The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

The right thing

-

remains in office. If she won’t resign, then parliament must force a General Election and that can only happen if MPs step up to the plate.

“Tory MPs, including those from Scotland, must put the interests of their country and their constituen­ts above their own, and do the right thing.”

Truss inherited an 80-seat majority in the House of Commons from Boris Johnson but Labour’s already commanding lead in the polls has surged in recent weeks.

Many Conservati­ve MPs face losing their seat in an election but sources suggest that while “turkeys don’t vote for Christmas” morale is so poor and the opinion of Truss so low in the parliament­ary party that an increasing number of MPs may prefer to take their chances at the polls than continue to support her chaotic administra­tion.

Recent polls have given Labour a 30 points-plus lead in the polls, which would deliver a landslide victory, and in a flagship speech, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer yesterday said the recent U-turns after an unfunded tax-cutting budget and the sacking of chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, only underlined why the Conservati­ves’ time was up.

He said: “No doubt we will hear plenty of laughable excuses in the coming days. After 12 years of stagnation, that’s all her party has left, but even they know she can’t fix the mess she has created.

“Deep down, her MPs know something else. They no longer have a mandate from the British people.”

In a speech in Barnsley yesterday, Starmer – echoing his predecesso­r Neil Kinnock’s descriptio­n of Militant councillor­s using taxis to serve redundancy notices on workers in Liverpool – accused Truss of presiding over “grotesque chaos” after she sacked Kwarteng on Friday following the introducti­on of the tax-cutting measures that she had campaigned on during the Conservati­ve leadership race.

His so-called minibudget was blamed for crashing the economy and has been followed by a series of U-turns.

Starmer said: “There are no historical precedents for what they have done to our economy. Britain has faced financial crises before but the prime ministers and chancellor­s who wrestled with them all acted fast.

“When their policies ran against the rocks of reality, they took decisive action.

“But this lot, they didn’t just tank the British economy, they also clung on as they made the pound sink. Clung on as they took our pensions to the brink of collapse. Clung on as they pushed the mortgages and bills of the British public through the roof.

“There is still one person clinging on. The prime minister.”

Truss fired Kwarteng and announced a U-turn on cancelling cuts to corporatio­n tax at a nine-minute, four-question news conference on Friday, branded unconvinci­ng by many of her own MPs.

Speculatio­n at Westminste­r includes claims of a plot to oust her within days while many backbenche­rs are suggesting she will not spend Christmas in Downing Street.

However, her first weeks in the job have only deepened division between the already riven Tory MPs and observers believe talk of a Rishi SunakPenny Mordaunt joint ticket will founder because the party’s MPs will not unite behind any candidate.

Since the chancellor’s “financial event” three weeks ago, interest rates have risen sharply, lenders have pulled mortgage products from the market and the pound has plummeted in value against the dollar.

Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar said: “This is a Tory government that has come to the end of the road. In the national interest we now need a general election.

“Tory MPs should do the right thing and call for one.”

Scottish Lib Dem leader Alex ColeHamilt­on said: “It’s time for Conservati­ve MPs to put the country first and back calls for an election. Their party is tired and out of touch.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom