December 26, 2024

Raging Rishi Sunak blasts Liz Truss and Penny Mordaunt as ‘more socialist than Corbyn’ in furious TV debate clash

Liz Truss #LizTruss

RISHI Sunak branded Liz Truss and Penny Mordaunt “socialists” in a bitter TV debate tonight – and blasted their planned policies as worse than Jeremy Corbyn’s.

Deep rivalries between the Tory leadership hopefuls were exposed as the five squared off against each other in a brutal sparring match.

All five Conservative leadership candidates, Kemi Badenoch, Penny Mordaunt, Rishi Sunak, Liz Truss and Tom Tugendhat, took part in a live debate tonight

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All five Conservative leadership candidates, Kemi Badenoch, Penny Mordaunt, Rishi Sunak, Liz Truss and Tom Tugendhat, took part in a live debate tonight And the bitter rivalry between Mr Sunak and Ms Truss was immediately apparent

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And the bitter rivalry between Mr Sunak and Ms Truss was immediately apparentCredit: ITV The pair repeatedly clashed as the Foreign Secretary blasted Mr Sunak's tax rises

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The pair repeatedly clashed as the Foreign Secretary blasted Mr Sunak’s tax risesCredit: ITV

The gloves came off as Ms Mordaunt, Ms Sunak, Ms Truss, Kemi Badenoch and Tom Tugendhat traded blows in the live debate on ITV.

Within moments of the programme beginning, Mr Sunak and the Foreign Secretary were locked in a spat.

Sparks flew as Ms Truss accused the former Chancellor of being too comfortable cranking up taxes – biting: “You raised taxes to the highest level in 70 years.

“The fact is, raising taxes will choke off economic growth and prevent us getting the revenue we need to pay off debt.”

But Mr Sunak snapped back: “‘Something for nothing’ economics isn’t Conservative, it is socialism.”

He added: “I’d love to stand here and say, ‘I’ll cut this tax and that tax and it’ll all be ok’, but you know what? It won’t.”

He later told Ms Mordaunt her plans to drop one of his fiscal rules against borrowing to fund day-to-day spending would be more extreme than a Jeremy Corbyn policy – blasting: “It’s not just wrong, it’s dangerous.”

Ms Badenoch said the Government must be honest that there are “no easy options” – adding: “When I was working in the Treasury, it was always a choice between difficult option A, terrible option B or mad option C.

“We need to be honest with the public about how difficult things are. The Government can’t solve everything and we need to do better at it in terms of the way that we fix things.”

Ms Truss and Mr Sunak then clashed again as they chose to ask each other one question.

Mr Sunak asked: “In your past, you were both a Lib Dem and a Remainer. Which one do you regret most?”

Liz, who compared her state-school education to multi-millionaire Rishi’s lessons at exclusive Winchester College, bit back: “Do you still think we should be doing more business with China?”

Mr Tugendhat and Ms Badenoch were next to wage battle as she accused him of “criticising what we’ve been doing” while not a minister himself.

“Talking is easy,” she said.

But defending his back-bencher status, Mr Tugendhat said those who served in Boris Johnson’s Government only “lent credibility to the chaos”.

Ms Mordaunt was also speared again over her record on trans rights.

Ms Badenoch accused her rival of shifting from previously backing gender self-identification – before Ms Mordaunt said the claims are “unedifying” and part of “toxic politics”.

Any attempt to portray her as being “out of touch” will “fail”, she warned.

And all five candidates bashed Mr Johnson in their desperate scramble for votes.

Host Julie Etchingham asked the contenders to raise their hands if they’d be happy to to have the current PM serving in their Cabinet.

What happened in tonight’s debate?

  • Mr Sunak says he never had non-dom tax status – and is “incredibly proud” of his billionaire father-in-law’s company
  • He and Ms Truss repeatedly took aim at each other, with the Foreign Secretary admitting that while she’s “not the slickest presenter on this stage”, she’s “honest”
  • All the hopefuls dismissed the idea of a snap general election when the new PM takes over
  • Mr Tugendhat said all the other candidates were tainted by having served in Boris Johnson’s Government
  • Not one did – despite backing Mr Johnson while he was top dog.

    It comes after Friday’s debate also descended quickly into a series of vicious blue-on-blue attacks.

    Candidates savaged each other on tax, spending and honesty in politics.

    The third ballot will take place tomorrow, and one more hopeful will be eliminated.

    On Wednesday, just two will remain standing.

    Both will tour the country trying to win the votes of 100,000 or so ordinary party members on Friday.

    In your past, you were both a Lib Dem and a Remainer. Which one do you regret most?

    Rishi Sunak

    Brits will then decide who should be the new PM, with the vote revealed on September 5.

    Ms Mordaunt’s bid for the top job was electrified earlier this week when a poll of Tory members put her on course to beat everyone in the final run-off.

    She is now the bookies’ favourite to enter Downing St despite not being in the Cabinet and entering the race as an outside bet.

    But a powerful campaign to stop her is under way, with former Brexit guru Lord Frost mounting a fierce attack on the Trade Minister.

    He told TalkTV he had “grave reservations” about whether Ms Mordaunt is fit to lead the country.

    And she could yet be beaten by Mr Sunak, who has repeatedly emerged in first place in the leadership ballots.

    He says he’s “incredibly grateful” to be the frontrunner.

    Kemi Badenoch told viewers Brits are ready to move on from talking about Brexit

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    Kemi Badenoch told viewers Brits are ready to move on from talking about BrexitCredit: EPA Penny Mordaunt says she's committed to the Net Zero climate target, but warned it mustn't 'clobber people'

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    Penny Mordaunt says she’s committed to the Net Zero climate target, but warned it mustn’t ‘clobber people’ Tom Tugendhat highlighted his experience serving in Iraq and Afghanistan when asked if he would be able to lead the country

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    Tom Tugendhat highlighted his experience serving in Iraq and Afghanistan when asked if he would be able to lead the country

    This is why you should back the five Tory candidates (according to them)

    The Tory leadership candidates outlined again why they believed they should become prime minister as the ITV debate closed

  • Former chancellor Rishi Sunak told viewers: “I’m standing because I believe I’m the best person to lead our country and the only candidate who can take the fight to Labour and win the next election for our party. The stakes for our country are high, and only I have the experience needed to deal with this economic crisis.”
  • Trade Minister Penny Mordaunt said: “Our model of politics is broken. Our model of political leadership is broken. You need someone who knows why it needs to change and has a plan to do that. And that’s me.”
  • Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Tom Tugendhat said: “We’re all asking the right questions. The real answer is we need a clean start because we need to restore confidence in our Government and in ourselves. We can do it. I’m ready to serve. I’m ready to lead.”
  • Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said: “I can hit the ground running at No 10, driving economic growth by cutting taxes and delivering tough reform. I’ve shown what I can do on Brexit, on trade and on Ukraine. I’ve shown that I’m trusted to deliver.”
  • Former minister Kemi Badenoch said: “I said that I was the candidate who would tell you the truth. And I am… I’m the candidate for the future and I’m here to be honest with you. I can make a change and change things for the better.”
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