Live updates: Liz Truss resigns as UK prime minister | CNN

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Liz Truss resigns as UK prime minister

Prime Minister Liz Truss making a statement outside 10 Downing Street, London, where she announced her resignation as Prime Minister. Picture date: Thursday October 20, 2022. (Photo by Kirsty O'Connor/PA Images via Getty Images)
Watch UK PM Liz Truss' resignation speech
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What we covered here

  • Liz Truss announced she will resign as Britain’s prime minister after a disastrous six-week tenure, making her the UK’s shortest-serving prime minister ever.
  • Another Conservative leadership election is due to take place within a week, with the next prime minister expected to be announced on Friday, Oct. 28.
  • Truss’ announcement Thursday came after her government descended into chaos, with key cabinet members and lawmakers savaging her leadership.
  • The UK will now see its fifth premier since the divisive 2016 Brexit referendum, intensifying calls for an early general election.

Our live coverage has ended. Read more about today’s developments in the posts below.

24 Posts

Here's a timeline of events leading up to Liz Truss' resignation

When she took the keys to 10 Downing Street in the wake of Boris Johnson’s political demise, Liz Truss promised to “ride out the storm” of Britain’s economic crisis. But she was soon engulfed by a hurricane of her own making.

It was a humiliating end to a calamitous premiership marked by failed economic policies and a deeply divided ruling party.

Here are the lowlights of Truss’ term as Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister.

Sept. 5: Truss takes over — Truss is declared the winner of the Conservative Party leadership contest after her predecessor, Boris Johnson, is forced to step down following a series of ethics scandals. The omens aren’t good. The country is facing a bruised economy, a spiraling cost of living crisis and a crumbling healthcare service. Truss, who served as foreign secretary in Johnson’s government, also faces huge diplomatic challenges in the face of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Sept. 8: Queen Elizabeth II dies — Days into Truss’ premiership Queen Elizabeth II dies at the age of 96, sending the country into a period of national mourning. Truss pays tribute to the Queen as a symbol of stability who ruled through crises, tragedies, political scandals, pandemic and recessions. The period of mourning gives Truss a breathing space after a marathon leadership campaign that lasted most of the summer.

Sept. 23: A disastrous “mini budget” — In her first big move as prime minister, Truss’ Chancellor of the Exchequer (the UK finance minister) and closest friend in politics, Kwasi Kwarteng, unveils a sweeping plan to extricate the country from recession, which includes a swath of tax cuts that will be funded by higher government borrowing. The plan’s a huge gamble — the biggest tax cuts in 50 years — without a clear plan on how to pay for them. Usually, big fiscal statements in the UK are audited independently by the Office for Budget Responsibility. But Kwarteng says there was no time for such an audit — a move that stuns financial markets and sends the pound plunging. Bond prices subsequently collapse, sending borrowing costs soaring, sparking mayhem in the mortgage market and pushing pension funds to the brink of insolvency.

Oct. 14: Truss fires Kwarteng — The economic turmoil and the prospect of higher mortgage rates force Truss to walk back key components of her financial plan. After ditching her plan to slash the highest rate of income tax, she fires Kwarteng in a desperate attempt to salvage her position. In a letter posted on Twitter, Kwarteng says he agreed to step down at Truss’ behest. Truss appoints former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt as Kwarteng’s replacement, making him Britain’s fourth finance minister in just over three months.

Oct. 17: Hunt ditches Truss’ fiscal plan —Just three days into the job, Hunt says he will scrap “almost all” tax measures announced by his predecessor in an effort to calm spooked markets and restore the government’s credibility. A proposed cut to the basic rate of income tax from April 2023 is postponed “indefinitely.” And while the government says it will still guarantee energy prices for households and businesses through this winter, it won’t commit to capping prices beyond next spring. The moves amount to a gutting of Truss’ flagship “growth plan” and leave her in a perilous political position. While investors show support for Hunt’s new plan, the opposition Labour Party is not appeased.

