Keir Starmer has called for parliament to be recalled as he pushed Liz Truss to abandon the mini-budget that has sparked a market spiral and dramatic intervention from the Bank of England.
The Labour leader said MPs should be called back early given the government had “lost control of the economy”.
The Commons went into recess on Friday until 11 October, meaning ministers cannot be questioned by MPs on concerns from constituents about rising mortgage payments and the cost of living crisis. Truss and the chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, have also given no interviews.
A three-week recess is traditionally held at the end of September and start of October, during party conference season. As delegates from Labour’s conference headed home, Starmer said the Bank of England’s move to buy long-dated UK government bonds was “very serious”.
He told broadcasters: “I think many people will now be extremely worried about their mortgage, about prices going up, and now about their pensions. The government has clearly lost control of the economy.”
Starmer added: “What the government needs to do now is recall parliament and abandon this budget before any more damage is done.”
Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrats, said people had heard “nothing at all from the prime minister” and that the Commons should be recalled so she and Kwarteng could “reassure not just the financial markets but also British homeowners at risk of higher mortgage costs”.
Davey added: “Truss and Kwarteng must come forward and spell out how they will repair the damage from their shambolic budget. Every hour the prime minister and chancellor hide from this economic nightmare increases the chances of interest rates spiralling out of control and people losing their homes.
“We
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