Tory leadership branded 'disaster' as Hoyle slams 'revolving door' of candidates for PM

1 year ago
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Tory leadership branded 'disaster' as Hoyle slams 'revolving door' of candidates for PM

The Speaker of the House of Commons has shamed the Conservative Party for the fierce political fallout which saw the UK grapple with three different prime ministers over three successive months.

Sir Lindsay Hoyle has spoken of his disappointment in the Tory Party after months of governmental controversy and instability. The Commons Speaker agreed with the suggestion that the antics of the Conservative Party had made the UK an “international laughing stock” when asked the question on BBC Radio 4's PM show. Reflecting on the past year in politics, he described the Tory leadership as a “disaster” which had threatened to break people’s trust in politics. Highlighting the “revolving door” of senior politicians after swathes of party members resigned, Sir Lindsay suggested he was forced to become the only aspect of “continuity” of Parliament.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4 PM, Sir Hoyle explained: “It was like a revolving door of ministers. 

“I’ve never seen anything like it - it was bizarre

We never knew who was going to be at the dispatch box. 

“The only continuity of Parliament was myself - we were running out of ministers.”

His comments come after Parliament experienced months of turbulence, initially sparked by the partygate revelations that some ministers had broken lockdown regulations.

As pressure mounted on then prime minister Boris Johnson to resign, a flood of Tory ministers, including some members of the leading Cabinet team, stepped down from their posts.

Following the resignation of Mr Johnson, government duties were effectively paralysed as Conservative Party members voted on a new leader over the summer, eventually selecting Liz Truss.

The fervent instability of government continued under Ms Truss as her short premiership was plagued by resignations among senior officials and characterised by her Cabinet’s disastrous mini-budget.

Sir Hoyle told BBC Radio 4: “Brexit divided the country, it divided families, and people’s respect for democracy has struggled. Of course, we didn’t help this year with what went on.”
He added: “Three prime ministers within three months - nobody could have envisioned it.”

Following the resignation of Ms Truss, Rishi Sunak, the runner-up in the summer leadership contest, became the new Prime Minister - marking him as the third prime minister in as many months. 

The Speaker suggested the respected image of the Government “fell apart” amid the Tory chaos, which massively overshadowed “the biggest majority we’ve seen for [the] Conservatives

Sir Hoyle suggested the Conservative chaos had amplified existing political tensions which stemmed from the divisive nature of the Brexit decision.

He noted: “We’re still struggling to recover from Breixt, that’s part of our problem.

“It divided families. There was real division there and we’ve been trying to heal that.”

Looking back on the tumultuous year in politics, Sir Hoyle asserted he had “never ever seen anything like it before”.

Moving forward, he called for “better respect and better tolerance” among MPs to reaffirm the public’s faith in the political system.

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