Everything you wanted to know about Liz Truss but
were too afraid to ask
Swot up on Britain’s incoming prime minister as Boris
Johnson heads for the exit.
BY MATT
HONEYCOMBE-FOSTER
SEPTEMBER
5, 2022 2:17 PM
https://www.politico.eu/article/everything-know-liz-truss-afraid-ask/
LONDON —
Britain is about to get a new prime minister. Yep, again.
As the
governing Conservatives pin their hopes on tax-cutting, free-trading,
woke-bashing Foreign Secretary Liz Truss to succeed where Boris Johnson,
Theresa May and David Cameron have all failed since 2016, POLITICO has a handy
primer on the U.K.’s (latest) incoming prime minister so you can pretend you
know what you’re talking about with friends.
The vital
statistics
Let’s start
with the basics. Truss is a Conservative. She’s 47 years old, and has been an
MP for 12 years and a Cabinet minister for eight, serving under three prime
ministers. Her current gig is foreign secretary, meaning she’s also the
country’s point person for post-Brexit EU relations — so if you’re reading this
in Brussels, you may already be rolling your eyes at this turn of events. She
starts work Tuesday as Johnson exits stage left, knife wounds still healing.
The
personal life
Truss is
married to accountant Hugh O’Leary, with whom she has two daughters. The
incoming U.K. leader was born in Oxford, and grew up in Scotland and then Leeds,
in the north of England, attending a school she later accused of setting “low
expectations” for its pupils. She also had a spell in Canada before belatedly
settling into the tried-and-tested route to Westminster — a degree in
philosophy, politics and economics at Oxford University.
The
politics
Truss is
seen as a libertarian and loves low taxes and small states. She co-wrote
‘Britannia Unchained,’ a 2012 book by newly-elected Tory MPs pitched as a
wake-up call for low-productivity Britain. It dubbed U.K. workers “among the
worst idlers in the world,” and took a swipe at young people for being “more
interested in football and pop music” than their Indian counterparts.
Yet Truss
has also proved to be a pragmatic shape-shifter throughout her career, getting
stuck in to running several tricky government departments and morphing from
bright-eyed Cameroon moderate to flag-waving champion of post-Brexit Britain.
She wisely kept her hands squeaky clean during the brutal Conservative coup
that called time on scandal-hit Johnson, refusing to openly criticize him — yet
managing to avoid being seen as part of the inner Johnson circle.
The
policies
Truss
comfortably saw off her rival Rishi Sunak and wooed the Conservative grassroots
with promises to slash taxes “from day one,” scrap outdated EU laws still on
the British statute book, and tackle what she’s called a “woke” culture in the
U.K. civil service. One MP supportive of Truss told POLITICO last month they
think Britain “could be heading for a 1980s-style culture shock” under the
incoming prime minister, while a key ally, Jacob-Rees Mogg, has called for a
full rethink of “whether the state should deliver certain functions at all.”
Truss has
insisted she’s no Margaret Thatcher clone (although that hasn’t stopped her
stealing the late Conservative prime minister’s best outfits).
The in-tray
Truss takes
the helm at a tumultuous time for Britain, which is battling soaring energy
costs (in part ramped by the war in Ukraine) and teetering on the brink of a
full-blown recession. The country has been gripped by a wave of strikes,
hobbling everything from the railways to the ports. Oh, and there’s a
cross-Channel “shitstorm” brewing over water companies dumping sewage into the
sea.
On the
political front, Truss is tasked with turning around the fortunes of a
Conservative Party that’s been in power for 12 years, and his has seen its
popularity fall off a cliff this year as Johnson fluffed the response to a host
of scandals. No pressure, Liz.
