Packed week ahead for Liz Truss as premiership set to swing into action

Truss says 'jury's out' on whether France's Macron is friend to UK

Packed week ahead for Liz Truss as premiership set to swing into action

The new Prime Minister will fly to New York for the UN General Assembly before the Government sets out its long-anticipated mini-budget on Friday.

Packed week ahead for Liz Truss as premiership set to swing into action

Liz Truss’s premiership will swing into action this week after a political pause to mark the Queen’s death, with a packed schedule of policy and diplomacy to follow the state funeral.

Typical action in Parliament has been placed aside briefly since the late ruler passed on, with business in the two Houses stopped for a time of grieving.

All eyes will be on Westminster Abbey for the service on Monday as the Prime Minister joins hundreds of dignitaries from across the globe to say a final farewell to the Queen.

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Ms. Truss is expected to fly to New York for the United Nations General Assembly following the funeral, where she has a key bilateral meeting lined up with US President Joe Biden.

Back in the UK, MPs will get back to Westminster on Wednesday, where the people who wish to do so can make another vow or assertion to the Ruler.

The PA news agency understands that Business Secretary Jacob Rees-Mogg will also set out further details of the Government’s plans to help firms through the energy crisis.

Heath Secretary and Deputy Prime Minister Therese Coffey is expected to outline her vision to see the NHS through the winter months on Thursday.

Mr. Kwarteng’s mini-budget focused on tackling the cost-of-living crisis and boosting growth, will then be delivered on Friday.

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It is expected to confirm Ms. Truss’s plans to reverse the national insurance hike and cancel the planned rise in corporation tax.

She is likewise considering slicing individual charges notwithstanding business demands in her proposed “speculation zones”, named “full fat freeports”.

 

It has been suggested the Chancellor will pursue a move to scrap the cap on bankers’ bonuses, although PA understands no final decisions have been made.

With the so-called “fiscal event” dominating the political agenda on Friday, there will be little room to draw breath before it is Labour’s turn in the spotlight, as the party heads to Liverpool for its annual conference.

MPs had been due to break for recess on Thursday, but will now be asked to sit a day longer to make time for the Chancellor’s mini-budget.

Ms Truss’s tax-cutting proposals were a cornerstone of her campaign for the Tory leadership which saw her topple rival Rishi Sunak with 57% of the vote.

However, the arrangement to fix the public protection increment has gone under analysis from certain quarters as it straightforwardly helps higher workers.

Economic analysis suggests the country’s poorest three million households will be as little as 63p better off per month thanks to the move, while the richest will keep an extra £150, according to The Times.

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When MPs file back into the Commons this week, having taken time away from the political business following the Queen’s death, Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle said he hopes “we can be slightly better to each other”.

“When the House needs to, it comes together, and it is by far at its best,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Westminster Hour.

“And I think it was wonderful to be a Speaker where the House is united as one. I don’t believe I’ll ever see the House that good and that great again. I would like to believe so.

“I hope from now we can be slightly better to each other, we can show a little more tolerance and certainly a lot more respect to each other.

“And I would like to think that will be the way that we will go forward. That will be a wonderful legacy to the late Queen, and to the new King going forward.”

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