in its opening days to embrace the idea that it would do stuff that was unpopular, it tested that theory to destruction, and then, it buckled. let me give you a sense of the life psych offal this idea that has been junked today. it was originally floated in liz truss s circles over the summer when she was still a candidate to be prime minister. it was fast tracked into that first announcement ten days ago, and then, ten days later, fast tracked straight into the bin. so, people are asking, what happens with the other stuff? all of those difficult decisions we heard faisal talking about there that are coming down the track, will there be sufficiently resolute in government for it to be able to stick to their guns on those policies, where they weren t able to be on a policy that wouldn t have cost them that much money, in the grand scheme of things and only benefitted a slither of the population, so that is the big question being asked here tonight, about the extent to which the governme
reporter: during her acceptance speech, ms. truss promised to cut taxes, and deliver a plan to tackle soaring energy costs. one of two candidates selected by tory law make r es after boris johnson was pushed to resign following one too many scandals, truss was ultimately chosen by less than 1% of the british electorate. a slither of the conservative base, older, whiter, and more white wing than the average voter. she promised a hard line on immigration and tax cuts to a party drifting further to the right, channelling their hero margaret thatcher, even dressing like her. outgoing prime minister boris johnson tweeted support, calling her victory decisive. with just 57% of the vote, truss first challenge will be to unite her party, let alone the country. like half of britain s prime ministers, she studied here at
one of the world s leading democracies that today the new leader of the country wasn t chosen by the british public en ma masse, but by a slither of the electorate, actually, less than 1%, just the conservative membership base and they are typically whiter, older and wealthier than the average voter. so that s probably going to plague her a little bit going forward. what are the mechanics now of when she officially starts the job and how boris johnson exits? reporter: so tomorrow will be the big day. unusually and the first time in the queen s reign she will be doing the prime minister changeover in scotland rather than in the heart of london, which is usually the case. we re told that s because of mobility issues. so boris johnson he will then resign as prime minister and the queen will fly to scott land, have photographs
place in charlotte, north carolina. all these things as a part of a political strategy a fearmongering to cheat up support, because we have a conservative movement where we re not expressive enough to to include more people so the polls shrink their ability to attract more people to their philosophy on how to govern. governing forest has always been about who gets taxed. who s not taxed, and how the tax dollars are spent. you have a narrow slither of individuals seeking to control governance by fearmongering in white communities against the other. jewish communities, african american communities, latino communities. the bottom line is we ve allowed corporate america to get away with it. let s be clear, this stuff is funded, fox news could not exist but fort news to be able to leverage nfl football. be clear about that. facebook could not exist if we