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Truss plans branded ‘inept madness’ as divisions emerge in Tory party over market chaos

28 Sep 2022 5 minute read
Prime Minister Liz Truss. Photo Toby Melville PA Images

Divisions are emerging in the Conservatives, after the Chancellor’s mini-budget prompted turmoil in the markets and talk of a financial crisis.

With Liz Truss only a few weeks in office, the mood in the party once again appears divided as some MPs hit out at the tax-cutting plans announced on Friday by Kwasi Kwarteng, with one prominent backbencher calling his party leader’s plan “inept madness”.

It comes as the Bank of England was forced to launched an emergency bond-buying programme to prevent borrowing costs from spiralling out of control and to stave off a “material risk to UK financial stability”.

The International Monetary Fund, in a highly unusual move, has already flagged serious concerns about the mini-budget.

The crisis has prompted Labour and other opposition parties to call for a recall of Parliament, so MPs can hear from the Chancellor about his plans to restore market confidence.

There were signs on Wednesday of outright worry within the party, with MPs – some of whom backed Rishi Sunak in the leadership contest – making public their own unhappiness with the political and economic chaos of recent days.

Economic crisis

Mel Stride, Conservative chairman of the Commons Treasury Committee, warned “there’s a lot of concern within the parliamentary party, there’s no doubt about that”.

He told Sky News: “I don’t want to speculate on the future of the Chancellor other than to say that I think where the party should be at the moment is really uniting at a time of economic crisis.

“The last thing we want now is a political crisis to compound that, and I think really focus on this issue of growth.”

Simon Hoare, the chair of the Northern Ireland Select Committee, cited the former Conservative chancellor Norman Lamont during the sterling crisis of 1992 as he tweeted: “These are not circumstances beyond the control of Govt/Treasury. They were authored there. This inept madness cannot go on.”

Tory MP Robert Largan also came out to label as a “mistake” the decision to cut the top income tax rate when “the Government’s fiscal room for manoeuvre is so limited”.

The High Peak MP tweeted: “This is a deeply worrying time. Elected officials need to be honest about the choices we face & Government needs to take a pragmatic, fiscally responsible approach on the short-term support needed for people & long-term strategic thinking to ensure our energy security.”

Unease has been brewing in wider Conservative circles too.

Nick Timothy, who was chief of staff to former PM Theresa May, attacked the the Government’s plan.

“This is not conservatism,” he tweeted.

“And it is not what conservatives do. Ideology and unnecessary risks with market confidence are supposed to be what the other side does. We do need a different plan – but this is a disaster that should never have happened.”

Nonetheless, some defenders of the Prime Minister have been vocal, with one Conservative peer suggesting that the crisis in the markets was driven by concerns over the possibility of a Labour government.

Mocked

Daniel Hannan, one of the key Conservative voices behind the push to leave the EU, wrote an article for the ConservativeHome website playing down market concerns about the £45 billion package of tax cuts announced by Mr Kwarteng.

In the piece, which was published on Wednesday and immediately mocked online, Lord Hannan wrote: “What we have seen since Friday is partly a market adjustment to the increased probability that Sir Keir Starmer will win in 2024 or 2025 – leading to higher taxes, higher spending, and a weaker economy.”

He suggested the reaction to the mini-budget was driven by “motivated reasoning”.

“Some pundits don’t like Truss, others have never forgiven the Tories for Brexit, yet others are horrified by the idea that growth, rather than equality, should be the Government’s priority.

“Fair enough. But let’s be clear-headed about what is happening.”

Lord Hannan downplayed the significance of the tax cuts in historical terms.

“To blame these tiny tax reductions for the fall in the pound is akin to a fly alighting on an exhausted shire horse as it lies down to sleep, and telling itself that it wrestled the mighty beast to the ground.”

The article was praised by Lord Frost, the former Brexit negotiator, who called it an “excellent piece”.

However, many mocked the article online and rubbished the peer’s analysis.

Sir Keir Starmer also called the comments “complete nonsense”.

The Labour leader told C4 News: “That’s just a ridiculous assertion. I don’t even think the Tory party are taking that seriously.

“It’s very obvious that this is a direct result of the budget on Friday.”

Elsewhere, Julian Smith, a Tory MP and former cabinet minister, reacted strongly to comments by Lord Frost dismissing the concerns of the IMF.

“Arghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh,” he tweeted.


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David Zenati-Parsons
David Zenati-Parsons
1 year ago

Don’t kid yourselves that they care about damaging the lives of ordinary people, this fury is at the thought of the hedge fund managers that fund the Tories pulling their donations #toryineptitude

George Thomas
George Thomas
1 year ago

““This is not conservatism,” he tweeted.””

Oh?

Cicoch
Cicoch
1 year ago
Reply to  George Thomas

This is class war.

Steve Duggan
Steve Duggan
1 year ago

What’s the betting the Conservative MPs will get more and more jittery about their seats and Labour’s increasing lead in the polls and produce another vote of no confidence in their leader. The party has been in power far too long and has run out of ideas. Trussomics will be the final nail in the coffin.

Peter Cuthbert
Peter Cuthbert
1 year ago
Reply to  Steve Duggan

They are already jittery given some of the bonkers things that prominent Brextemists have said today. The IMF has now become a left wing socialist organisation!!!! That lot seem to have become completely detached from rational reality.

I.Humphrys
I.Humphrys
1 year ago

This has been predicted by a certain man on You Tube for a few years (he is not an economist, rather than an English patriot, one who is against violence and “mad colonels” but nevertheless…..) We shall see whether the British collapse comes before 2030, as he predicts. (There is a lot of debt in the “UK”.) In one way, this is why I don’t mind having Will and Kate amongst us, even though it offends some. It is a gesture of friendship and stability, and not against our Indy aspirations.

Last edited 1 year ago by I.Humphrys
Ivor Schilling
Ivor Schilling
1 year ago
Reply to  I.Humphrys

Which Youtube channel are you referencing here, Humphrys?

G Horton-Jones
G Horton-Jones
1 year ago

Why bother with a General election .

England is a two party dysfunctional state.

Welsh and Scottish independence on October 1st and a united Ireland on the same day
We can then decide our relationship if any with our neighbours

Y Cymro
Y Cymro
1 year ago

The Tories deserve everything they get. Since Partygate they arrogantly brushed under the carpet their shambolic Covid rollout resulting in the deaths of tens of thousands. Wasted billions of taxpayers money lining the pockets of their fat-cat donors , family & friends. And when they forced that fat albino limpet Boris Johnson out if office kicking & screaming thought the election of Liz Truss would reinvigorate their party and give them a second wind. How wrong they were and how happy I am to see them suffer in the polls. May it continue until we get a general election then… Read more »

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