Kwasi Kwarteng: A politician who challenges established thinkingpublished at 11:17 British Summer Time 3 October 2022
Nicholas Watt
Political editor, BBC Newsnight
Self-doubt is a concept that has rarely troubled Kwasi Kwarteng.
"Don't worry, I'm sure you'll do very well," the teenage Etonian joked to an apologetic admissions tutor, who had turned up late for his interview at Trinity College, Cambridge.
With supreme confidence in his intellectual abilities, Kwarteng went on to dazzle audiences across the worlds of academia and politics with his mastery of multiple subjects.
Kwarteng was first elected to Parliament in 2010 and saw other contemporaries shoot ahead of him up the ministerial ladder.
But one event and two people turned round his political fortunes. He was a genuine supporter of Brexit, believing with his historical overview that it was always going to happen.
"We were always going to leave," he told friends after the referendum.
Kwarteng was a supporter of Boris Johnson who put him on the ministerial fast-track as energy minister in 2019.
Then his political partnership with Liz Truss, a fellow member of the 2010 intake of MPs, paid dividends when she asked him to serve as chancellor.
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