Starlink satellite internet service and his Twitter deal.

Read more: Facebook shuttle bus drivers are losing their jobs

4. Ukraine presses on

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits the Memory Wall of Fallen Defenders of Ukraine, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, during marking the Defender of Ukraine Day in Kyiv, Ukraine October 14, 2022.

Ukrainian Presidential Press Service | Reuters

Ukrainian forces continued to seize back territory in the nation’s Kherson region, as Russian forces retreat and evacuate the area. Ukraine’s government accused the Russians of forcibly removing Ukrainians, but the Kremlin denied it. Volodomyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s president, also warned that Russia could attack a hydroelectric dam in Kherson. His comments come as Ukraine tries to fix its electrical infrastructure following waves of Russian missile and drone attacks on city centers and other important hubs. Read live war updates here.

5. Who’s next?

British Prime Minister Liz Truss announces her resignation, outside Number 10 Downing Street, London, Britain October 20, 2022.

Henry Nicholls | Reuters

After just a month and a half on the job, Liz Truss said Thursday she would step down as the UK’s prime minister. While her tenure was brief, it was consequential. Her government’s tax cut-heavy economic plans shook British markets to their core and severely weakened the pound when the country was already struggling with a surging cost of living. So who’s next? Rishi Sunak, a former finance minister who was runner-up to Truss, is considered the favorite to succeed her. Penny Mordaunt, who finished a surprising third in the Conservative leadership race, is also in the mix. Defense Minister Ben Wallace is well-liked, but it’s unclear he would run. And there’s always Boris Johnson. Seriously. CNBC’s Karen Gilchrist breaks down the state of play here.

– CNBC’s Alex Harring, Jonathan Vanian, Natasha Turak and Karen Gilchrist contributed to this report.

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Sunak, Mordaunt or Boris Johnson: The candidates who could succeed Liz Truss as UK prime minister


London
CNN
 — 

A new leadership contest will take place within a week, Liz Truss said in her resignation speech outside Downing Street on Thursday.

This will be the fifth Conservative prime minister in just over six years – and the third within this parliamentary term. But who might the next leader be? Here are some of the main runners and riders:

Sunak has proved to be something of a prophet of the government’s demise, as many of the predictions he made during this summer’s leadership about Truss’s economic plan came to pass.

The former Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) warned that Truss’s unfunded tax cuts would lead to a run on sterling, a panic in the bond market and concern from the International Monetary Fund. Perhaps even he would have been surprised by the pace with which he was proved right.

Sunak has experience of economic crisis-fighting, having guided the UK through the Covid-19 pandemic. He is also popular among MPs, having secured more votes within Parliament than Truss before the choice between the final candidates was put to the members, and only losing narrowly in the final vote.

The trust he has among MPs – and the vindication his predictions have gained – may make him the most likely next set of hands to steer the ship.

The Leader of the House of Commons may have had a dress rehearsal for being prime minister this week, after stepping in for an absent Liz Truss at a debate.

“The prime minister is not under a desk,” Mordaunt confirmed Tuesday – in a performance that seemed as much about pitching herself as it did about helping the PM.

Mordaunt came third in the last leadership election, narrowly missing out on being put before the members – among whom she was expected to do well, in part due to her military credentials. Mordaunt is a reservist of the Royal Navy and served a short spell as Secretary of State for Defence.

Like Sunak, she is from the more moderate wing of the party. There was even talk among MPs of the two forming a “dream team” ticket, although this is yet to materialize – and it is unclear if either would accept being chancellor over taking the top job.

It is a sign of the disorder of the last days of Truss’s government that she elevated Grant Shapps to home secretary – despite not offering him a ministerial role of any sort when she first took office.

Shapps served as transport secretary under Boris Johnson. He put himself forward to succeed him in the previous leadership election – only to withdraw from the race three days later, after failing to secure the requisite 20 MPs’ votes to proceed to the next round.

Badenoch came fourth in this summer’s leadership election – but was consistently rated by pollsters as a favorite among Conservative grassroots members.

One of the younger MPs in the running, Badenoch quickly won the endorsement of long-serving Tory grandee Michael Gove, who praised her as the “outstanding talent” in the party.

Badenoch is from the right of the Tory party – and in her previous leadership bid suggested that the government’s climate targets might prove too costly.

