Employment and candidatures (1996–2010) From 1996 to 2000, Truss worked for
Royal Dutch Shell, living in
Lewisham and
Greenwich and qualifying as a
chartered management accountant. In 2000 she was employed by
Cable & Wireless and rose to the position of economic director before leaving in 2005; one of her colleagues there, the Labour peer
George Robertson, said that Truss "had a passion for politics... she [was] fresh minded, enthusiastic and the Tory Party needed people like that". In January 2008, after losing her first two elections, Truss became the deputy director of
Reform, a
centre-right think tank, where she advocated for more focus on countering serious and
organised crime, higher standards in schools and action to tackle Britain's "falling competitiveness". She co-authored
The Value of Mathematics,
Fit for Purpose,
A New Level,
Back To Black and other reports. Whilst working at Shell, Truss served as the chair of the
Lewisham Deptford Conservative Association from 1998 to 2000, having been introduced to the branch by her friend and later Conservative MP
Jackie Doyle-Price. During this time, at a reception at the
Greenwich Conservative Association, Truss met her future husband,
Hugh O'Leary, whom she married in 2000 and with whom she has two daughters: Frances (born 2006) and Liberty (born 2008). Truss unsuccessfully stood for election twice in
Greenwich London Borough Council: for
Vanbrugh ward in 1998 and
Blackheath Westcombe in 2002. The deputy leader of Greenwich Conservatives, Graeme Coombes, recalled in 2022 that Truss "said [in 1998] she was hoping to stand for Parliament... she was destined for bigger and better things". However, Alex Grant, the candidate who had defeated Truss in 2002, called her "largely invisible during the campaign". In
the 2006 council election, Truss was elected for
Eltham South, but did not seek re-election to the council in
2010, standing down the day she became an MP. , leader of the Conservative Party from 2005 to 2016|upright=0.8 At the
2001 general election Truss was selected for the
safe Labour seat of
Hemsworth,
West Yorkshire, coming a distant second but achieving a 3.2 per cent
swing to the Conservatives, thought impressive by her party colleagues. The election saw the Conservatives make a net gain of one seat, which was considered a disappointment; the party leader,
William Hague, subsequently resigned, with Truss supporting the former
defence secretary Michael Portillo's unsuccessful leadership campaign. In January 2005 Sue Catling, the parliamentary candidate for the
Calder Valley constituency, was forced to resign by the local Conservative Association because of an affair with the association's chairman. Catling claimed that the members of the party that had opposed her were sexist and said that she was "accused of everything except murder and paedophilia". Truss, who was selected as the candidate for the seat,
narrowly lost to the Labour incumbent after an active Conservative campaign which
The Yorkshire Post described as "
Blitzkrieg". Beginning in 2004, Truss embarked on an 18-month affair with the Conservative MP
Mark Field, which ended shortly after the following year's election. Following the 2005 general election
David Cameron replaced Michael Howard as leader, and Truss was added to
the party's A-List, a list of potential Conservative candidates; in October 2009 she was selected for the constituency of
South West Norfolk by members of the local Conservative Association, winning over 50 per cent of the vote in the first round of the final against five other candidates, including the future deputy prime minister
Thérèse Coffey. Shortly after her selection, some members of the constituency association objected to Truss's selection because of her failure to declare her affair with Field.
The Mail on Sunday was the first to report on the affair, and party members claimed to have been misled over Truss's "
skeleton in the cupboard". A motion was proposed to terminate Truss's candidature; the proponents of Truss's deselection were branded the "Turnip
Taliban" by Conservative Party officials and the press, including by the
Mail, a reference to stereotypes about Norfolk being a county of farmers. There was also controversy over the fact that Truss was not from Norfolk, with some in the association asking for a local candidate and saying that she had been "parachuted in". On 16 November, the motion was put to the association: following both sides making their arguments, including what Cole and Heale call an "impassioned" speech from Truss, it was defeated by 132 votes to 37.
