UK’s problems will not ‘go away’, admits Sunak
after ‘tough’ 2022
Prime minister’s new year message makes no mention of
the chaos that has plagued the Tory party in 2022
Peter
Walker Political correspondent
@peterwalker99
Sat 31 Dec
2022 00.01 GMT
Rishi Sunak
has blamed Covid and the Ukraine war for what he acknowledged had been a
“tough” 12 months, and warned in a prime ministerial new year message that the
country’s problems will not disappear in 2023.
Often
taking an openly party political stance, Sunak praised his government’s record
and made no mention of the chaos within the Conservative party that contributed
to 2022’s difficulties.
The year
now ending had been tough, the prime minister said in a video address. “Just as
we recovered from an unprecedented global pandemic, Russia launched a barbaric
and illegal invasion across Ukraine. This has had a profound economic impact
around the world, which the UK is not immune to.”
Passing
over the impact of the disastrous September mini-budget under Liz Truss, one of
three Tory prime ministers to serve in 2022, Sunak said the government had
“taken difficult but fair decisions to get borrowing and debt under control”.
“Three
months ago, I stood at the steps of Downing Street and promised I would work
relentlessly on the things that matter most to you,” he said. “Since then, this
government has taken decisive action to back our NHS with record resources to
tackle the backlogs – more funding, more doctors and more nurses.
“We’re also
tackling illegal migration and stopping criminals from abusing our asylum
system. Now, I’m not going to pretend that all our problems will go away in the
new year. But 2023 will give us an opportunity to showcase the very best of
Britain on the world stage.”
With a
general election expected in 2024, Keir Starmer’s new year message also
contained clear partisan elements, saying 2023 would be “a new chapter for
Britain” with the coronation of King Charles.
“We must
look forward to that with hope,” the Labour leader said. “But for hope to
flourish, Britain needs to change.”
During
2023, Starmer said, Labour would “set out the case for change”, including more
equal economic growth, a green jobs revolution and what he called “a completely
new way of doing politics”, based on trust.
Like Sunak
and Starmer, Ed Davey, the Liberal Democrat leader, noted the death of Queen
Elizabeth II, and along with Starmer he hailed the England women’s football
team for their triumph in the Euros.
Also saying
change was needed in 2023, Davey condemned what he called “political chaos in
the Conservative party, inflicting economic chaos on the rest of us.”
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