Multiple allies have made the case that Johnson could be a unity candidate who could bring stability to the country, despite the fact he resigned in disgrace only a few months ago after a series of scandals came together, making his position untenable.

When asked by CNN how they could justify Johnson standing to be PM again, one MP who campaigned for Johnson in the 2019 leadership campaign, said: “Socialists will destroy our economy and if you don’t understand that then I genuinely fear for our future.”

Another MP who supported Johnson in 2019 said he was the only candidate who could comfortably win over both Conservative MPs and members of the Conservative Party.

Johnson’s closest allies said they were aware he was being actively lobbied in the hours after Truss’ resignation speech, making the case to him that he represented the party’s best shot at stability in the medium term.

In his final speech as prime minister outside 10 Downing Street, Johnson made one of his characteristic allusions to ancient history. He said he would “return to his plough” like the Roman statesman Cincinnatus – suggesting a quieter life on the backbenches. But that’s not how Cincinnatus saw out his days. He was called back from his plough to return to Rome for a second term – this time as a dictator.

Suella Braverman’s resignation as home secretary on Wednesday night may have been a precursor to a possible leadership bid. The former attorney-general has not run before – but with her hard-line stance on immigration, might look set to drag the party further to the right.

Tom Tugendhat emerged as a surprise favorite among Tory members and the wider public, despite only coming fifth in the last leadership election. Having not served as a cabinet member before that contest, Tugendhat distanced himself from the moral mess of Johnson’s government and promised a “clean start” for Britain. After serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, Tugendhat was made security minister by Truss.

Ben Wallace, defense secretary and another ex-military man, was tipped to succeed Johnson in the last leadership contest – polling extremely well among Conservative members. However, he never ran in that election, and it is unclear if his position will have changed since then.

Former prime minister Theresa May has also been floated as a possible “unity” candidate to succeed Truss. May tried to bring together the warring wings of the Conservative party over Brexit, in move that ultimately saw her replaced by Boris Johnson. As the party has proven unable to resolve its disputes this time round, another attempt at compromise may soon be in order.

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Live updates: Liz Truss resigns as UK prime minister

A new leadership contest will take place within a week, Liz Truss said in her resignation speech.

This will be the fifth Conservative prime minister in just over six years – and the third within this parliamentary term.

But who might the next leader be? Here are the main runners and riders.

Rishi Sunak

Sunak has proved to be something of a prophet of the government’s demise, as many of the predictions he made during this summer’s leadership about Truss’s economic plan came to pass.

The former Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) warned that Truss’s unfunded tax cuts would lead to a run on sterling, a panic in the bond market and concern from the International Monetary Fund. Perhaps even he would have been surprised by the pace with which he was proved right.

Sunak has experience of economic crisis-fighting, having guided the UK through the Covid-19 pandemic. He is also popular among MPs, having secured more votes within Parliament than Truss before the choice between the final candidates was put to the members, and only losing narrowly in the final vote.

The trust he has among MPs – and the vindication his predictions have gained – may make him the most likely next set of hands to steer the ship.

Penny Mordaunt

The Leader of the House of Commons may have had a dress rehearsal for being prime minister this week, after stepping in for an absent Liz Truss at a debate.

“The prime minister is not under a desk,” Mordaunt confirmed Tuesday – in a performance that seemed as much about pitching herself as it did about helping the PM.

Mordaunt came third in the last leadership election, narrowly missing out on being put before the members – among whom she was expected to do well, in part due to her military credentials. Mordaunt is a reservist of the Royal Navy.

Like Sunak, she is from the more moderate wing of the party. There was even talk among MPs of the two forming a “dream team” ticket, although this is yet to materialize – and it is unclear if Sunak would settle for being chancellor again.

Grant Shapps

It is a sign of the disorder of the last days of Truss’s government that she elevated Grant Shapps to home secretary – despite not offering him a ministerial role of any sort when she first took office.

Shapps served as transport secretary under Boris Johnson. He put himself forward to succeed him in the previous leadership election – only to withdraw from the race three days later, after failing to secure the requisite 20 MPs votes to proceed to the next round.

Kemi Badenoch

Badenoch came fourth in this summer’s leadership election – but was consistently rated by pollsters as a favorite among Conservative grassroots.

One of the younger MPs in the running, Badenoch quickly won the endorsement of long-serving Tory grandee Michael Gove, who praised her as the “outstanding talent” in the party.

