Boris Johnson bows out as British PM, Liz Truss to take over
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[September 06, 2022]
By Alistair Smout and William James
LONDON (Reuters) -Boris Johnson bowed out
as British prime minister on Tuesday, ending a tumultuous three years in
office and bequeathing his successor Liz Truss a daunting list of
problems to tackle.
Johnson, who was forced out of office by his own Conservative Party over
a series of scandals, urged the country to come together and back his
successor.
After making a farewell speech outside Downing Street, he left London to
travel to Scotland and tender his resignation to Queen Elizabeth. Truss
will also travel to the monarch's castle in northeast Scotland and be
asked to form a government.
The 47-year-old Truss is tasked with steering Britain through a looming
lengthy recession and an energy crisis that threatens the finances of
millions of households and businesses.
Her plan to boost the economy through tax cuts while providing tens of
billions of pounds to cap energy costs has already badly rattled
financial markets, prompting investors to dump the pound and government
bonds.
"This is it folks," Johnson said in his speech. "What I say to my fellow
Conservatives, it's time for politics to be over, folks. It's time for
us all to get behind Liz Truss and her team and her programme."
Truss will be the fourth Conservative prime minister in six years. She
confronts the latest crisis to buffet Britain with a weaker political
hand than many of her predecessors after she defeated rival Rishi Sunak
in a vote of Conservative Party members by a tighter margin than
expected, and with more of her lawmakers initially backing her rival.
She has promised to take "bold action" to get the country through the
tough times, including cutting taxes despite a warning that that would
exacerbate Britain's inflation rate, at 10.1% already the highest of any
leading economy.
Johnson, who fought to stay in office until the end, used his departure
speech to boast of his successes, including an early vaccine programme
during the coronavirus pandemic and his early support for Ukraine in its
battle against Russia.
He also listed "delivering Brexit" as one of his main achievements,
although polls now show that a majority of people think leaving the
European Union was a mistake, while Truss has pursued a combative
approach towards Brussels that could eventually lead to a trade war.
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Outgoing British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson delivers a speech on his last day in office, outside Downing
Street, in London Britain September 6, 2022. REUTERS/Phil Noble
CHANGING THE RULES
Johnson's speech was full of the bombast and jokes characteristic of
a man once loved by much of the British public but also loathed by
many. He has refused to show any remorse over the scandals that
brought him down, including "Partygate" a series of boozy gatherings
in Downing Street while the country was under COVID-19 lockdown for
which he was fined by police.
Having refused to rule out a return to the top job one day, he also
indicated he was still bruised by the nature of his departure.
"The torch will finally be passed to a new Conservative leader," he
said. "The baton will be handed over in what has unexpectedly turned
out to be a relay race. They changed the rules halfway through but
never mind that now."
Britain, under Conservative rule since 2010, has stumbled from
crisis to crisis in recent years and there is now the prospect of a
long recession, and further increases in inflation, plus a weakening
pound.
The most pressing issue is the energy emergency, which could last
for a couple of years, potentially draining the savings of
households and the futures of smaller businesses that are still
weighed down by COVID-era loans.
Household energy bills are due to jump by 80% in October, but a
source familiar with the situation has told Reuters that Truss may
freeze bills in a plan that could cost towards 100 billion pounds,
surpassing the COVID-19 furlough scheme.
It is not clear how Britain will pay for the support, and whether it
could involve loans that are paid back over many years.
Britain's public finances also remain weighed down by the
government's huge coronavirus spending spree. Public debt as a share
of economic output is not far off 100%, up from about 80% before
pandemic.
(Writing by Kate Holton; additional reporting by Elizabeth Piper and
Muvija M; editing by David Evans, Robert Birsel and Angus MacSwan)
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