Liz Truss refuses to commit to appointing ethics
adviser
Tory leadership hopeful says there is no need for
independent body as she has ‘always acted with integrity’
Jessica
Murray Midlands correspondent
Tue 23 Aug
2022 21.41 BST
Liz Truss
has refused to commit to appointing an ethics adviser if she became prime
minister, saying she has “always acted with integrity”.
At the
Conservative leadership hustings in Birmingham on Tuesday night, Truss declined
to directly answer whether she would appoint someone to the role, instead
saying she would “ensure the correct apparatus is in place so that people are
able to whistle-blow”.
The
previous ethics adviser, Christopher Geidt, quit in June after conceding the
prime minister may have broken the ministerial code over the Partygate scandal.
After being
pressed on the subject of a new ethics adviser multiple times, Truss said: “I
do think one of the problems we have got in this country in the way we approach
things is we have numerous advisers and independent bodies, and rules and
regulations.
“For me
it’s about understanding the difference between right and wrong, and I am
somebody who has always acted with integrity […] and that is what I would do as
prime minister.”
During the
hustings, hosted by Time Radio, Truss also gave her backing to setting up more
grammar schools and said she will redirect money from the health and social
care levy away from the NHS and into social care.
Rishi
Sunak, her rival for No 10, suggested UK aid programmes should be cut in
countries that refused to accept deportations of “failed asylum seekers” to
Britain.
He said
emergency humanitarian aid would remain but “ongoing aid programmes in
countries which we’ve had for years” would be withdrawn.
Sunak also
warned “millions of people are going to face the risk of destitution” if more
is not done to help them with energy bills this winter.
The former
chancellor attacked Truss’s policies, saying: “I think unfunded tax cuts are
wrong and do you know what? [Margaret Thatcher’s] chancellor Nigel Lawson
agrees with me, the head of her policy unit agrees with me, Norman Lamont
agrees with me.”
“I think it
will be a moral failure of the Conservative government and I don’t think the
British people will ever forgive us,” he added.
Truss
defended herself against accusations her economic proposals were dangerous,
railing against what she labelled “Treasury orthodoxy”.
The foreign
secretary told the audience of Tory members: “This whole language of ‘unfunded’
tax cuts implies the static model, the so-called abacus economics that the
Treasury orthodoxy has promoted for years, but it hasn’t worked in our economy
because what we have ended up with is high tax, high spending and low growth.
“That is
not a sustainable model for Britain’s future.”
Both
candidates commented on the death of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel, who was
killed in a shooting in Liverpool on Monday night.
Truss said
“there is a serious problem in this country with gun crime” and that she would
introduce police force league tables if elected, while Sunak said he called his
family to speak with his daughter when he first heard about the shooting.
“I thought:
‘She was nine, she is the same age as my younger daughter,’” the former
chancellor said. “Horrific. I called my wife and spoke to my daughter.”
He added
that he would “finish putting 20,000 more” police officers on the streets to
fight crime.

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