Oct. 19: Key ally quits cabinet —Home Secretary Suella Braverman announces her departure from Truss’ Cabinet, as claims emerge of chaos and “bullying” during a parliamentary vote the same day. Braverman says she stepped down as Home Secretary over the use of a personal email address that violated ministerial rules, but also launches a thinly veiled criticism of Truss’ leadership in her resignation letter. Allegations also emerge of some ruling Conservative Party lawmakers being physically dragged to vote with the government against the ban on fracking for shale gas. Politicians later share accounts on Twitter of angry scenes of shouting and altercation in parliament.

Oct. 20: Truss resigns — After a chaotic six-week spell in Downing Street, Truss announces her resignation. “I recognize though given the situation I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party,” she says. Truss says she has tendered her resignation to the King, and a leadership election will take place within a week. She will remain UK prime minister until her successor is chosen. Her swift exit as prime minister prompts calls for an early general election in Britain. But a fresh election is no certainty before 2025, even as Britain prepares for its fifth leader in just over six years – and its third since the last ballot.

CNN’s Rob Picheta, Tara John, Bianca Nobilo, Luke McGee, Stephen Collinson and Julia Horowitz contributed reporting.

Here's how Liz Truss' tenure compares to other recent UK prime ministers

With her resignation on Thursday, Liz Truss is now the shortest-serving prime minister in British history. She was six weeks into a disastrous term that pitched Britain deep into political and economic turmoil.

Only eight prime ministers have served for less than a year.

Truss’ successor will be the third prime minister since the country last had a general election. 

Boris Johnson, the previous prime minister, resigned in July 2020, triggering a Conservative Party leadership contest but not a general election. 

Truss won that leadership contest and became prime minister on Sept. 6, 2022. 

Irish prime minister says he hopes Britain finds political stability following Truss' resignation

The Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin hopes that stability will be brought to British politics in light of the “critical issue” of Northern Ireland.

Speaking to journalists on his way into a European Council meeting in Brussels on Thursday, Martin said he sympathized with Truss calling it a “very difficult time for the British prime minister given all that has happened.”

“What’s important as Britain’s nearest neighbor, we have significant economic relationship and many other relationships with the United Kingdom, I think stability is very important,” Martin said. 

Martin highlighted “the critical issue” taking place in Northern Ireland which has been without a government since early May after the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) refused to form a government with the Nationalist Sinn Féin party. If a government is not formed by Oct. 28, the Northern Ireland secretary of state is bound to call an election in the region. 

“There is an urgent need for engagement as well with the British government and the new prime minister in relation to Northern Ireland and ensuring stability,” Martin stressed. 

This also comes as officials from the UK and EU attempt to find solutions to the contentious Northern Ireland Protocol which forms of part of the Brexit agreement. 

Despite the challenges, Martin said he believed it was “within the capacity of the British political system to settle this,” adding that he looked “forward to engaging with the new prime minister.”

Maximum of 3 candidates to run for British Conservative party leader

Candidates to replace Liz Truss as Tory leader will need at least 100 nominations from British Conservative MPs, Sir Graham Brady, a former committee chair and parliament member, has said. 

Requiring 100 signatures to proceed in the race effectively narrows the field of potential candidates. Brady said the threshold allows for the possibility of three candidates at most. 

In the event, only one candidate emerges, there could be a new party leader and Prime Minister by Monday, Tory Conservative Party chairman Jake Berry added. Berry said there would be an online vote for members if two candidates made it through the parliamentary stages.

Former British Prime Minister Theresa May says the UK needs a "competent government"

Former UK Prime Minister Theresa May has said Liz Truss was right to stand down as leader of the country, in order to provide a “roadmap for an orderly transition.”

“MPs must now be prepared to compromise. It is our duty to provide sensible, competent government at this critical moment for our country,” she said on twitter.

