Dead on arrival: The Truss and Trussonomics experiment is almost over

British Prime Minister Liz Truss
British Prime Minister Liz Truss
Reuters

Things have been turbulent in the UK since the 2016 “Brexit” vote to leave the European Union – but the upheaval of the last six weeks may be among the most volatile episodes in modern British politics.

A recap. Newly installed Conservative PM Liz Truss introduced a tax cut plan last month – aka Trussonomics – to try to stimulate Britain’s inflation-ridden economy through a trickle-down effect by pushing for £45 billion ($50 billion) of tax cuts. But she failed to convince voters, markets, and even her own party that it could be paid for or succeed in addressing the cost-of-living crisis. Market turmoil and widespread criticism ensued.

In response, Truss backtracked on the corporate tax cuts and then, on Friday, sacrificed longtime ally and political soulmate, UK Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng. She replaced him with Jeremy Hunt, a Conservative centrist who is the fourth person to take on this role since July. Importantly, on Monday, Hunt scrapped nearly all of Truss's mini-budget that sparked the recent chaos, causing the pound to rise slightly against the US dollar.

While the opposition smells blood and Conservative support is plummeting, the chaos has also invited international criticism. US President Joe Biden openly called Truss’s plan a mistake on Sunday. The UK is also becoming the butt of jokes cracked publicly by world leaders.

Indeed, Truss’s go-it-alone policy-making – she failed to consult the independent watchdog that scrutinizes fiscal plans – and sloppy u-turns have triggered the beginnings of a mutiny in the Conservative benches. Less than two months into a tenure that started with the removal of former PM Boris Johnson, the days of Truss’s prime ministership appear to be numbered.

Goodwill Hunting. While Truss and the Conservative Party hemorrhage support, the new chancellor of the exchequer, Jeremy Hunt, said he supported Truss's premiership despite some policy differences. But his reversal of nearly all of her planned tax cuts (excluding those already put into place) and ditching of her scheme to cap energy prices for a full two years, is indeed a humiliating development for the new PM.

Hunt is in the hot seat. While some have praised the moderate, anti-Brexit “remainer” now running the exchequer from No. 11 Downing Street, critics point out that Hunt didn’t do well during the last Tory leadership contest. Also, while he eventually endorsed Rishi Sunak in that race, Hunt himself had supported higher corporate tax cuts than Truss. As the former health secretary, his performance in getting the UK pandemic-ready also fell short.

Money moves. Hunt seems to be quickly moving towards orthodoxy. Within 48 hours of assuming office, he warned that taxes could rise and that government spending would shrink. But he also referred to a “compassionate” Conservative government that wouldn’t implement the type of austerity measures seen back in 2010.

Though Goldman Sachs downgraded its economic growth outlook for the UK on Sunday, yields on long-dated gilts (UK government bonds) fell during Hunt's address Monday, while the pound rose 0.9% against the US dollar. Markets seemed to respond positively to his announcement that the universal cap on energy prices, set to cost £80bn ($90 bn), would be lifted in April and would only target poor Britons thereafter.

Can Truss hang on? Letters of no confidence are reportedly already being filed against Truss by MPs. But Mujtaba Rahman, Eurasia Group’s lead Europe analyst, says removing Truss will be difficult. “Although MPs are openly talking about finding a way of replacing Truss without again involving the 160,000-strong party membership [for intra-party elections], this will not be easy,” he says.

Like last summer, there is likely to be disagreement on who should take the helm. “Some Truss supporters, and allies of Boris Johnson, will try to block a return to power by Rishi Sunak,” Rahman explains.

Some MPs, Rahman says, think Truss will be forced out before the end of the month. The consensus is that her performance will now accelerate the talks among senior Tories for agreement on a “unity candidate.” But the party rules for choosing a PM would have to be rewritten to raise the threshold a candidate would need to reach to be in the running. Likely candidates, Rahman says, are Rishi Sunak, the former Chancellor, and Penny Mordaunt, the Commons leader.

While many fear that appointing yet another Tory leader will make the party look ridiculous, “the growing view at Westminster,” says Rahman, “is that that might be a better alternative to holding on to a Prime Minister who has palpably failed to achieve the ‘mission’ on which she set out.”

This article comes to you from the Signal newsletter team of GZERO Media. Sign up today.

More from GZERO Media

Listen: In 2019, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin met at a summit and described their “friendship without limits.” But how close is that friendship, really? Should the US be worried about their growing military and economic cooperation? On the GZERO World Podcast, Ian Bremmer sits down with Pulitzer prize-winning national security correspondent for The New York Times David Sanger to talk about China, Russia, the US, and the 21st century struggle for global dominance.

Members of the armed wing of Nelson Mandela's African National Congress line up waiting to vote in a military base north of Pretoria, on April 26, 1994.
REUTERS/Corinne Dufka

On April 27, 1994, Black South Africans went to the polls, marking an end to years of white minority rule and the institutionalized racial segregation known as apartheid. But the “rainbow nation” still faces many challenges, with racial equality and economic development remaining out of reach.

"Patriots" on Broadway: The story of Putin's rise to power | GZERO Reports

Putin was my mistake. Getting rid of him is my responsibility.” It’s clear by the time the character Boris Berezovsky utters that chilling line in the new Broadway play “Patriots” that any attempt to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin’s rise would be futile, perhaps even fatal. The show opened for a limited run in New York on April 22.

TITLE PLACEHOLDER | GZERO US Politics

Campus protests are a major story this week over the Israeli operation in Gaza and the Biden administration's support for it. These are leading to accusations of anti-Semitism on college campuses, and things like canceling college graduation ceremonies at several schools. Will this be an issue of the November elections?

The view Thursday night from inside the Columbia University campus gate at 116th Street and Amsterdam in New York City.
Alex Kliment

An agreement late Thursday night to continue talking, disagreeing, and protesting – without divesting or policing – came in stark contrast to the images of hundreds of students and professors being arrested on several other US college campuses on Thursday.

U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Judge Amy Coney Barrett after she was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S. October 26, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Some of the conservative justices (three of whom were appointed by Trump) expressed concern that allowing former presidents to be criminally prosecuted could present a burden to future commanders-in-chief.

A Palestinian woman inspects a house that was destroyed after an Israeli airstrike in Rafah, April 24, 2024.
Abed Rahim Khatib/Reuters

“We are afraid of what will happen in Rafah. The level of alert is very high,” Ibrahim Khraishi, the Palestinian ambassador to the United Nations, said Thursday.

Haiti's new interim Prime Minister Michel Patrick Boisvert holds a glass with a drink after a transitional council took power with the aim of returning stability to the country, where gang violence has caused chaos and misery, on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, Haiti April 25, 2024.
REUTERS/Pedro Valtierra

Haiti’s Prime Minister Ariel Henry formally resigned on Thursday as a new transitional body charged with forming the country’s next government was sworn in.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrives at the Beijing Capital International Airport, in Beijing, China, April 25, 2024.
Mark Schiefelbein/Pool via REUTERS

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken brought up concerns over China's support for Russia with his counterpart Wang Yi in Beijing on Friday, before meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.