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Liz Truss: Tories would have done better in UK election if I had stayed PM | Conservatives

Liz Truss has said the Conservatives would have done better in July’s general election if she had stayed on as prime minister, during an often freewheeling one-off appearance at the Tory conference.

Truss, who stepped down after 49 days in Downing Street, said that if she had had the support of her MPs and if the financial “establishment” had not undermined her 2022 mini-budget, she would have delivered lower taxes, more growth and lower energy costs due to fracking.

Truss, who declined to back any of the four Tory leadership candidates, saying she preferred Argentina’s far-right president, Javier Milei, also refused to rule out trying to return to parliament, saying: “I’m not going to give up on this “fight.”

Asked during a fringe event Q&A if a Tory party led by her rather than Rishi Sunak would have performed better in the general election, Truss replied: “Yes, I do.” She went on: “Because when I was in No 10, Reform was holding at 3% (in the polls). By the time we got to the election, I think they got 18% because we promised change that we didn’t deliver.”

Truss also blamed the rise of Reform for Labor winning her South West Norfolk constituency, saying she “didn’t believe the people of South West Norfolk actually consciously want a Labor MP”.

She did, however, say that it would have been “a very tall order” for her to have won the general election if she stayed as PM, saying: “I think our best chance of winning would have been to have kept Boris.”

Since leaving office, Truss has increasingly blamed the Bank of England, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) and other officials for causing the extremely negative market reaction to the mini-budget, which offered £45bn of unfunded tax cuts.

It was, she said, “complete economic illiteracy” to blame her: “When I got into government, taxes were ready at a 70-year high… the debt was going up.

“I tried to turn that around, but the mini-budget was not implemented because organizations like the Bank of England sought to blame their mistakes on me, and the media, what you’d call the political class in Britain, went along with that “narrative.”

Truss called for the OBR, the government’s fiscal watchdog, to be abolished: “Conservatives won’t succeed until we get rid of the Office for Budget Responsibility.”

Saying she had a mandate to take on such institutions after Conservative members picked her over Sunak to replace Boris Johnson as prime minister, Truss said: “What I found was that those people and institutions were very powerful. “They sought to undermine me, and at the same time, people in the Conservative party wanted to buy into that narrative, but they are fundamentally wrong.”

Asked about the four candidates vying to succeed Sunak now as party leader, Truss said they needed to be more radical, for example looking at scrapping or amending the Human Rights Act and the Equality Act. Candidates also needed, she said, to combat “the wokery marching for our institutions, the human rights culture embedded in government.”

“So far, I haven’t seen any of the candidates really acknowledge how bad things are in the country as a whole, and frankly, for the Conservative party,” she said.

Truss added: “I am a huge fan of Javier Melei. If Melei was standing in the Conservative leadership election, I would be backing him like a shot. On everything, he’s doing the right thing.”

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