Liz Truss Is Flailing, Politically and Economically
The British Conservative Party can’t figure out what it wants.

Has Liz Truss blown it already? After just over a month in the job, Great Britain's new prime minister finds herself in crisis—with worse approval ratings than her predecessor. Friday brought another twist, when Truss made the dramatic decision to fire her most senior cabinet minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng, as part of an attempt to reset her premiership. But it may all be too late.
Where did it all go wrong for Truss? In Britain, it's conventional wisdom to point to the infamous "mini budget" of September 23, in which Truss marked her arrival with a sudden package of unfunded tax cuts. The mini budget may have spooked the markets—but does it tell the whole story?
Both the Truss tax cuts and their economic fallout have their roots in this summer's Tory leadership battle. Truss and her rival Rishi Sunak entered the contest agreeing that Britain's tax burden had become too high (35.5 percent of GDP, a peacetime record). They disagreed, though, on how to go about dealing with that situation.
Sunak's position was that tax cuts could only come after Britain had dealt with its other economic headaches: reducing the fiscal deficit and bringing down inflation. For Truss, this was the wrong way around. Britain's deficit, she argued, was the result of the country's anemic economic performance, partially caused by the cumbersome tax burden. She thought it better to cut taxes now and let the market work its magic.
After beating Sunak in the membership vote, Truss quickly put her hypothesis into action. But while most forecasters agree that her package of tax cuts and energy handouts (the latter set to cost £150 billion, or almost $168 billion, over two years) will help mitigate the immediate downturn, they balked at what it meant for our fiscal stability. Most see "Trussonomics" as a recipe for more borrowing and a greater risk of eventual default.
In Truss' defense, Britain isn't the only country dealing with this conundrum. Across Western Europe, major economies face the problem of aging populations, rising interest rates, and an addiction to printing money. While much of the continent remains impressively complacent in the face of this ticking time bomb, Truss' government has been the first of its peers to choose its particular lever—the old Reaganite fix of supply-side economic reforms.
Right now, the markets are nervous as yields on U.K. bonds accelerate much faster than France, Germany, or Japan, adding billions to the nation's already painful borrowing costs. But the picture is exaggerated by nervousness among flighty investors, few of whom would claim to know how this will play out in the long term.
But Truss' bigger problems are political, with a flurry of high-profile blunders raising questions about her judgment. Just 10 days after announcing she would scrap the higher tax rate levied on anyone earning more than £150,000 a year, Truss performed a screeching U-turn, conceding that the tax would stay after all.
Friday's sacking of Kwarteng was the most dramatic development yet: He was a close ideological ally who now has the honor of being the second-shortest-serving chancellor. In a calamitous press conference from Downing Street (never a good sign in British politics), Truss insisted her economic mission had not changed—even if some of her colleagues are speculating she will be gone within weeks.
Truss was meant to be a conviction politician. Yet for its short time in office her administration has been unable to balance its ideological instincts against the more humdrum political realities—hence the current paralysis over whether to increase state benefits in line with inflation or not, or whether to loosen immigration rules to boost growth. By scrapping her flagship tax cuts, she has telegraphed extreme weakness to her opponents within the Conservative Party.
The political realities aren't easy. As I've argued before, the British Conservative Party is increasingly wedded to big spending, at least for certain groups. In such circumstances, governing as a low-tax Tory is as difficult as navigating the laser beams you see in action movies.
Even before Friday, Truss was in an unenviable position: 30 points behind the Labour Party ahead of a (likely) 2024 election. In other words, she and her party are on the verge of an electoral wipeout. The big question, though, is whether she even makes it that far.
Having removed three sitting prime ministers in six years, the Conservative Party has gotten strangely used to deposing its leaders, all while retaining its power. The problem is that it's proving impossible to work out what party members actually want. As we enter winter, Truss may well prove to be the latest casualty of that conundrum.
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From my favorite Libertarian rag across the pond:
Yeah, it's important to note that Reagan actually went out of his way to sell his policies and if you don't do that you probably will piss off a lot of people (I.E. Markets).
