The British Conservative Party has elected Liz Truss as its new leader Successor to Boris Johnsonwho resigned in early July, automatically making him Prime Minister of the UK.
Following Monday’s announcement, Johnson plans to deliver his farewell speech on Tuesday and announce Queen Elizabeth II’s resignation as prime minister at Balmoral Castle in Scotland. Later, Truss will meet the sovereign to announce his intention to form a government.
Andrew Woodcock, political editor of The Independent newspaper, says there will be no traditional “honeymoon” period for the new prime minister, with inflation in the United Kingdom hitting 18% and general concern over high energy costs.
“She’ll go straight into the hurricane,” commented the journalist.
But, the political editor has defined BBC Chris Mason says Truss has proven throughout his career — time and time again — that he is a politician who knows how to survive difficult situations.
But who was Liz Truss elected against the Conservative Party’s Rishi Sunak?
In Thatcher’s footsteps
At the age of seven, Liz Truss played Margaret Thatcher in the English general election at her school.
But unlike the Prime Minister, who won a large majority in the 1983 election, Truss lost.
Years later he recalled the fact: “I took the opportunity and spoke honestly in the ‘election’, but I ended up with no votes. I didn’t vote for myself.
Thirty-nine years later, Liz Truss now has a real chance to follow the Iron Lady’s example by becoming Conservative leader and British Prime Minister.
During five rounds of voting for Conservative MPs, the former foreign secretary has built relationships with constituencies over the years and won by remaining loyal to current and former prime minister Boris Johnson.
But in many ways the new prime minister She is not a typical conservator.
Basic facts about Liz dress
- Age: 47
- Place of Birth: Oxford
- Home: London and Norfolk
- Education: Roundday School, Leeds, University of Oxford
- Family: Married to accountant Hugh O’Leary with two teenage daughters
- Vol: South West Norfolk
Mary Elizabeth Truss was born in Oxford in 1975. He himself described his father, a maths teacher, and mother, a nurse, as ‘left-wing’ people.
When her mother was a child, Common took part in marches by the Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, an organization that strongly opposed the Thatcher government’s decision to allow US nuclear weapons to be installed at the former Royal Air Force base in Greenham, west London.
The family moved to Paisley, west of Glasgow, Scotland, when Truss was four years old.
His brother, in statements to Radio 4 BBCThat said, the family likes board games, but the young woman He hated losing the dress And he often disappeared before he was in danger of being unsuccessful.
The family later moved to Leeds, in the north of England, where Liz attended Roundey, a state secondary school.
During his time there, he said, he saw “kids fail and be let down by low expectations.”
Some of Truss’s contemporaries at Roundday have questioned his version of the school, including journalist security guard, Martin Pengelly wrote: “Perhaps he selectively uses his upbringing to casually disparage the school and the teachers who taught him for ordinary political gain.”
Regardless of his upbringing, Truss attended Oxford University, where he studied philosophy, politics and economics and was active in student politics, initially for the Liberal Democrat Party.
At the party convention In 1994, he spoke in favor of abolishing the monarchy and told delegates, “We liberal democrats believe in opportunity for all. We don’t believe that people are born to rule.
Political ambitions
At Oxford, Truss joined the Conservative Party.
After graduating, she worked as an accountant for Shell and Cable & Wireless, and in 2000 married fellow accountant Hugh O’Leary. The couple has two daughters.
Truss stood as the Conservative candidate for Hemsworth in Yorkshire, England in the 2001 general election, but was defeated.
He then suffered another defeat in 2005 at Calder Valley in Yorkshire.
But despite the setbacks, his political ambitions remained, and in 2006 he was elected to Greenwich City Council in south-east London. Since 2008 he has also worked for the center-right think tank Reform.
Then-Conservative leader David Cameron put Truss on his “A-list” of priority candidates for the 2010 election.
But she soon faced a battle with the constituency’s Conservative Association, which called for Truss to be removed after it was revealed she had an affair with Conservative MP Mark Field a few years ago.
The attempt to oust him failed, and Truss won by 13,000 votes.
In 2010 he co-authored the book Britannia Uncharted with four Conservative MPs.
In it they advocated the removal of state regulations to raise England’s position in the world, and the book portrayed Truss as one. Prominent advocate of free market principles In conservative ranks.
During a recent discussion at BBC During the campaign for Prime Minister, he was questioned for a comment in Britannia Unchained in which he described British workers as “some of the worst loafers in the world”.
She insists she didn’t write it.
In 2012, two years after becoming Vice-Chancellor, he joined the government as Education Secretary and was promoted to Environment Secretary in 2014.
At the 2015 Conservative conference, Truss was mocked for a speech in which he said in an emotional voice: “We import two-thirds of our cheese. Its. a. misfortune”.
Brexit is a radical turn
Almost a year later, the biggest political event in a generation took place: the referendum on the European Union.
Truss campaigned for it to stay and wrote in his diary the sun Brexit would be “three woes: more rules, more forms and more delays when selling to the EU”.
However, after his side lost, he changed his mind, arguing that Brexit offered an opportunity to “shake up the way things work”.
Under Theresa May, Truss served as Attorney General and then Chief Secretary to the Treasury.
When Boris Johnson became Prime Minister in 2019, Truss became International Trade Secretary, which meant meeting world political and business leaders to promote UK business interests.
In 2021, at the age of 46, he became one of the highest positions in government: foreign secretary.
In this role, he sought to resolve the thorny issue of the Northern Ireland protocol, scrapping parts of the post-Brexit EU-UK deal, a move strongly criticized by the EU.
He also secured the release of two British-Iranian nationals who had been arrested and detained in Iran.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Vladimir Putin took a hard line, insisting that all of its forces be pulled out of the country.
But he faced criticism after supporting citizens in the UK who wanted to go to Ukraine and fight.
Fees and Allowances
Truss’s campaign for the leadership of the Conservative Party was not without controversy.
When pressed on how he would tackle the country’s cost-of-living crisis, he said he would “focus on reducing the tax burden, not providing financial assistance”.
He also called Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon an “attention seeker” and said he had been “ignored”.
Some have suggested that Druss, with her clothes, was trying to emulate another Conservative favourite, Margaret Thatcher.
But as she said she rejected it GBNews: “It’s so frustrating that female politicians are always compared to Margaret Thatcher. At the same time, political men are not comparable to (former British Prime Minister) Ted Heath.”
But that comparison is not a disadvantage when it comes to trying to win support from Conservative Party members.
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