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Liz Truss officially Prime Minister after meeting with Britain's Queen Elizabeth

The handover of power from Boris Johnson to Liz Truss is taking place at the queen’s Balmoral estate.

LAST UPDATE | 6 Sep 2022

featureimage The British queen welcomes Liz Truss during an audience at Balmoral, Scotland Jane Barlow Jane Barlow

LIZ TRUSS HAS become the new UK Prime Minister after being invited to form a new government by the British queen at Balmoral. 

The new Prime Minister is the 15th premier of the Queen’s 70 years on the throne.

In a statement this afternoon, Buckingham Palace said: “The Queen received in audience The Right Honourable Elizabeth Truss MP today and requested her to form a new administration.

“Ms Truss accepted Her Majesty’s offer and kissed hands upon her appointment as Prime Minister and First Lord of the Treasury.”

Following the meeting with the queen, Truss, who was joined by her husband Hugh O’Leary, said her goodbyes to the monarch’s private secretary and her equerry in a reception hallway and was waved off by the royal aides.

She will now head to Downing Street to deliver her first speech in office, just hours after Boris Johnson used his farewell address to pledge “fervent support” to his successor.

Liz Truss has left Balmoral after becoming the first Prime Minister of the Queen’s reign to be appointed by the monarch at her private Scottish home of Balmoral.

The new Prime Minister is the 15th premier of the Queen’s 70 years on the throne.

Truss, who was joined by her husband Hugh O’Leary, said her goodbyes to the Queen’s private secretary and her equerry in a reception hallway and was waved off by the royal aides.

The Prime Minister followed Johnson to the queen’s Scottish estate and, shortly after he tendered his resignation, she had an audience with the monarch to become the 15th premier of her reign.

Truss’ top priority will be to deliver a package of support for households and businesses facing crippling energy costs, with speculation she is working on a plan to freeze bills which could cost tens of billions.

Johnson used his speech on departing No 10 to call on the Tory party to unite behind Truss, but he could not conceal his bitterness at the way he was ousted.

He suggested he would now slip into political obscurity, although a reference to Roman statesman Cincinnatus fuelled speculation he could consider a comeback.

In his farewell speech outside No 10, the outgoing Prime Minister said his successor’s administration would do “everything we can” to help people struggling with the cost-of-living crisis.

Johnson said Russian leader Vladimir Putin was “utterly deluded” if he thought he could succeed by “blackmailing and bullying” the British public through restricting gas supplies, driving up world prices.

Johnson said the UK had the “economic strength to give people the cash they need”.

“I know that Liz Truss and this compassionate Conservative government will do everything we can to get people through this crisis and this country will endure it and we will win.”

Johnson said “I will be offering this government nothing but my most fervent support”, calling for Tories to unite behind the new leader at a “tough time for the economy”.

Watched by wife Carrie Johnson, he added that if the couple’s dog Dilyn and Larry the No 10 cat can “put behind them their occasional difficulties”, then “so can the Conservative Party”.

But in a sign of lingering resentment at the manner in which he was forced out, Johnson said “the baton will be handed over in what has unexpectedly turned out to be a relay race, they changed the rules halfway through, but never mind that now”.

He said his career was now like a booster rocket “that has fulfilled its function and I will now be gently re-entering the atmosphere and splashing down invisibly in some remote and obscure corner of the Pacific”.

Johnson declared “like Cincinnatus, I am returning to my plough” – before entering No 10, an ambitious Johnson had frequently said he would serve as prime minister if he was “called from my plough”.

london-uk-07th-july-2022-british-prime-minister-boris-johnson-resigns-with-a-speech-outside-10-downing-street-in-westminster-london-uk-credit-imageplotteralamy-live-news British Prime Minister Boris Johnson resigns with a speech outside 10 Downing Street in Westminster, London Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

In a statement issued shortly after Truss officially became PM this afternoon, Taoiseach Micheál Martin extended his “congratulations”.

“A shared history and close ties of people, of economy, and of culture link our two countries. A strong partnership between our two Governments is vital to underpin the Good Friday Agreement and support peace and prosperity on these islands,” Martin said. 

“I hope we can use the period ahead to prioritise EU-UK engagement, and to reach agreed outcomes on the issues around implementation of the Northern Ireland Protocol,” he said. 

“I am committed to a strong and deep relationship between our countries, and to working in an open and constructive way with Prime Minister Truss,” the Taoiseach added. 

“I look forward to our close cooperation and early engagement as we face important issues on these islands and globally.”

Today’s agenda

Truss will now begin putting in place her team of officials and ministers, with key allies and supporters already pencilled in for some of the most senior roles, including Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng who is widely expected to be given the crucial role of chancellor.

The energy support plan could be announced as soon as Thursday.

The Daily Telegraph reported that among the measures under consideration was a scheme to freeze bills until the next general election in 2024, while the Times suggested the measures could also apply to businesses who energy prices were not covered by the household cap.

