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WorldLiz Truss: 'I will lead Conservatives into the next general election'

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Liz Truss: ‘I will lead Conservatives into the next general election’

Liz Truss has insisted that she will lead the Conservatives into the next general election, despite U-turns that have left her fighting for her authority.

The Prime Minister apologized for making mistakes after new chancellor Jeremy Hunt scrapped almost all of her tax-cutting proposals to calm market turbulence.

She went on to say that her month-old premiership “hasn’t been perfect,” but that she had “corrected” flaws.

And she said it would have been “irresponsible” not to change course.

In an interview with the BBC, she said she was still committed to boosting UK economic growth, but acknowledged it would now take longer to achieve.

“I remain committed to the vision, but we will have to deliver that in a different way,” she said.

It comes after a dramatic day at Westminster after Mr Hunt announced that nearly all the tax cuts announced at last month’s mini-budget would be scrapped.

The decision has been welcomed by investors but has left Ms Truss’s economic agenda in tatters only weeks into her time in No 10.

Liz Truss told the BBC’s Chris Mason she was “sorry for the mistakes that have been made”.

In her interview, Ms Truss said she accepted responsibility for going “too far, too fast” – and she wanted to “say sorry for the mistakes that have been made”.

She added that she remained committed to a “low tax, high growth economy” – but preserving economic stability was now the “priority”.

“I do think it is the mark of an honest politician who does say ‘yes, I’ve made a mistake. I’ve addressed that mistake. And now we need to deliver for people.

“It would have been completely irresponsible for me not to act in the national interest in the way I have.”

Shadow Treasury minister James Murray said the PM’s apology “after weeks of blaming everyone else” would not “undo the damage” caused by her mini-budget.

“No sorry can change the fact that this crisis was made in Downing Street but is being paid for by working people,” he added.

Jeremy Hunt in the Commons
IMAGE SOURCE, JESSICA TAYLOR/UK PARLIAMENT Image caption, Liz Truss sat in the Commons for half an hour as Mr Hunt outlined the U-turns to MPs

Ms Truss watched on silently as Mr Hunt delivered a Commons statement to explain to MPs why the economic strategy, outlined last month by Kwasi Kwarteng, was being torn up.

The chancellor warned that “decisions of eye-watering difficulty” on tax and spending remain ahead of an economic statement on 31 October, when he will give further details of a plan to reduce the UK’s debt burden.

He said further windfall taxes on energy companies – a policy repeatedly rubbished by Ms Truss during her Tory leadership campaign – could not be ruled out, along with changes to the pension triple lock.

Ms Truss refused a Labour request to explain the U-turns to MPs herself before Mr Hunt’s statement, with Commons leader Penny Mordaunt saying the PM had been “detained on urgent business”. The prime minister later arrived in the Commons taking her seat beside Mr Hunt before he began his statement.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer accused the PM of leaving an “utter vacuum” in government, while one of his MPs jibed she had been “cowering under a desk”.

In total, £32bn of the £45bn in tax cuts announced at last month’s mini-budget have now been ditched, including plans to cut the basic rate of income tax from 20p to 19p from April.

Cuts to dividend taxes and VAT-free shopping for international tourists have also been scrapped, along with a freeze on alcohol duty rates.

Leadership threats

The government’s energy support package, a policy repeatedly championed by Ms Truss in defence of her premiership, will also be scaled back after six months.

The reversals have prompted some Tory MPs to talk privately about how Ms Truss could be ejected from office, despite party rules preventing a formal leadership challenge for a year.

Tactics reportedly under consideration include submitting no-confidence letters in a bid to force party bosses into a rule change or changing the rules to allow MPs to bypass party members and pick a new leader themselves.

Liberal Democrats leader Ed Davey called for a general election, telling the BBC “the damage has already been done” by the mini-budget.

Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves echoed calls for Ms Truss’s removal, telling BBC Breakfast the “only thing left from the Prime Minister’s plan is higher mortgage rates and higher bonuses for bankers”.

Ms Reeves said Labour would fund a longer-running energy bill support package by scrapping non-dom status.

However, there is little agreement over who should take over from Ms Truss if she is removed.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace has quashed rumours that he could replace Ms Truss should she resign.

Speaking to the Times, he said he will be holding on to his current job and accused Tory MPs of playing “political parlour games”.

Five of the PM’s own MPs have called publicly for her to resign, with others briefing journalists that they think her time in office is up.

Ms Truss has been holding meetings with her cabinet ministers and backbench MPs as she tries to reassure her party of her grip on power.

She also met Sir Graham Brady, who chairs the committee that decides the Tory party rulebook.

The committee’s treasurer has confirmed a rule change is possible, but suggested “probably 60-70%” of the party’s MPs would have to support the move.

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