Badenoch is from the right of the Tory party – and in her previous leadership bid suggested that the government’s climate targets might prove too costly.

Boris Johnson

Only a few months ago, Johnson commanded a comfortable majority in Parliament and even claimed he was even considering his third term – to widespread derision. Despite being beset by a seemingly endless string of scandals, Labour still lagged behind in the polls – and Johnson did not have an obvious competitor in the party.

In his final speech as Prime Minister outside 10 Downing Street, Johnson made one of his characteristic allusions to ancient history. He said he would “return to his plough” like the Roman statesman Cincinnatus – suggesting a quieter life on the backbenches.

But that’s not how Cincinnatus saw out his days. He was called back from his plough to return to Rome for a second term – this time as a dictator.

The memories of “Partygate,” the prolonged scandal that eventually resulted in his downfall, may prove too fresh for MPs to call Johnson back yet.

But, as the Tory party faces electoral oblivion, the man who delivered an 80-seat majority in 2019 may prove a tempting option for many MPs.

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Liz Truss warned she has hours to save her job as British prime minister


London
CNN
 — 

Liz Truss was fighting to save her job as Britain’s prime minister Thursday after more of her own lawmakers called for her to quit, incensed by a shambolic parliamentary vote and the resignation of her home secretary.

Truss was meeting with the chair of the 1922 Committee of the backbench Conservatives, Graham Brady, Downing Street said on Thursday, according to PA Media. The group decides whether to call a vote of no confidence in the prime minister.

Truss’s government was earlier told it had “12 hours” to “turn the ship around” by Conservative lawmaker Simon Hoare, after a vote on whether to ban controversial fracking for shale gas descended into chaos.

Lawmakers reported that aides for Truss manhandled MPs into the voting lobby to force them to vote against the ban. The government initially presented the vote as a confidence motion in Truss’s government, but confusion remains about whether it was. A Downing Street spokesperson said on Thursday that Conservative lawmakers who didn’t participate in Wednesday evening’s vote will face disciplinary action, PA Media said.

The speaker of the UK’s House of Commons, Lindsay Hoyle has launched an inquiry into allegations of bullying and harassment during the vote, PA reported.

The chaos came hours after Suella Braverman, Truss’ home secretary, dramatically resigned just seven weeks into her job with a blistering attack on the PM’s leadership.

“The business of government relies upon people accepting responsibility for their mistakes. Pretending we haven’t made mistakes, carrying on as if everyone can’t see that we have made them, and hoping that things will magically come right is not serious politics,” Braverman wrote in a critique of Truss’s numerous U-turns on taxes and public spending.

“I have concerns about the direction of this government,” Braverman said. “Not only have we broken key pledges that were promised to our voters, but I have serious concerns about this Government’s commitment to honoring manifesto commitments.”

Truss, who fired her finance minister just last week after a disastrous and since-ditched financial plan caused turmoil on the markets, must now focus on getting to the weekend without her own MPs moving to oust her.

Backbencher Crispin Blunt told BBC Radio 4 on Thursday that Truss’ position is “wholly untenable,” adding that she has shown a “lack of self-knowledge” in this process.

“And if she doesn’t understand that then I would be astonished,” Blunt said. “But one of the qualities she has shown is a lack of self-knowledge to this whole process, because it ought to have been clear that she did not have the capacity to lead our party and I don’t think she should have put herself up for the leadership in the first place.”

At least two Conservatives lawmakers have confirmed they have submitted letters of no confidence, although many more are believed to have done so in private. “I had high hopes for Liz Truss but after what happened last night her position has become untenable and I have submitted a letter to Sir Graham Brady,” Sheryll Murray wrote on Twitter on Thursday, following her colleague William Wragg in publicly declaring her letter.

“This is an absolute disgrace,” Charles Walker added to the BBC on Wednesday. “As a Tory MP of 17 years who’s never been a minister, who’s got on with it loyally most of the time I think it’s a shambles and a disgrace. I think it is utterly appalling.”

Truss will face a vote of confidence if the influential 1922 Committee of backbenchers changes its rules to enable one so soon after the leadership vote, but previous prime ministers have been pressured to resign before facing the humiliation of a successful ballot to oust them.

Earlier this year, Truss’s predecessor Boris Johnson narrowly survived a confidence vote in his leadership. But he resigned weeks later when dozens of ministers and members of the government resigned, citing a lack of confidence in his government.

