Liz Truss told to focus on levelling up to narrow north-south divide, northern Tory MPs say

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(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 23, 2022 Britain's Prime Minister Liz Truss walks out of Number 10 Downing Street on her way to the House of Commons for the government's anti-inflation budget plan in London. - UK Prime Minister Liz Truss on September 29, 2022 defended her tax cuts policy, despite it triggering market turmoil and forcing a Bank of England intervention to prevent "material risk" to the economy. "We had to take urgent action to get our economy growing, get Britain moving, and also deal with inflation," she told local station BBC Radio Leeds in her first comments since Friday's mini-budget. (Photo by Daniel LEAL / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL LEAL/AFP via Getty Images)

LIZ Truss has been told to focus on the levelling up agenda to ensure the north-south divide narrows, northern Tory MPs say.

The PM will face the electoral consequences if she doesn’t double down on the pledges made by Boris Johnson to spread opportunity more equally across the country.

Liz Truss has been told to focus on levelling up to narrow the north-south divide, Tory MPs say

The calls come on the eve of the Conservative Party conference which starts in Birmingham this weekend with a call to help the High Street thrive.

A third of voters, including 1 in 5 people who voted Conservative in 2019, would be less likely to vote Tory without noticeable improvement to their nearby area.

Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake added: “Urgent action is needed to help encourage private sector investment into our northern towns and cities.

“Reforming business rates is one such lever which the Government could pull to breathe new life into our local communities.”

Fellow Tory MP John Stevenson said efforts to “retain talent and attract private investment” must be enacted to boost productivity in towns and cities.

Research for the Retail Jobs Alliance, a group of retail businesses and unions, found that of the 50 constituencies with the highest rates of empty shops some 90% are in most need of levelling up.

The report calls on business rates to be frozen before reforming them.

Will Tanner, director of the Onward think tank, warned: “If the Conservatives abandon levelling up, they will not only be letting down millions of voters who believed that promise, they will be forfeiting their chances of a majority.”