Backbencher (2010–2012) Truss was elected as an MP in the
2010 general election, which saw 148 other Conservatives become MPs for the first time; many of what
The Independent described as the "golden generation" would later reach high ranks in government. The Conservatives did not reach an
overall majority in the
House of Commons and entered into
a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats, with Cameron becoming prime minister. Following her election to Parliament, Truss campaigned for issues relating to her constituency, including the retention of the
Tornado GR4 airbase at
RAF Marham in her constituency; the replacement of the old aircraft with around 150 new
F-35 strike fighters; the conversion of the
A11 west of
Thetford into a
dual carriageway, which was completed in 2014; and preventing a waste incinerator being built in
King's Lynn. Truss co-founded the
Free Enterprise Group (FEG)a grouping of over 30
Thatcherite Conservative MPsin October 2011; the month prior, she had co-authored
After the Coalition with some of the people that would later join the FEG:
Priti Patel,
Kwasi Kwarteng,
Dominic Raab and
Chris Skidmore. The book advocated for a number of policies, including a reduction in the top rate of tax to 40 pence per pound and the introduction of a
carbon tax to reduce pollution. On the publication, Truss wrote: Another book by the same authors,
Britannia Unchained, was published in September 2012. The book attracted controversy for claiming that "the British are among the worst idlers in the world. We work among the lowest hours, we retire early and our productivity is poor". In 2022 Truss stated that the authors had each written a different chapter of the book; Raab had written the chapter which contained that claim. Truss soon became well known amongst members of Parliament in Norfolk for her frequent
photo ops but was well respected amongst Conservative MPs, who recognised her as dedicated and hard-working, and by staff as attentive to local issues. Some of Truss's earliest contributions to parliamentary discourse were on the subject of education: she advocated for more rigorous teaching in school subjects, especially mathematics, calling for mathematics lessons to be compulsory for all students until the age of 18 and expressing concern about a perceived overreliance on calculators from
primary school pupils. Truss criticised "[giving]
media studies the same value as
further maths" and suggested in 2011 that students should have to sit
GCSEs for "5 traditional academic subjects".
Education under-secretary (2012–2014) In September 2012 Truss was appointed as parliamentary under-secretary of state for education and stepped back from the leadership of the FEG, with Kwarteng taking her place. Truss was pleased with her appointment, and praised
Michael Gove, the
secretary of state for the department; she also formed a friendly rivalry with the future
health secretary Matt Hancock. In January 2013, Truss wrote a
white paperMore Great Childcarein which she proposed increasing the maximum number of children
childminders could look after at a time from three to four, as a means of reducing childcare costs. The press, including Conservative-leaning papers like
The Daily Telegraph and
The Times, were largely hostile to the plan. The former claimed that prices would not fall; the latter claimed that "her appointment signal[led] a rapid deregulation of the sector"; and the
Guardian columnist
Polly Toynbee challenged Truss to demonstrate how to care for so many children on her own. Following a negative response from
trade unions and childminders, Truss met with the deputy prime minister,
Nick Clegg, who told her that "some of this is fine" but the maximum childminder increase went "much too far", and advised her to revise the proposal; Truss ignored Clegg and pushed ahead with the plan, angering Clegg, who then blocked the proposals. Truss also announced proposals to reform
A-levels by concentrating exams at the end of two-year courses and said that Britain should attempt to "out-educate" countries in Asia.
