Truss holds meetings with EU leaders after tumultuous party conference

Politics

Liz Truss will hold meetings with EU leaders today after a chaotic party conference that left Conservatives divided over her policies.

The prime minister arrived in the Czech Republic on Thursday morning for the European leaders’ summit in Prague where she is expected to have bilateral meetings with French President Emmanuel Macron, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, and Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala.

It is expected that Ms Truss will seek to convince the gathering that the UK has continued to play a leading role in Europe despite Brexit – pointing to the country’s support for Ukraine after the Russian invasion.

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She will also discuss reducing Europe’s reliance on Russian energy, joint projects to develop new nuclear and offshore wind capacity, and tackling illegal migration.

Arriving in the Czech Republic on Thursday morning, Ms Truss said Europe must “continue to stand firm” with Ukraine.

The PM posted on social media: “Europe is facing its biggest crisis since the Second World War with unity and resolve. We must continue to stand firm to ensure that Ukraine wins this war, dealing with the strategic challenges that it has exposed.”

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Following Ms Truss’s first meeting of the trip with Czech PM Fiala, a Downing Street spokesperson said the pair “were in strong agreement on the importance of like-minded European democracies presenting a united front against Putin’s brutality”.

“They discussed the UK and Czech Republic’s early support for Ukraine’s defence and the need to continue military aid, help on reconstruction and sanctions on Putin’s regime,” the spokesperson continued.

“The prime minister and Prime Minister Fiala also noted opportunities for our countries to work together to secure long-term energy supplies, including cooperation on nuclear and renewables.”

The summit comes after Irish foreign minister Simon Coveney revealed the UK and EU would be holding talks this week to resolve issues around the Northern Ireland Protocol – part of the Brexit deal aimed at preventing a harder border on the island of Ireland, but that led to a border being placed in the Irish Sea.

He told reporters: “Both sides have agreed to engage this week – this is a very welcome change of course that the British government is engaging now seriously.”

But while Ms Truss will be facing issues abroad, there will be more problems waiting for her at home after the tumultuous Conservative gathering in Birmingham this week.

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Truss’s month of mayhem: From bumpy rides to Balmoral to bumpier battles in Birmingham

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Truss: There will be disruption – and not everyone will like it

The event saw the new government perform a U-turn on one of its headline policies from Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget – cancelling its proposed scrapping of the 45p tax rate for the wealthiest 1% of earners.

It came after markets were thrown into turmoil by the fiscal event, with the pound plummeting, mortgage products being withdrawn, and the Bank of England having to step in to save pension funds.

A row also broke out between different factions in the party – including within her own cabinet – over whether to increase benefits in line with inflation, as promised by former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, or to see them face a real terms cut amid the cost of living crisis.

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Closing the conference with a keynote speech, Ms Truss vowed to “get Britain through the tempest” and insisted “everyone will benefit” from the result of her economic policies.

But Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said she “must reverse her kamikaze budget”, adding: “The burden of the Tories’ fantasy economics should not fall on working people.”

He also referred to Ms Truss as the “destroyer of growth” in response to the PM’s suggestion that Labour is part of an “anti-growth coalition”.

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