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Hey, at least she is easy on the eye (especially by British standards) and has nice tracts of land.
but Father, I'd rather ... sing!
Damn, they're not even giving Truss a honeymoon period? They really must hate her. She's probably doing something right. Does she know how to use the phrase "Fuck off, you lying shitweasels"?
She's another unelected bureaucrat.
She's WEF.
“Fuck off, you lying shitweasels”
In the UK, that would be illegal hate speech.
That’s one of my favorite phrases. I regular,y use variations of that in response to Liarson, Tony, Pedo Jeffy, etc..
Force-initiating looters attack each other like starving dogs tangling over a scrap of meat someone else produced. Any pretext will do if it gets enough sockpuppets to shriek about it. Still, this is a bit more civilized than the KGB trying to re-swallow Ukraine, with both urging the murder of anyone not shouting "hooray for our side."
So is reason for or against tax cuts?
It is worse than that. The author states
Truss marked her arrival with a sudden package of unfunded tax cuts.
"Unfunded tax cuts"? Reason believes that all your income belongs to the government and the government deciding to let you keep more of it is exactly the same as government spending tax dollars. In reason land, everyone is a welfare queen living by the charity of big government.
Very Libertarian of them.
FYI, I'm old enough to know that "unfunded tax cuts" was a term that rose to mainstream use during the 1994 Congress takeover by the Republicans. Their proposed tax cuts were derided by the Goliath Government Democrats as "unfunded". Mainline libertarianism of 2022: Big Government Democrats of the mid 90s.
indeed!
I also dislike the phrasing, but the basic point stands. GOP congresscritters actually made some efforts to restrain spending in the mid-to-late nineties, but as soon as Clinton was out and Bush was in, any commitment to fiscal responsibility went straight out the window. We went from a nominally balanced budget to $500 billion dollar deficits, and that was before we started flinging money at the financial crisis. Even with Obama to kick around, Reps couldn't manage to do more than get deficits back to their pre-crisis levels. Then came Trump, and the brakes really came off, with trillion dollar deficits even before anyone knew what the hell a coronavirus was. So now, whenever Reps make any noises about controlling spending, it's all too easy to write them off as hypocrites.
I'm all in favor of lower taxes, but we have to get spending under control, too. If I have to choose between the two, I'm inclined to prioritize spending restraint. Anyone who's not willfully blind knew the bill was going to come due some day, and rising inflation and interest rates suggest that "some day" might just be today.
I need some of those comic-book glasses. All I have ever seen God's Own Prohibitionists do is shift spending to send arms and suitcases of cash to right-jingo junta caudillos. It's as though gunning down the miserable wretches made poor by "our" violent wrecking of their economies in the 80s, 90s and noughts will make it all go away.
I'll agree that the phrasing is extremely questionable, but I think the general principle is sound. I'm all in favor of lower taxes, and especially simplification of the tax code. But, at some point you have to make real cuts to spending. No US administration this century has done more than pay lip service to fiscal responsibility, and now even so-called conservatives aren't even doing that much. How's that working out? Oh, right, a mountain of debt, and now inflation is finally catching up to us. And thanks to rising interest rates, that debt is set to effectively get bigger even if we somehow magically stopped borrowing tomorrow.
Have you watched "Space Ice" videos on YouTube? If not, go watch one and then imagine this post being read in that guy's voice.
Neck yourself you insufferable cunt. Also you misspelled your name again.
your excitement for this lady's failure reads like drool on a keyboard
Oddly, they never seem very excited when leftist governments fail. I wonder why.
the gasp! from the "unfunded tax cuts" line created a tropical depression.
You mean that British politics didn't play out like how they do here?
This is why I hate it when ostensible libertarians try to export their thinking to foreign politics. They really are clueless about the rest of the world.
While much of the continent remains impressively complacent in the face of this ticking time bomb, Truss’ government has been the first of its peers to choose its particular lever—the old Reaganite fix of supply-side economic reforms.