A lettuce lasted longer than Liz Truss

The record-breaking brevity of Liz Truss’s catastrophic stint as prime minister is perhaps best encapsulated by her defeat in a much-publicized contest with Britain’s most famous lettuce.

The Daily Star tabloid posed an unexpected question last Friday, after Truss sacked her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng and U-turned on her disastrous mini-budget, seemingly putting her premiership on course for a collision with an iceberg.

“Can Liz Truss outlast a lettuce?” the paper asked.

To test the theory it set up a live stream showing a 24/7 view of a lettuce alongside a picture of Truss, which quickly went viral.

And, on Thursday, thousands flocked to the video to watch the lettuce celebrate its astonishing victory.

“I can’t believe the lettuce won,” Labour MP Afzal Khan wrote on Twitter. “The lettuce wins with time to spare!” added SNP lawmaker Owen Thompson.

Though the lettuce showed signs of browning during the six-day contest, it appears healthy enough to have held off Truss’s challenge for a further few days if necessary.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan says Britain has become a "laughing stock"

London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan has told CNN the UK has become “a laughing stock” due to the ongoing chaos at the heart of government.

“I’m not somebody who’s easily surprised or easily shocked, but I’m surprised and shocked that just a few weeks after Liz Truss became the Conservative leader and the British prime minister we have the chaos we’ve seen over the last few days and weeks, leading to her resigning today,” Khan told Christiane Amanpour.

“What we don’t want is yet another internal Conservative leadership contest,” Khan said.

“What we need is for Liz Truss or whoever Conservative members choose to be the next leader to give the British public the opportunity of voting for a fresh start.”

WATCH:

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01:48 - Source: cnn

What doomed Liz Truss?

“The Prime Minister is not under a desk.”

It said much about the state of Liz Truss’s troubled premiership that this statement by fellow Conservative minister Penny Mordaunt at the start of the week was made, ostensibly at least, as a show of support.

Three days later, on Thursday, Truss announced her resignation.

Hard to believe it is less than six weeks since Truss descended a helicopter to “kiss hands” with Queen Elizabeth II (two days before the latter’s death in Balmoral Castle, Scotland), becoming the United Kingdom’s 56th prime minister.

As she surveys the shattered wreck of her premiership, Truss must be wondering where it all went wrong – and quite how it collapsed around her ears so quickly.

To recap: as the country observed 10 days official mourning for the late Queen, Truss and her close ally and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng drew up plans for a financial package dubbed the “mini-Budget” but with consequences which would feel decidedly maxi.

Truss and Kwarteng’s prescription for turbo-powering the economy in a quest for growth through unfunded tax cuts unnerved the markets, triggering a run on the pound and forcing the Bank of England to step in to prevent pension funds collapsing.

Last week, Truss hoicked Kwarteng back from Washington DC, where he was attending a gathering of the IMF, to fire him for, as critics quipped, following her policies to the letter. In his stead, she installed as Chancellor the experienced Jeremy Hunt, a candidate from the opposite moderate wing of the party, but who trailed in eighth place behind her in the contest to replace Boris Johnson last summer.

On Monday, Hunt took steps to steady the markets by jettisoning the entire mini-Budget, including a planned 1p cut in income tax, a corporation tax rise and VAT-free shopping for tourists (Truss and Kwarteng had already been forced to ditch plans to scrap the top 45p tax rate).

That left Truss’s low-tax economic vision in tatters, a boil lanced not only for the short term but, to the fury of those who had been in her camp, leaving sufficient scar tissue to warn politicians off repeating the experiment for a generation.

Rosa Prince is editor of The House magazine. She is former assistant political editor of the Daily Telegraph and author of the books “Theresa May: The Enigmatic Prime Minister” “and “Comrade Corbyn: A Very Unlikely Coup.” The views expressed in this commentary are her own. View more opinion on CNN.

