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Liz Truss exit sets off another Tory leadership race

Liz Truss has resigned as prime minister after 45 days in office marked by turmoil, triggering the second Tory leadership election in four months.

Ms Truss said her successor would be elected by next week after a rebellion by Tory MPs forced her to quit.

Boris Johnson is among MPs said to be considering bids but Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has ruled himself out.

Tory MPs revolted against Ms Truss after a series of U-turns on her economic plan sapped her of authority.

In a brief speech outside Downing Street, Ms Truss said the Conservative Party had elected her on a mandate to cut taxes and boost economic growth.

But given the situation, Ms Truss said: “I recognise that I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party.”

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and other opposition parties called for an immediate general election following Ms Truss’s resignation speech.

Ms Truss said she would remain in post until a successor formally takes over as party leader and is appointed prime minister by King Charles.

While Mr Hunt – who was appointed chancellor last week – will not challenge for the leadership, none of the candidates who stood against Ms Truss in the previous contest have indicated whether they would stand.

Sir Graham Brady, the chairman of the 1922 committee of backbench Conservative MPs, said it would be possible to conclude a leadership ballot by Friday next week.

He said he expected Conservative members to be given a say on who succeeds Ms Truss, but would set out further details later.

But he sidestepped questions about whether one or two candidates would be likely to run, telling reporters: “The party rules say there will be two candidates unless there is only one candidate.”

Ms Truss will become the shortest-serving PM in British history when she stands down.

Leaders of allied nations thanked Ms Truss for her co-operation, including US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron, who said he wanted “stability” from the next UK prime minister.

In her speech, Ms Truss said she entered “office at a time of great economic and international instability”, as war rages in Ukraine and living costs skyrocket.

The prime minister said her government delivered on providing support for energy bills and reversing a rise in National Insurance, a tax on workers and companies.

But Ms Truss’s resignation comes after a period of political and economic turbulence, which forced her government to ditch tax cuts that sent financial markets into a tailspin.

The prime minister sacked close political ally Kwasi Kwarteng as chancellor and appointed Mr Hunt as his successor as she attempted to calm the markets.

At Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, Ms Truss insisted she was a “fighter, not a quitter” after Labour’s leader asked her why she had not resigned.

But more instability followed, when Suella Braverman quit as home secretary and a vote on fracking fell into disarray, with some Tory MPs accused of bullying.

Remarks made by Sir Graham Brady – that under current rules, the last two candidates from the leadership contest go to the membership unless there’s only one left – suggest there is still a bit of wiggle room.

One of the wheezes that’s been discussed in Parliament in the last few days is that MPs could set such a high threshold that only an MP with a lot of support would get there.

It’s not certain what’s going to happen, to be frank. This is an unprecedented situation.

We should have more details by the end of the day. Sir Graham will be conscious of spelling out how the next leader will be chosen.

There are a lot of MPs who don’t want this to go to the Conservative Party membership – they think a new leader needs to be chosen as quickly as possible.

The logistics of trying to consult the membership in only a week are hard to figure out – unless it was a quick online ballot. But even that would be a hard task.

As for MPs, if they’re to end up choosing the next leader themselves, how can they coalesce around one person? It seems unlikely, impossible even.

Ms Truss’s resignation sets off a scramble to find a successor to lead a deeply divided party, which is lagging behind Labour in the polls after 12 years in power.

Candidates who contested the last leadership election earlier this year included Ms Braverman, International Trade Secretary Kemi Badenoch, Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt, and former Chancellor Rishi Sunak.

Their supporters are talking them up as potential candidates in the contest to succeed Ms Truss, but none have confirmed their position on standing.

Nor has former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose supporters have not denied reports that he is considering standing again for the Conservative leadership.

A source close to Mr Johnson told the BBC they were “not saying anything either way” at the moment.

In a tweet, another former prime minister, Theresa May said “MPs must now be prepared to compromise.

“It is our duty to provide sensible, competent government at this critical moment for our country,” she wrote.

As Tories assessed their chances of winning the leadership, opposition parties poured scorn on the idea of another prime minister taking office without having a general election.

Sir Keir said the Conservative Party “no longer has a mandate to govern”, saying “the British people deserve so much better than this revolving door of chaos”.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said his party would be willing to work with Labour to “get the general election our country needs to let the British people have their say”.

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said a general election was a “democratic imperative” following Ms Truss’s resignation.

The next general election is not due to take place until at least 2024, after the Conservatives won a landslide majority in the last one in 2019.(BBC)

•PHOTO: Liz Truss