Details have yet to be announced, with Bloomberg suggesting the Truss administration could directly fix a new unit price that households will pay for electricity and gas, with regulator Ofgem sidelined from its role in setting the price cap, while a separate level could be fixed for business supply.

Treasury chief secretary Simon Clarke, a close ally of Truss, declined to give details of the package.

But he said: “There is a clear commitment to rise to the level of events and to provide early certainty to families and businesses that there will be help available to meet the undoubted challenges that this autumn and winter are going to bring.”

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today: “It will be a major moment, I think, in terms of drawing a line under the sense of uncertainty which undoubtedly is present in the country at this time.”

Senior opposition politicians said the freeze must not be paid for through loans which would be recouped from future energy bills, instead calling for the burden to fall on oil and gas giants.

Includes reporting by Press Association 

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    Mute Mary Linton
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    Apr 11th 2025, 7:22 AM

    A good & timely article. Unfortunately, we will never make progress as long as the deterrent, the sanction, is so miniscule as to be irrelevant. This is not even the fault of the judiciary as their hands are tied in that the maximum permitted ‘punishment’ for wildlife/ environmental crimes is so inconsequential. The stautes/legislation needs to be amended & updated as a matter of urgency

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    Mute Emma Smith
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    Apr 11th 2025, 8:27 AM

    I agree we need enforcement of laws and bigger penalties but a greater emphasis needs to be on incentives for Farmers and landowners to steward the land in an environmentally sensitive way. It will also take some reeducation after decades of encouraging farmers to do exactly the opposite!

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    Mute Mary Linton
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    Apr 11th 2025, 8:35 AM

    @Emma Smith: Morning Emma, ‘cart before the horse’ though isn’t it? Proper enforcement AND serious sanctions need to be front& centre

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    Mute Thomas Sheridan
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    Apr 11th 2025, 8:48 AM

    So it’s the farmers’ fault – and it often is.
    But no mention of the Mourne mountain fire, started by an arsonist. Or the Killarney fire, started by a portable barbacue – not a typical farmers item.

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    Mute Shane Gallagher
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    Apr 11th 2025, 10:26 AM

    Ireland has less than 2% native forests. The rest are non native evergreens. It would be nice to replace them with native trees.

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    Mute Hunt Ley
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    Apr 11th 2025, 4:21 PM

    @Shane Gallagher: Why? They won’t produce lumber to build your home or make paper.

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    Mute Shane Gallagher
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    Apr 12th 2025, 12:05 PM

    @Hunt Ley: Evergreen forests in Ireland are not grown to be used for construction or producing paper. We import those products. The main intended purpose for evergreen forests was to offset carbon dioxide emissions. The government provides grants to landowners willing to use their land for forestry.

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    Mute AnthonyK
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    Apr 11th 2025, 7:45 AM

    OK. If a fire begins naturally, say from lightening, should we as humans, interfere and put that fire out or allow it to burn uncontrollably?

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    Mute thomas molloy
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    Apr 11th 2025, 9:16 AM

    @AnthonyK: Humans planted forests and built houses and would naturally protect them.

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    Mute Thesaltyurchin
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    Apr 11th 2025, 10:13 AM

    @AnthonyK: Before we were brainwashed into thinking that paradise is somewhere else we used to worship nature and the natural world. Real shame those belief systems were not allowed to evolve really, we would certainly be more involved with maintaining and utilising the planet, we’re so far from anything like that tho, addicted to the effects of another human construct, that of wealth.

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    Mute Nicholas Grubb
    Favourite Nicholas Grubb
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    Apr 11th 2025, 7:46 AM

    Pádraic, do us one on why we should be re introducting the Beaver, a move that would do more for the restoration of our natural state than any other. “Oh but they were never here” – bollocks.!

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    Mute Sea Spirit
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    Apr 11th 2025, 8:36 AM

    @Nicholas Grubb: But sure they weren’t.

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    Mute Rian O’Callaghan
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    Apr 11th 2025, 8:14 AM

    What a load of absolute nonsense article

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    Mute Hunt Ley
    Favourite Hunt Ley
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    Apr 11th 2025, 2:43 PM

    Where is my comment that was posted hours ago? Just because it disagrees with Fogarty’s anti forestry distribution is no reason to remove it.
    Fogarty is neither a forester nor a silviculutist. Just because he limes trees foes not make him an authority.
    Shame on the Journal for partisan censorship.

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    Mute Rian O’Callaghan
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    Apr 11th 2025, 2:47 PM

    @Hunt Ley: What do you expect its like China for the propaganda on the journal.

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    Mute Ailbhe MacThomais
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    Apr 11th 2025, 7:35 PM

    Maybe an approach of eco tourism in areas the farmers get tax free earnings from cycling, walking, wildlife photography individuals or groups bed and breakfast for the particular months mentioned not to cut or till the land would maybe help nature. Any damage to the local area by farmers or county council will result in fines or cut back in county council amount of money given by central government. Farmers any EU funding also cut as a deterrent.

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