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 14: Britain's Prime Minister Liz Truss holds a press conference in the Downing Street Briefing Room on October 14, 2022. (Photo by Daniel Leal-WPA Pool/Getty Images)

Related article Opinion: Liz Truss will be Britain's shortest-serving prime minister | CNN

Biden thanks Truss and vows to maintain a close relationship with the UK

US President Joe Biden thanked British Prime Minister Liz Truss “for her partnership on a range of issues” in a statement Thursday following her resignation, and he pledged that the close relationship between the US and UK “will never change.” 

“The United States and the United Kingdom are strong Allies and enduring friends — and that fact will never change,” Biden said in a statement Thursday. “I thank Prime Minister Liz Truss for her partnership on a range of issues including holding Russia accountable for its war against Ukraine.” 

Biden said the US would continue its “close cooperation with the U.K. government as we work together to meet the global challenges our nations face.”

He was later asked whether her resignation was the right move.

“That’s for her to decide, but look she was a good partner on Russia and Ukraine. And the British are going to solve their problem. But she was a good partner,” he told reporters. 

He dismissed that there could be potential spillover effects from the UK’s economic and political turmoil on the US economy. “No, I don’t think they’re that consequential.”

Boris Johnson's allies believe he will stand again

Members of Parliament who supported and in some cases worked on Boris Johnson’s first candidacy in 2019 think that the former prime minister will stand in the leadership contest that will follow Liz Truss’ resignation, according to two sources who worked on the 2019 campaign.

Multiple allies have made the case that Johnson could be unity candidate who could bring stability to the country, despite the fact he resigned in disgrace only a few months ago after a series of scandals came together, making his position untenable.

One MP who campaigned for Johnson in the 2019 leadership campaign, when asked how they could justify Johnson standing to be PM again, told CNN: “Socialists will destroy our economy and if you don’t understand that then I genuinely fear for our future.”

Another MP who supported Johnson in 2019 said he was the only candidate who could comfortably win over both Conservative MPs and members of the Conservative party.

Johnson’s closest allies said they were aware he was being actively lobbied in the hours after Truss’ resignation speech, making the case to him that he represented the party’s best shot at stability in the medium term.

How bond investors pushed Liz Truss out of office

A revolt among members of Liz Truss’ Conservative Party sealed her fate as the shortest-serving prime minister in Britain’s history.

But the failure of her fleeting leadership was really written by financial markets. Investors immediately protested her disastrous “growth plan” when it was revealed in September.

UK government bond yields rose at their fastest rate on record, sending borrowing costs surging, upending the country’s mortgage market and forcing the Bank of England to make three successive interventions to rescue overstretched pension funds.

The pound at one point hit an all-time low against the US dollar, falling to almost $1.03. At a time when traders were already feeling anxious about the potential for a global recession, plans to dramatically slash taxes while ramping up borrowing fed concerns about the sustainability of the United Kingdom’s finances.

At one point, UK medium-term borrowing costs leaped above those of Greece and Italy, two countries that are notoriously seen as riskier bets for investors because of their high levels of debt.

Jeremy Hunt, who replaced Kwasi Kwarteng as the country’s finance minister last Friday, soothed markets when he announced Monday that he would reverse almost all the tax cuts from the so-called “mini-budget.”

But the dismantling of Truss’ flagship economic package to placate investors spelled the end of her premiership.

Markets usually hate uncertainty. But on Thursday, they shrugged. UK bonds held their ground. The pound ticked up 0.4% to $1.125.

“Although the resignation of Liz Truss as Prime Minister leaves the UK without a leader when it faces huge economic, fiscal and financial market challenges, the markets appear to be relieved,” said Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics.

British people deserve "so much better" than this "revolving door of chaos," UK opposition leader says

The British people deserve “so much better” than this “revolving door of chaos,” UK Labour leader Keir Starmer said on Thursday, calling for a general election after UK Prime Minister Liz Truss resigned.

