If Conservative members vote to send Ms Truss to Downing St they will hand her a national rescue mission that would daunt her predecessors and will define her life.
Thankfully, her powerful record of achievement gives us confidence she will not only lead the UK through the battles ahead, but ensure the next generation inherits a richer, stronger and healthier nation.
Ms Truss’s searing personal ambition is only matched by her passion for Britain.
She yearns to do more than fix the immediate problems confronting our communities; she wants to transform our standing in the world so not a single one of the abundant opportunities unlocked by Brexit is squandered.
That hunger for change is shared by millions of citizens who for years have watched men in suits trundle in and out of Whitehall without ever delivering the true rejuvenation of our former industrial heartlands.
People who voted Conservative for the first time in 2019 – because they long for prosperity to spread far beyond London and the South East – can be assured that Ms Truss burns with that same desire.
Right now, she is in the final stages of an audition for one of the toughest jobs in the world. If she wins, she will arrive at No 10 just as the cost-of-living crisis threatens to push working families into ruin, with the Bank of England briefing that the country is about to slump into a long recession.
This story is from the August 14, 2022 edition of Sunday Express.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 14, 2022 edition of Sunday Express.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Armchair viewers' blank afternoon
TEMPERATURES below freezing wiped out both of the ITV fixtures yesterday leaving viewers without any live racing to watch.
Kyrgios slams Sinner and will not be silenced
NICK KYRGIOS has warned he is not going “to shut up” about Italian hero Jannik Sinner’s failed drug tests in the build-up to the Australian Open.
Will power for Sarries
TOM WILLIS surged over for two tries to give England boss Steve Borthwick another compelling reminder that his Test debut is overdue.
NOW HAAL'S WELL AGAIN AT ETIHAD
THE crisis is officially over and normal service has resumed.
NWANERI ONLY HIGH SPOT FOR GUNNERS
Lacklustre draw deals title hopes fresh blow
Stroke victim meets cops who saved her
A WOMAN who had a cardiac arrest and stroke while driving and miraculously survived has been reunited with the officers who saved her life.
Mum's cash crisis after cancer bills
A MOTHER-of-three whose mouth cancer was missed due to Covid restrictions is now facing eviction after failing to pay bills during her two years of treatment and rehabilitation.
100 'jump dock' at court despite £7m safety drive
MORE than 100 prisoners have escaped custody by jumping out of the dock during the last seven years - despite a government-funded scheme to make courts more secure.
We must teach pupils why Britain is 'Great'
ALMOST from the moment the first child crossed the threshold and entered a classroom, governments, dictators and other political leaders have sought to use education as a means of indoctrination and controlling the population.
Half a billion in pensions to dead people
BUNGLING civil servants overpaid £511.8 million in state pensions and pension credits to dead recipients, and failed to claw back £256.8m of it over the past five years.