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      There’s a gaping hole at the centre of the Tory party where ideas should be. The risk is Liz Truss will fill it | Rafael Behr

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 07:00

    Sunak likes to pretend his predecessor never happened. But are the moderates going to sit back and cede their party to fanatics?

    It would be charitable to ignore Liz Truss. Attention is her addiction and any dose, even laced with scorn, sustains the toxic belief that she has important things to say. Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister has been bingeing on publicity for a memoir that cannot enhance her reputation. She is a stranger to contrition. She regrets only the haste with which she tried to implement an economic plan that she believes was sabotaged by the establishment.

    She thinks the meltdown in financial markets that brought her down was engineered by the Bank of England and the Office for Budget Responsibility. Truss’s bizarre demeanour, self-regarding without self-awareness, limits the purchase her ideas might get on public opinion, even with audiences primed for conspiracy theory. The loudest cheers when she appears on television are from the Labour party.

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      Liz Truss and her plan to ‘save the west’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 02:00

    Liz Truss is back – kind of. The former PM of just 49 days has published a book, Ten Years to Save the West. The Guardian’s political correspondent Eleni Courea and breaking news correspondent Martin Pengelly discuss her seeming lack of regret

    Despite just 49 days in office during which the British pound reached an all-time low against the dollar in reaction to Liz Truss’s mini-budget, Truss remains defiant and has published her views on how to “save the west” in a book.

    Today in Focus host Helen Pidd speaks to the Guardian’s political correspondent Eleni Courea about what Truss has been up to since her resignation and what she may be hoping to achieve with the publication of her book, Ten Years to Save the West. Helen also talks to Washington breaking news correspondent Martin Pengelly for his thoughts on the book and whether Truss has shown any remorse for the decisions made during her short-lived premiership

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      Nigel Farage is cancelled at last and he’s never been happier | John Crace

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 18:08

    Thanks to the Brussels police the National Conservatism usual suspects could feel they really were relevant and important

    You’ve seldom seen Nigel Farage look quite so happy. Beatific bordering on ecstasy. And all because he had been cancelled. Something he has longed for all his career. Failing to be elected as an MP on seven separate occasions was just proof of the limitations of democracy. Winning the Brexit referendum was almost a disappointment. What was there left for him to do? Other than to sniff around the far right in the US. Hoping for scraps. A sense of identity. But on Tuesday all his dreams came true.

    Last year’s National Conservatism conference in London had been largely forgettable apart from a few attention-seeking appearances from people most go out of their way to avoid. And even these were no more than period pieces, designed merely to preach to the couple of hundred of the already converted. An exercise in futility. No more, no less.

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      Smoking ban: Penny Mordaunt among ministers wavering over support

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 11:00

    Commons leader known to have reservations about PM’s plan, as Liz Truss swipes at ‘unelected’ officials

    Penny Mordaunt, a potential Conservative leadership challenger to Rishi Sunak, is among the cabinet ministers wavering over whether to support the prime minster’s generational smoking ban.

    Mordaunt, the leader of the House of Commons, is known to have reservations about the prime minister’s tobacco and vapes bill and the precedent it would set for banning other unhealthy things.

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      Liz Truss quiz: did she really say that in her book?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 09:00

    Can you guess which things Liz Truss actually claimed in her book and which are our fantastic inventions?

    Cometh the hour, cometh the memoir, and from Tuesday people can enjoy in full the apocalyptically titled Liz Truss book Ten Years to Save the West. She says she wants people to read it to “learn the lessons of the battle I lost”. That battle apparently being staying in Downing Street for more than 49 days. But how much have you picked up from the published snippets and Truss’s interviews about her book? Can you spot what she actually said from our ridiculous inventions? And did she really think that about the Queen dying? Find out with our Liz Truss quiz!

    The Guardian’s Liz Truss quiz

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      Liz Truss has kindly offered to 'save the west'. But who will save her from her delusions? | Gaby Hinsliff

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 05:00 · 1 minute

    The former PM’s book claims she was undermined by ‘establishment’ enemies. It instead shows exactly why her friends deserted her

    So it wasn’t just a bad dream, then. Liz Truss really did become prime minister, and that brief ensuing moment of madness really did happen. It must have done because she’s written a book about it, though given the brevity of her stay at No 10 it’s arguably less a memoir of her time there than a kind of extended Tripadvisor review. (Great location for central London; shame about the fleas .) And while calling it Ten Years to Save the West may suggest faintly deluded levels of self-belief, given Britain had to be saved from the author after less than seven weeks , it’s accidentally very revealing about the deeper reasons for that overconfidence and what they mean for the country.

    Truss entered parliament in the golden Tory era of 2010, and prospered despite bosses who clearly grasped her faults. (Theresa May, she writes, wanted to sack her but didn’t feel strong enough; Boris Johnson’s allies have long suspected he promoted her to crowd the pitch for others he considered more of a serious threat.) In comparison with Labour politicians of the time, she was therefore playing politics mostly on the easy setting: one where the biggest newspapers bend over backwards to be kind, the City broadly shares your view of wealth creation, and a lack of serious challenge from the opposition makes it possible to believe that the facts of life will remain Conservative, regardless of what Conservatism itself actually morphs into.

    Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

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      What does Liz Truss’s book tell us about her American ambitions?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 16 April - 04:01

    The former prime minister spent just 49 days in office but wants to stay on the world stage. Her attacks on Biden and praise for Trump are aimed at the populist right

    In her new book , the former British prime minister Liz Truss directs scathing attacks and mockery at Joe Biden, president of her country’s closest ally. Biden was guilty of “utter hypocrisy and ignorance”, Truss writes, when the US leader said he “disagree[d] with the policy” of “cutting taxes on the super wealthy” in the mini-budget Truss introduced in September 2022, shortly after taking power.

    “I was shocked and astounded that Biden would breach protocol by commenting on UK domestic policy,” Truss adds. “We had been the United States’ staunchest allies through thick and thin.”

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      Rish! tries for gravitas on Middle East but he’s just no longer a serious politician | John Crace

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 15 April - 18:25

    Blamed for almost everything else these days, for Sunak the focus on foreign affairs was a blessed relief

    It goes without saying that Rishi Sunak would have preferred the Easter recess to go on indefinitely. The more that people see of him these days, the further he drops in the polls. So loitering in Downing Street, online shopping for Adidas trainers or taking the dog for a walk, is about as good as it gets for the prime minister these days. At least that ensures the level of public contempt rises at a more or less manageable rate.

    But if recess did have to end then the first day back in parliament was pretty much ideal for Rish!. OK, so the escalation of hostilities in the Middle East and the prospect of world war III might be a major concern for the rest of us, but for Sunak it is a blessed relief.

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      The greatest mystery of modern politics? Liz Truss’s self belief | Zoe Williams

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 15 April - 16:20

    The former prime minister is teaching us a lot about narcissism in her new memoir, and it’s hard to tear your eyes away

    Liz Truss’s memoir, Ten Years to Save the West, first penetrated the nation’s consciousness with her reflections on the death of Queen Elizabeth II. “Why me?” the former prime minister wrote. “Why now?” It was actually pretty funny, the depth and shamelessness of her narcissism; so funny, in fact, that I felt that, somewhere along the line, she had been stitched up by an editor. Fair play; I too would stitch her up in that job. It’s hard to be your best, most generous self towards a person you hold personally responsible for the fact that your mortgage is now 100% higher than it used to be.

    But a kinder, more mature person would have at least scribbled in the margin: “Are you absolutely sure you want to connect yourself, who served for 49 days, with the death of death of a monarch who served the nation for 70 years?”

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