“Each one of these crises was made in Downing Street but paid for by the British public. Each one has left our country weaker and worse off,” the opposition leader said in a statement posted on Twitter
“The Tories cannot respond to their latest shambles by yet again simply clicking their fingers and shuffling the people at the top without the consent of the British people,” he added. “They do not have a mandate to put the country through yet another experiment; Britain is not their personal fiefdom to run how they wish.”

Starmer said the British public deserves a proper say in the country’s future, adding that Labour plans to “sort out their [Conservative party’s] mess.”

“We must have a chance at a fresh start. We need a general election – now,” he concluded in the statement. 

Liz Truss' successor will inherit a mess

The governing Conservative party will hope that Liz Truss’ resignation draws a line under the chaos of her short premiership and brings the UK some economic stability.

Her short time in office was defined by market meltdowns and constant speculation about her long-term future after mini-budget full of unfunded tax cuts caused turmoil in the British economy.

But even when she leaves office, a week from now, her successor will inherit a mess that is unlikely to improve.

The truth is, the Conservative party has been divided for years. It started with Brexit, splitting the party in two, and has got worse ever since.

The factionalism breaks on more lines than can be counted on one hand: From Boris Johnson loyalists to libertarians to anti-immigration Conservatives.

It is hard to see how any single candidate could be accepted by all tribes of the party. It’s even harder to see how they could appoint a Cabinet that wouldn’t split on multiple issues. And it’s almost impossible to imagine how party discipline could be imposed on members of parliament who want so many different things.

The answer to this would traditionally be a to call a general election, and let the voters sort it out. But Conservative MPs don’t want that – they are so far behind in the opinion polls that most accept they would lose.

Under these circumstances, given that calling an election is in the government’s gift, it seems unlikely it will do so.

That means Truss’ successor will have a serious credibility problem. They will be the second PM imposed on the UK by the Conservative party without any say by voters, and arguably lacking much of a mandate.

Things could get worse very fast for the new leader if these issues are not addressed. So, given the next election might be as late as January 2025, it’s entirely possible that this chaotic mess drags on for a couple more years, simply to spare the political blushes of Conservatives.

US had been skeptical of Truss policies and is watching UK chaos closely

The ongoing political crisis in the UK has generated concerns inside the White House at the potential global economic fallout, people familiar with the situation say.

This concern emerged in US President Joe Biden’s highly unusual criticism of former Prime Minister Liz Truss’s economic plans last weekend,

The statement, made in an Oregon ice cream shop, broke the standard of avoiding discussing other countries’ politics — particularly those of the United States’ top ally. It reflected a deeply skeptical view of Truss’ policies that had been simmering inside the White House since she took office six weeks ago. 

White House officials mostly declined to expand on Biden’s comments. But privately many officials have voiced concerns at the chaos within Britain’s ruling party and the effect that could have on global issues. 

The Biden White House shed few tears for Boris Johnson when he resigned and there was a perception that Truss would follow in his policy mold, even as she lacks the personal drama — or charisma — of Boris.

The chaos and economic turmoil that ensued once she took office was eye-opening for many US officials, who viewed the situation cautiously. 

Truss’s hardline approach to Brexit also set off relations with Biden on a sour note. The President has taken a personal interest in the particular issue of the Northern Ireland Protocol, a post-Brexit arrangement that requires extra checks on goods moving between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

The rules were designed to keep the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland open and avoid a return to sectarian violence. But Truss has moved to rewrite those rules, causing deep anxiety in both Brussels and Washington.

Biden, who makes frequent references to his Irish ancestry, has made his views clear on the issue, even though it does not directly involve the United States. Congressional Democrats have similarly voiced concern at any steps that could reignite the Northern Ireland conflict. 

In their first phone call as counterparts earlier this month, Biden raised the matter with Truss, according to the White House. A US readout of their conversation said they discussed a “shared commitment to protecting the gains of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement and the importance of reaching a negotiated agreement with the European Union on the Northern Ireland Protocol.”

New UK prime minister expected by next Friday

A new British prime minister should be in place by Friday October 28, according to the Conservative party official responsible for the process.

