Kwasi Kwarteng is clearly right about one thing in his interview with Talk TV: his departure hastened the end of Liz Truss’s premiership. Sacking a Chancellor is a dramatic, and risky, move for a Prime Minister at the best of times. But when the Prime Minister and the Chancellor are known to have been in lockstep, it is particularly risky. Truss could never answer the question of why, if Kwarteng had to go over the mini-Budget, she did not.
What is also right is that Kwarteng was more prepared to talk about spending cuts than Truss was. If the mini-Budget had just been his, it would almost certainly have included the tax cuts but would also have had a greater emphasis on spending restraint – whether that would have been enough to reassure the markets without more specifics is uncertain.
Kwarteng argues that with gilt yields having come down, the effects of the mini-Budget are now out of the system.
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