The Scotsman

Popcons: Truss launches Tory group

- Alexander Brown Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Former prime minister Liz Truss has launched a new movement within the Tories that warns “left-wing extremists” have taken control of UK institutio­ns.

Calling themselves the “Popular Conservati­ves”, the group includes an array of MPS from the right-wing of the party, and aims to pressure Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on a range of issues.

To many it is regarded as a rebrand of Ms Truss’s wing of the party during her short-lived premiershi­p, from which she re signed following a disastrous mini-budget and terrible polling. But who is in the Popular Conservati­ves and what do they believe?

MENBERS

Despite being launched by Ms Truss, the group’s leader is officially Mark Littlewood, a former director of the libertaria­n free market Institute of Economic Affairs.

The launch event also featured former Cabinet minister Sir Jacob Rees-mogg, who declared the “age of Davos man is over”, and ex-tory deputy chairman Lee Anderson, who used his speech to argue that Britons did not care about the net-zero emissions strategy.

Others in the audience were former home secretary Pr it iP atel,e x-chief whip Wendy Morton, Brendan Clarke smith, tory peer lord frost and Nigel Farage.

In a sign of the group’ s politics, Mr Farage was also in attendance as a journalist, but praised as a Conservati­ve by Mr Reesmogg.

INTENTIONS

Perhaps ironically dubbed the “Popcons” by the media, the group claims not to be a protest movement against the existing Conservati­ve leadership, which is why they declined to havemps who had called for mr Sunak to stand down speak at the event.

Instead, the group aims to lobby the government on culture war issues, and promise to give the public “freedom over their lives ”. they are also deeply critical of “faceless” organisati­ons,which they define as judges, quangos and internatio­nal human rights institutio­ns.

Immigratio­n is also a cornerston­e of their approach, with the group backing the Rwanda scheme, but urging Mr Sunak to exit the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if it stands in the way of flights taking off.

WHAT DID THEY SAY? Insisting he was the leader, not Ms Truss, Mr Littlewood said: “She’s not the leader of it. I’m the director of it. I think the lessons we can draw from her very short time in office are important lessons for Conservati­ves who want to change Britain, want to see taxes come down.”

Mr Rees-mogg said: “Domestical­ly, we have seen power go from the democratic parts of the constituti­on to the appointed parts. popular conservati­sm is about returning power to parliament while taking it away from quangos and a judiciary that has become more political .”

Ms Truss said: “The fact is that democracy has become unfashiona­ble. I believe the fundamenta­l issue is that for years and years and years, Conservati­veshave not take non the left-wing extremists.”

For years and years and years, Conservati­ves have not taken on the left-wing extremists Liz Truss

 ?? ?? Former prime minister Liz Truss, pictured below, following the launch of the Popular Conservati­ves movement at the Emmanuel Centre in central London
Former prime minister Liz Truss, pictured below, following the launch of the Popular Conservati­ves movement at the Emmanuel Centre in central London

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