Posted by: John Elliott | October 21, 2022

Liz Truss’s Brexit-based economic dreams end her brief reign over “Britaly”

Rishi Sunak in the lead to become PM next week

Boris Johnson wants to return to Downing Street

When Britain voted in 2016 to leave the European Union, it was expected that it would be hit by economic problems while it rebuilt its international trade and investment links. A loss of international prestige was also seen as likely. But what no-one envisaged was that its usually sane and stable politics would become so dysfunctional that it would be jokingly likened to Italy.

The Economist magazine has picked up on the joke with a spaghetti and pizza laden image of a Truss-like Britannia on its cover and an article headlined “Welcome to Britaly – A country of political instability, low growth and subordination to the bond markets”.

Another joke at the start of this week likened Liz Truss to a lettuce that only has a shelf life of a week.

The lettuce won because Truss didn’t last the week and announced her resignation as prime minister yesterday after just 44 days in power, the shortest period ever for a British prime minister.

Now to add to the sense of dysfunctional politics Boris Johnson, whose resignation from his unethical and flippant reign as prime minister led to the current crisis, is said to be considering standing in the ballot to succeed Truss. He would be doing that, say his supporters, “in the national interest” and is reported to be returning early this weekend from a Caribbean holiday.

The truth is that he might have a good case because there is no other obvious candidate who could unite the bitterly divided Conservative Party and have a remote chance of winning the general election that is due in 2024.

Meanwhile, pressure is growing for a general election to be called immediately by the new prime minister, who is due to be named by next Friday.

To be considered in the ballot for the post, contestants must gain the support of 100 or more Conservative members of parliament by 2pm on Monday. Since there are 357 MPs, that means only three contestants will go to a ballot starting later Monday afternoon. When two contestants are left, the party’s 170,000 members will be able to vote in an internet ballot (after an indicative vote by MPs), unless one of them withdraws.

Rishi Sunak, who was backed by a majority of MPs in the summer but lost to Truss in the members’ vote, is reported to ahead with the support of 100, followed by Johnson. Next comes Penny Mordant, who also stood in the summer and has been a credible Leader of the House of Commons for the past month.

Johnson has made it clear since he was ousted as prime minister that he assumed one day he would return to the job, but seemed to think that would not be till next year at the earliest. He had hoped to spend time earning big money with speeches and journalism that would help finance his and his family’s lifestyle. Clearly though, the chance to return now is too good to miss.

Liz Truss announces her resignation after 44 days as prime minister

Sunak’s position means that South Asian-origin politicians are continuing to be prominent in the politics of the country that welcomed their parents as immigrants. It was Sunak and Sajid Javid who triggered Johnson’s downfall when their resignations as cabinet ministers in July led to a mass of other ministerial walkouts. Sunak produced sound economic policies in the subsequent leadership contest, but the Conservative members voted for Truss’s unreally rapid right-wing low tax high growth dreams.

Suella Braverman may put her name forward this weekend but has little chance of success. She jumped to prominence when she entered the contest against Sunak, Truss and others in the summer and was appointed home secretary in Truss’s government. She pursued tough immigration laws and attacks on the rights of public protest and trade union action that led to a reportedly heated row with Truss in Downing Street on October 19 and subsequently resigned.

Under its “Britaly” headline, The Economist noted that, in 2012, Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng, who resigned as chancellor of the exchequer (finance minister) on October 14, were two of the authors of a pamphlet called “Britannia Unchained”, which used Italy as a warning of what could happen if economic policies did not change.

“Bloated public services, low growth, poor productivity: the problems of Italy and other southern European countries were also present in Britain,” said the magazine. “Ten years later, in their botched attempt to forge a different path, Ms Truss and Mr Kwarteng have helped make the comparison inescapable.”

Truss became prime minister on September 6 and held the post for the shortest period of any British prime minister ever. Together with Kwarteng she was determined quickly to pursue their right-wing economic policies. But this was disrupted two days later when Queen Elizabeth died and normal politics were suspended till the state funeral on September 19.

Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng in the House of Commons while their mini-budget is under attack

Later that week on September 23, Kwarteng produced his bombshell economic package – a mini-budget – with $45bn tax cuts supposedly funded by unspecified borrowing and without the usual economic assessment by the Office for Budget Responsibility. He failed to alert the markets to what he was planning and refused to produce a new medium-term strategy for the economy assessing his mini-budget till November 23, but later agreed on October 31.

That disdain for conventional policy making was too much for the markets and Britain was hit by a financial crisis and a collapse of the pound that even triggered a rebuke from the International Monetary Fund.

It was also too much for the bulk of the Conservative Party that feared losing votes in the Labour Party’s heartlands because the proposals included cutting the top tax rate for high earners, introducing other tax cuts that would benefit the better off rather than the poor, and removing a ceiling for bankers’ bonuses.

Normal politics were again adjourned while the Conservative and Labour parties held their annual conferences, and parliament resumed on October 11. It then took just ten days for Kwarteng to be sacked and for Truss’s government to unravel to the point where she took the formal constitutional step yesterday of telling King Charles that she was resigning.

She then announced that publicly in Downing Street in front of the famous No 10 door, saying correctly that she had been elected by Conservative Party members with “a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms of Brexit”. She now had to recognise that “given the situation, I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party”.

The key word there is Brexit because Truss and Kwarteng wanted to justify their support for Britain leaving the European Union by introducing a low tax economy that would attract domestic and foreign investment and lead to high economic growth alongside strict controls on immigration.

Jeremy Hunt starts cancelling Kwarteng’s mini-budget measures

The theories that she had espoused in the 2012 pamphlet with Kwarteng, a very bright old Etonian with seemingly even greater self-belief than Johnson, did not take account of the consequential financial uncertainty that would deter investment and block the immigration the country needs to fuel economic growth.

Braverman, with an almost manic right-wing approach exacerbated the growing crisis. She emerged as the heroine of the ageing right wing Conservative Party membership that elected Truss. Advocating a new public order legislation in parliament on September 18, she said, “I’m afraid, it’s the Labour Party, it’s the Lib Dems, it’s the coalition of chaos, it’s the Guardian-reading, tofu-eating wokerati, dare I say, the anti-growth coalition that we have to thank for the disruption that we are seeing on our roads today.”

Jeremy Hunt, a former health and foreign secretary who was defeated for the prime minister’s post by Johnson in 2019 and failed to qualify as a contestant this summer, is now the rock on which the government’s stability rests till a new prime minister is named. He took over the finance minister’s post from Kwarteng and has cancelled virtually all the mini-budget’s controversial proposals.

Braverman was succeeded on October 19 as home secretary by Grant Shapps, who Truss had sacked as transport secretary when she became prime minister. That surprising choice underlined Truss’s weakness and the collapse of the Brexiteer’s power because both Hunt and Shapps were “remainers” in the Brexit  debate.

By the end of next week, there should be a new prime minister who will try to bring the Conservative Party’s warring factions together and run a stable government ready for the 2024 general election. But the rows and uncertainty over what Britain should do following Brexit are far from over for the simple reason that there has never been any broadly agreed public policy on what could and should be achieved.

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Responses

  1. “Growth” as understood by most economists and embraced by politicians in most countries (including both Labour and Conservatives in the UK, not just Truss et al) is now a primary source of problems for the world and all countries, not in any way a solution.

  2. Yes I agree Horace and no politician has the guts to tackle it!

  3. The problem now is that in the event of a run off between Johnson and Sunak , it will be a majority of the voting public from amongst the party faithful whose choice it will fall. These voters got it wrong with Truss. Could they do it again with Boris?

  4. […] Liz Truss’s Brexit-based economic dreams end her brief reign over “Britaly” — Riding the Ele… […]


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