Kwasi Kwarteng: PM’s vision was right, says sacked chancellor

EPA British Prime Minister Liz Truss and former Chancellor Kwarteng at the opening session of Conservative Party ConferenceEPA
Kwasi Kwarteng served as Chancellor for 38 days

Kwasi Kwarteng has been sacked as chancellor amid intense speculation Prime Minister Liz Truss is about to junk key parts of their economic plan.

Mr Kwarteng met Ms Truss for crunch talks in Downing Street after cutting short a US trip.

In a letter to the PM, Mr Kwarteng said Ms Truss's vision for economic growth was "right" and he still supported it.

Ms Truss is expected to announce a U-turn on business tax cuts at a news conference in Downing Street at 14:30.

The prime minister has appointed former Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt - who backed Rishi Sunak in the Tory leadership contest - as the new chancellor.

Ms Truss's pledge to cut taxes was at the heart of the economic agenda that won her the Tory leadership at the start of September.

"As I said many times in the past weeks, following the status quo was simply not an option," Mr Kwarteng wrote in his letter.

"For too long this country has been dogged by low growth rates and high taxation - that must change if this country is to succeed."

Responding to Mr Kwarteng in her own letter, Ms Truss said she was "deeply sorry" to lose him and thanked him for putting "the national interest first" by standing down.

"We share the same vision for our country and the same firm conviction to go for growth," Ms Truss wrote.

The dramatic dismissal of Mr Kwarteng makes him the second shortest-serving chancellor after just 38 days in the job.

A long-time ally of Ms Truss, Mr Kwarteng shared her tax-cutting economic ideology and was seen as her political soulmate when he was appointed to the role on 6 September.

The prime minister has also asked Chris Philp to move to the Cabinet Office, with Edward Argar replacing him as chief secretary to the Treasury.

For days, Ms Truss has faced calls to drop parts or all of her economic plan to calm market turbulence and reassure her party, which has slumped in the polls.

Some Tory MPs have discussed options to remove Ms Truss as prime minister, laying bare divisions within the party, which has been in power for 12 years.

Ms Truss has already U-turned on her plan to scrap the top rate of income tax and some Tory MPs believe another change of course is inevitable.

A further U-turn is likely to seen as a blow to Ms Truss's political authority only 39 days after she became prime minister.

Labour's shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said a "humiliating U-turn is necessary" after the government "plunged our economy into chaos and crisis with Truss' discredited trickle down approach".

"Changing the Chancellor doesn't undo the damage that's already been done," she said.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey urged the prime minister to call a general election, accusing the Conservatives of mismanaging the economy.

"It started with Boris Johnson failing our country, and now Liz Truss has broken our economy, it is time for the people to have their say in a general election," he said.

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No mea culpa

Analysis box by Nick Eardley, political correspondent

It's clear from Kwasi Kwarteng's letter that it was the prime minister's decision to get rid of him.

This wasn't a mea culpa on his part; he was told to step down and did.

Do not underestimate how significant this is. Ms Truss and Mr Kwarteng were billed as the closest of political allies when she won power.

His allies told me he saw his job as delivering her plans. They would, we were told, work in lockstep free from the drama seen in previous PM-chancellor relationships.

But the turmoil in the markets - and then at Westminster - have ripped that relationship apart.

Ms Truss has made the calculation that to move on from the mini budget she needed to get rid of her chancellor. But given how close the pair have been, that may be easier said than done.

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The mini-budget - announced by Mr Kwarteng on 23 September - included £45bn of tax cuts and an energy package worth an £60bn over six months, partly funded by borrowing.

There were few details on how the government would fund the package, which left financial markets reeling, sent the pound plummeting, and forced the Bank of England to bail out pensions funds.

The chancellor was due to make a financial statement on 31 October, but it is unclear whether that will change.

Meanwhile, financial markets rallied and the pound held firm as speculation mounts about a possible U-turn over the mini-budget.

The Bank of England has been buying government bonds - known as gilts - to try to stabilise their price and prevent a sell-off that could put some pension funds at risk of collapse.

But that support is due to come to an end on Friday.