Well, if they’re afraid of ‘Reaganomics’ one might note that it actually did work at the time so they’re afraid of a policy that worked versus one that almost certainly wouldn’t.
Although I’m also pretty sure they aren’t following that blueprint, since there are other factors at play that it doesn’t seem they’re even discussing.
Also, cutting taxes from their insane high over there would almost certainly increase revenue. Counterintuitive, perhaps, but it's been shown to work out that way most of the time.
"Across Western Europe, major economies face the problem of aging populations, rising interest rates, and an addiction to printing money."
We're very fortunate nothing like that is happening on this side of the pond, it sounds awful.
The adults are in charge again.
Hey where’s Jackie?
I'm no expert on UK politics and while the authors insights are interesting I struggle to see the libertarian angle here. As I understand it the unfunded tax cuts(?) led the money traders to dump the Sterling (ha ha) and buy greenbacks. If fear of default is the driving factor yeah, UK will probably go down before the US Treasury but not by much. Funny how the more valuable the dollar is on the market the less it's worth to me.
Has Liz Truss blown it already? I CAN'T REMEMBER.
Cut spending, cut taxes and deregulate how hard is that?
It has to be physically done in the real world, not just in your mind.
If Truss falls, is Francis Urquhart available?
Taxation is theft. Cut spending.
So what are the alternatives? Cut spending and increase taxes or increase spending and increase taxes?
Or the UK government could just send everyone checks. Then no one will give a shit what they do.
So cut spending and cut taxes is crazy talk?
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Trickle-down didn’t work in the US as the data make clear. No reason to suppose it would work in the UK. “Unfunded tax cuts” is inartfully expressed, but it captures the point that Truss wanted tax cuts – fair enough, indeed – but couldn’t find anywhere to cut spending.
The Tories have no current or potential leader of any great calibre – it seems that all the possible candidates are if anything worse than Boris.
"Trickle-down didn’t work in the US as the data make clear."
You're full of shit.
There's no such thing as trickle down. That was a smear used by the opposition against Reagan.
"Trickle down" is a lefturd strawman. Letting people keep what they earn isn't giving them a handout.
-jcr
We have trickle down now whereby the Fed prints money, it starts at the top and eventually trickles down to the rest of us.
Boris is the one who got swatted for partying while not dressed like a muslim?
Hey, did the Brits get rid of mean tweets and end up with a bumbling idiot, too?
The last guy was a bumbling idiot too.
The UK needs to quit fucking around and make Nigel Farage their PM for the next ten years.
-jcr
Or just overthrow and slaughter their socialists until there are none left.
If Farage becomes their PM, the lefturds will off themselves by holding their breath until they turn blue.
-jcr
Truss is still doing better than Biden, who started failing day one with his executive orders, is still failing almost two years later, doesn't know what he wants or have a coherent agenda. I'd take Truss any day over Biden.
There is no such thing as an unfunded tax cut, taxes are the funds.
As a supposed libertarian site, TReason thinks the higher the taxes the greater the Administration. They also love high inflation, recessions, insane money printing, election interference, Ministries of Truth, Weaponinzed government police agencies, unlimited spying on Americans, open bordes, the government legallly harassing political opponents, Gun Bans, and mandate, mandates and more mandates. In other words they support Joe Biden!
Such is the consequence of having no basic principles.
So Conservative Party mixed-economy looters are doing like Reagan and drawing the same accusations. Since the gaggle in both Hice won't cut spending, Truss, like Ronnie, gets blamed for "causing" a budget deficit. Enter the magic of libertarian spoiler votes. They let a small party gradually influence the parasites into reversing the drift into serfdom that Fabian socialist looters dragged them into over many decades. Maybe she could put a libertarian in some bureaucracy post to divide and confuse. (https://bit.ly/3AunUfM)
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It does seem just a little odd when many self-proclaimed "conservatives" are calling for actual, literal socialism, ie nationalizing energy companies.