Home Secretary Suella Braverman has attacked Tory MPs who she claims “staged a coup” against the prime minister over her plan to scrap the 45p tax rate.
Speaking at a Telegraph event at the Conservative Party conference, Ms Braverman said she had been “in favour” of the policy and was “disappointed” by the government’s U-turn.
But while she said she understood why Liz Truss and her Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng had changed direction, she was more “disappointed” by those in her party who had “undermined the authority of our prime minister in an unprofessional way”.
But she warned that a “Benefit Street culture is a feature of modern Britain”, and the government needed to use “a bit more stick” to get “a stubborn core who see welfare as the go to option” back into work.
The tax cut for the wealthiest 1% was one of a raft announced by Mr Kwarteng in his mini-budget less than two weeks ago that led to market turmoil – with the pound plummeting, the Bank of England having to step in to rescue pension funds and mortgage products being withdrawn.
More on Conservatives
Related Topics:
But the particular policy also got a bad reception from a number of Tory MPs at a time when lower earners are facing strife with the cost of living crisis, and prominent former ministers such as Michael Gove and Grant Shapps were among those calling for it to be reversed.
It also saw Labour surge to opinion poll leads of up to 33 points – numbers not seen since the early 2000s.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
10:01
Truss: ‘No shame’ over tax U-turn
Asked about it during a live podcast event in Birmingham, Ms Braverman said: “Ultimately I am very disappointed that members of our own parliamentary party staged a coup effectively and undermined the authority of our prime minister in an unprofessional way.”
She said the PM had talked about tax cuts “extensively” during her campaign for leadership over the summer so the move was “doing what she put on the tin”.
She added: “We should be supporting her, and I am very disappointed to say the least over how some of our colleagues have behaved.”
‘Small mercy’
Levelling Up Secretary Simon Clarke said the home secretary “speaks a lot of good sense, as usual”.
But Tory MP and chairman of the Northern Ireland Select Committee Simon Hoare tweeted a dictionary definition of the word “coup”, adding: “Representing one’s constituents is not a coup.”
Armed Forces Minister James Heappey, who attends cabinet, said the policy suggested the party had “the wrong priorities” and it was right to U-turn.
Speaking to Sky News’ political correspondent Tamara Cohen at a conference fringe event, Mr Heappey said the Treasury team were thinking of “competitiveness and attracting top end global talent” when they made the proposal.
“But when you’re going through a cost of living crisis and the vast majority of people can’t even dream of earning that amount of money, it hints at having the wrong priorities,” he added.
“The parliamentary party is feeling how the wider public are feeling, and the small mercy is that [the leadership] they had the courage to do it quickly because it would have dragged on.”