It is said that the Conservative Party only has two modes — triumph and panic. Under
Chancellor of the Exchequer
Only 19% of the respondents to a YouGov poll believe the mini-budget was fair, while 57% of Britons think it was unfair. (The comparable figures for former Chancellor
This has shaken average Tory MPs to their cores. “Jittery,” “shell-shocked” and “panicky” are a few of the words being used to describe the mood, with alarm extending to the government itself as well as to the backbenches. Kwarteng has been holding meetings with MPs to calm their nerves. But his charm offensive was hardly helped by the International Monetary Fund’s
The Tory Party depends overwhelmingly on its reputation for economic competence. Now, Labour leader
Tory governments can afford to risk unpopular policies if they are cheered by the market, and they can even afford to annoy the markets if they are implementing popular policies, but Kwarteng has produced a rare double of policies, upsetting both the public and the markets.
MPs aren’t only worried by the basic conceit at the heart of the mini-budget — cutting taxes while also raising spending and therefore making yourself vulnerable to a rise in the cost of borrowing — but also by the cack-handed way it has been handled. The government failed to “roll the pitch” for a radical budget by laying out an intellectual case and a detailed plan of action. All it appeared to do was compile a bucket list of policies from free-market think tanks, shove them together in a single speech and unleash them on the world, with Kwarteng relying on swash and buckle to push the policy through and Truss on grit and determination. Uncapping bankers’ bonuses could have been buried under a pile of announcements about unleashing small businesses on Tyneside in the northeast; instead, the payouts looked like the centerpiece of the policy.
Truss loyalists like to argue that
Thatcher may have been difficult to deal with, but she surrounded herself with experienced colleagues and formidable civil servants. Truss is running a talent-light administration in the middle of one of the most serious economic crises in decades: She has consigned the two most impressive members of the last Cabinet,
MPs are worried that worse is to come. The only way to restore fiscal discipline and
Can the Truss team keep her shell-shocked backbenchers in order as she tries to implement her great experiment? It will certainly be hard. Now that Starmer has either cleared out or marginalized the far-left, the Tory Party is the more divided of the two parties, with some moderate Tories even comparing Truss and her crew to Labour’s Corbynistas — ideological zealots who hijack a mainstream party from within. The party has got so much into the habit of rebellion that Westminster watchers were already asking if Andrew Bridgen, MP for North West Leicestershire and a particularly enthusiastic letter writer, had sent a note on the day Truss won the leadership. The government’s effective majority is much smaller than the official figure of 71 — perhaps less than a third of that.
Truss won the support of less than a third of Tory MPs during the leadership race, depending on party members for her victory. She has surrounded herself with ideological fellow travelers and personal loyalists regardless of either their appeal to the public (Jacob Rees-Mogg at the Department of Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy) or their political heft (
Truss also confronts the problem that there are two obvious rivals for her job waiting in the wings. Rishi Sunak, the MPs’ choice for the leadership, is being vindicated in his prediction that the prime minister’s “fairy tale” economics — borrowing your way out of inflation — would rapidly lead to a run on sterling and a surge in interest rates. (The restraint Sunak has displayed in not tweeting “I told you so” is superhuman.) Truss’s predecessor,
That said, a full-scale defenestration still seems unlikely, barring a Chernobyl-scale economic meltdown. Getting rid of a third leader in a row with just two years to go until the next election would destroy what remains of the Tories’ political credibility while further spooking the markets. Sunak can’t mount a leadership challenge without blowing himself up in the process, which hardly seems in character. And more letter-writing campaigns risk looking silly and irresponsible. The most likely outlook is that Truss will limp along in office, trimming a bit here and there, restraining her bumptious chancellor, but nevertheless fatally wounded — suffering from dismal opinion polls, a restive party and a media that smells blood in the water. It will be surprising if we hear more talk of further tax cuts.
More From Bloomberg Opinion:
- Truss’s Economic Plan Isn’t
the Disaster Everyone Says It Is : Tyler Cowen
- Why Investors Are Facing
Even More Market Instability : Mohamed El-Erian
- The Bank of England Is Right to
Snub Calls for Emergency Action : Mark Gilbert
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Adrian Wooldridge at awooldridge5@bloomberg.net
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Joi Preciphs at jpreciphs1@bloomberg.net
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