Environment secretary (2014–2016) In July 2014 during
a cabinet reshuffle, Truss was appointed
secretary of state at the
department of environment, food and rural affairs (Defra); the changes to the Cabinet made it one third women. She was originally to be made a minister of state, but Cameron changed his mind on the morning of the reshuffle. Her predecessor
Owen Paterson "stormed out" of Cameron's Commons study when told he was to be dismissed; nevertheless, he gave Truss his phone number and offered his support. Paterson was dismissed partly because of his
culling plans for badgers with tuberculosis, which Truss later supported. Early actions at the department included setting up a "food crime unit" to prevent incidents similar to the
2013 horse meat scandal, approving planning for the
Thames Tideway Tunnel and development of
Flood Re, a scheme designed to insure homes at a high risk of flooding. According to the academic
Dieter Helm, Truss, having "no obvious interest" in environmental matters, saw Defra instead as "but a first step on a political ladder she wanted to climb up
asap". She was, along with the Treasury, keen to cut the budgets of bodies such as
Natural England and the
Environment Agency, placing them under stricter direct departmental control:
Rory Stewart, one of Truss's
junior ministers during her second term as environment secretary, claimed that she saw the department "very much in terms of budgets [and] cuts". Under Truss, Defra launched a ten-year strategy to counter falling bee populations, approved the limited temporary lifting of a
European Union ban on the use of two
neonicotinoid pesticides and cut subsidies for
solar panels on agricultural land. Following the
2015 general election Truss was reappointed as environment secretary, although Helm writes that her second period at Defra "saw little change... do as little as possible was the political objective". At the
Conservative Party conference in September 2014 Truss made a speech in which she said "we import two thirds of our cheese. That is a disgrace" and "in December, I'll be in Beijing, opening up new pork markets". Four days after Truss delivered the speech, parts of the video were featured on the satirical panel show
Have I Got News For You; the awkward, stilted delivery led her to be mocked and clips of the speech went viral online. In March the following year Truss was one of two cabinet ministers to vote against the government's proposal to mandate
plain packaging for cigarettes. When she had been asked previously about the issue during a constituency meeting, Truss said "when it comes to things like this, I take a more
libertarian approach... I don't know if it's the government's role to regulate this". During the
2016 referendum on leaving the European Union, Truss endorsed
Remain, saying that the Conservatives had "a golden chance to reform Britain over the next few years" and to avoid "[spending] that time negotiating Britain's exit from the European Union". The referendum resulted in the defeat of Remain and Cameron's resignation; the
home secretary Theresa May won
the ensuing leadership election and subsequently became leader of the Conservative Party and prime minister.
Justice secretary and lord chancellor (2016–2017) In July 2016, Truss was appointed as
secretary of state for justice and
lord chancellor in the
first May ministry, becoming the first female lord chancellor in the office's thousand-year history. May's decision to appoint her was criticised by the
minister of state for justice,
Edward Faulks, who resigned from the government, questioning whether Truss would "have the clout to be able to stand up to the Prime Minister when necessary, on behalf of the judges". Other Conservative members of Parliament criticised Truss's appointment owing to her lack of legal experience; in response, Truss's supporters accused one of the MPs,
Bob Neill, of "thinly veiled misogyny". Before Truss's arrival, the budget of the
Ministry of Justicewhich is responsible for the administration of
British prisonshad been subjected to successive cuts under the coalition government. The cuts were blamed for the prisons' rising rates of violence owing to the consequential drop in prison officer numbers. Truss lobbied the
chancellor of the Exchequer,
Philip Hammond, for £104 million in order to hire an additional 2,500 officers, which Hammond reluctantly delivered. In November 2016, Truss was accused of failing to support the judiciary after three judges of the
High Court were criticised by politicians and by the
Daily Mailwhich ran with the headline "
Enemies of the People"for
ruling against the government on whether
Article 50—which would begin the process of leaving the EU—could be triggered without Parliament's approval. A former lord chancellor,
Charlie Falconer, suggested that, like her immediate predecessors, Truss lacked legal expertise and called for her to be dismissed as justice secretary as her perceived inadequate response "[signalled] to the judges that they have lost their constitutional protector". She denied that she had failed to defend them, writing:
Chief secretary to the Treasury (2017–2019) In June, following the
2017 general election, May demoted Truss from justice secretary to
