UK: Truss replaces Home Secretary Suella Braverman

UK: Truss replaces Home Secretary Suella Braverman

The British chair-back continues. Home Secretary Suella Braverman has resigned from office. Prime Minister Liz Truss loses the second cabinet member within days. Resignations in the leadership of the faction followed.

British Prime Minister Liz Truss has split from Home Secretary Suella Braverman. The conservative politician confirmed corresponding reports on Wednesday via Twitter. Braverman gave “a technical breach” of confidentiality rules as the reason for her resignation. She forwarded an official document from her personal email address to a “trusted parliamentary colleague,” Braverman wrote. Much of it was already known, but it was “right for me to go”.

Braverman will be succeeded by former Transport Secretary Grant Shapps. The 54-year-old had supported Truss’ rival Rishi Sunak in the internal party election campaign to succeed ex-Prime Minister Boris Johnson. He was previously Transport Secretary in Boris Johnson’s cabinet. He is considered an experienced minister and a convincing communicator and is already the second newcomer to one of the key ministries within a week.

Braverman belongs to the extreme right wing

In the letter, Braverman criticized the government’s course. Important promises to voters have been broken, and she also has “great concerns about this government’s commitment to our election manifesto, such as limiting the total number of immigrants and stopping illegal migration, particularly dangerous boat crossings,” Braverman said.

Braverman belongs to the extreme right wing of the party and has been a frequent source of publicity for comments on her plans for a tougher crackdown on deportations. She recently railed against “tofu-eating” leftists in parliament.

It is the second change in an important department within six days. Truss fired her Treasury Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng on Friday and replaced her with former Secretary of State Jeremy Hunt.

Chaos in the faction increases pressure on Truss

The conservative head of government is fighting for office after she triggered financial chaos with planned tax breaks and had to turn around. But Truss seems to be less and less mistress of the situation. Some of the parliamentary group leadership also reportedly resigned on Wednesday after the government initially declared a parliamentary vote a vote of confidence but backtracked at the last minute.

In the conservative faction, nerves are obviously stretched to the breaking point. The chaos cast “a pathetic light on the Conservative Party and the current government in every respect,” MP Charles Walker said in an interview with the BBC. In his 17 years in Parliament he had never seen anything comparable, Walker reported from Wednesday’s session. “I’m incredibly shocked, I’m angry,” Walker said. According to unconfirmed reports, Chief Whip Wendy Morton resigned shortly after a vote in the House of Commons in which the Conservatives showed little unity.

Source: Stern

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Posts