Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has called for an immediate general election following the resignation of the prime minister. Sir Keir said the country “cannot have another experiment at the top of the Tory party”. Liz Truss resigned as prime minister after just 45 days in the job, claiming she “cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected”. A new prime minister is expected to be announced by 28 October. It will be the second Conservative Party leadership election this year. Follow Live: Liz Truss resigns as UK prime ministers. A quick guide to why Liz Truss resigned. Could there be an early election? The Liberal Democrats, the SNP and the Green Party have also been calling for an immediate general election.
SNP Westminster Leader Ian Blackford MP said the “utter chaos at the Centre of the Tory government cannot continue any longer”. Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “We do not need another Conservative prime minister lurching from crisis to crisis, we need a general election. “It is time for Conservative MPs to do their patriotic duty, put the country first and give the people a say.” The next general election is not due to take place until at least 2024, after the Conservatives won a landslide majority in the last one in 2019. Ms Truss was elected by the Tory membership in September, but she lost authority after a series of U-turns. In a brief speech outside Downing Street, Ms Truss said the Conservative Party had elected her on a mandate to cut taxes and boost economic growth. But Ms Truss said: “I recognise that I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party.” Ms Truss said she would remain in post until a successor formally takes over as party leader and is appointed prime minister by King Charles III.
She will become the shortest-serving PM in British history when she stands down. Leading pollster Professor Sir John Curtice said whoever leads the Conservative party next should “enjoy the next 18 months to two years, because that will probably be their tenure”. “Parties and governments who preside over a fiscal crisis have nearly always struggled at the ballot box at the next election,” Sir John said. An Opinium poll this week projected a 1997-style landslide for Labour, with the party winning 411 seats. The same poll, conducted for the TUC interviewing more than 10,000 adults, predicted the Conservatives would be reduced from 356 MPs to 137.