LONDON, UK
Liz Truss was on Monday
announced as the UK's next prime minister, after winning an internal leadership
contest of the ruling Conservative party.
The foreign secretary beat her
rival, former finance minister Rishi Sunak, by 81,326 votes to 60,399, after a
summer-long internal contest sparked by Boris Johnson's resignation in July.
Truss becomesthe UK's third
female prime minister following Theresa May and Margaret Thatcher.
The 47-year-old has consistently
led 42-year-old Sunak in polling among the estimated 200,000 Tory members
eligible to vote.
The leadership contest began
in July after Johnson announced his departure following a slew of scandals and
resignations from his government.
Postal and online voting
closed Friday after eight weeks of campaigning that Truss described to the BBC
as "the longest job interview in history".
Truss told the Daily Mail that
as prime minister she would "do everything in my power to make sure
everyone, no matter where they are from, has the opportunity to go as far as
their talent and hard work takes them".
However, she faces a tough
task in winning over general public opinion.
A YouGov poll in late August
found 52 percent thought Truss would make a "poor" or
"terrible" prime minister.
Forty-three percent said they
did not trust her "at all" to deal with the burning issue of the rise
in the cost of living.
Whoever emerges as winner
faces "the worst in-tray for a new prime minister since Thatcher",
The Sunday Times wrote.
The UK is gripped by its worst
cost-of-living crisis in generations, with inflation soaring into double digits
and energy prices shooting up on the back of Russia's war in Ukraine.
Millions say that with bills
set to rise by 80 percent from October -- and even higher from January -- they
face a painful choice between eating and heating this winter, according to
surveys.
"If I'm elected prime
minister, I will act immediately on bills and on energy supply," Truss
told the BBC on Sunday, while declining to go into details.
British newspapers, including
the Times and Daily Telegraph, reported Monday that she was considering
freezing energy bills for consumers, with the government reimbursing suppliers.
Truss has campaigned on a
promise to slash taxes and prioritise economic growth, with Britain tipped to
enter recession later this year.
She said Sunday she would
"within a month present a full plan for how we are going to reduce
taxes" and "get the British economy going".
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