The Telegraph

Tory leadership race: When is the next hustings in the battle to be prime minister?

The Telegraph logo The Telegraph 09.08.2022 09:44:59 Amira Arasteh
Liz Truss speaks during a Conservative party membership hustings at the All Nations Centre on August 3, 2022 in Cardiff, Wales - Matthew Horwood/Getty Images

Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss will hold their next hustings debate today in Darlington on August 9.

Their last one was in Eastbourne, Sussex, on August 5, when six Extinction Rebellion protesters disrupted the event.

On August 4 they were grilled by Kay Burley and Conservative members on their campaign pledges.

Mr Sunak is under pressure to overhaul his campaign as polling suggests he is lagging behind his rival, but insisted that he would not quit the race.

August 9: Members' hustings in North East 

August 11: Members' hustings in Cheltenham, hosted by The Telegraph's Camilla Tominey. More information and tickets

August 16: Members' hustings in Perth 

August 17: Members' hustings in Northern Ireland 

August 19: Members' hustings in Manchester 

August 23: Members' hustings in Birmingham 

August 25: Members' hustings in Norwich 

August 31: Members' hustings in London

September 2: Deadline for ballots to be returned 

September 5: New Conservative leader and Prime Minister announced

Liz Truss vowed to crack down on "militant activists" after six Extinction Rebellion protesters disrupted the event.

The Foreign Secretary said she would pass new laws to stop hardline unions and activists "who try and disrupt our democratic process and our essential services".

Ms Truss and Mr Sunak also clashed about the likelihood of a recession and the best way to tackle the forecasted downturn and soaring inflation.

Ms Truss, the Foreign Secretary, said a recession could be avoided: "What the Bank of England have said today is of course extremely worrying but it is not inevitable. We can change the outcome."

She insisted her tax cuts, including scrapping the Corporation Tax rise and reversing the National Insurance increase, would help avert the downturn, saying: "You simply cannot tax your way to growth."

Rishi Sunak earlier insisted he will not drop out of the Tory leadership race, despite opinion polls showing that Liz Truss has double his support among party members.

Asked during the Sky News debate on August 4 whether he would quit the race, the former chancellor said: "The quick answer is no". He stressed that he would continue "fighting".

Rishi Sunak was accused of a major U-turn on onshore wind after announcing he would scrap a ban on new turbines.

The former chancellor said at the Cardiff hustings on August 3 that he supported building new wind farms if they had the consent of local communities, and suggested residents could be financially incentivised to support them.

The Truss campaign said it was a "policy flip-flop" after Mr Sunak said last month he did not agree with a plan to relax the ban on onshore wind, which has been in place since the coalition years.

At the event, Liz Truss insisted her public sector pay plans were "misinterpreted" but would no longer proceed after she abandoned a plan to bring in regional pay boards. Ms Truss axed the policy less than 48 hours after announcing it.

Pressed on her "U-turn" at the Wales hustings, Ms Truss said: "What happened was we announced a policy, it was misinterpreted by the media, it was never intended to apply to doctors, nurses and teachers. So I wanted to clear the matter up straight away."

Penny Mordaunt hailed Ms Truss as the "hope candidate" as she became the latest - and one of the most significant - Tory MPs to back the Foreign Secretary.

Speaking at the hustings in Exeter, the former defence secretary said deciding between Ms Truss and Mr Sunak had been "difficult" but that she had "seen enough".

"Her graft, her authenticity, her determination, her ambition for this country, her consistency and sense of duty - she knows what she believes in, and her resolve to stand up against tyranny and fight for freedom," Ms Mordaunt said, introducing Ms Truss.

"That's what our country stands for and that's why I know with her we can win."

Meanwhile, Mr Sunak defended resigning as chancellor from Boris Johnson's government, claiming it wasn't "disloyal" but the "right thing to do".

"It wouldn't have been right for the country to have a prime minister and a chancellor who weren't on the same page about economic policy going into the situation that we are going into," he told Conservative members.

During the first hustings event with Conservative members on July 28, Mr Sunak admitted he was the underdog in the leadership battle, but said he would fight for every vote.

He was confronted by one party member in the audience who told him many people believed he had been "treacherous" against Mr Johnson and had "stabbed him in the back".

Mr Sunak replied that resigning was the right thing to do - and that he would be able to bring the party together.

Mr Sunak originally appeared to say he wanted to bring grammar schools back in England. But his team later confirmed he only meant expanding existing selective schools.

Speaking at the same event in Leeds, Ms Truss said she would review inheritance tax as part of a general review of Britain's tax system.

She said she wanted to ensure girls in schools had access to single-sex toilets.

Ms Truss described herself as a "freedom fighter" on Ukraine, telling party members they could trust her to do all she can to ensure Vladimir Putin is defeated.

In a head-to-head debate dominated by economic issues, the Foreign Secretary claimed Mr Sunak's warnings that her plan would fuel inflation and send interest rates soaring were "scaremongering" and "Project Fear".

But Mr Sunak, the former chancellor, went on the attack as he declared Ms Truss's promise to borrow to fund tax cuts was neither "moral" nor "conservative".

A snap poll by Opinium found Ms Truss was judged by Tory voters to have performed better in the debate, while Mr Sunak won narrowly with all voters.

The debate was cut short after TalkTV presenter Kate McCann fainted around halfway through the hour-long programme.

In the debate in Stoke-on-Trent, Ms Truss accused Mr Sunak of endangering Britain's economy with plans that could push the country into a recession, comparing him to Gordon Brown.

The former chancellor hit back, saying the Foreign Secretary's plans would drive up interest rates and "tip millions of people into misery".

Mr Sunak and Ms Truss made further arguments on tax and had the most substantive discussion of the NHS to date.

Mr Sunak said he does rely on the NHS "as do all of us and I know it's people's priority". While Ms Truss said she was "committed to the extra money that was announced for the NHS".

It is understood that when Ms McCann fainted, Ms Truss dashed over to help her.

During the Sky News event on 4 August, the former chancellor vowed not to stand down from the race despite Ms Truss's significant lead in the polls.

Mr Sunak was asked by an audience member if he would withdraw from the contest at any point and replied: "The quick answer is no. That's because I'm fighting for something I really believe in and I'm taking my ideas across the country."

Ms Truss came under fire over her recent about-turn on her pledge to "introduce regional pay boards tailoring pay to the cost of living where civil servants actually work, saving up to £8.8billion per year".

She said the policy was misinterpreted and she "took an immediate decision not to go ahead with it".

Ms Truss and Mr Sunak also clashed about the likelihood of recession and the best way to tackle the forecasted downturn and soaring inflation.

This article is kept updated with the latest information.

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mardi 9 août 2022 12:44:59 Categories: The Telegraph

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