Tory leadership: Pressure on Liz Truss over bill help ahead of final hustings

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Liz TrussImage source, EPA
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Liz Truss has ruled out further windfall taxes on energy companies

The cost-of-living crisis is likely to be high on the agenda at the final Conservative leadership hustings on Wednesday evening.

But as the pollsters' favourite to be crowned party leader and prime minister next week, Liz Truss is under particular pressure to spell out her plans in detail - especially after cancelling her interview with Nick Robinson scheduled for Tuesday night on BBC TV.

She has said she would "put money in people's pockets" by reversing the National Insurance rise and moving the cost of "green levies" from energy bills to general taxation, but she has been less specific about any additional help above and beyond what the government has already announced for the autumn.

The official line from her campaign is that she has ruled nothing out and will consider the options only if and when she gets to No 10.

But when her supporters have been approached to flesh out her thinking, they have not all been steering in the same direction.

One of her prominent backers said any extra help had to be well targeted and through the benefits system.

The current Chancellor, Nadhim Zahawi - a Liz Truss supporter - wants targeted help, too.

But his target is much bigger than just welfare recipients.

Range of options

He argued in the Daily Telegraph, external that extra support might have to extend to those earning £45,000 a year - well above the average income.

On the same day, one of my BBC colleagues said they had been steered towards a more universal offering.

But another colleague was told Team Truss would rule out any further direct support that goes to all households - such as the £400 energy bill rebate.

Subsequently, a member of her team re-emphasised that, in fact, that nothing had been ruled out after all.

Mr Zahawi has said that officials have been working on a range of options for the new prime minister to consider.

If Ms Truss's leadership rival, Rishi Sunak, were to win the contest, he has not yet said how much extra support with bills would be provided.

But we do know the mechanisms he would use, including more cash going directly to people who receive disability payments and to pensioners.

If the polling of Conservative members is broadly correct and Ms Truss does walk through the door of No 10 in a week's time, what options would she consider?

Blunt instrument

Her team may be sticking to the line that nothing has been ruled out, but in truth some things are highly unlikely.

She has already denounced the idea of further windfall taxes on energy companies as a "sticking plaster" solution that could discourage investment.

And she is not attracted to Labour's price cap freeze.

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,

Rishi Sunak has not put a figure on how much extra support he would give

That said, Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng - tipped to be Ms Truss's chancellor if she wins - has met some energy companies that favour freezing prices now in return for a more modest decrease in bills later, when prices eventually fall.

The Centre for Social Justice - the think tank set up by the former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith, another Truss supporter - has advocated a substantial, temporary increase in universal credit which could help eight million households.

And Patrick Minford, the economics professor who has influenced Liz Truss's thinking on tax cuts, has said he too favours a "real-time" benefits uplift.

But that would not, of course, help those who are feeling the squeeze, but are not reliant on welfare - those identified by Nadhim Zahawi, for example.

So there is little doubt that among the options would be the sort of measures - such as council tax rebates - favoured by Mr Sunak when he was chancellor.

It is a bit of a blunt instrument, but by excluding those in the higher bands from any extra help, it could be claimed that it is targeted.

And the idea that VAT could be cut temporarily has been floated in some newspapers.

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Watch: Conservative party members spoke to the BBC at a campaign event in Norwich

But there are downsides to that approach. While reducing prices would initially reduce inflation, the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has warned this is unlikely to last.

Inflation could go back up when VAT is increased again, while a short-term cut may also fuel optional spending, which in turn, could also push up inflation, the IFS cautions.

Anxious wait

At the final Conservative Party hustings on Wednesday evening, Ms Liz Truss is likely to be pressed to give more detail on her thinking.

She is likely to stick to the line that she wants to examine the "full facts" before taking final decisions,

And she will not presume to have won the contest at this stage.

But whether via a Budget or a "fiscal event", she will have to announce her cost-of-living measures before the party conference season gets under way at the end of September.

So we may not have too long to wait until we know more - although for many struggling with their bills, it will be an anxious wait.

