The Daily Telegraph

Truss’s riotous romp of a memoir proves she never stood a chance

Tim Stanley

- By Liz Truss

Ten Years to Save the West ★★★★☆

Most PMS’ memoirs are a multi-volume snoozefest. Liz Truss has published the first in history that could be accurately described as a “romp”.

Having served just 49 days in Number 10 – she notes that she was evicted before her furniture could be delivered – Truss details with speed and good humour the cock-ups and back-stabbing that destroyed her mini-budget and pushed her from office. It’s one of those farces in which the very set collapses; and the hero, so un-self-aware she’s practicall­y an innocent, brushes the dust from her shoulders and says, “I did nothing wrong!”

The author describes her “usual style” as “full frontal”. The audio book should have a Yakety Sax soundtrack.

For all the laughs, however (Dominic Raab, when vacating his Chevening residence, left behind protein drinks in the fridge with “Raab” written on them), there’s much for historians to pick over. If you think

Truss was simply a libertaria­n nutter then the only lesson is that she should never have been elected Tory leader.

If, like me, you think she was fundamenta­lly right – that Britain is getting poorer because we’ve forgotten how to generate wealth – then how and why she failed demands some serious thought.

There were bigger forces at play than mere eccentrici­ty.

The Truss Thesis is that Left-wing ideas birthed in the 1960s have become the values of the establishm­ent – from civil servants to businessme­n, charities to teachers – with the result that whoever is in government, the same ideology remains in power.

Detailing her pre-pm career via agricultur­e, education, justice and trade, she demonstrat­es how wacky educationa­l theories (no to facts, yes to feelings) have been baked in, alongside environmen­tal policies that ballooned the cost of expanding one of her local roads to provide a “bat bridge” (to her knowledge, no bat has ever used it).

The Tories have failed to push back against this nonsense because many of their MPS believe in it, as demonstrat­ed by their reluctance to tear-up our regulatory framework after Brexit. Truss’s colleagues were inclined to retain EU rules, including a “Meursing table” of commodity codes that lists “504 different classifica­tions of biscuit”. The eagle-eyed will spot a contradict­ion on spending: I always wanted to save money, writes Liz, yet when at the Justice Department she argued for more investment in prisons and at the Foreign Office rushed to prevent the sale of an attractive embassy in Tokyo. Indeed, Rishi

Sunak’s strongest argument against Truss is that she is the fake conservati­ve, willing to unbalance the books and blow up the economy in an orgy of unfunded tax cuts – unleashing a wild budget in September 2022 that was opposed by those loony-lefties at the Bank of England and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

But whether Trussonomi­cs was sound or not isn’t the interestin­g point. It’s that she stood no chance of implementi­ng even a relatively mild fiscal reform because of the “sheer power of the administra­tive state and its influence on the markets and the wider polity”. Truss had certainly “not anticipate­d how ruthless they would be in pushing back by all means at their disposal.”

The men in grey suits who once ensured that socialism was unimaginab­le in Britain now exist to do the same for conservati­sm, and Karl Marx will be amused to learn that it was the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, who ultimately told Truss she had to resign as it was what the markets wanted.

It was a coup. One of the most pro-capitalist government­s in memory was thus ended by a cabal of capitalist­s, which suggests that capitalism hasn’t got much of a future.

The job of prime minister comes across as near-impossible, down to the bare essentials. Truss had to do her own hair and make-up (which probably took up half the day). There was no on-site doctor to care for her health. And the inhabitant of No 10 is kept awake by the Horse Guards clock that chimes every quarter hour.

This might seem trivial, but Ten Years to Save the West – a brilliantl­y presumptiv­e title from someone who spent 10 minutes in office – makes the powerful point that a modern PM “is treated like a president but has nothing like the kind of institutio­nal support for the office that we would expect in a presidenti­al system”.

Apparently her husband, Hugh, predicted that her time in office would “end in tears”, and “helpfully” reminded her of it when she quit. Yet for all the laughter at Truss, I truly admire her ability to rise above it, roll up those gorgeous Chanel sleeves and return to making the argument for freedom.

If anything, humiliatio­n has bolstered her ego.

320pp, Biteback, T£16.99 (0808 196 6794), RRP£20, ebook £10.99

 ?? ?? Liz Truss visiting British troops in Estonia in 2021 as foreign secretary
Liz Truss visiting British troops in Estonia in 2021 as foreign secretary
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