Business secretary Grant Shapps has said Liz Truss’s approach to the economy “clearly wasn’t” the right one.
Shapps said that while he agreed with the former prime minister that the UK should have a lower-tax economy, that could not happen without “laying out the groundwork” first by tackling inflation and controlling debt.
The Cabinet minister, who served as Truss’s home secretary for just six days, was speaking in response to a 4,000-word article penned by Truss in the Sunday Telegraph.
In the article, Truss claimed she was not given a “realistic chance” to enact her policies to cut taxes and boost growth, which she argued were correct.
Truss said that while she was not “blameless” about the market turmoil that ensued, she was nevertheless held back by a “very powerful economic establishment” and a “lack of political support”.
Taking aim at her own party, she said she had “underestimated the resistance... to move to a lower-tax, less-regulated economy”.
Asked whether he thought Truss’s approach to the economy was right, Shapps replied: “Clearly it wasn’t.”
Shapps also defended the Conservative Party from Truss’s criticisms, saying: “No-one wants to pay higher levels of taxes but I think you have to set this in an international context.
“Every Western government has been hit by Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine and experienced through-the-roof energy costs, and has then experienced high levels of inflation.
“People might mistakenly think this is something happening in Britain and Britain alone. In fact if you look at the international comparisons, it is happening around the world. Every government is struggling with this.”
Truss has kept a low profile ever since she was ousted from the top job after just 49 days in office —until now.
Her 49 days in office ended following the market turmoil caused by her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget, which unveiled £45 billion-worth of unfunded tax cuts.
It caused the value of the pound to plunge, interest rates to soar and led to the Bank of England having to bail out the UK’s pensions industry.
But her intervention — her first since standing down in October — has reignited a debate in the Conservative Party about how it grapples with high taxes and sluggish economic growth.
Former Tory party chairman, Sir Jake Berry, said he believed Truss offered the right “diagnosis of the disease that is facing the country”, although it “wasn’t delivered in the correct way”.
But Tory MP and trade envoy Richard Graham disagreed, telling Times Radio he thought Truss’s article in the Sunday Telegraph was a “mistake”.
“I think it’s probably a mistake, really, to try and make the case that the Liz Truss government had the right ideas at this stage,” he said.
“I think, for most people in the country, that was a period that they would rather not really remember too clearly. And let’s get on with sorting out the problems in people’s day to day lives.”
Truss’s comeback represents another headache for Rishi Sunak, who is already battling with the resurgence of Boris Johnson.
The former prime minister has also put pressure on Sunak over the economy, calling on him to cut taxes before the next election.
The prime minister has repeatedly said that inflation must be brought under control before the government can contemplate slashing taxes.
Johnson also criticised Sunak’s decision not to send British fighter jets to Ukraine following a plea from Kyiv to Western allies.
Downing Street has said it would not be “practical” to send jets to Ukraine. The UK has, however, sent 14 Challenger 2 tanks to assist with the war effort against Russia.