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Sajid Javid backs Liz Truss over Rishi Sunak’s ‘high-tax, low-growth’ tax plans

One poll of the Tory party members who will chose the next prime minister put Ms Truss 34 points ahead of her rival.

03 August 2022

Former chancellor Sajid Javid has thrown his support behind Liz Truss’s Tory leadership bid, warning that Rishi Sunak’s more cautious tax plans would see the nation “sleepwalking” into a “high-tax, low-growth” economy.

The announcement came after the campaign of Ms Truss, the Foreign Secretary, was boosted by two surveys giving her overwhelming leads over Mr Sunak as they face off to become the next prime minister.

She won a 34-percentage point lead over Mr Sunak in a YouGov poll of party members, before a survey for the ConservativeHome website released on Wednesday put her 32 ahead.

Mr Javid, whose resignation as health secretary minutes before Mr Sunak quit as chancellor triggered the cascade that forced Boris Johnson to resign, then threw his support behind the frontrunner.

The failed leadership candidate warned that “tax cuts now are essential” as Mr Sunak resists adopting Ms Truss’s more radical plan, saying he must get to grips with spiralling inflation first.

In an article for The Times, Mr Javid said the nation risks “sleepwalking into a big-state, high-tax, low-growth, social democratic model which risks us becoming a middle-income economy by the 2030s”.

“If we can renew our government with a bold agenda, the Conservatives can still beat Labour, the Lib Dems and the SNP at the next election – and the evidence suggests Liz is the best-placed candidate to do so,” he added.

Mr Javid launched a leadership run on a platform of swift tax cuts, but quickly pulled out, struggling to win enough nominations from Tory MPs to go through to the first round of voting.

The YouGov survey showed 60% of party members polled between July 29 and August 2 saying they intended to vote for the Foreign Secretary, with 26% backing Mr Sunak.

The poll of 1,043 Conservative Party members indicated just 11% do not know who they will vote for, while 2% said they will not take part in the contest.

A further indication of Ms Truss’s dominance came with a survey of 1,003 members by the ConservativeHome website, which had 58% backing her, to Mr Sunak’s 26%.

But she insisted she is taking nothing for granted as a delay in ballot papers being issued due to cyber security concerns gave her rival more time to catch up.

Asked if she is looking forward to being prime minister, Ms Truss said: “I am not taking anything for granted. There is still a long way to go in this leadership election.”

But she later lashed out at “the media” for having “misinterpreted” her £8.8 billion policy pledge to cut the public sector wage bill by paying workers in cheaper areas of the country less than in more expensive parts.

In the first turbulence for her campaign, Ms Truss was forced to abandon the proposal after furious Tory colleagues warned it would lead to a “levelling down” of the nation.

Under questioning during a leadership hustings of Tory members in Cardiff, Ms Truss insisted the plan was never intended to apply to doctors, nurses and teachers.

Asked who had got the policy wrong, she said: “The media.”

But she refused to set out why the policy was being abandoned entirely if the problem was merely one of presentation.

The information put out by her campaign said the potential £8.8 billion saving from the policy depended on it being “adopted for all public sector workers in the long term”.

Mr Sunak welcomed her U-turn, saying it would have meant “almost half a million workers in Wales getting a pay cut”.

Meanwhile, renewed her attacks on Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon after saying she would ignore the “attention seeker”.

The Foreign Secretary went on to criticise Ms Sturgeon’s Welsh counterpart Mark Drakeford as a “low-energy version of Jeremy Corbyn”, the former Labour leader, and his “plastic patriot” successor Sir Keir Starmer.

Ms Truss lamented “some unfortunate occurrences” during the Tory leadership race when questioned about some of the bitter blue-on-blue attacks as she said she would want fewer debates in the future.

“I wouldn’t necessarily have so many debates again, I think it’s better if we’re talking to each other within the Conservative Party rather than airing our dirty linen in public,” she said.

POLITICS Tories
(PA Graphics)

The first postal votes in the contest were due to be submitted this week, but the party delayed sending ballots out after advice from cyber security experts.

The party has made changes to its process on the advice of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), part of GCHQ, after warnings that hackers could change members’ votes.

The ballots had been due to be sent out from Monday but could now arrive as late as Thursday August 11.

A Conservative spokesman said: “We have consulted with the NCSC throughout this process and have decided to enhance security around the ballot process.

“Eligible members will start receiving ballot packs this week.”

An NCSC spokesman said: “Defending UK democratic and electoral processes is a priority for the NCSC and we work closely with all parliamentary political parties, local authorities and MPs to provide cyber security guidance and support.

“As you would expect from the UK’s national cyber security authority, we provided advice to the Conservative Party on security considerations for online leadership voting.”

The party has been forced to abandon plans to let members change which candidate they are backing in the election process, the Telegraph reported.

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