The inner
circle
A new prime
minister usually means a new top team, and key figures expected to get major
jobs in a Truss government include fellow Britannia Unchained scribe Kwasi
Kwarteng, an instinctive small-state Conservative who looks all-but certain to
become Truss’ top finance minister. Friend, karaoke-lover and fellow Cabinet
minister Therese Coffey, currently holding the work and pensions brief, has
been tipped for a senior role. Rees-Mogg, a die-hard Brexiteer who effectively
lives in a castle and yet really hates working from home, looks like the
frontrunner to become business and energy secretary.
Defeated
rival and former chancellor Sunak may or may not be offered a job — but don’t
expect the bloke who called Truss’s economic plan “immoral” to leap at the
chance, either way.
The Brexit
conversion
Perhaps the
most striking shift in what we might generously describe as Truss’ pragmatic
journey to the top has been her switch from worried Remainer to avid
Brexit-backer. Ahead of Britain’s fateful EU referendum in 2016, Truss — then
environment secretary — argued passionately for the country to stay in the
bloc, warning that going it alone would be a “hugely retrograde step” on
environmental protection and could usher in a “wasted decade” for the U.K.
economy. Oh, and there’s always a tweet.
Fast
forward to 2017 and Truss had already recanted, saying the “massive economic
problems” she feared Britain would face on its own had “not come to pass.” It’s
a position she’s stuck to ever since and, happily, the British economy is doing
just fine, thank you very much.
The
maverick diplomat
As U.K.
foreign secretary, Truss hasn’t exactly been afraid to ruffle a few feathers.
She’s shepherded through controversial legislation which the EU says risks
ripping up the hard-won protections for Northern Ireland in the Brexit deal
(unnerving Brussels and Washington in the process), and caused outrage in China
by suggesting the West should be prepared to arm Taiwan. On the leadership
campaign trail, she earned the ultimate badge of honor for a prospective
British leader: pissing off the French.
Aussie
conservatives who love her no-nonsense, free-trading talk are a bit more
enthusiastic, while Baltic states spooked by the threat of Russia see a leader
who’ll stand up for them when the going gets tough.
The art of
the deal
Truss made
her name signing a raft of post-Brexit trade deals, elevating a middle-ranking
Cabinet job into a daily chance to fly the flag for Britain. As international
trade secretary, Truss soared in the favorability ratings with grassroots
Conservatives and bagged a string of rollover trade deals aimed at retaining
post-Brexit links with key trading partners.
But her
approach has not been without controversy: critical MPs accused her of being
too focused on her own profile, with some even labelling her Department for
International Trade (DIT) the “Department for Instagramming Truss,” based on
her prolific output on the social network. Scrutiny of the deals she actually
negotiated as trade secretary has only increased since she left the job, with
agriculture and farming groups accusing her of ignoring warnings about the toll
of opening the door to cheap imports from Australia and New Zealand.
The pork
markets thing
Perhaps
surprisingly, Britain’s next prime minister was previously best known for …
shouting about pork (stay with us here). Truss has long embraced a somewhat
goofy public persona, and gave an, erm, highly enthusiastic 2014 speech to the
Conservative Party faithful as environment secretary, which included possibly
the most rapturous use of the phrase “pork markets” ever recorded. She also won
applause for gravely informing her audience with a steely gaze: “We import
two-thirds of our cheese: that is a disgrace!”
Truss is
also remembered for taking on rural Conservatives in her battle to become the
MP for South West Norfolk. The group of political opponents, dubbed the “Turnip
Taliban” due to their supposed militancy, grumbled that Truss’ colorful
personal life (she’d had an affair with a married MP) was unbecoming for their
prospective political representative. But Truss — whose allies claimed a whiff
of sexism among her critics — ultimately prevailed.
Truss’ real
dark secret
Brace
yourselves: she used to be a Liberal Democrat. Yep, the small-state libertarian
had a misspent youth as a representative of Britain’s tree-hugging,
socks-and-sandals-wearing, center-left opposition party, telling its 1994
conference that she’d be up for abolishing the monarchy. That should at least
give her something to chat about with the queen when she’s invited to form a
new government at Balmoral Tuesday lunchtime.

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