New Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Will Probably Disappoint Fans of Free Markets
After 50 days, Liz Truss is out as the U.K. prime minister and Rishi Sunak is in.

Just 50 days after losing to Liz Truss in a Conservative leadership election, Rishi Sunak finds himself the prime minister of the United Kingdom anyway.
The Conservative Party originally rejected Sunak because of his tax policies as chancellor of the exchequer and his perceived role in bringing down former Prime Minister Boris Johnson. But after the financial turmoil that followed Truss's tax-cutting "mini-budget," Conservative members of Parliament (M.P.s) forced her from office, creating a fresh route for Sunak to bounce into Downing Street.
In the hasty contest that followed, most conservative media had swung behind Sunak given his perceived prescient warnings about the financial effects of a Truss government. Johnson then decided not to stand and Penny Mordaunt, the only other declared candidate, stepped aside after struggling to pass the nomination threshold. Sunak was thus coronated unopposed on Monday in the most unlikely comeback.
Sunak had been appointed by Johnson as chancellor in February 2020 as a more pliable finance minister for Johnson and Dominic Cummings' Downing Street. During the early stages of the pandemic, he became the most popular Chancellor for 15 years as he showered money to keep workers attached to shuttered firms through a huge "furlough" program.
His relationship with the grassroots soured, however, over the next two years. He first set out plans to raise the corporation tax rate from 19 percent to 25 percent to finance past pandemic spending. He then broke a manifesto pledge not to raise personal taxes by increasing Britain's employees' and employers' social security taxes by 1.25 percent each. Alongside the freezing of income tax thresholds, the resultant tax burden under him was set to increase to its highest level for 70 years.
Sunak's own resignation from the Cabinet then helped precipitate Johnson's ejection. The former chancellor had a polished video for his candidacy ready to go as soon as Boris departed. Tory members smelt a planned knifing, and as the leadership campaign developed, his unpopular tax policy became the central cleavage with Truss.
She pledged to abandon both Sunak's corporation tax rise and reverse the social security tax increases. Without offsetting spending cuts, Sunak argued this risked a surge in the U.K. government's borrowing costs, feeding through into higher mortgage rates. Truss won the debate but has since lost the argument.
Her "mini-budget" delivered on her tax promises, yet went much further than expected. She and her chancellor spooked markets by also cutting two income tax rates and several smaller taxes and subsidizing a freeze in household unit energy prices for two whole years. Each had microeconomic justifications, but markets went haywire at the scale of additional borrowing and the uncertainty of its passthrough to interest rates. It didn't help that Truss's government refused to allow the Office for Budget Responsibility to set out estimates of how all this would affect deficits.
The pound became very volatile, and U.K. borrowing costs surged, as Sunak predicted, particularly after Truss's Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng promised that more tax cuts would come. Some pension funds exposed to bond yield risk almost went bust, requiring an emergency Bank of England intervention. Mortgage rates rose sharply. The Conservatives' polling numbers plunged.
Truss u-turned on several tax pledges to restore market confidence, as Tory M.P.s made clear they would not tolerate any major offsetting spending cuts. Bond yields became hooked to British political developments, falling each time a fiscally conservative signal was given. Truss ultimately backed down entirely, firing her chancellor and allowing his replacement, Jeremy Hunt, to abandon almost all tax cuts except the social security reversal, while only committing to the universal energy policy until April. The Party has reembraced deficit reduction.
And so, Sunak finds himself prime minister, having made no policy pledges at all in this more recent, short campaign. The new prime minister is a committed fiscal conservative and not afraid to raise taxes to achieve it. He regularly pays rhetorical homage to free markets, but in the leadership campaign with Truss advocated for a producer-led trade policy and for tightening the U.K.'s already stringent land use planning laws. Those hoping he will maintain Truss's unrealized plans for deregulatory, non-tax, supply-side policies are likely to be disappointed.
Will the change of leader pay off politically? Tories will expect a boost, but Sunak is the sort of Conservative that columnists who would never vote Conservative say they respect. Will a super-wealthy jet-setter go down smoothly during a cost-of-living crisis that he, as chancellor, contributed to? The jury is out.