Keir Starmer, the leader of the opposition Labour Party which is enjoying a huge lead in opinion polls, repeated his calls for an early general election on Thursday. “Britain can’t afford the Tories’ chaos,” he wrote on Twitter. “My Labour government will provide the stability and leadership needed. For our economy. For growth. For working people. General Election, now.”

A vote does not need to be called until January 2025 at the latest, but the prospect of Britain seeing its third prime minister since the last poll in 2019 would heap pressure on Truss’ successor to ask the public for a new mandate.

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UK PM Truss clings to power as chaos in Westminster escalates

  • Truss losing authority as lawmakers quarrel
  • Pound stable against the dollar
  • Some lawmakers says Truss must go now

LONDON, Oct 20 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Liz Truss battled to retain her grip on power on Thursday, a day after a second top minister quit and rowing and jostling broke out among her lawmakers in parliament in a dramatic breakdown of unity and discipline.

Only six weeks into the job, Truss has been forced to abandon almost all of her policy programme after it triggered a bond market rout and a collapse of her approval ratings and those of her Conservative Party.

In just six days she has lost two of the four most senior ministers in government, sat expressionless in parliament as her new finance minister ripped up her economic plans and faced howls of laughter as she tried to defend her record.

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“We can’t go on like this,” one Conservative lawmaker told Reuters late on Wednesday, of the chaotic scenes in parliament.

The sight of yet another unpopular prime minister clinging to power underscores just how volatile British politics has become since the 2016 vote to leave the European Union unleashed a battle for the direction of the country.

Truss became Britain’s fourth prime minister in six years after being elected to lead the Conservative Party by its members, not the broader electorate, and with support from only around a third of the party’s lawmakers. She promised tax cuts funded by borrowing, deregulation and a sharp shift to the right on cultural and social issues.

Her abrupt loss of authority comes as the economy heads into recession and her new finance minister Jeremy Hunt races to find tens of billions of pounds of spending cuts to reassure investors who took fright at Truss’s policy proposals.

Government borrowing costs, while lower than they were at the height of the crisis last week, remain elevated as investors question who is in charge and whether Hunt will be able to rebuild confidence in Britain’s once-sound economic reputation.

Crispin Blunt, a Conservative lawmaker for 25 years, told Reuters the situation was so grave that his colleagues needed to allow one person with experience to take control.

“Personal considerations and ambition now must be set aside,” he said, adding that he would back Hunt as leader.

Simon Hoare, in parliament for seven years, said Thursday and Friday were crunch days for the government. “I have never known … a growing sense of pessimism in all wings of the Tory Party,” he said.

BUFFETED BY EVENTS

Truss has been fighting for her political survival since Sept. 23 when her then-finance minister and close ally, Kwasi Kwarteng, announced a “mini-budget” of vast, unfunded tax cuts that sent shockwaves through financial markets.

She fired Kwarteng on Friday and her interior minister, Suella Braverman, resigned on Wednesday.

With opinion polls showing the Conservatives face a wipeout at the next election, some lawmakers say Truss should go so they can try to rebuild their brand. Others seem to have given up.

“Sadly, it seems we must change leader BUT even if the angel Gabriel now takes over, the Parliamentary Party has to urgently rediscover discipline, mutual respect and teamwork if we are to (i) govern the UK well and (ii) avoid slaughter at the next election,” lawmaker Gary Streeter said on Twitter.

With inflation at a 40-year high and mortgage rates jumping, the scenes of lawmakers warring and scheming in parliament risk deepening anger among voters who are preparing for a tough winter of rising food and energy costs.

Wednesday’s parliamentary drama was sparked by confusion over whether a vote on fracking was being used as a confidence vote in the government. Opposition lawmakers said some of Truss’s Conservatives were “manhandled” to make them vote with the government.

With lawmakers lining up to denounce the state of affairs in the country, the government could not say for several hours whether the politician in charge of party discipline, or chief whip, had quit or not.

In a sign of the chaos, Truss’s Downing Street office issued a statement at 1:33 am (0033 GMT) to say the prime minister had “full confidence” in the chief whip and her deputy.

It also said that any lawmaker who abstained on the vote to allow fracking could “expect proportionate disciplinary action”. Voting results show that more than 30 Conservative lawmakers did not vote, including those who were away or unwell.

