BSS
  26 Oct 2022, 21:50

UK's new PM delays budget, restores fracking ban

 LONDON, Oct 26, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - In his first full day as Britain's prime

minister, Rishi Sunak on Wednesday delayed a crunch budget and rebuffed
renewed demands for an early general election as he began trying to rebuild
the Conservatives' poll standing.


Following the fiscal chaos seen under his short-lived predecessor, Liz Truss,
Sunak's government said it needed more time to present the full budget --
deferring a Treasury statement due next Monday to mid-November.


He also jettisoned a signature stance taken by Truss, which he also backed
during their summer battle for the leadership. After taking office, she had
made good on the promise to overturn a ban on fracking -- drilling on land
for natural gas -- but Sunak said the ban would return.


The U-turn was back in line with the 2019 manifesto that last brought his
Conservative party to power.


No company had yet come forward to take advantage of Truss's offer, which
risked arousing serious opposition from locals in prospective drilling sites.


Following a meeting of his new cabinet, Sunak engaged in his first
parliamentary joust with opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer, who is riding
high in the polls and says the new Conservative leader lacks a democratic
mandate.


"The only time he ran in a competitive election he got trounced by the former
prime minister, who herself got beaten by a lettuce," Starmer said,
challenging Sunak to face UK voters.


After the scandal-tarred Boris Johnson announced in July that he was
quitting, Truss beat Sunak in a vote by Tory members.


But her right-wing economic programme, based on unfunded tax cuts, collapsed
and she lasted only 49 days -- with a lettuce lasting longer in one newspaper
stunt.


Sunak then beat off an audacious comeback bid by Johnson to become Tory
leader on Monday.


"We will have to take difficult decisions to restore economic stability and
confidence," he told MPs, brushing off Starmer's election call.


"I will always protect the most vulnerable. We did it in Covid and we will do
it again," the former finance minister added.


- 'Test of time' -


Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt -- retained in Sunak's cabinet along
with several other senior ministers -- said that Monday's planned "medium-
term fiscal statement" was no longer so pressing.


Instead, there will be a full budget statement on November 17 to lay out the
new government's tax and spending plans, Hunt told reporters.


The new plan will be accompanied by fresh economic forecasts from the Office
for Budget Responsibility (OBR), which were lacking from Truss's own aborted
plan, and will "stand the test of time", he said.


Hunt said he had discussed the delay with Bank of England governor Andrew
Bailey. The central bank was forced to make several emergency interventions
in recent weeks after Truss's tax-slashing plans sent markets into a
tailspin.


Markets were unperturbed by the postponement, suggesting Hunt and Sunak have
successfully calmed investors' nerves.


Truss left office as the UK's shortest-serving premier in history, replaced
by its youngest since 1812 and first Hindu leader.


Sunak triumphed in a 96-hour Tory leadership contest after rival contender
Penny Mordaunt failed to secure enough nominations from Tory lawmakers and
Johnson dramatically aborted his own bid.


After appointing his top team Tuesday, Sunak spoke to the presidents of
Ukraine and the United States to vow continuity on UK foreign policy,
including ongoing support for Kyiv's resistance following Russia's invasion.


- 'Grubby' -


Sunak has vowed to restore "trust" and "integrity" in government after months
of tumult under Johnson and then Truss.


But critics claimed the new leader had immediately undermined the pledge by
reappointing hardline right-winger Suella Braverman as interior minister,
days after she was forced to resign for a security breach.


Braverman emailed classified government documents outside her department that
reportedly included market-sensitive information from the OBR.


Sunak told parliament that she had "made an error of judgement" but had
"accepted her mistake" and so he was "delighted to welcome her back".


Starmer said her return was "grubby" payback after Braverman backed Sunak
against Johnson's attempt to return to Downing Street.


"There's a new Tory at the top but as always with them, party first, country
second," the opposition leader said.


As well as mending Britain's wounded finances, Sunak is also pledging to
reunite the Conservatives after another bruising leadership contest, mere
weeks after Johnson was forced out.


He has kept Truss's defence, trade and culture ministers among others, as
well as re-hiring some older faces from the Johnson cabinet.