LONDON â When Liz Truss was running to lead Britain this summer, an ally predicted her first weeks in office would be turbulent.
But few were prepared for the scale of the sound and fury -â least of all Truss herself. In just six weeks, the prime ministerâs libertarian economic policies have triggered a financial crisis, emergency central bank intervention, multiple U-turns and the firing of her Treasury chief.
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Now Truss faces a mutiny inside the governing Conservative Party that leaves her leadership hanging by a thread.
Conservative lawmaker Robert Halfon fumed on Sunday that the last few weeks had brought âone horror story after another.â
âThe government has looked like libertarian jihadists and treated the whole country as kind of laboratory mice on which to carry out ultra, ultra free-market experiments,â he told Sky News.
Itâs not as if the party wasnât warned. During the summertime contest to lead the Conservatives, Truss called herself a disruptor who would challenge economic âorthodoxy.â She promised she would cut taxes and slash red tape, and would spur Britain's sluggish economy to grow.
Her rival, former Treasury chief Rishi Sunak, argued that immediate tax cuts would be reckless amid the economic shockwaves from the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
The 172,000 Conservative Party members -â who are largely older and affluent -- preferred Trussâ boosterish vision. She won 57% of membersâ votes to become leader of the governing party on Sept. 5. The next day, she was appointed prime minister by Queen Elizabeth II in one of the monarchâs final acts before her death on Sept. 8.
Trussâ first days in office were overshadowed by a period of national mourning for the queen. Then on Sept. 23, Treasury chief Kwasi Kwarteng announced the economic plan he and Truss had drawn up. It included 45 billion pounds ($50 billion) in tax cuts -â including an income tax reduction for the highest earners â without an accompanying assessment of how the government would pay for them.
Truss was doing what she and allies said she would. Libertarian think-tank chief Mark Littlewood predicted during the summer there would be âfireworksâ as the new prime minister pushed for economic reform at âabsolutely breakneck speed.â
Still, the scale of the announcement took financial markets, and political experts, by surprise.
âMany of us, wrongly, expected her to pivot after she won the leadership contest in the way many presidents do after winning the primaries,â said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. âBut she didnât do that. She actually meant what she said.â
The pound plunged to a record low against the U.S. dollar and the cost of government borrowing soared. The Bank of England was forced to step in to buy government bonds and prevent the financial crisis from spreading to the wider economy. The central bank also warned that interest rates will have to rise even faster than expected to curb inflation that is running at around 10%, leaving millions of homeowners facing big increases in mortgage payments.
Jill Rutter, a senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank, said Truss and Kwarteng made a series of âunforced errorsâ with their economic package.
âThey shouldnât have made their contempt for economic institutions quite so clear," she said. "I think they could have listened to advice. And I think one of the things that they got very wrong was to announce one part of the package, the tax cuts ⊠without the spending side of the equation.â
As the negative reaction grew, Truss began to abandon bits of the package in a bid to reassure her party and the markets. The tax cut for top earners was ditched in the middle of the Conservative Partyâs annual conference in early October as the party rebelled.
It wasnât enough. On Friday, Truss fired Kwarteng and replaced her longtime friend and ally with Jeremy Hunt, who served as health secretary and foreign secretary in the Conservative governments of David Cameron and Theresa May.
At a brief, downbeat news conference, the prime minister acknowledged that âparts of our mini budget went further and faster than markets were expecting.â She reversed a planned cut in corporation tax, another pillar of her economic plan, to âreassure the markets of our fiscal discipline.â
Truss is still prime minister in name, but power in government has shifted to Hunt, who has signaled he plans to rip up much of her remaining economic plan when he makes a medium-term budget statement on Oct. 31. He has said tax increases and public spending cuts will be needed to restore the governmentâs fiscal credibility.
Still, Hunt insisted Sunday: âThe prime ministerâs in charge.â
âSheâs listened. Sheâs changed. Sheâs been willing to do that most difficult thing in politics, which is to change tack,â Hunt told the BBC.
The Conservative Party still commands a large majority in Parliament, and -â in theory -â has two years until a national election must be held. Polls suggest an election would be a wipeout for the Tories, with the Labour Party winning a big majority.
Conservative lawmakers are agonizing about whether to try to replace their leader for a second time this year. In July, the party forced out Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who led them to victory in 2019, when serial ethics scandals ensnared his administration.
Now many of them have buyerâs remorse about his replacement. Under party rules, Truss is safe from a leadership challenge for a year, but some Conservative legislators believe she can be forced to resign if the party can agree on a successor. Defeated rival Sunak, House of Commons leader Penny Mordaunt and popular Defense Secretary Ben Wallace are among the names being mentioned as potential replacements. Johnson, who remains a lawmaker, still has supporters, too.
Junior Treasury minister Andrew Griffith argued Sunday that Truss should be given a chance to try to restore order.
âThis is a time when we need stability,â he told Sky News. âPeople at home are just tearing their hair out at the level of uncertainty. What they want to see is a competent government getting on with (the) job.â
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