chief secretary to the Treasury, meaning she could attend cabinet meetings but was not a full member; Truss was enraged and called the demotion "incredibly unfair" and was, according to one of her friends, "seething for a good couple of days". Despite what Cole and Heale describe as her "knocked" confidence from the demotion, Truss soon began to contribute to the department, using it, according to a Treasury worker, "like her own personal think tank" by asking for research and advice on
monetary policy. In her first few months there, she was largely left out of decision-making processes by Hammond, who was described by Kwarteng as "quite a closed, centrally controlling chancellor"; nevertheless, Truss and the Chancellor were reported to have a good relationship. Beginning in December 2017 she developed an enthusiasm for cultivating her presence on
Twitter and
Instagram; Truss began to plan ministerial visits around
photo ops for her social media. Some of her civil servants were reported as finding her tenure as chief secretary "exhausting", owing to her work schedule and asking them multiplication questions, a tactic she had first employed as an MP. Despite her governmental role, Truss remained relatively unknown by the public, with only seven per cent recognising her in March 2019. In June 2018, Truss gave a speech criticising rules and regulations which she said "just g[ot] in the way of consumers' choices and lifestyles", including the government's efforts to reduce alcohol consumption and unhealthy eating habits, and warned that raising taxes could see the Conservatives being "crushed" at the polls. She also attacked colleagues who she said should realise "it's not
macho just to demand more money", a jibe at the defence secretary
Gavin Williamson, who had mounted a largely unsuccessful campaign for an extra £20 billion for his department, including threatening to write "Liz Truss blocked your pay" to everybody in the British Armed Forces. Truss's speech, which also mocked Michael Gove, was criticised by Hammond;
Ed Vaizey, an ally of Gove's; and Gove himself; a speech she gave in November similarly joked about Matt Hancock, the newly appointed home secretary,
Sajid Javid, and the health secretary,
Jeremy Hunt. Before May's resignation announcement on 24 May 2019 Truss had sought the opinion of her colleagues on whether she could credibly stand and courted media attention. As it became apparent she could not win, she ruled herself out the day after May announced her resignation and subsequently endorsed the former
foreign secretary Boris Johnson, the first minister to do so.
International trade secretary (2019–2021) , leader of the Conservative Party from 2019 to 2022|upright=0.8 After Johnson became prime minister, Truss was widely expected to be promoted because of her endorsement of his leadership campaign; it was thought she might have been appointed chancellor or
business secretary, but she was instead promoted to the position of
secretary of state for international trade and
president of the Board of Trade. Following the resignation of
Amber Rudd, Truss was additionally appointed
minister for women and equalities in September that year. Shortly after becoming international trade secretary, Truss embarked on international trips to the US, New Zealand, Australia and Japan. Truss met with her American counterpart
Robert Lighthizer on her first trip to the US, where she gave what Cole and Heale describe as an "incendiary" speech on a potential USUK trade deal. In Australia she made unscripted comments on their free-trade negotiations with Britain; both events were to the dismay of Downing Street officials.
Sebastian Payne described Truss's tenure as international trade secretary as "enthusiastic yet disruptive". She continued to document her trips through social media. In February 2020,
a reshuffle took place following
the general election which had been held in December. Truss feared that she would be dismissed after the comments she had made on her previous international trips, but Johnson decided to keep her in post following Javid's resignation as chancellor. During her time at the department, Truss became notorious for leaking information.
Dominic Cummings, Johnson's chief adviser, later wrote that Truss was "the only minister I shouted at in Number 10" because of her "compulsive pathological leaking". Truss's pursuit of a trade deal with the US concerned some in the
National Farmers' Union (NFU), which worried about an influx of lower-quality food products if passed; the NFU, along with
The Mail on Sunday, campaigned against such a deal in May. The
COVID-19 lockdowns eliminated international travel, and Truss instead attended virtual meetings. By early 2021, Truss's attempted US trade deal was deemed futile. Instead, she focused on
joining the
Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, which necessitated
free trade agreements with Australia, Japan and New Zealand. The Australia deal, finalised in December, was described by one of Truss's aides as "the hardest thing she's ever got through"; the New Zealand deal was agreed to shortly thereafter. By mid-2021 she had started to ingratiate herself with the parliamentary party in anticipation of a leadership election. In September plans for a
National Insurance increase were opposed by Truss; Downing Street expected her resignation, but Truss later decided against it.
