Liz Truss accused of ‘running scared’ after
pulling out of BBC interview
Truss now likely to become prime minister without
undergoing a single set-piece grilling on TV or radio
Peter
Walker
@peterwalker99
Mon 29 Aug
2022 17.51 BST
Liz Truss
has been accused of “running scared” of scrutiny after pulling out of a BBC
interview scheduled for Tuesday, meaning she is likely to become prime minister
without undergoing a single set-piece broadcast quizzing.
Earlier
this month the foreign secretary agreed to a primetime interview with the
veteran political journalist Nick Robinson on BBC One, something already done
by Rishi Sunak, her rival to succeed Boris Johnson as Conservative party
leader.
But a BBC
spokesperson said Truss had now cancelled the interview. “Ms Truss’s team say
she can no longer spare the time to appear on Our Next Prime Minister,” they
said. “We regret that it has not been possible to do an in-depth interview with
both candidates despite having reached agreement to do so.”
In a tweet,
Robinson said he had been pleased that Truss had agreed to the interview and he
was “disappointed and frustrated it’s been cancelled”.
A source in
Sunak’s campaign said their tally showed Truss had done just two broadcast
interviews of any form during the campaign, whereas Sunak had undertaken nine,
also including three spots on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme and an appearance
on ITV’s This Morning.
The source
said: “It’s important that candidates face proper scrutiny so that members and
the public know what they are offering. Avoiding that scrutiny suggests either
Truss doesn’t have a plan at all or the plan she has falls far short of the
challenges we face this winter.”
Wendy
Chamberlain, the Liberal Democrats’ chief whip, said: “Liz Truss is running
scared of the media and proper public scrutiny. How can she lead our country
through an economic crisis when she can’t even cope with a basic media
interview?
“She wants
to follow in Margaret Thatcher’s footsteps but she’s fallen at the first
hurdle. She’s fighting for the highest office by answering the lowest number of
difficult questions.”
Labour also
criticised Truss for backing out. Conor McGinn, the shadow minister without
portfolio, said: “The British public don’t get a say in choosing the next Tory
prime minister and now it seems Liz Truss wants to avoid any public scrutiny
whatsoever.
“People
will rightly conclude that she doesn’t want to answer questions about her plans
for the country because she simply hasn’t got any serious answers to the big
challenges facing our country.”
Truss’s
tactic of avoiding scrutiny mirrors that of Boris Johnson, who before the
Conservative victory in the December 2019 general election declined a BBC
interview with Andrew Neil, something faced by rivals including the then Labour
leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
Truss has
appeared at a series of Conservative hustings events around the UK in recent weeks
and faced some difficult questions from the various hosts, although less so
from the audiences made up of party members.
But
longer-form interviews, in which a candidate can be pushed repeatedly on their
answers, are viewed as considerably more difficult.
During some
hustings events, Truss has been critical of the media, and of the BBC
specifically, accusing some outlets of trying to “talk our country down” and
having a leftwing bias.
Truss’s
campaign was contacted for comment.
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