Transport minister Anne-Marie Trevelyan, sent out to talk to broadcasters and radio stations on Thursday morning, was asked if Truss would lead the Conservative Party into the next election, expected in 2024.

“At the moment that is still the case,” she said.

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Writing by Kate Holton; additional reporting by Farouq Suleiman and Kylie MacLellan; Editing by William Schomberg, Sarah Young and Catherine Evans

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Suella Braverman: Liz Truss loses her Home Secretary, plunging her premiership into even deeper turmoil


London
CNN
 — 

Liz Truss’s ill-fated tenure as British Prime Minister was engulfed in yet more chaos on Wednesday when Suella Braverman, her Home Secretary, resigned seven weeks into her role over the use of a personal email address that breached ministerial rules.

Braverman said she “sent an official document from my personal email to a trusted parliamentary colleague as party of policy engagement.”

“This constitutes a technical infringement of the rules,” she wrote in a resignation letter which was also scathing of Truss’s leadership and indicated deep fissures in the heart of her government.

“The business of government relies upon people accepting responsibility for their mistakes. Pretending we haven’t made mistakes, carrying on as if everyone can’t see that we have made them, and hoping that things will magically come right is not serious politics,” Braverman wrote in a thinly veiled critique of Truss’s numerous U-turns on taxes and public spending.

“I have concerns about the direction of this government,” Braverman said. “Not only have we broken key pledges that were promised to our voters, but I have serious concerns about this Government’s commitment to honoring manifesto commitments.”

Truss accepted Braverman’s resignation, saying “it is important that the ministerial code is upheld, and that cabinet confidentiality is respected,” she said in a letter.

Grant Shapps was appointed as Braverman’s replacement in the Home Office, Downing Street tweeted Wednesday.

The lawmaker was transport secretary under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and said earlier this week, during a podcast recording with comedian Matt Forde, that Truss had a “Mount Everest to climb” to remain in power, according to PA Media.

“What she needs to do is like threading the eye of a needle with the lights off,” Shapps said.

Braverman’s departure comes amid growing pressure on the beleaguered leader, whose time in Downing Street has been spectacularly derailed by a radical fiscal agenda which Truss has been forced to abandon and apologize for.

It comes five days after Truss fired her Chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, over the mini-budget, which sparked a collapse in the value of the pound and forced the Bank of England to intervene to calm markets.

And it will result in yet more turnover at the heart of Britain’s government. Truss will soon appoint the UK’s third home secretary in eight weeks, to accompany its fourth finance minister in four months.

Several Conservative British lawmakers told CNN they had “reservations” that the reason for Braverman’s resignation was limited to what she outlined in her letter – sending a draft ministerial statement from her personal email – and queried that it was a resignation offense.

One lawmaker called the official version of events “nonsense,” another called it “very unusual, if true.”

Braverman competed in the Conservative Party leadership campaign during the summer, which was eventually won by Truss. A rising star of the party’s right wing, Braverman has repeatedly pledged to reduce illegal migration to Britain and has frequently stoked culture war topics.

On Tuesday during a debate on a public order bill in Parliament, she criticized “the Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati” for leading climate protests that have blocked British roads in recent months.

Truss is meanwhile in serious danger of becoming Britain’s shortest-serving leader ever, with some of her own lawmakers calling for her to resign and opinion polling indicating an electoral wipe-out for her Conservative Party.

On Wednesday, the new Home Secretary told reporters that he was ready to work on providing security to the British people despite “turbulent time” for the British government.

“I accept that government has obviously had a very difficult period,” Shapps said, adding that the new UK Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, had done “a great job of settling issues relating to that mini-budget,.”

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Minister departs UK govt in new blow to embattled Liz Truss

LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Liz Truss described herself as “a fighter and not a quitter” Wednesday as she faced down a hostile opposition and fury from her own Conservative Party over her botched economic plan.

Yet the grim faces of Conservative lawmakers behind her in the House of Commons suggested that Truss faces an uphill struggle to save her job. Within hours of Truss’ appearance at the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions session, a senior member of her government left her post with a fusillade of criticism.

Home Secretary Suella Braverman said she resigned after breaching rules by sending an official document from her personal email account. In her resignation letter, Braverman said she had “concerns about the direction of this government” and — in a thinly veiled attack on Truss — said “the business of government relies upon people accepting responsibility for their mistakes.”