Foreign secretary (2021–2022) the day prior to her 2022 meeting with Lavrov|upright=1.25 In September 2021, during a
cabinet reshuffle, Johnson promoted Truss from international trade secretary to secretary of state for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development affairs, replacing
Dominic Raab, who had been criticised for holidaying in
Crete during the
Fall of Kabul; the move was despite Johnson finding Truss "
flaky", according to the historian
Anthony Seldon. Truss became the second woman to occupy the office and kept the post of equalities minister. Her early actions as foreign secretary included negotiating at the
United Nations General Assembly for the release of
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe; meeting with her Japanese, Canadian and German counterparts; mounting an unsuccessful attempt to join the
United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement; and a visit to Estonia where—like
Margaret Thatcher in
West Germany—she was photographed in a tank, with the pictures generating both praise and mockery. In early 2022, Truss's attention was directed towards a
build-up of Russian troops near the
Russia–Ukraine border. Truss supported a plan which
declassified a large amount of intelligence on Russia, releasing it to the public for the first time in order to weaken the Russian government in the event of an invasion. On 10 February 2022, she met the Russian foreign minister
Sergey Lavrov in Moscow, becoming the first British minister to go on a diplomatic trip there since the
2018 Salisbury poisonings. The meeting was, according to Payne, a "disaster": Lavrov described it as being "between the dumb and the deaf", and the two ministers spoke over each other and found it difficult to communicate. Five days later, Truss stated that the world was on the "brink of war in Europe", which transpired in the early hours of 24 February as
Russia invaded Ukraine. Before the invasion and during its immediate aftermath, Truss advocated for
sanctions on Russia and encouraged other
G7 leaders to impose them; in March 2022, she stated that the sanctions would end only in the event of a "full ceasefire and withdrawal". Johnson praised Truss's actions, saying that "she was always terrific on Ukraine... other governments
faffed around... she was very clear and focused". Throughout the first half of 2022, Johnson's position as prime minister became increasingly unstable owing to successive scandals
damaging his government and his personal reputation, including
Partygate, which resulted in him and the chancellor
Rishi Sunak receiving
fixed penalty notices. During this time, Truss announced the
Northern Ireland Protocol Bill, which was intended to overhaul the
Northern Ireland Protocol, including measures to free goods produced in Great Britain from what she described as "unnecessary bureaucracy" entering Northern Ireland. The plan was criticised by the
European Commission but was received well by the
European Research Group—a
Eurosceptic faction within the parliamentary Conservative party—and the right-wing Northern Irish
Democratic Unionist Party. Amid mounting pressure on Johnson following the
Chris Pincher scandal, on 5 July Sunak and Javid resigned within minutes of each other. Johnson again considered giving Truss the chancellorship, but decided against it owing to what Payne calls the "fragile geopolitical situation" and instead selected
Nadhim Zahawi as Sunak's replacement. However, Johnson's premiership proved untenable and on 7 July he announced his resignation as leader of the Conservative Party, a move which Truss called "the right decision".
Leadership election (July–September 2022) On 10 July, Truss announced her intention to run in the
leadership election to replace Johnson. She pledged to cut taxes, said she would "fight the election as a Conservative and govern as a Conservative" and would take "immediate action to help people deal with the cost of living". She said she would cancel a planned rise in
corporation tax and reverse the increase in National Insurance rates, funded by delaying the date by which the national debt was planned to fall, as part of a "long-term plan to bring down the size of the state and the tax burden". The political scientist
Vernon Bogdanor said in a 2022 article that "[Truss] appreciated that winning over the membership required not detailed policy proposals but the creation of a mood". Truss received 50 votes on the first of
Conservative MPs' five ballots, with the number of votes cast for her increasing in each; on 20 July Truss and Sunak were chosen by the parliamentary party to be put forward to the membership for the final leadership vote, with Truss receiving 113 votes to Sunak's 137. In the membership vote, the leader of the
1922 Committee,
Graham Brady, announced on 5 September that 43 per cent of ballots were for Sunak and 57 per cent for Truss, making her the new leader. In Truss's victory speech, she said that she would deliver on her campaign promises and pledged to win a "great victory" for the Conservatives at the
next general election. == Premiership (2022) ==