United Kingdom: Prime Minister Liz Truss announces her resignation

United Kingdom Prime Minister Liz Truss announces her resignation

She remained in power for less than 50 days, the shortest in contemporary British history. The kingdom’s conservative prime minister, Liz Truss, announced her resignation on Monday, October 20. In recent days, she had seen two of her main ministers resign from the government. First, the Minister of Finance, Kwasi Karteng, left his post on Friday, after his budget was called into question by the Prime Minister. This Wednesday, it was the Minister of the Interior, Suella Braverman, who announced her departure, against a backdrop of disagreement over the government’s migration policy.

A primary to choose a successor

Added to this revelations of pressure exerted on the elected conservatives so that they vote according to the will of the Prime Minister, the position of Liz Truss became untenable. What she admitted, this Thursday, in a speech delivered on the steps of 10 Downing Street. “I recognize, given the situation, that I cannot continue the mandate,” she said, before announcing that she would present her resignation to King Charles III that same day. Liz Truss has also indicated the organization of a primary “by next week”, in order to find him a successor.

Aged 47, this former Minister of Foreign Affairs had succeeded Boris Johnson on September 6, in an economic context of high inflation and soaring energy prices. Its aim was to revive growth through a massive tax cut, a program criticized even within the Conservative Party. In early October, for example, it had to give up introducing one of its flagship measures: the abolition of the top bracket of income tax. Then, on October 17, Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt canceled Liz Truss’ economic program almost entirely. A terrible snub which his mandate will not have survived.


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