“Pretending we haven’t made mistakes, carrying on as if everyone can’t see that we have made them and hoping that things will magically come right is not serious politics,” she said.

Braverman is a popular figure on the Conservative Party’s right wing and a champion of more restrictive immigration policies who ran unsuccessfully for Conservative Party leader this summer, a contest won by Truss.

Braverman was replaced as home secretary, the minister responsible for immigration and law and order, by former Cabinet minister Grant Shapps. He’s a high-profile supporter of Rishi Sunak, whom Truss defeated in the final round of the Conservative leadership race.

Braverman’s departure comes days after Truss fired her Treasury chief, Kwasi Kwarteng, on Friday after the economic package the pair unveiled Sept. 23 spooked financial markets and triggered an economic and political crisis.

The plan’s 45 billion pounds ($50 billion) in unfunded tax cuts sparked turmoil on financial markets, hammering the value of the pound and increasing the cost of U.K. government borrowing. The Bank of England was forced to intervene to prevent the crisis from spreading to the wider economy and putting pension funds at risk.

On Monday Kwarteng’s replacement, Treasury chief Jeremy Hunt, scrapped almost all of Truss’ tax cuts, along with her flagship energy policy and her promise of no public spending cuts. He said the government will need to save billions of pounds and there are “many difficult decisions” to be made before he sets out a medium-term fiscal plan on Oct. 31.

Speaking to lawmakers for the first time since the U-turn, Truss apologized and admitted she had made mistakes, but insisted that by changing course she had “taken responsibility and made the right decisions in the interest of the country’s economic stability.”

Opposition lawmakers shouted “Resign!” as she spoke.

Asked by opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer, “Why is she still here?” Truss retorted: “I am a fighter and not a quitter. I have acted in the national interest to make sure that we have economic stability.”

Official figures released Wednesday showed U.K. inflation rose to 10.1% in September, returning to a 40-year high first hit in July, as the soaring cost of food squeezed household budgets. While inflation is high around the world — driven up by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its effect on energy supplies — polls show most Britons blame the government for the country’s economic pain.

Opponents also accuse the Conservative government of sowing chaos by flip-flopping on policy. On Wednesday, Truss reassured retirees that pensions would continue to rise in line with inflation — less than 24 hours after her spokesman said the government was considering removing the expensive pledge as it seeks to cut public spending.

With opinion polls giving the Labour Party a large and growing lead, many Conservatives now believe their only hope of avoiding electoral oblivion is to replace Truss. But she insists she is not stepping down, and legislators are divided about how to get rid of her.

A national election does not have to be held until 2024. Truss appeared to rule out calling an early election, saying Wednesday that “what is important is we work together … to get through this winter and protect the economy.”

Truss faced another test in Parliament later Wednesday when lawmakers vote on a Labour Party motion seeking to ban fracking for shale gas — a policy that Truss recently approved.

Conservative Party whips said the vote would be treated as “a confidence motion in the government,” meaning the government would fall if the motion passed, triggering an election. The Conservatives’ 70-plus majority makes that unlikely, but the vote will be closely watched for signs of dissent about Truss’ leadership.

Conservative rebels can expect to be expelled from the party’s group in Parliament.

Conservative lawmaker Chris Skidmore, a former energy minister, tweeted that “I cannot personally vote tonight to support fracking and undermine the pledges I made at the 2019 General Election. I am prepared to face the consequences of my decision.”

One Tory lawmaker, William Wragg, said he would vote with the government even though he opposes fracking — but only so he could remain in the party’s parliamentary caucus and keep trying to bring down Truss.

Wragg said he was “personally ashamed” of the government, ”because I cannot go and face my constituents, look them in the eye and say that they should support our great party.”

Under Conservative Party rules, Truss is safe from a leadership challenge for a year, but the rules can be changed if enough lawmakers want it. There is fevered speculation about how many lawmakers have already submitted letters calling for a no-confidence vote.

Some Conservative legislators think Truss could be forced to resign if the party agrees on a successor.

As yet, there is no front-runner. Sunak, House of Commons leader Penny Mordaunt and popular Defense Secretary Ben Wallace all have supporters, as does Hunt, whom many see as the de facto prime minister already.

