Prime Minister Liz Truss must take her C21st growth message to the people [see photo].
More specifically, she must convene Town Hall meetings in the Red Wall electorates. It is there that she must lay out her plans for economic growth and energy renewal. She must stress that GDP growth will not come from the globalists within her government [who promote unstable high-priced renewable energy platforms.] GDP growth for Britain will come from her policies to freeze the public sector, explore fracking opportunities, revisit nuclear power, wind back business regulations, and push ahead with tax cuts.
But to sell the Liz Truss vision of GDP growth and new economic opportunities she must get out of No 10 and travel into the heartland of the Red Wall electorates where she can interact with regular Britons. She must talk to the local media representatives while largely ignoring the non-growth reporters who live and thrive in London. She must show the working and middle class stratum of Britain that Brexit can work for them if they embrace her vision for a robust nation. Inevitably she will be embraced by these folks because they need her help. They need growth policies that favour the individual, family unit, and small business person rather than Fleet Street, the City, and those who control the Bank of England.
Prime Minister Liz Truss has made a wise decision to appoint Jeremy Hunt to the Treasury because he is "a sweet talker" who can put the gloss on her constructive vision for a vibrant economy in this post-Brexit Britain. Brexit was voted for by the Red Wall electorates [not by those in London] and now Prime Minister Liz Truss has the vision to deliver to those electors what they bargained for. But to deliver on that promise she must tell them that she is on their side and that she is determined to return their nation to a growth agenda.
If, and when, Prime Minister Liz Truss leaves the bunker of No 10 for the babble, debate, and controversies encountered on the hustings in the Red Wall electorates she will win her battle with the non-growth elements within her backbench, the media, and the Bank of England.
Richard.
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