• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

(Updated) Liz Truss is the new UK Prime Minister

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal
www.bbc.com

What I'll be asking Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak on Sunday​

By Laura Kuenssberg
Presenter, Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg

Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss
Image source, Reuters
Many, many politicians want to become prime minister. It's the top job, the chance to be the boss, the one politician in the country that is guaranteed a place in the history books and everyone's living rooms on the telly.

On Monday we'll learn who is the new leader of the Conservative Party - and our next PM.


On our new show, starting this Sunday on BBC One, I'll be asking the two people vying for that responsibility - Foreign Secretary Liz Truss and former Chancellor Rishi Sunak - why they want the job.

And given the extreme problems whoever walks through the No 10 door will have to solve - I'll be asking whether they have the answers to the nation's questions.

No 10 door (and Larry the cat)
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The next occupant of this famous address - and Larry the No 10 cat's future colleague - face a raft of challenges

First - how on earth will they help families and firms keep the lights on in the next few months?

Bills aren't just squeezing consumers, demanding we all make some different choices, but are presenting costs that are simply impossible for many of us to pay.
This is not the same as general worries about making ends meet. This is the prospect of costs that some businesses and millions of households just won't be able to cope with.
We've all seen how parts of the NHS are pressed - struggling to provide anything like the level of care the public expects.

Making the right decisions or having a controversial conversation that does not involve additional spending will require political gumption, determination and perhaps a lot of luck.

That's even before considering multiple other issues like strikes on the railways, tensions with the EU over Northern Ireland and the push for a new referendum on Scottish independence.

There's a political challenge too. Many Conservatives acknowledge privately that the party is exhausted after more than a decade in power.

After all the psychodrama of the Johnson years and the pressures of the pandemic there is a question over the party's real identity. Can his successor keep together different groups of voters with very different wants and needs?

LK strap
  • Also on Sunday's show will be Olena Zelenska, First Lady of Ukraine
  • Watch on BBC One and iPlayer this Sunday, 4 September, from 09:00 BST
  • Follow Laura on Twitter @BBCLauraK

And like no other recent leader they will inherit a continuing war as well. Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine has changed the dial. It's put boosters on energy prices and shaken Europe's sense of security.

Boris Johnson relished the role of being Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's diplomatic best friend and the two Tory contenders have both promised vigorous support.

Yet with the economic impact of the war becoming ever more acute is there a risk that support could fade?
Laura Kuenssberg (l) with Olena Zelenska
Image source, Ukrainian Government
Image caption,
Olena Zelenska will also be on Sunday's programme
Ukraine's First Lady, Olena Zelenska - who is also on the show this Sunday - fears so.

She acknowledged the cost of living was "very tough" but said "the prices are going up in Ukraine as well".

Underlining the still perilous situation her country faces, she added: "But in addition our people get killed… when you start counting pennies on your bank account or in your pocket, we do the same and count our casualties."

Our 56th prime minister will seek to maintain Boris Johnson's level of support for Ukraine, but managing the impact of Putin's aggression and its profound effect on energy prices is at the top of a challenging list.

Mrs Zelenska shied away from making a political statement on the UK's next leader. She did wish them good luck - and there is no question that's something that they will need plenty of.
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Liz truss will only lengthen the ukrainian agony. And with that comes unnecessary energy price escalation and suffering of their iwn industries and citizens.
 

winners

Alfrescian
Loyal
I think Truss will make it. China will not like it because she's more anti-China than that Indian.
 

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal
bbc.com

Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak to be announced as UK's next PM​

By Paul Seddon
Politics reporter

Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss
Image source, Getty Images
Boris Johnson's successor as UK prime minister will be revealed later when either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak is named next Conservative leader.
The winner of the leadership contest will be announced at 12:30 BST before they take up office on Tuesday.
The new PM inherits a flagging economy, with inflation at a 40-year high.
BBC News has been told that a menu of options has been worked up in Whitehall to help struggling households, including a freeze on energy bills.
Industry sources are increasingly optimistic that the new prime minister will back plans to freeze the energy cap, the maximum price for domestic gas and electricity set every three months by regulator Ofgem.

