Liz Truss battling open revolt as number of Tory MPs demanding she goes doubles
The tally hit a dozen within a couple of hours after the Prime Minister oversaw a day of abject chaos.
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Your support makes all the difference.Liz Truss was battling an open revolt as the number of Tory MPs demanding her resignation swelled after a calamitous 24 hours for her premiership.
The number of Conservatives publicly calling for the Prime Minister to quit doubled to a dozen within the space of a couple of hours on Thursday morning.
Tory MPs were wondering how long Ms Truss can go on after the chaotic scenes in the Commons that followed the resignation of Suella Braverman as home secretary.
But Transport Secretary Anne-Marie Trevelyan insisted that, āat the momentā, she believes Ms Truss will lead the party into the next election.
Senior backbencher Simon Hoare was unable to say whether the country has a functioning Government as he gave Ms Truss ā12 hoursā to fix the situation.
The pound, which faced a battering over the disastrous mini-budget, slid again as City traders digested the growing turmoil in Westminster.
Six Conservatives demanded Ms Trussās exit before the morning was out, with the number expected to rise further ā with the scale of private demands believed to be far higher.
Veteran Tory Sir Gary Streeter said it now seems they must change leader but warned the Tories could still face āslaughter at the next electionā even if āangel Gabrielā took over.
Sheryll Murray said Ms Trussās position was āuntenableā after ugly scenes including allegations of bullying in the Commons and No 10 unable to say for hours whether the whips had quit.
Miriam Cates told Times Radio āitās time for the Prime Minister to goā, with Henry Smith demanding she does the āhonourable thingā in order to get āsolid leadershipā.
But who would succeed Ms Truss remained a major point of contention, with Steve Double demanding a unity candidate such as Rishi Sunak after Ms Truss ālost controlā.
Former culture secretary Nadine Dorries, however, was tipping Boris Johnson, forced out just months ago over a series of scandals, to take over again.
The turmoil appeared to be affecting the pound as sterling declined by 0.27% to 1.119 against the US dollar ā its lowest reading this week.
The events of Wednesday saw Ms Braverman lash out at Ms Trussās ātumultuousā premiership as she resigned and accused the Government of ābreaking key pledgesā including on immigration policy.
Her departure, just five days after Kwasi Kwartengās sacking as chancellor, means the Prime Minister has lost two people from the four great offices of state within her first six weeks in No 10, with all eyes on whether other Cabinet ministers could follow suit.
The exodus appeared to continue, with speculation chief whip Wendy Morton and her deputy Craig Whittaker had resigned in fury at the handling of a vote on a Labour motion over fracking.
At 9.49pm ā over two hours after the vote ā No 10 issued a statement saying both remained in post.
In an extraordinary further update at 1.33am, Downing Street said the Prime Minister has āfull confidenceā in both of them.
It came after climate minister Graham Stuart told the Commons minutes before the vote that āquite clearly this is not a confidence voteā, despite Mr Whittaker earlier issuing a ā100% hardā three-line whip, meaning any Tory MP who rebelled could be thrown out of the parliamentary party.
No 10 later said Mr Stuart had been āmistakenlyā told by Downing Street to say the vote should not be treated as a confidence motion, and that Conservative MPs were āfully awareā it was subject to a three-line whip.
A spokesman said the whips would be speaking to the Tories who failed to support the Government, and those without a āreasonable excuseā would face āproportionate disciplinary actionā ā although that does not necessarily mean whey would have the whip removed.
The confusion led to ugly scenes at Westminster, with Cabinet ministers Therese Coffey and Jacob Rees-Mogg among a group of senior Tories accused of pressuring colleagues to go into the ānoā lobby, with Labour former minister Chris Bryant saying some MPs were āphysically manhandled into another lobby and being bulliedā.
Business Secretary Mr Rees-Mogg insisted he had seen no evidence of anyone being manhandled, but senior Tory MP Sir Charles Walker said what took place was āinexcusableā and āa pitiful reflection on the Conservative Parliamentary Partyā.
Ms Trevelyan told Sky News it is ānever acceptableā for MPs to be āmanhandledā into voting, adding she was āshockedā by reports from the Commons.
She said Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle would be investigating āto ensure that these scenes and indeed these situations do not happen againā.
Tory rebels were confused over whether they still had the party whip, with Siobhan Baillie saying: āI donāt know but I hope so.ā
In a sign of the growing pressure on Ms Truss, Tory former Brexit minister Lord Frost joined calls for her to step down.
āThe Government is implementing neither the programme Liz Truss originally advocated nor the 2019 manifesto. It is going in a completely different direction,ā the Conservative peer, who backed Ms Truss to be Prime Minister, wrote in The Telegraph.
āThere is no shred of a mandate for this. Itās only happening because the Truss Government messed things up more badly than anyone could have imaginedā¦ Something has to give.ā
There is speculation the chairman of the Tory backbench 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady, has already received more than 54 letters calling for a confidence vote in the Prime Minister, the threshold for triggering one if Ms Truss was not in the 12-month grace period for new leaders.