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Another thrall to Klaus Schwab and the WEF.
Came to say this. They all are wef stooges
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Sometimes in a democracy, you have to step in when the idiotic voters make the wrong choice......
Which voters? The last election was in 2019, when BoJo romped into office with an 80-seat majority.
No election is required until late 2024, so there very well may be more Conservative Prime Ministers before that happens.
The British should overthrow their global socialists and start over with something similar to how the US started out. As a bonus, imprisoned and dead marxists are always a good thing.
The free market IS the response to Truss' mini budget
LOL
Is this guy a FASCIST like that Italian lady who dares to oppose the billionaire-funded open borders agenda?
#CheapLaborAboveAll
No worries OBL, he's an imperialist globohomo banker, with Trump level wealth and a WEF education.
Can one be disappointed if one expected nothing to start with?
I can't resist a bitter chuckle over all the people who have sneered at Milton Friedman and Ayn Rand during "discussions" over the years. Perhaps sneering was all they could muster, especially since both have been proven amazingly accurate in their predictions by subsequent and current events.
As a Lions fan I can tell you the answer is no. I expect nothing and am never disappointed.
I ask for nothing and I recieve it in abundance
Keeping the TV off usually helps too. Otherwise, we'll get our hopes up with a lead by halftime, only to watch the Lie-Downs blow it through the second half.
Luckily, I never get my hopes up. At least Barry Sanders gave us a reason to watch. And that's over 20 years ago now. I wish we could get a real professional football team in this town.
Perhaps if you had a real town ...
No doubt this town has seen better days, but the other three major sports teams have done pretty well over the years, as well as all the teams at the two major universities nearby.
I've heard that Sunak is even richer than the Royals, which must mean he's smarter than them, too. What could go wrong with entrusting government to such a smart guy? We should always trust the experts and the elites, they always know what's best for us. In the meantime, I seem to be stuck inside this wet paper bag and can't find my way out. Will someone tell nurse I may be late for tea?
Gates-Bezos 2024!
Musk-Thiel?
(yes, Elon is ineligible)
He’s a big money technocrat who is happy to spend other people’s money, and he’s dark-skinned too. What’s not to love?
He makes up for it by being willing to make the country into a police state that locks everyone in their homes for months at a time in the event of a pandemic and by believing the global warming cult such that he doesn't believe in the nation actually producing any cheap or reliable energy.
What is not to love indeed
Well, he does come from a country where millions cook over dung fires.
That would explain English cuisine.
Born: May 12, 1980 (age 42), Southampton, England
I feel very bad for the British people. Both the Tories and Labor seem to be entirely corrupted by the global elite to a degree well beyond even what the major parties are in this country. The Tories won’t do anything to protect the border, believe in all of the worst global warming lunacy, and enthusiastically turned Britain into a police state during the pandemic. I would imagine Labor manages to be even worse, never underestimate the loathsomeness of leftwing parties especially in Europe. The Tories, however, even if they are not as bad seem to offer no hope for much or any relief from whatever Labor would inflict on the country.
There is no global elite. The politicians are behaving like politicians have always behaved: their goal is to gain and wield power; and they sell favors to the people who have money to buy them with and something to gain from politicians with power granting them favors. Ultimately this is what the voters voted for whether they realized it or not when they voted. The only thing that was not predictable about the final consequences was how long it would take to arrive here.
Shut up, Bill Gates (or the bot you attached to Reason).
He means wealthy crony capitalists attending DAVOS, writing books on climate change. The requirements , not unlike the mandate in Obamacare to purchase private health insurance, require government mandates and bans to force everyone to purchase whatever very profitable Green products they are selling.
Mandating and banning products in the free market is not free market capitalism.
The British people revere their shambolic NHS to the point of religious devotion. And that support goes right across party lines. So don't feel so bad for the British people--they're not exactly the huddled masses yearning to breathe free.
And I realise you're just an ignorant Yank trying to shovel your point into every story, but recent Tory anti-immigration policies have been hardly "open-borders". Does Rwanda ring a bell?
