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Noises off dominate Tory conference as Liz Truss’ ministers go rogue – POLITICO

LONDON — Less than a month into Liz Truss’ turbulent time as U.K. prime minister, her top colleagues are publicly questioning her approach.

Cabinet ministers have been openly urging Truss, whose party is gathering in Birmingham for its annual conference, to hike the value of welfare benefits, just a day after it was forced into a major u-turn over a controversial tax cut.

Meanwhile a member of her government took a thinly-veiled sideswipe at Truss’ time running the government’s trade agenda, and talked up one of her former leadership rivals.

Trade Minister Conor Burns suggested Truss prioritized presentation over substance, as he tipped Kemi Badenoch as a future Conservative saviour.

Speaking at a fringe event during the Conservative conference, Burns said there was “not a huge amount of good news that is going to be emanating from the government in the coming months. The one department that will have some good news is the Department for International Trade.”

And as he praised new international trade chief Badenoch he also took more direct aim at Truss, who became famous for her optimistic social media presence during her time as trade secretary under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Some officials took to labeling the Department for International Trade the “Department for Instagramming Truss” during her tenure.

“Kemi totally gets that trade needs to move beyond Instagram posts about free trade agreements and needs to actually focus on delivering for companies the support to unleash the potential that the free trade agreements open up,” he said.

Badenoch ran an insurgent campaign during the recent Tory leadership contest and came fourth overall. Truss appointed her as international trade secretary after the race. Burns said Badenoch was “the future of our party,” amid speculation about whether Truss will survive as prime minister for long.

He added that he was “not a big fan of talking about bigger cakes” — after Truss repeatedly said she was focused on growing the size of the U.K.’s economic “pie” rather than redistributing it. However Burns did insist the trade agenda was a crucial element of growing the economy.

He later sought to clarify his remarks, telling POLITICO via a tweet that his comments were “not very controversial.”

Liz Truss energised the FTA ambitions and I was privileged to work with her when she was Trade Secretary and be asked by her to return to @tradegovuk,” he said, referring to the trade department.

Welfare rebellion mounts

Burns’ remarks came as Cabinet ministers Penny Mordaunt and Robert Buckland made clear that they would back a rise in the value of welfare benefits to keep pace with inflation.

Truss and her ministers have repeatedly refused to commit to such a pledge, saying only that the policy is under review.

But Mordaunt, a former leadership rival to Truss, told Times Radio Tuesday: “I’ve always supported – whether it’s pensions, whether it’s our welfare system – keeping pace with inflation. It makes sense to do so. That’s what I voted for before.”

And she added: “We are not about trying to help people with one hand and take away with another.”

Buckland, Truss’ Wales secretary, meanwhile told the BBC that his boss is “an extremely effective team player, she’s a great leader. And she’ll continue to listen and act accordingly.”

But he added: “I’m a One Nation compassionate Conservative. I believe in enabling the most successful in our society to succeed, and I believe in the safety net as well.”

Asked specifically by the BBC whether he’d like to see benefits rise in line with inflation, Buckland replied: “Every Conservative government that I’ve been part of has maintained the safety net, and I’m sure this one will do the same.”

Truss downplayed the interventions Tuesday afternoon, telling Times Radio she was “focused on delivering and the cabinet is also fully focused on that too.”

“And people do interviews all the time — at party conference, people talk,” she added. “That’s what happens. But the important point is that we’re all unified behind the growth plan and behind what we have to do to get this country back on track.”

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