Top Tory Lee Anderson lashed out at government critics over the state of the economy last night, saying it was ‘nonsense’ that there was poverty in modern Britain.
The party deputy chairman, who has been nicknamed ’30p Lee’ after previous comments on eating on a budget, said while some people were struggling, the country was in a far better state than it was in the 1970s.
In a wide-ranging chat at a Conservative Party Conference fringe event, he said: ‘I don’t believe all this… poverty nonsense. Go in a time machine back into when I was growing up in the 70s, that was real poverty… It’s nonsense now, it’s absolute nonsense.
‘Yeah things are tough, things are difficult for families, people are struggling to budget sometimes, but this is not an impoverished island. This is a wealthy country, if you want something you can go and get it. You need to get off your a*** and go and get it for yourself.’
He also defended the expected announcement that the HS2 rail line north of Birmingham will be scrapped, saying money would be better spent on buses.
In a discussion about how it would quicken journeys to Bradford, he provoked laughter by saying: ‘Anyone here from Bradford? Would you want to get there quicker?’

The party deputy chairman, who has been nicknamed ’30p Lee’ after previous comments on eating on a budget, said while some people were struggling, the country was in a far better state than it was in the 1970s.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will use the most important speech of his premiership to paint himself as an agent of change
After a conference attendee from the city told him it was a ‘cheap shot’, he added: ‘I just cannot believe in this day and age that some people are so intent on fitting in a high speed railway, the length and breadth of the country, digging everywhere, kicking people out of their houses…
‘People can’t get from one village to another on a bus. If everybody could get to that, from one village to another on a bus, I’d have no arguments at all. I’d say fine, go for it. It’s about being fair.’
After the event for the Conservative Home website, Councillor Susan Hinchcliffe, the leader of Bradford Council, told The Telegraph and Argus newspaper: ‘It’s no wonder that the Government’s much-heralded levelling up has not happened in the north if this is the attitude of the Conservative Party deputy chair.’
The Ashfield MP, who had been a Labour councillor before defecting to the Tories and getting elected for the first time in 2019, is well-known for his bluntness and remarks about poverty and other subjects.
He gained his nickname by claiming people could feed themselves on 30p a day, attacked migrants who did not want to live on the Bibby Stockholm barge and refused to watch the England football team while they ‘take the knee’ in protest at racial injustice before games.
He was also criticised for taking a £100,000 role as a presenter with GB News after previously criticising MPs taking second jobs to top up their £86,000 salary.
Rishi Sunak is expected to defy a backlash from Tory colleagues and northern leaders by abandoning the high-speed rail route to Manchester as he seeks to portray himself as a radical reformer.
Rishi Sunak will use a crucial Tory conference speech today to vow to fix Britain’s ‘broken’ politics – after Suella Braverman’s immigration ‘hurricane’ warning split the party.
The PM is braced for his big moment just before noon as he wraps up what is likely to be the final Conservative gathering before a general election.
Mr Sunak will say he is the leader to end 30 years of failed ‘status quo’ in what is being billed as a highly personal pitch to voters.
The importance of making an impact today was underscored with another poll showing the Tory bounce after he watered down net-zero commitments has reversed.
However, he is also poised to spark controversy by axing HS2’s Manchester leg, instead pumping billions into other northern transport projects.
And internal tensions have flared up in the wake of the Home Secretary’s dramatic speech yesterday, when she delivered a grim vision of the threat to Britain’s borders.
Ms Braverman said a ‘wind of change’ had brought her own parents from Kenya to the UK, but cautioned that a ‘hurricane is coming’ – painting a dire picture of the country being concreted over in a futile effort to accommodate millions of arrivals.
Business Secretary Kemi Badenoch – seen as a potential rival to be the next Conservative leader – warned politicians have to be ‘careful’ about words.
‘We have to be very careful about how we explain and express immigration policies, so that people aren’t getting echoes of things that were less palatable,’ she said.
Science Secretary Michelle Donelan declined to repeat the language used by Ms Braverman.
She told BBC’s Newsnight: ‘My language is different to her language… I think that she’s trying to emphasise how important it is that we tackle something that the British public are deeply concerned about.’
Defence Secretary Grant Shapps played down concerns that the speech was inflammatory. ‘She makes the absolutely correct point we’ve already seen a lot of movement… we could see a lot more, a hurricane, as she describes it, of people moving,’ he told Times Radio.
Asked about comparisons which have been made to Enoch Powell’s infamous ‘rivers of blood’ speech, he said: ‘So many people are from immigrant backgrounds in this country. I think I’m third generation myself… Suella’s first generation, her parents came over in the 60s. So this is certainly no Enoch Powell situation, is it, to make the very obvious point.’
Mr Sunak will use the most important speech of his premiership to paint himself as an agent of change who is willing to make tough decisions in the country’s long-term interests.
He will acknowledge that Westminster politics is ‘broken’ and declare a mission to ‘fundamentally change our country’.
And he will accuse Sir Keir Starmer of a cynical attempt to win the election by default.
The run-up to today’s speech has been overshadowed by a furious row over the future of the troubled HS2 rail line.
Mr Sunak will convene an emergency meeting of the Cabinet this morning to rubber stamp proposals that will scrap the northern leg from Birmingham to Manchester – amid Tory dismay that bungled handling has allowed the row to run for weeks and dominate the conference.
The PM yesterday said the bill for the project – now estimated at more than £100billion – was ‘far beyond what anyone thought’ when it began.


In a red meat address to the party faithful yesterday Suella Braverman (left) warned of an immigration ‘hurricane’ coming – but Kemi Badenoch (right) said politicians need to be ‘careful’ about their language
Today he will unveil detailed plans to plough the billions of pounds saved into improving transport infrastructure in the North and Midlands.
This will include a renewed commitment to the Northern Powerhouse Rail project which aims to revolutionise east-west services stretching from Hull to Liverpool via Leeds and Manchester.
The plan for an HS2 station at Euston also appears to have been saved, following a rearguard action by Chancellor Jeremy Hunt.
Mr Shapps all but confirmed the move today, stressing that HS2 trains will still run and ‘tens of billions’ will be freed up for other investment.
The proposal to axe the northern leg of HS2 has triggered a massive backlash from business, Labour and senior Tories, including Boris Johnson and West Midlands mayor Andy Street.
Mr Sunak will argue that HS2 is the product of a failed consensus – and insist that ‘levelling up’ projects in the North will be delivered more quickly and effectively without it.
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