Some even favor the return of Boris Johnson, who was ousted in the summer after becoming enmeshed in ethics scandals.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said he understood why colleagues were angry, but said “defenestrating another prime minister” was the wrong thing to do.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of British politics at https://apnews.com/hub/liz-truss

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U.K. inflation hits 10% as Liz Truss faces Parliament

Comment

LONDON — British Prime Minister Liz Truss lost the second of her key cabinet officials Wednesday after Home Secretary Seulla Braverman resigned.

In another day of political turbulence in Britain, Braverman departed her post as home secretary — one of four “great offices of state,” or the most senior posts in government, which also include the prime minister, chancellor and foreign secretary. The terms of her resignation are still unclear.

Since Truss became prime minister in early September, two senior figures have left their posts. Her former chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, was sacked last Friday.

Earlier in the day, Truss had declared herself to be “a fighter, not a quitter,” amid calls for her own resignation at her first public grilling session since she sacked her finance minister and saw her economic agenda gutted.

Truss offered Parliament an apology — of sorts — as she came under withering criticism for first proposing big tax cuts and then reversing herself after her policies sent financial markets reeling.

“I’ve been very clear that I am sorry and I have made mistakes,” she told lawmakers in the House of Commons, where opposition members accused the new prime minister of governing with no viable plan and no mandate.

As Truss struggles, so does the British economy. Just a few hours before she appeared in Parliament, the government reported that inflation increased to 10.1 percent in September compared with prices last year. The higher cost of food was driving the spike.

The economy was in trouble before Truss became leader — though she arguably has made things worse. Energy costs are soaring, in part because of Russia’s war in Ukraine; the British pound is taking a beating; and the Bank of England has warned that a recession is likely before year’s end.

In her remarks, Truss blamed global head winds for the woes — and not her bungled plan for economic growth, which envisioned tax cuts for the well-to-do and corporations, paid for by deep borrowing and more debt.

With Liz Truss’s agenda gutted, Brits ask if prime minister is still in charge

Her appearance at prime minister’s questions, or PMQs — only her third since becoming leader of the country six weeks ago — found Truss mostly on the defensive. She lashed out at the opposition parties. But the opposition has not run Britain for the past 12 years. Her Conservative Party has.

Labour Party leader Keir Starmer asked Truss, “What is the point of a prime minister whose promises don’t even last a week?”

Starmer said that Truss’s now-defeated economic plan had sent adjustable mortgage rates soaring for homeowners, and charged that she had “trashed” the British economy.

“How can she be held to account when she is not in charge?” Starmer asked, referring to how her new finance chief, Jeremy Hunt, had presented an entirely new government policy this week. Some politicians and British media outlets have referred to Hunt as the “de facto prime minister.”

“I have acted in the national interest to make sure we have economic stability,” Truss retorted.

Reviews from the public have been brutal. One poll from YouGov found that only 10 percent of voters have a favorable view of Truss, making her the most unpopular prime minister the organization has ever tracked. Another survey found that most Conservative Party members — the small section of the population who voted her into office — would now like to see her resign.

If Truss stays in office, it may be less because she’s a fighter than because Conservative Party lawmakers — who would have to pressure or vote her out — are divided over who might replace her.

Foreign Secretary James Cleverly was among those in the party calling for patience. Speaking to Sky News, he said “going through another leadership campaign, defenestrating another prime minister” won’t “convince the British people that we are thinking about them rather than ourselves” or “convince the market to stay calm.”

“Being angry I get, I totally get it, but that’s an emotional response, not a plan,” he added.

The latest double-digit inflation figure is a 40-year-high and matches the number in July after a slight dip to 9.9 percent in August. The government’s target rate of inflation is 2 percent.

The figures published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) on Wednesday showed that the rising costs were driven mostly by food prices, which jumped 14.5 percent compared with the same month last year. That was the largest annual increase since 1980.

“After last month’s small fall, headline inflation returned to its high seen earlier in the summer,” Darren Morgan, ONS director of economic statistics, said in a statement. “The rise was driven by further increases across food, which saw its largest annual rise in over 40 years, while hotel prices also increased after falling this time last year.”

The increases were somewhat mitigated by a drop in prices for gasoline and airline tickets, and the price of used cars has not increased as much as last year, he added.

Hunt responded to the figures, saying he understood that people across the country were struggling with higher bills.

“This government will prioritize help for the most vulnerable while delivering wider economic stability and driving long-term growth that will help everyone,” he said.

On Monday, Hunt announced that Truss’s previous pledge to help Britons with energy bills for the next two years had been junked because it was too expensive. Now, support will be guaranteed only until April 2023. Hunt said further help would then be “targeted.”

