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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
Nigel Nelson

Liz Truss's premiership 'hanging by a thread' as Tory MPs plot to get rid of PM

Liz Truss’s premiership was “hanging by a thread” tonight as Tory MPs plot to get rid of her.

They want their backbench shop steward, Sir Graham Brady, to urge Ms Truss to go quietly.

On Friday she fired her friend, Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, for delivering the mini-budget she ordered. She did another U-turn on taxes but that did not halt economic turmoil.

And her new chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, faced flak from a guest on Radio 4’s Today programme yesterday.

Miriam Margolyes, 81, on air paying tribute to fellow Harry Potter star Robbie Coltrane, said: “When I saw him there, I just said ‘You’ve got a hell of a job, the best of luck!’ What I ­really wanted to say was f****g b*****d! But you can’t say that.”

The clip was tweeted and after less than an hour it had more than 3,000 likes and almost 1,000 retweets.

Sir Graham, chairman of the 1922 Committee, has already warned Ms Truss three times of the peril she is in.

Outgoing Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng leaves 11 Downing Street (PA)

Even by last week, he had received about 120 letters of no ­confidence in the PM.

Party rules would have to change to oust Ms Truss and first Sir Graham must form a new 1922 executive on Tuesday.

They will then be in a position to send a delegation to No10 to tell Ms Truss her time is up. The only things likely to stay his hand would be a rally in the pound when markets open tomorrow after Ms Truss saved £18billion by binning her corporation tax freeze and appointed Mr Hunt.

But even if the PM gets through the week, she has lost all authority.

On Radio 4 today ex-Health Secretary Mr Hunt ditched her plan, calling her mini-budget a “mistake” – and rubbishing her campaign pledge of tax cuts.

He said: “Taxes are not going to come down by as much as people hoped, and some taxes will have to go up.”

The two are also at odds over Ms Truss’s plan to increase defence spending to 3% and Mr Hunt opposes fracking, which Ms Truss supports.

Ex-Cabinet minister David Davis told GB News: “She’s going to have to give the new chancellor a chance, and allow him to do what he wants to do to see whether it works.”

Jeremy Hunt, newly appointed Chancellor, at the BBC (Tom Bowles / Story Picture Agency)

Mr Hunt can deliver his own mini-Budget on October 31 – if Ms Truss lasts that long. Senior Tory and former Home Office adviser Claire Pearsall said Ms Truss must have a clear plan to get us out of this mess.

Richard Tice, of Reform UK, a right-wing populist party, said: “ Liz Truss clinging to power would make her one of the most fraudulent PMs in British history.”

Now Tory MPs are grappling with getting a new PM in place without facing a general election, which could wipe them out.

Based on polls, number crunchers Electoral Calculus yesterday gave the Tories 85 seats and Labour 471 if there was an election now.

Labour leader Keir Starmer said: “The quicker this shambolic Government is gone, the quicker we can get on with the job of fixing their mess and rebuilding our country.”

Tories are trying to persuade Defence Secretary Ben Wallace, 52, to be their new leader and ex-Chancellor Rishi Sunak to return to the Treasury. Mr Wallace was a favourite to succeed Boris Johnson but in July he said he would not run as “my focus is on my current job and keeping this great country safe”.

Asked at this month’s Birmingham party conference if he would consider running for leader, Mr Wallace said: “I don’t rule it out."

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace (AFP via Getty Images)

One plotter told the Sunday People : “Most of us now favour a coronation for Ben. He’s the best we’ve got. But he might need some persuading to take the job. Rishi coming back would calm the bond markets and strengthen the pound.”

But if the PM digs her heels in it will need a change in the rules to allow MPs to bypass the party’s 172,000 members to install their chosen candidate in No10.

One MP warned: “Our members will be furious not to get a vote and they’ll go on strike.That means no one to canvass or deliver leaflets for us. But it’s the least worst option.”

MPs are have dismissed the idea of letting Ms Truss stay or a return of Mr Johnson. They may turn instead to Mr Sunak and Commons leader Penny Mordaunt. But there is likely to be an argument over which should become PM.

Former No10 aide Dominic Cummings said the team around Ms Truss is so bad “it’s close to impossible that she can recover”. He said: “Their actions resemble what you’d see if her worst enemies could brief on her behalf a few times per day.”

On Friday, Ms Truss ­ended her press conference after eight minutes and after taking only four questions from journalists – all about why she was not resigning.

Veteran Tory MP Sir Christopher Chope said Ms Truss had turned the Conservative Party and the Government into laughing stocks.

Labour leader Keir Starmer said: “The quicker this shambolic Government is gone, the quicker we can get on with the job of fixing their mess and rebuilding our country." (James McCauley/REX/Shutterstock)

And Labour Deputy Leader Angela Rayner said: “She’s crashed the British economy by using it as a guinea pig in her dangerous experiment with trickle-down economics and it’s working people paying the price.”

And former Tory leader William Hague said Ms Truss’s premiership now “hangs by a thread”.

A survey of 500 small business owners showed that more than nine in 10 want a general election now.

Ms Truss said that despite tearing up her mini-Budget the UK is still on course for 2.5% growth under her plans. But the International Monetary Fund puts that figure at just 1.5%.

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