Furious Tories conclude that Liz Truss is
finished
‘It feels like the end. I think she’ll be gone next
week,’ says veteran Tory MP.
BY ELENI
COUREA AND ESTHER WEBBER
OCTOBER 14,
2022 7:56 PM
https://www.politico.eu/article/liz-truss-prime-minister-uk-conservative-party-finished/
LONDON — In
six short weeks, Liz Truss has succeeded in angering all wings of her party. Most
now agree she can’t fight the next election.
Britain’s
latest prime minister, who won a Tory leadership contest with promises of tax
cuts and “growth, growth, growth,” by Friday had driven supporters on the Tory
right to send furious WhatsApp messages bemoaning her latest U-turn on
corporation tax as more of her planned budget crumbled.
“I’ve never
known the atmosphere to be as febrile as it is at the moment,” one veteran Tory
MP who backed Truss in the leadership contest said. Another MP who supported
her said: “It feels like the end. I think she’ll be gone next week.”
Tory MPs
began casting around wildly for mechanisms to oust Truss and candidates to
replace her. While party rules make that complicated, rules can be changed and
Truss’ removal is fast becoming a question of when, not if. Her only strength
at this point, insiders say, is that there is no obvious successor.
With
markets showing little signs of being placated by the prime minister’s decision
to sack her friend and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, the latest in a series of
steps that have tried and failed to calm the turmoil in the three weeks since
her budget was announced, there were whispers that some of her former
leadership rivals were testing their level of support should they decide to
mount a challenge.
A tense,
hastily-arranged press conference in which Truss took just four questions and
left after 10 minutes did nothing to improve the mood. Her weakness was
underlined by the appointment of Jeremy Hunt to the Treasury, a veteran Cabinet
minister of the Cameron and May years who backed her rival Rishi Sunak. Steve
Brine, an ally of Hunt’s, told the BBC that while Truss would be the “chairman”
Hunt would be the government’s “chief executive.”
Craig
Mackinlay, a Tory backbencher, messaged colleagues saying of Kwarteng’s
departure: “This is a double U-turn with the handbrake on. Never U-turn. Others
will smell the blood in the water knowing they can take bites out of your
backside & dictate the agenda. No, No, No!”
Tory
WhatsApp groups descended into open warfare. One MP messaged colleagues urging
them to “show backbone” and claimed the maelstrom had been an invention of the
press. A colleague responded to say they were “living in a fantasy world.”
Thérèse
Coffey, the deputy prime minister and Truss’ closest ally, held a call with a
supportive group of Tory MPs in an attempt to calm the waters at 2:15 p.m. and
a second call with to which all Tory MPs were invited later in the afternoon.
One attendee at the first meeting said she appeared “emotional” and “very
down”.
Andrew
Griffith, a Treasury minister, spoke in support of Truss on the 2:15 p.m call
and told colleagues that asset managers were “pumped” by the government’s
policies, according to one MP present.
Another MP,
asked if she had done enough to steady the ship, replied: “Ship’s fine. It’s
the crew!”
How badly
can we lose?
Truss’ most
strident critics now argue that removing her is a matter of national rather
than political interest — they are resigned to losing the next election but
view her premiership as a threat to the U.K. economy.
Some Tory
rebels believe there is nothing Truss can do to regain the confidence of the
markets. “They want to know that the government understands its parliamentary
party and the two are aligned rather than constantly in battle,” one former
Cabinet minister said. “Otherwise, why do you trust anything the government
says publicly?”
For many
MPs, it’s also a question of limiting the damage done to the Tory brand. “A
bunch of libertarian entryists have taken over the Tory party,” one rebel MP
said. “It’s our Corbyn problem. We now have a choice between landslide and
annihilation. You can’t destroy the economy and our reputation for economic
competence and expect anything less.”
Truss’
biggest flaw has been her rigidity. She has insisted that the market reaction
to her mini-budget was the result of a communication failure rather than a
policy error. Her decision to stick to that line and refusal to admit fault at
a meeting Wednesday with the organizing group for backbench Tory MPs, the 1922
committee, infuriated MPs.
One
well-connected Tory strategist said the prime minister was unfazed by the dire
polls. “She doesn’t care about the polling. She says something to the effect of
‘we’re not populists, we need to do what’s right.’ She just doesn’t accept that
she needs people to buy into her plans.”
A group of
Tory MPs have settled on the idea of a joint ticket of Penny Mordaunt and Rishi
Sunak to take over from Truss. “Rishi and Penny got over two-thirds of the
parliamentary party between them on the final MPs ballot,” one Tory rebel
organizer said. “You have a critical mass already backing them.”
In a
message leaked to POLITICO, Crispin Blunt told colleagues in a Tory backbench
WhatsApp group on Friday afternoon: “Enough. Emergency repair needed for our
party and our country. Step forward Rishi and Penny, with our support and
encouragement in the interests of us all.”
But it is
unlikely that other leadership hopefuls will be content to give the pair a free
run.
What now?
Ousting
Truss this year would make her the shortest-serving prime minister in British
history.
But
orchestrating her exit is easier said than done. One mechanism under discussion
is changing party rules to allow for Truss to be challenged — ordinarily she is
immune for the first year of her premiership — and for Tory MPs to choose her
successor without a vote by the grassroots membership.
One member
of the 1922 committee executive, which oversees leadership rules, said no
change had been discussed and that none was currently anticipated.
Another
mechanism being mooted in some quarters is getting a majority of Tory MPs to
agree on her replacement and installing the new prime minister via a majority
vote in the Commons. Such a move might be technically possible but would drag
the King into a constitutional row, with opposition parties demanding an
election if Truss cannot command a parliamentary majority.
And getting
all Tory MPs to agree on a candidate would be no easy feat, particularly at a
time when the party is so viciously divided.
Truss’
defenders are strident in their criticism of those plotting to get rid of her.
A Tory MP who backs Truss said “a lot of people are getting really rather overexcited.”
“The wild
talk about replacing her as a unity candidate at this particular stage is not
going to go down very well,” the MP said. “Colleagues who do this sort of thing
ought to start to think about the impression that they give to their own associations.
The Conservative Party doesn’t like what it perceives as disloyalty.”
When former
Prime Minister Boris Johnson won an 80-seat majority — which has now been
whittled down to 69 seats — the general assumption was that the Tories would
govern for at least two terms.
The
electoral challenge facing Labour — winning back enough seats in the north and
in Scotland while also gaining ground in the south — was seen as too great. But
Tory MPs point out that on current polling figures, those calculations are
blown out of the water.
Both the
Labour leader Keir Starmer and the Liberal Democrat leader called for a general
election to be triggered on Friday. If Labour’s current lead in the polls were
to be replicated in an election, the party would win more than 400 seats,
dwarfing even Tony Blair’s landslide 1997 victory.
Labour’s
lead will almost certainly narrow when an election comes. But many Tory MPs
believe the damage of the past months will take a long time to repair — and
that Labour is certain to win the next election as a result.
“We don’t
know whether it goes on for three months, six months, or another year,” said a
former Cabinet minister, “but the thing is bust.”


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