Graham Brady, leader of the so-called 1922 Committee, which represents rank-and-file Conservative Members of Parliament, said. Speaking outside the House of Commons, Brady said further details of the process would be announced later today. Grassroots Conservative party members will get a say in some form, he added.

“It will be possible to conduct a ballot and conclude a leadership election by Friday 28 October,” Brady told reporters.

That would put a new prime minister in Downing Street ahead of a crucial economic statement by Britain’s finance minister, set for October 31.

Will there be a general election in Britain?

Liz Truss’s resignation has already re-ignited calls for an early general election in Britain.

The opposition Labour Party, which opinion polls put on course for a landslide victory, is leading that charge.

“After 12 years of Tory failure, the British people deserve so much better than this revolving door of chaos,” its leader Keir Starmer said after Truss resigned. “We need a general election, now.”

But a fresh election is no certainty, even as Britain prepares for its fifth leader in just over six years – and its third since the last ballot.

As long as the government can command the confidence of the House of Commons, it can decide when to call an election. For all their turmoil, the Conservatives have a healthy working majority of 71 in Parliament and it’s unlikely their MPs would voluntarily opt for an election that could see them lose their jobs.

Currently, the Conservatives are trailing Labour in opinion polls by virtually historic levels, indicating a near wipe-out for the group.

The next nationwide poll does not need to take place until January 2025 at the latest, and has been generally expected to occur in mid-2024, which is the time of the year that general elections usually take place in Britain.

A government needs Parliament to green-light plans for a new vote, and as soon as that happens, a six-week election campaign period begins.

But the issue of a general election is certain to dominate British politics and dog the new prime minister, given the whirlwind of changes at the heart of government since the last vote.

Who might succeed Liz Truss?

A new leadership contest will take place within a week, Liz Truss said in her resignation speech.

This will be the fifth Conservative prime minister in just over six years – and the third within this parliamentary term.

But who might the next leader be? Here are the main runners and riders.

Rishi Sunak

Sunak has proved to be something of a prophet of the government’s demise, as many of the predictions he made during this summer’s leadership about Truss’s economic plan came to pass.

The former Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) warned that Truss’s unfunded tax cuts would lead to a run on sterling, a panic in the bond market and concern from the International Monetary Fund. Perhaps even he would have been surprised by the pace with which he was proved right.

Sunak has experience of economic crisis-fighting, having guided the UK through the Covid-19 pandemic. He is also popular among MPs, having secured more votes within Parliament than Truss before the choice between the final candidates was put to the members, and only losing narrowly in the final vote.

The trust he has among MPs – and the vindication his predictions have gained – may make him the most likely next set of hands to steer the ship.

Penny Mordaunt

The Leader of the House of Commons may have had a dress rehearsal for being prime minister this week, after stepping in for an absent Liz Truss at a debate.

“The prime minister is not under a desk,” Mordaunt confirmed Tuesday – in a performance that seemed as much about pitching herself as it did about helping the PM.

Mordaunt came third in the last leadership election, narrowly missing out on being put before the members – among whom she was expected to do well, in part due to her military credentials. Mordaunt is a reservist of the Royal Navy.

Like Sunak, she is from the more moderate wing of the party. There was even talk among MPs of the two forming a “dream team” ticket, although this is yet to materialize – and it is unclear if Sunak would settle for being chancellor again.

Grant Shapps

It is a sign of the disorder of the last days of Truss’s government that she elevated Grant Shapps to home secretary – despite not offering him a ministerial role of any sort when she first took office.

Shapps served as transport secretary under Boris Johnson. He put himself forward to succeed him in the previous leadership election – only to withdraw from the race three days later, after failing to secure the requisite 20 MPs votes to proceed to the next round.

Kemi Badenoch

Badenoch came fourth in this summer’s leadership election – but was consistently rated by pollsters as a favorite among Conservative grassroots.

