Liz truss isn't up to being boris's chancellor | thearticle

Liz truss isn't up to being boris's chancellor | thearticle


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Refreshing though it is to hear that there is still something to play for in the Conservative leadership contest, it would be foolish to pretend that Boris Johnson is anything less than the


runaway favourite. In Westminster circles, in fact, everyone is so convinced of a Boris victory that talk has turned away from the race at hand and onto who will make up the next cabinet.


Senior politicians, too, are getting rather excited at the prospect of a reshuffle – and a few even seem to have taken time off their day jobs to enthusiastically audition for the role of


Boris’s Chancellor. As David Gauke pointed out on Twitter a few weeks ago, being Boris’s number two wouldn’t be a walk in the park: the former Foreign Secretary has spent the last few months


outlining lavish plans for public spending in his Telegraph column – and it still isn’t 100% clear where all the money is coming from. Whoever is picked for Number 11 in a few weeks time


will have to temper and moderate the new Prime Minister, while simultaneously “peddling the optimism” (to coin a phrase) which Boris hopes will win him the next election. So, who would be up


to the task? Home Secretary Sajid Javid is the current front runner, but he isn’t by any means the only one vying for the job. Liz Truss, the first Cabinet-level minister to publicly


endorse the Prime Minister in waiting, is making no bones about her ambitions. Last week, she used her appearance at a Press Gallery lunch to set out her stall to be Britain’s first female


Chancellor: in not quite so many words, she explained how she would cut stamp duty, level up Britain’s infrastructure, and make the argument that people keep more of their own money. On the


face of it – she wouldn’t be a bad choice. Her experience as Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Philip Hammond’s Number two) would stand her in very good stead, and her libertarian views (she


is famous for hating the “nanny state”) would chime with the new Prime Minister’s. Her temperament, too, would be a good match for Boris’s: the pair both have a highly developed sense of the


ridiculous, and neither – judging by Truss’s Instagram and Boris’s behaviour over the last 40 odd years – take themselves too seriously. With Truss in Number 11 and Boris in Number 10, it’s


hard to imagine a Blair/Brown style bust up. On the other hand, she has a record of flip flopping: although she now styles herself as a free-market loving Brexiteer, when she was in David


Cameron’s government, she voted Remain – and would have been considered a “One Nation Tory”. More importantly, she’s hardly shone in any of her cabinet positions so far, and has often failed


to gain the respect of those with whom she has worked closely. In one memorable incident in 2017, Lord Thomas, the Lord Chief Justice, laid into Truss (the Lord Chancellor) in a way that


top barristers suggested was unprecedented. After beginning the session with an excoriating attack against the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), of which Truss is the head, and its approach to the


introduction of pre-recorded evidence in criminal trials, he went on to blast her for failing to defend the judiciary against scathing media headlines in the wake of the Brexit legal


challenge when she was Justice Secretary. According to Thomas, Truss was:_“[C]ompletely and utterly wrong in the view she takes… We must maintain a free press… but there is a difference


between criticism and abuse, and I don’t think that is understood. I don’t think it’s understood either how absolutely essential it is that we are protected.”_ If these words were spoken by


a staunch Remainer, they could, perhaps, be taken with a pinch of salt. Given, however, that Lord Thomas has never shown bias against Brexiteers before (in 2017 he dismissed rumours that


leaving the EU would affect the quality or certainty of English law or the standing of British courts) his judgement on the woman putting herself forward to be Britain’s Chancellor sounds


pretty damning – and it chimes in with persistent doubts about her competence in Westminster. When Theresa May became Prime Minister in 2016, she picked her cabinet based on optics. The


result was a perfectly balanced mix of classes, genders and Brexit positions, united in mediocrity. Though appointing Britain’s first female Chancellor will be tempting for Boris (who will


want to quash rumours that he’s a misogynist) he must resist. Liz Truss has yet to demonstrate that she is ready for one of the great offices of state.