Home » World » Pandemonium in Parliament and harsh criticism. Terrace challenges “Baqiah” and that’s what happened in the accountability session (video)

Pandemonium in Parliament and harsh criticism. Terrace challenges “Baqiah” and that’s what happened in the accountability session (video)

With boos and a flurry of criticism, British Prime Minister Liz Terrace opened her government’s interrogation session in Parliament on Wednesday. This time around, however, conservative politics also strongly resisted criticism and ridicule, particularly from the leader of the opposition Labor Party, Keir Starmer.

In contrast to his famous speech last week in which he announced his withdrawal from his economic plan, after his finance minister Kwasi Quarting resigned and apologized to the British, as he looked sad and defeated this time around. it appeared “determined” and solid.

Why are you still here?
To Starmer sarcastically, “Why are you still here after his finance minister resigns?” He defiantly replied: “I’m staying, I’m not retiring.” He underlined: “he acted in the interest of the country”.

She also insisted that she would not step down in a stormy atmosphere in the first impeachment hearing since her tax plan was pulled.

In addition, she repeated her apology, but this time without showing any signs of defeat, as she said: “I was very clear and I apologized, but the changes announced by the government should now be implemented.”

But the swords of the critics have not spared her, indeed they have touched her from all sides, as many parliamentarians have questioned her abilities and her plan.

Some of them also asked, “Why are you here if” your schedule is good, referring to government accountability sessions, while another asked, “Do we refrain from washing our faces with warm water in the winter?”

However, each time he answered and addressed the affirmation of his survival.

Terrace appears to have “run out of feathers” in the first parliamentary interrogation session since new finance minister Jeremy Hunt canceled a package of tax cuts his government announced last month.

Interestingly, the package of unfunded tax cuts announced on 23 September had sparked turmoil in the financial markets and led to a drop in the pound exchange rate, as well as the cost of public borrowing in the UK, which prompted the Bank of England to intervene to prevent the crisis from reaching the macroeconomic framework and endangering the economy Pensions at risk.

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