<p>Protesters outside the British Conservative party's annual conference added an air of musical farce after the new government's signature economic policy was left in tatters Monday.</p>.<p>Once they had got past the amplifier-fed rendition of the comedy theme tune from <em>The Benny Hill Show</em>, a global TV hit from the 1970s, many delegates inside were aghast at the turn of events.</p>.<p>Sarah Smith, 47, a Tory councillor from southern England, said she had been coming to the conference for "many, many years".</p>.<p>"It's definitely not upbeat this time. It feels more nervous than any other conference I've been at," Smith told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>Activist nerves were on edge after Prime Minister Liz Truss and her finance minister, Kwasi Kwarteng, abruptly reversed course on their plan to slash taxes for Britain's highest earners.</p>.<p>Rishi Sunak, Truss's defeated rival for the party leadership, and her scandal-tainted predecessor Boris Johnson are among many senior MPs staying away from the conference in Birmingham.</p>.<p>That had left the stage clear for Truss to stamp her authority on the party -- or to squirm in the spotlight of a public-relations mess less than a month into her premiership.</p>.<p>"I wasn't impressed at all at the U-turn. We do have leadership issues," London Tory activist Sapna Chadha, 49, said.</p>.<p>"Who announces something like this and then reverses course overnight? You'd never get away with that in business," she said.</p>.<p>The Truss-Kwarteng plan, which was heavy on right-wing policy prescriptions to fix the UK economy, had encountered stiff resistance on financial markets and deep dislike among voters.</p>.<p>After sticking by the plan for days, even up to Sunday morning, Truss sent Kwarteng out for a painful round of media interviews early Monday to justify dropping the top-rate tax cut.</p>.<p>Some delegates said they had panicked.</p>.<p>Helen Mayer, 50, described herself as a free-market libertarian and said her WhatsApp group of likeminded activists "feel it could have been defended".</p>.<p>"They feel this has been forced by disgruntled MPs who supported Rishi Sunak," she said.</p>.<p>"I want to hear Liz plough on with ideas for growth. I want to see an end to things like net zero, which will just bankrupt us."</p>.<p>Truss is due to close the conference on Wednesday, 22 years after her Tory predecessor Margaret Thatcher declared "the lady's not for turning" on her own economic platform.</p>.<p>By her own admission, today's prime minister is not the slickest speaker. In 2014, Truss gave a bizarre turn to the conference as environment minister, talking up the merits of UK pork and cheese.</p>.<p>Graham Burgess, another Tory councillor, backed Sunak in the leadership race after grassroots favourite Penny Mordaunt was rejected by Tory MPs in initial rounds of voting.</p>.<p>"It's very bumpy, I must admit," he said of the conference, amid mutterings that Truss could face her own leadership challenge before long.</p>.<p>"We want someone who is good at the (parliamentary) despatch box, who commands authority, who can speak with authority and get the message over to the general public," Burgess added.</p>.<p>"I believe Penny Mordaunt could do that. I believe Rishi could do that. Boris could do it in spades.</p>.<p>"So the next few months are going to be very, very interesting."</p>
<p>Protesters outside the British Conservative party's annual conference added an air of musical farce after the new government's signature economic policy was left in tatters Monday.</p>.<p>Once they had got past the amplifier-fed rendition of the comedy theme tune from <em>The Benny Hill Show</em>, a global TV hit from the 1970s, many delegates inside were aghast at the turn of events.</p>.<p>Sarah Smith, 47, a Tory councillor from southern England, said she had been coming to the conference for "many, many years".</p>.<p>"It's definitely not upbeat this time. It feels more nervous than any other conference I've been at," Smith told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>Activist nerves were on edge after Prime Minister Liz Truss and her finance minister, Kwasi Kwarteng, abruptly reversed course on their plan to slash taxes for Britain's highest earners.</p>.<p>Rishi Sunak, Truss's defeated rival for the party leadership, and her scandal-tainted predecessor Boris Johnson are among many senior MPs staying away from the conference in Birmingham.</p>.<p>That had left the stage clear for Truss to stamp her authority on the party -- or to squirm in the spotlight of a public-relations mess less than a month into her premiership.</p>.<p>"I wasn't impressed at all at the U-turn. We do have leadership issues," London Tory activist Sapna Chadha, 49, said.</p>.<p>"Who announces something like this and then reverses course overnight? You'd never get away with that in business," she said.</p>.<p>The Truss-Kwarteng plan, which was heavy on right-wing policy prescriptions to fix the UK economy, had encountered stiff resistance on financial markets and deep dislike among voters.</p>.<p>After sticking by the plan for days, even up to Sunday morning, Truss sent Kwarteng out for a painful round of media interviews early Monday to justify dropping the top-rate tax cut.</p>.<p>Some delegates said they had panicked.</p>.<p>Helen Mayer, 50, described herself as a free-market libertarian and said her WhatsApp group of likeminded activists "feel it could have been defended".</p>.<p>"They feel this has been forced by disgruntled MPs who supported Rishi Sunak," she said.</p>.<p>"I want to hear Liz plough on with ideas for growth. I want to see an end to things like net zero, which will just bankrupt us."</p>.<p>Truss is due to close the conference on Wednesday, 22 years after her Tory predecessor Margaret Thatcher declared "the lady's not for turning" on her own economic platform.</p>.<p>By her own admission, today's prime minister is not the slickest speaker. In 2014, Truss gave a bizarre turn to the conference as environment minister, talking up the merits of UK pork and cheese.</p>.<p>Graham Burgess, another Tory councillor, backed Sunak in the leadership race after grassroots favourite Penny Mordaunt was rejected by Tory MPs in initial rounds of voting.</p>.<p>"It's very bumpy, I must admit," he said of the conference, amid mutterings that Truss could face her own leadership challenge before long.</p>.<p>"We want someone who is good at the (parliamentary) despatch box, who commands authority, who can speak with authority and get the message over to the general public," Burgess added.</p>.<p>"I believe Penny Mordaunt could do that. I believe Rishi could do that. Boris could do it in spades.</p>.<p>"So the next few months are going to be very, very interesting."</p>