This would not necessarily require upfront government financing at the beginning, BBC News economics editor Faisal Islam reported.
It follows multiple meetings with government, including ministers close to Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.
Ms Truss, tipped by pollsters to win the contest, has promised to announce further help to shield consumers within a week of taking over.

She then plans to deliver £30bn in tax cuts through an emergency Budget later this month, arguing the UK's tax burden is behind sluggish growth.
Her rival, former chancellor Mr Sunak, has signalled he believes he has lost, saying his job "now is just to support a Conservative government".
Ms Truss is yet to offer details of her cost-of-living support plan beyond saying she will temporarily scrap green levies on energy bills and reverse the rise in National Insurance introduced during Mr Johnson's tenure.
Mr Sunak announced payments of £15bn as chancellor, including £400 payments for all households, but both contenders have said further support will be required after cost predictions rose further over the summer.

Analysis box by Nick Eardley, political correspondent
There aren't many people around Westminster predicting anything other than Liz Truss being named the new prime minister.
Even Rishi Sunak's closest allies talk of him not losing by much, rather than winning.
If Ms Truss is named the victor just before lunchtime, one issue will define her early weeks in power: the cost of living.
She is planning a significant intervention this week, where tens of billions of pounds will be committed to helping with rising bills and inflation. That will include tax cuts and help for families and businesses. Expect her to also talk about an energy strategy to protect the UK against further turbulence in years to come.
After weeks of talking to Conservative members, the new prime minister will have to start talking to the country immediately. And the stakes are high, for voters are worried about their bills most of all. But also for the Conservative Party, worried about its future.
As one senior Tory put it to me last night: "If we get energy right, Starmer is beatable. If we don't, we're out."

Media caption,
Watch: The BBC looks back at the two final candidates and their memorable campaign moments
On Sunday the foreign secretary declined to say whether further help would be universal or targeted at the most needy, saying she would need time in office to iron out the details of her plan.
She admitted unpicking the National Insurance rise would benefit higher earners more, but said it was justified because it would boost the economy overall.
Speaking to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg, she blamed a focus on distributing wealth through taxes for low economic growth over the past two decades.
Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the SNP have all called on the government to freeze energy prices through multi-billion pound subsidies, while the Greens have suggested nationalising the UK's five biggest suppliers.
Ms Truss did not rule out a freeze on Sunday but has previously described the idea as a "sticking plaster" and argues more needs to be done to help the UK boost its domestic sources of energy.
She said any further support would have to go "hand in hand" with efforts to boost nuclear energy, fracking for shale gas and more oil and gas drilling in the North Sea.
As well as tax cuts, Ms Truss has pledged to deliver low-regulation investment zones and bring about the biggest increase in defence spending in decades.
She abandoned a plan to link public sector pay to local living costs, however, after a backlash from unions, Labour and some Tories.
The seven-week leadership contest brings to an end Mr Johnson's turbulent three years in office, and has seen the candidates regularly attack each other's policies as well as the Tories' record in government.
Mr Johnson was forced out in July by a ministerial revolt over a string of scandals, just over two-and-a-half years after leading the Tories to a landslide victory at the 2019 election.
The original field of 11 contenders was whittled down to two in a series of Tory MP ballots, with the final pair going into a run-off to be decided by the membership, which stands at about 160,000.
Although Mr Sunak had the most support among Tory MPs, he has trailed Ms Truss in opinion polls of the party grassroots.
Mr Johnson is expected to deliver a farewell speech upon leaving office on Tuesday, before the handover of power takes place.
In a break with tradition, the next Tory leader will travel to Balmoral Castle in Scotland to be appointed by the Queen, rather than at Buckingham Palace.
The Queen has been suffering from mobility issues and it is understood the change announced last week was made to prevent the need for any last-minute rearrangements.
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The British politics arena is no different from that of the US democrats motherfuckers. They only want people they can control.
 

cocobobo

Alfrescian
Loyal
0 chance for the neh. At it's core it's still a white people party. Truss already start dressing up like thatcher
 
Top