One of the younger MPs in the running, Badenoch quickly won the endorsement of long-serving Tory grandee Michael Gove, who praised her as the “outstanding talent” in the party.

Badenoch is from the right of the Tory party – and in her previous leadership bid suggested that the government’s climate targets might prove too costly.

Boris Johnson

Only a few months ago, Johnson commanded a comfortable majority in Parliament and even claimed he was even considering his third term – to widespread derision. Despite being beset by a seemingly endless string of scandals, Labour still lagged behind in the polls – and Johnson did not have an obvious competitor in the party.

In his final speech as Prime Minister outside 10 Downing Street, Johnson made one of his characteristic allusions to ancient history. He said he would “return to his plough” like the Roman statesman Cincinnatus – suggesting a quieter life on the backbenches.

But that’s not how Cincinnatus saw out his days. He was called back from his plough to return to Rome for a second term – this time as a dictator.

The memories of “Partygate,” the prolonged scandal that eventually resulted in his downfall, may prove too fresh for MPs to call Johnson back yet.

But, as the Tory party faces electoral oblivion, the man who delivered an 80-seat majority in 2019 may prove a tempting option for many MPs.

Other names in the hat

Suella Braverman’s resignation as home secretary on Wednesday night may have been a precursor to a possible leadership bid. The former attorney-general has not run before – but with her hard-line stance on immigration, might look set to drag the party further to the right.

Tom Tugendhat emerged as a surprise favorite among Tory members and the wider public, despite only coming fifth in the last leadership election. Having not served as a cabinet member before that contest, Tugendhat distanced himself from the moral mess of Johnson’s government and promised a “clean start” for Britain. After serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, Tugendhat was made security minister by Truss.

Ben Wallace, defense secretary and another ex-military man, was tipped to succeed Johnson in the last leadership contest – polling extremely well among Conservative members. However, he never ran in that election, and it is unclear if his position will have changed since then.

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Related article Who might succeed Liz Truss as UK prime minister? | CNN

France wants UK to "find stability as soon as possible," Macron says

French President Emmanuel Macron called for political stability in Britain after UK Prime Minister Liz Truss announced her resignation Thursday. 

“I want to say that France, as a nation and as a people who are friends of the British people, wishes above all for stability in the context that we know, which is a context of war,” Macron told the media while attending an EU summit in Brussels.

“Personally, I am always sad to see a colleague leave, but what I want is to see this stability return as soon as possible,” he added.

Remember: Truss created controversy during the Conservative leadership contest when she said “the jury is still out” when asked whether Macron is a “friend or a foe” of the UK.

Liz Truss is gone. What happens next?

Liz Truss’s tenure as prime minister has ended in record time, and an accelerated leadership contest has been announced to replace her.

In her resignation speech, Truss said a contest would take place within a week. While the exact process for the contest has yet to be revealed, it seems unlikely that there will be a repeat of the two-month marathon contest that followed the toppling of Boris Johnson.

Under current Conservative Party rules, those wishing to stand for leader must put themselves forward to a vote by the 357 members of the parliamentary party. The top two candidates from that process go forward to a second round of grassroots party members.

It’s possible that won’t happen this time. Instead, there is speculation that a new leader will likely be chosen by Conservative MPs alone, without going to the membership.

A so-called unity candidate who can claim to mend the fissures in the party will likely look to garner enough support among MPs to win the race quickly.

Details of how exactly the contest will occur will be announced soon.

But such a rushed process will only increase opposition calls for a general election; it is virtually unprecedented, in peacetime, for a third prime minister to take charge since the last general election.

Truss was chosen by a few thousand Conservative members – if her successor is chosen by just 357 Tory MPs, the Labour Party will undoubtedly demand the leader seek a fresh mandate at the ballot box.

How Truss destroyed her own premiership within weeks

Liz Truss’s resignation brings to an ignominious end her catastrophic tenure in Downing Street, which appeared doomed ever since Truss’s flagship economic agenda sent markets into panic and led to a fall in the value of the pound.

