Liz Truss calls for Trump-style 'revolution' in the UK after blaming Bank of England for her downfall
Liz Truss blames the Bank of England for economic turmoil following £45bn unfunded tax cuts and urges UK institutional reforms inspired by US political changes.
- Liz Truss, Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister, resigned nearly three years ago after 44 days in office amid economic turmoil sparked by a 2022 mini-budget.
- The start of her decline came after she and Kwasi Kwarteng introduced £45 billion in unfunded tax cuts, triggering several weeks of economic disruption and friction with the Bank of England.
- Truss has defended her record, accusing the Bank of England and Office for Budget Responsibility of briefing against her and called for institutional change to address economic stagnation and poor public services.
- She stated, “I never rule anything out” regarding a political return and expressed concern that the Conservative Party’s refusal to confront the leftist establishment means it is unlikely to win the election.
- Truss’s comments suggest she seeks a Trump-style revolution in the UK to restore Britain’s status while lamenting the country’s deindustrialisation and current economic decline.
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6 Articles
Coverage Details
Total News Sources6
Leaning Left2Leaning Right2Center1Last UpdatedBias Distribution40% Left, 40% Right
Bias Distribution
- 40% of the sources lean Left, 40% of the sources lean Right
40% Right
L 40%
C 20%
R 40%
Factuality
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