The government has so far refused to fund those subsidies with a windfall profits tax for oil and gas providers, as demanded by the opposition.

Experts have warned that because of rising global energy prices, bills could spike from an average of $2,800 a year to more than $4,500 next spring.

The squeeze on household costs hits those with the lowest incomes the hardest because they spend a greater proportion of their money on food, fuel and energy.

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British PM Truss vows to carry on as her party support dwindles

  • Truss says she’s sorry for mistakes
  • Says she is ‘sticking around’
  • Economic agenda that caused market rout scrapped
  • Some Conservative MPs calling on her to quit

LONDON, Oct 18 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Liz Truss warned of tough times ahead after she scrapped her vast tax-cutting plan and said she would carry on to try to put the economy on a stronger footing, defying calls for her resignation.

After weeks of blaming “global headwinds” for investors dumping the pound and government bonds, Truss on Monday said she was sorry for going “too far and too fast” with her radical economic plan to snap Britain out of years of tepid growth.

It was not clear whether the apology would quell a growing rebellion in her Conservative Party, with a handful of lawmakers urging Truss to quit just six weeks after she became prime minister.

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Truss has said she will fight on and told her top ministers she wanted to level with the public that there were tough times ahead.

A new YouGov opinion poll showed that even among Conservative Party members who backed her for prime minister, more than half of those polled said she should resign. A third wanted her predecessor, Boris Johnson, to return.

Markets, which plunged after Truss’s Sept. 23 “mini-budget”, are still under strain even after her finance minister Jeremy Hunt tore up her plans on Monday.

“I do want to accept responsibility and say sorry for the mistakes that have been made,” Truss told the BBC late on Monday.

“I wanted to act to help people with their energy bills, to deal with the issue of high taxes, but we went too far and too fast.” Truss said she was “sticking around” and that she would lead the Conservatives into the next election due in about two years time, although the statement was accompanied by a laugh.

Earlier on Monday, Truss watched silently in parliament as Hunt ripped up the plan she proposed less than a month ago, and which triggered a bond market rout so deep that the Bank of England had to act to prevent pension funds from collapsing.

‘HONEST’

For some in the party, the sight of a prime minister humbled in parliament provided little confidence she could fight on.

James Heappey, a minister for the armed forces, said Truss, his boss, could not afford to make any more mistakes.

Truss was due to speak later to her Brexit-supporting lawmakers, who are angry that she has abandoned her tax-cutting drive. Members of parliament have been urged by government to hold off from any move to oust her before it presents its medium-term fiscal plan on Oct. 31.

“The prime minister said she wanted to be honest with the public that times would be tough but by addressing long-standing issues now, we can put the country on a stronger path for the future,” her spokesperson quoted her as telling ministers on Tuesday.

Truss was elected by Conservative party members, not the broader electorate, on a promise to slash taxes and regulation to fire up the economy in a policy dubbed by critics as a return to 1980s Thatcherite-style “trickle-down” economics.

But markets reacted so dramatically that borrowing costs surged, lenders pulled mortgage offers and pension funds fell into a tailspin.

Ryanair (RYA.I) boss Michael O’Leary described Britain’s economic situation as a “car crash” which he blamed on the country’s decision to vote to leave the European Union in 2016.

SPENDING SQUEEZE

With Britain’s economic reputation shattered, Hunt may now have to go further in finding public spending cuts than the government would have done had Truss not unleashed her economic plan at a time of surging inflation.

Truss’s spokesperson said the government could not yet make commitments in individual policy areas, despite previous pledges, but it was focused on protecting the most vulnerable. He said Truss stood by her pledge to increase defence spending by 2030.

Torsten Bell, the head of the Resolution Foundation, a think tank, said the government may need to cut public spending by around 30 billion pounds ($34 billion) – a politically very difficult task after successive Conservative governments cut departmental budgets over the last 10 years.

One area of spending already to go is Truss’s vast two-year energy support package that was expected to cost well over 100 billion pounds, which Hunt said would now last until April before it is reviewed.

($1 = 0.8807 pounds)

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Writing by Kate Holton and Elizabeth Piper; Additional reporting by William James, Andrew MacAskill, Kylie MacLellan and Paul Sandle; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky, Gareth Jones and Tomasz Janowski

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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