And the sense of uncertainty over what decisions she will take, if she wins power, seems to be shared by some of her own supporters.

As one Whitehall insider put it: "She will have options, but she just might decide they are all rubbish."

What has Liz Truss said on the big issues?

Choose an issue to see what the new Conservative Party leader has said

Cost of living

  • Promises to announce a plan to help people and businesses with soaring energy costs within a week of becoming prime minister
  • Plans an emergency budget to set out measures that would get the economy growing in order to fund public services and the NHS
  • Says she will tackle the crisis by putting money back into people’s pockets, such as by immediately reversing the National Insurance rise
  • Promises not to revisit the idea of windfall taxes on energy firms and rules out energy rationing this winter
  • Would suspend what is known as the “green levy” - part of your energy bill that pays for social and green projects
  • Promises to change taxes to make it easier for people to stay at home to care for children or elderly relatives
  • Says the Bank of England needs to do more to tackle inflation, arguing "we haven't been tough enough on the monetary supply" during a leadership debate

Read more about Liz Truss


Tax & spending

  • Says she will reverse the recent rise in National Insurance, which came into effect in April, and hold an emergency budget by the end of September
  • Pledges not to bring in any new taxes and to scrap a planned rise in corporation tax - set to increase from 19% to 25% in 2023
  • Would suspend what is known as the “green levy” - part of your energy bill that pays for social and green projects
  • Says she will pay for the cuts by spreading the UK's "Covid debt" over a longer period
  • Promises to change taxes to make it easier for people to stay at home to care for children or elderly relatives
  • Wants to create new “low-tax and low-regulation zones” across the country to create hubs for innovation and enterprise
  • Says she won’t cut public spending unless there is a way to do so that won’t lead to future problems
  • Would bring target of spending 2.5% of GDP on defence forward to 2026 and introduce a new target of 3% by 2030

Read more about Liz Truss


Climate

  • Says she will honour the goal of reaching net zero by 2050 and spoke of “accelerating our transition to net zero” at the COP26 climate summit
  • Would suspend what is known as the “green levy” - part of your energy bill that pays for social and green projects
  • Would review the ban on fracking
  • Says the UK needs to build more nuclear power stations and small modular nuclear reactors and would review the ban on fracking
  • Wants to protect wildlife and biodiversity better and would launch a new UK survey of wildlife to understand which species are endangered
  • As environment secretary, she cut subsidies for solar farms calling them “a blight on the landscape”

Read more about Liz Truss


Brexit

  • Argues she can be trusted with Brexit despite voting Remain in the 2016 referendum
  • Responsible for introducing the Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which could override parts of the post-Brexit deal between the UK and the EU
  • Says UK courts should be the "ultimate arbiter" and that trade between Northern Ireland and Great Britain must be "free-flowing"
  • Promises to scrap or replace by the end of 2023 EU laws considered to be holding back the economy

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Health & social care

  • Has pledged to divert a greater share of healthcare spending towards helping with social care
  • Says GP services need to be more accessible in order to reduce the pressures on hospital services
  • Says there should be more mental health support available in schools
  • Wants to encourage doctors who came out of retirement to help the NHS during the pandemic "to come back into the profession"

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Education

  • Pledges to give every child “the best opportunity to succeed” wherever they are from and whatever their background
  • Would expand existing high-performing academy schools, and replace failing establishments with free schools
  • Promises parents more childcare around the school day and to widen the range of providers who accept government childcare entitlements
  • Wants to reform university admission procedures so students apply after getting their A-levels (or equivalent) rather than based on predicted grades
  • Says students receiving top grades should be invited automatically to apply to Oxford and Cambridge
  • Wants more mental health support available in schools
  • Says she wants schools to provide single sex toilets

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Housing & planning

  • Says she would end "Stalinist" housing targets - the government currently wants 300,000 homes built in England every year
  • Plans to create "opportunity zones" with tax cuts and deregulation, making it easier and quicker to build on brownfield sites
  • Wants to help first-time buyers by incorporating rental payments into mortgage assessments

Read more about Liz Truss