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Astonishing U-turn by British Prime Minister Liz Truss —fires finance minister

UK Prime Minister Liz Truss has fired her finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng and scrapped parts of their economic package in a desperate bid to stay in power and survive the market and political turmoil gripping the country.

Mr Kwarteng said he had resigned at the request of Ms Truss after being forced to rush back to London overnight from IMF meetings in Washington DC.

Ms Truss, in power for only 37 days, told a news conference she would now allow a key business levy to rise from next year, raising 18 billion pounds ($32 billion), as she accepted she had gone “further and faster” than markets had been expecting.

“We need to act now to reassure the markets of our fiscal discipline,” she said.

Her predecessor had planned to increase corporation tax from 19 per cent to 25 per cent, which Truss campaigned against.

Ms Truss appointed Jeremy Hunt, a former foreign and health secretary, to replace Kwarteng on Friday.

“You have asked me to stand aside as your Chancellor. I have accepted,” Kwarteng said in his resignation letter to Truss, which he published on Twitter.

She said in response: “As a long standing friend and colleague. I am deeply sorry to lose you from the government.

“We share the same vision.”

The pound slid against the US dollar after she spoke, trading 1.2 per cent lower on the day at $US1.1198 and two-year UK government bonds, or gilts turned negative.

The plan for unfunded tax cuts crushed UK assets and drew international censure, but the pound and gilts have started to recover since the government started looking for ways to balance the books.

Kwasi Kwarteng is the country’s shortest serving chancellor since 1970, and his successor will be the fourth finance minister in as many months in the United Kingdom, where millions are facing a cost of living crisis.

The finance minister with the shortest tenure died.

The prime minister’s position is in jeopardy.

Liz Truss won the Conservative Party leadership last month by promising vast tax cuts and deregulation to try to shock the economy out of years of stagnant growth, and the fiscal policy Kwarteng announced on September 23 aimed to deliver that vision.

But the response from markets was so ferocious that the Bank of England had to intervene to prevent pension funds from being caught up in the chaos as borrowing and mortgage costs surged.

The duo had been under mounting pressure to reverse course after polls showed support for the Conservative Party had collapsed, prompting many colleagues to look for ways to force them out of office.

“The party loves the idea of principles and conviction politicians but staying in power is everything,” one party insider told Reuters.

“Ruthless can also be popular.”

Having triggered a market rout, Truss now runs the risk of bringing the government down if she cannot find a package of public spending cuts and tax rises that can appease investors and get through any parliamentary vote in the House of Commons.

Her search for savings will be made harder by the fact the government has been cutting departmental budgets for years.

At the same time Conservative Party discipline has all but broken down, fractured by infighting as it struggled first to agree a way to leave the European Union and then how to navigate the COVID-19 pandemic and grow the economy.

“If you can’t get your budget through parliament you can’t govern,” Chris Bryant, a senior MP from the opposition Labour Party, said on Twitter.
“This isn’t about u-turns, it’s about proper governance.”

– with AAP

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