While @trusskliz tries to convince her party she knows what she's doing, these are the men and women she refuses to meet.
Last week, nuclear veteran families held a reunion, and wrote her some messages. 1/plenty
Julie Soan, whose dad took part in firing the biggest weapon Britain's ever had, Operation Grapple Y, in 1958: "I seek justice for him."
David Witcomb, who was on National Service when ordered to Christmas Island after it had been covered by radioactive fallout. "Please, before we are all gone."
Gordon Craggs, sent to Christmas Island by the US govt to witness 24 US nuclear explosions with a combined yield 1,900 times that of Hiroshima: "Listen. Think. Act."
John Oates, who worked on planes that flew through the mushroom clouds: "I helped keep us all safe for the past 70yrs. Ms Truss be the first PM to recognise what the forces did for the country during the Cold War years."
Barbara Butler, whose husband died of multiple cancers after Op Grapple, and whose daughter has a litany of birth defects: "Please keep your predecessor's promise to us."
Matthew Waddell, whose grandad won a force *competition* for a holiday on Christmas Island during the tests, and who has had a spinal tumour removed not long ago: "I would like an apology."
Mike Dillon, who worked in the stores troop: "What about recognition for all the lads on the island and all that have passed away."
Widow Maureen Barber: "I find it difficult to believe that troops sent to the Pacific for nuclear testing have had no recognition from the UK."
Wheelchair-bound Suzanne Eades-Willis, whose father was at the tests: "Surely the promise made by Boris must be honoured promptly."
Her daughter Charlotte, who has autism: "We aren't going away."
Brian Unthank, who's had multiple cancers: "Don't you think the phrase risk and rigour is very over-used and rather defunct with all the rare illnesses the veterans and families are experiencing."
Malcolm Smith: "A medal for the heroes, please."
Widow Marion Gumbrill, whose husband took part in radioactive experiments in the Outback: "My husband has died, but his demons from Maralinga live on. Help me to give him justice and put his demons to rest for him and his family."
Hazel Davies, who wants you to know she's 82, has cared for her husband through failing health for 40 years. "Please Prime Minister, help all the veterans."
Bill Lawrie, who took part in clean-up operations: "Say 'thank you' now, not 'we will remember them' later."
Ernest Bow, whose dad David was in the RAF squadron which flew sampling missions: "Why are we the last country that has not given a medal or compensation?"
Long-time campaigner Dennis Hayden: "If the MoD stopped lying about the nuclear tests, we'd stop telling the truth about the MoD."
Finally, Eric Barton, who survived cancer, and was compensated by the American government after the UK ordered him to take part in their testing programme: "Look me in the eye, and recognise me."
These are the men and women who @trussliz has refused to meet. Those are the things they want to say to her.
Today is the #PlutoniumJubilee, 70 years since Britain's first bomb test. And it's also the deadline the government was given - a YEAR ago - to deliver recognition.
So far, they've been promised £450k next April. More than half will go to an institution to record their stories, with the remaining £200k available to be bid for by charities.
It's the equivalent of £133 a head for the 1,500 survivors. Does that sound like enough?
If you include the estimated 155,000 descendants of the original 22,000 men who served, it's equivalent to £1.28.
Each.
£1.28.
Does THAT sound like enough?
"What an awful time you've had, tell you what, here's £1.27 and a CD of your own life story, we won't admit or apologise for anything, and you're welcome."
Last week I told No10 that @JohnnyMercerUK and @DanJarvisMP were joining forces to warn Truss was in danger of betraying these heroes. On the day we published, No10 put out a press release - to other outlets, not me - saying there'll be a £450k 'tribute' to test veterans.
Those outlets which picked it up, with the best of intentions, can have very little appreciation of how little it means. Some are just repeating it word-for-word as though it's jolly nice of the government to notice.
No. No it's not.
This cannot be left to the MoD. It cannot be left on the bottom of the pile.
Evidence is building of the sort that governments cannot ignore any longer.
Johnny, @JPAOwen and unnamable others have had their shoulder to the wheel on this for weeks as Boris' time in office ticked down, working against the clock.
These men were brutally mistreated, for decades, while keeping us safe. Story here: mirror.co.uk/news/politics/…
Should be said, one jarring point in the letter - these servicemen kept 100s of millions of people safe. But they were following grossly negligent orders.
And no-one kept indigenous people in Australia, Nevada, or Kiritimati safe. They don't get medals. They just get radiation.
Servicemen were knowingly and intentionally exposed. Records were never kept, or 'lost'. Brown people were treated even worse, whether Commonwealth soldiers or locals. And all so the British PM could take tea with the US president and not have to worry about the Russian one.
This is the letter from @BorisJohnson to Britain's most mistreated and maligned heroes, the nuclear test veterans. Actual tears here, because this is the best these men have ever had.
I’ve been quiet because I’ve spent the past two days on a paediatric ward with possibly-appendicitic (?) #Foxcub. We’re home now, she seems to have had a weird infection which is slowly improving, but couple of things of to say…
(Everyone leaves a hospital either so relieved and happy they’re evangelical about the NHS, or in pain of some sort which can make them rage at it. I am in first camp. But will *try* to limit this to facts.)
1. In the space of 48 hours we saw 7 doctors. GP, paediatrician, surgeon, junior doc, registrar, another jr and surgeon registrar. A dozen nurses. Sonographers. And there is no way on EARTH an insurance policy, or my income, would otherwise have got us more than 2 or 3 of them.
This is a cache of 1,000 classified documents that were opened but mostly unseen, gathering dust in an archive of their own within the National Archives, and resistant to all my efforts to find them.
I was passed a list of file numbers and titles, and pulled 20 of the ones that looked most interesting, a total of 522 pages. It's taken months to comb through them, but the overall picture they paint is horrifying.
EXCLUSIVE: UK government spent 34 years suppressing its own study which found servicemen at nuclear weapons tests were 3.5x more likely to die from leukaemia.
It took 20 years for the govt to admit *some* of it, and another 14 for nuclear veterans to be told that 140 pages of data on their risks of cancer, suicide and heart disease even existed.
In 2008, government lawyers told the High Court that 159 men on high-risk missions 'may' have been exposed.
In fact, the real number was 2,314. And by this point, the government had known that fact for 20 years.