"...but Sunak is the sort-of Conservative that columnists who would never vote Conservative say they respect."
Does this make him a TINO? We have those [or something very similar].
He supported Brexit. He is very Tory.
Sunak has ties to Davos. He isnt a conservative but more akin to a moderate Democrat here. As the article mentions he wants increased taxes across the board. And largely was for lockdowns during the pandemic, including pushing The Science.
Truss wasn't great either. More bark than bite. But immediately set to push her friends into high positions.
Britain is fucked.
The Tory party seems to be totally corrupted by the global elite. The average person in the UK has no one they can vote for that has any change of gaining any influence or gives a flying fuck about their interests. The citizens of the UK are now just subjects of the global ruling elite.
And yet they voted for what they have now every step of the way for the last seventy years. Unlike the U.S. the U.K. is not a two-party system. They had multiple options and alternative party representatives serving in the Parliament all along.
Hardly. The UK is effectively a two-party system, primarily as a result of the "first past the post" voting rule for MPs. It is not a proportional representation system, such as feature in many other European countries, often resulting in government by coalition.
Nothing says freedom and prosperity like higher taxes and bigger government.
Is he leading the world on climate mandates and bans? Barrons is all in on Newsom and California due to his climate bans and mandates. Climate Crony Jihad is Maos Great Leap Forward in crony capitalist speak.
I’ve been saying for years that they really need a violent revolution to purge the globalist Marxist types if they want any kind of functional government and freedom for the masses. And since it’s a foreign country it’s totally legal for me to advocate that they round up and execute all the commies there.
For the same reason it is totally legal to advocate the murder of "all the Martians there".
The U.K. has become ungovernable. A combination of cynical politicians lusting after power and a help-the-little-guy economic mentality is responsible for this. The Tories, like the Republicans, have abandoned all pretense of conservatism and have opted for "socialist lite" as a modus operandi. The U.S. is only a little way behind the U.K. on the slippery slope to economic disaster because we had more resources and wealth banked for the government to squander. The hope at this end has always been that the crunch would hit us sooner rather than later while we still had some resources left for us to climb back out of the hole we've let them dig for us, but that hope is growing more and more forlorn with each passing day.
The founders should have envisioned that federal taxpayers would be overrun by non taxpayers. Federal taxpayers should be the only people voting in federal elections. Here we are.
"New Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Will Probably Disappoint Fans of Free Markets"
1. No shit. It's the UK.
2. Given that Reason was all about Truss' 'libertarianism' why the fuck would we trust your assessment of Sunak?
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Britain is a social welfare state that had years of open borders before Brexit. A social welfare state runs out of other peoples money and risk taking and hard days work enthusiasm.
Not sure why I have to end with this on a so called “libertarian” site:
There’s no such thing as FREE.
Well, free fall…
"Open borders", where non-EU citizens can spend 25 years not qualifying for residency.
"Sunak was thus coronated unopposed on Monday in the most unlikely comeback."
coronate
A person is crowned, not coronated. “Coronate” is improperly derived from “coronation,” but “crown” is the original and still standard form of the verb.
Edited in Murrika, innit?
The End
That Rishi Sunak was born in England makes him no more of an Englishman than Kanye West is a Caucasian. Biologically, Englishmen are Euro-Caucasians. Sunak is Indo-Caucasian. His elevation to Prime Minister symbolizes the end of an English England and perhaps of Western civilization as we have known it.
Left to its own, India was nothing but a patchwork of feudal states at war with each other. Englishmen brought civilization to India, giving it a common language — English — and English common law. What will the Indian, Sunak, bring to England?
Conversely, what did the Semitic-Caucasian, Disraeli, bring to England? A great deal. The context, however, was vastly different. Britain had an empire ruled by Englishmen and was almost entirely Euro-Caucasian of Nordic type. Not so today. Sunak appears to be the crown on the shrunken head of a once-great people.
“An autopsy of history would show that all great nations commit suicide.” -Arnold Toynbee (1889-1975)
https://www.nationonfire.com/white-men/ .
Becoming PM of the UK is a great way to immediately end your political career.