Liz Truss has won the contest to replace Boris Johnson as Conservative Party leader and prime minister.
By The Visual Journalism Team
BBC News
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-60037657
The foreign secretary beat former Chancellor Rishi Sunak in a ballot of Conservative members - winning by about 21,000 votes.
Ms Truss set out some of her policies during the leadership campaign and has promised to hit the ground running. Here are some of the key pledges and plans she outlined.
- Promises to announce a plan to help people and businesses with soaring energy costs within a week of becoming prime minister
- Plans an emergency budget to set out measures that would get the economy growing in order to fund public services and the NHS
- Says she will tackle the crisis by putting money back into people’s pockets, such as by immediately reversing the National Insurance rise
- Promises not to revisit the idea of windfall taxes on energy firms and rules out energy rationing this winter
- Would suspend what is known as the “green levy” - part of your energy bill that pays for social and green projects
- Promises to change taxes to make it easier for people to stay at home to care for children or elderly relatives
- Says the Bank of England needs to do more to tackle inflation, arguing "we haven't been tough enough on the monetary supply" during a leadership debate
Read more about Liz Truss
Who chose the winner?
The Conservative Party said 172,000 people were eligible to vote in the final stage of the contest, or about 0.3% of the total UK electorate, and that about 142,000 voted.
Research suggests that, like members of the other major parties, Tories tend to be older, more middle class and more white than the rest of the population.