This is the latest blow to the Conservatives' love affair with Brexit, with the UK having already faced labor shortages and trade losses to the EU since it went into effect. If Britain were still tied to the euro, the government wouldn't be talking about restricting its budget and, if PM Sunak knows what is good for him and his country, he will put ideology aside and the British people first.
The left will pounce on this news in an attempt to blame Brexit for the UK's economic decline, but both the numbers and history prove this notion wrong. The Eurozone still faces higher inflation than the UK, and a devaluation of the pound does not correlate to GDP loss. The current economic pain felt by the British people only began once the Bank of England stepped in.