Tories in disarray over energy crisis as Truss
urged to spell out plans to help
Some MPs backing leadership frontrunner showing signs
of jitters over lack of response to soaring bills
Liz Truss said she would ‘ensure people get the
support needed’ but offered no new suggestions on what would be provided.
Rowena
Mason and Aubrey Allegretti
Fri 26 Aug
2022 18.21 BST
The
Conservatives were in disarray over their response to the energy crisis on
Friday, with some Tory MPs backing Liz Truss showing signs of jitters over her
refusal to spell out how she would help households.
The
frontrunner to be prime minister in just over a week’s time said she would
“ensure people get the support needed to get through these tough times” but had
no new suggestions about how much or who would get assistance, with the average
energy bill set to hit £3,549 from October.
One
Conservative MP supporting Truss said they “wanted to see more” and hoped the
Ofgem announcement would “sharpen thinking” in her camp, while expressing
frustration that her campaign had not relentlessly focused on what to do about
energy bills.
Another
Tory MP who switched to Truss from another candidate said they felt
“disappointed with the lack of focus on what matters to people” and acknowledged
they had mostly backed her because she looked likely to win.
A third
Truss supporter, Chris Skidmore, wrote an article saying the UK needed to be
weaned off gas, despite his favoured candidate backing more North Sea gas and
having called overnight for fracking to be exploited in the UK. “Anyone that
suggests that our dependence on gas isn’t the problem, or that the solution is
more gas, is gaslighting you,” he wrote for PoliticsHome.
After
Ofgem’s announcement that the price cap would rise by 80% from October, Truss
sent out a statement saying help would be forthcoming but gave no further
details and her spokesperson said there would be “nothing more” for the rest of
the day.
With little
new from the Truss team, Boris Johnson set out his view that his successor
would “plainly” have to act without capping prices for the very richest, while
Nadhim Zahawi, the chancellor, said the reality was that “we should all look at
our energy consumption”.
The
chancellor assured the public that “more help is on its way” and he was “doing
the work to make sure that will be in place throughout next year”.
Zahawi’s
comments on cutting consumption put him at odds with the official government
position set out by Kwasi Kwarteng, the business secretary and Truss’s likely
next chancellor, that there is no need for people to reduce their energy use.
No 10 has also said energy usage is a matter of “individual choice”.
Senior
Tories are worried about the idea that asking people to use less energy could be
viewed as a form of rationing, but officials have already drawn up plans for
the next government to consider asking the public to voluntarily use less.
Despite the
uncertainty over the plans of the next prime minister, Johnson told
broadcasters on Friday that the cash “handouts” were “clearly going to be
augmented, increased, by extra cash that the government is plainly going to be
announcing in September”.
But he also
said energy bills should not be subsidised for everyone. “What I don’t think we
should be doing is capping things for absolutely everybody, the richest
households in the country,” he said.
“This will
go on for a few months and it will go on over the winter,” he added. “And it
will be tough – and I’d be very clear about that – but in the end, we are also
putting in the measures we need to ensure that we have the energy independence
to get through this.”
The
government was accused of being “missing in action” by the Labour leader, Keir
Starmer.
He said:
“You’ve got a prime minister who insisted on staying in office, recognises
there’s a problem with energy prices, shrugs his shoulders and does nothing
about it.
“You’ve got
two leadership candidates who are fighting with each other about how appalling
they have been in government, but neither has come up with any plan to deal
with this problem. Unforgivable.”
Truss has
repeatedly been criticised by her leadership rival, Rishi Sunak, for economic
plans he claimed would worsen the pain felt by those already living in fuel
poverty and others who will be pushed into it.
The former
chancellor said pensioners and the most vulnerable would be supported if he
became prime minister. “I want them to have certainty that extra help is
coming,” he said.
Truss’s
plans, which he said amounted to borrowing tens of billions of pounds for
unfunded tax cuts, “don’t actually do anything to help the people most in need,
risk making inflation worse and put our nation’s finances at risk as well”, he
added.
Truss has
limited her announcements about support to tax cuts, including reversing the
national insurance rise and temporarily suspending green levies on energy
bills.

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