She won support from Conservatives members by promising low-tax, pro-growth policies – derided by her critics as a lurch towards trickle-down economics – but within weeks of coming to power she disavowed the plans in a humiliating pivot, firing her Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng and ditching virtually all of the fiscal agenda in the wake of a market backlash.

It came after investors rejected an announcement by the Truss government in late September that it would slash taxes while ramping up borrowing in a bid to produce faster growth, citing concerns that the plan would push up inflation just as the Bank of England wants to bring it down. 

Fears also crept in about the sustainability of government debt at a time of rapidly rising interest rates. 

The pound crashed to a record low against the US dollar, while bond prices slumped, sending yields soaring. That pushed mortgage rates much higher, and brought some pensions funds to the brink of default. 

The Bank of England was forced to announce three separate interventions to avoid a full-scale meltdown in the UK government bond market.

Truss meanwhile failed to regain control of an increasingly mutinous Conservative Party, and her Home Secretary Suella Braverman launched a blistering attack on her leadership after leaving the role on Wednesday.

A final chaotic display saw Truss allies accused of manhandling lawmakers to force them to vote against a fracking ban on Wednesday evening.

Truss departure plunges Britain deeper into chaos

Liz Truss’s departure ensures a fresh power struggle within the ruling Conservative Party, which has hemorrhaged public support for the past year and has now overthrown Boris Johnson and Truss in the space of a few months. 

A trickle of Conservative MPs called on her to go and Truss ultimately bowed to the pressure on Thursday. 

Britain now faces the prospect of a third different leader entering office since its last general election, an unprecedented scenario in modern peacetime that will lead to serious questions about the mandate of the government and increase a growing clamor for a fresh vote. 

It is a spectacular fall from grace for a party that won a landslide victory under Johnson in a December 2019 election that was won on the then-leader’s promise to deliver Brexit.

A new leadership contest will take place on an expedited timetable soon, with Truss saying a new leader will be chosen within a week. Figures who could be in the running include Rishi Sunak, the former chancellor who lost to Truss during the summer race; Penny Mordaunt, the leader of the Commons who was second in the leadership contest behind Sunak until Truss overtook them both in the final round of voting; and Jeremy Hunt, the current finance minister who Truss turned to after sacking Kwarteng on Friday. 

And a potential return to frontline politics for Boris Johnson has not been ruled out, with some of Johnson’s allies in the Commons claiming in recent weeks that moving to remove him was a mistake. 

Liz Truss will become Britain's shortest-serving prime minister ever

Liz Truss said outside Downing Street that she “set out a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms of Brexit.”

“I recognise though, given the situation, I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative party,” she said.

Truss said she has tendered her resignation to the King, and a leadership election will take place within a week.

That timeline would make her, by some distance, Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister ever.

WATCH LIZ TRUSS RESIGN:

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01:36 - Source: cnn

BREAKING: Liz Truss quits as Britain’s prime minister

Liz Truss is set to become Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister ever, after announcing her intention to resign just six weeks into a disastrous term.

Downing Street to make statement

Liz Truss is expected to give a statement in Downing Street amid calls for her to resign as Britain’s prime minister after a disastrous six-week tenure.

Truss earlier met with the chair of the 1922 Committee of the backbench Conservatives, Graham Brady, Downing Street said on Thursday, according to PA Media. The group decides whether to call a vote of no confidence in the prime minister.

Truss’s government was earlier told it had “12 hours” to “turn the ship around” by Conservative lawmaker Simon Hoare, after a vote on whether to ban controversial fracking for shale gas descended into chaos.

Lawmakers reported that aides for Truss manhandled MPs into the voting lobby to force them to vote against the ban. The government initially presented the vote as a confidence motion in Truss’s government, but confusion remains about whether it was. A Downing Street spokesperson said on Thursday that Conservative lawmakers who didn’t participate in Wednesday evening’s vote will face disciplinary action, PA Media said.