Today the Conservatives are launching their Plan to Cut Taxes – a
clear plan to cut taxes for people at every stage of life. It
comes as Labour continue to refuse to rule out which taxes they
will raise to fill the £38.5 billion hole in their finances, and
the party faces fresh questions about their £2,094 of tax rises on
every family. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that cutting
taxes was a “moral mission” and he slammed Labour's £2,094 of tax
rises...Request free trial
Today the Conservatives are launching their Plan to Cut Taxes – a
clear plan to cut taxes for people at every stage of life.
It comes as Labour continue to refuse to rule out which taxes
they will raise to fill the £38.5 billion hole in their finances,
and the party faces fresh questions about their £2,094 of tax
rises on every family.
Prime Minister said that cutting taxes was a
“moral mission” and he slammed Labour's £2,094 of tax rises that
would “hammer working families hardest”.
The Conservatives have committed to a suite of tax cuts worth
£17.2 billion a year by the end of the decade, putting more money
in the pockets of hard-working people, boosting the economy and
giving pensioners the peace of mind and financial security they
deserve. The plans are fully funded through delivering £12
billion of welfare savings and £6 billion from cracking down on
tax avoidance and evasion.
The measures in the Plan to Cut Taxes include:
- Total abolition of the main rate of National Insurance
Contributions (NICs) for self-employed in transformational boost
to the economy and enterprise
- Further 2p cut to payroll NICs by 2027, so we will have
halved it from the beginning of this year, putting more money in
the pockets of hard-working people
- A Triple Lock Plus to protect pensioners from paying income
tax on the State Pension, unlike Labour's Retirement Tax
- A tax cut for parents by ending the single earner penalty in
the High-Income Child Benefit Charge and moving the threshold to
£120,000, up from £60,000 currently.
- Stamp duty cut to revitalise property market and help young
people get on the housing ladder
- Temporary capital gains tax relief for landlords selling to a
tenant to help people buy their first home
- A guarantee not to raise income tax, national insurance or
VAT
- A workplace pension guarantee to not introduce any new taxes
on pensions or increase existing ones for the whole of the next
Parliament - unmatched by Labour
- A family homes guarantee by committing not to change number
of council tax bands, undertake an expensive council tax
revaluation or cut council tax discounts – unmatched by
Labour
It comes as refused to rule out a council
tax raid to fund the £2,094 of tax rises Labour will need to find
to fill its unfunded spending commitments. Starmer also confirmed
that anyone who has savings – two thirds of the population – will
be in the firing line for his tax rises. He defined ‘working
people' - who he says will be protected from tax rises - as those
who ‘don't really have the ability to write a cheque when they
get into trouble'.
In total Labour has refused to rule out:
- The new State Pension being dragged
into income tax for the first time in history.
- Ending the 25 per cent tax free
lump sum.
- Making tax relief on pension
contributions less generous.
- Extending National Insurance to
employer pension contributions.
- Increasing the number of council
tax bands.
- Undertaking an expensive council
tax revaluation as Labour have already done in Wales.
- Cutting council tax discounts, as
Labour is currently doing in Wales.
- Increasing the rate and level of
Stamp Duty.
- New levies or charges on bills
while accelerating the rollout of renewables.
- Increasing Capital Gains Tax.
- Increasing Employers' National
Insurance (the ‘jobs tax').
- Ending the Enterprise Investment
Scheme.
- Cutting or ending the Seed
Enterprise Investment Scheme.
- Ending Venture Capital
Trusts.
- Ending Business Asset Disposal
Relief.
- Ending Agricultural Property Relief
and Business Relief.
- Maintaining the expanded ULEZ zone
in Outer London and expanding road pricing beyond London.
The new Plan to Cut Taxes comes ahead of the latest inflation
figures this morning. Since the Prime Minister made tackling
inflation his key priority, inflation has fallen from 11.1% to
2.3% at the last set of figures in May 2024.
Speaking ahead of the new inflation figures, the Prime Minister
said:
“When I became Prime Minister, spiraling inflation was our
biggest economic challenge – and so I made halving inflation my
key priority. Now, with inflation back under control, we can
focus on cutting taxes and ensuring working people have the
financial security they deserve.
“As Conservatives, we believe in lower taxes because people, not
governments, make the best decisions about how to spend their
money. Cutting taxes is a moral mission for me and I want to
deliver tax cuts at every stage of life.
“By contrast, raising tax is in Labour's DNA. The plans set out
in Labour's manifesto would take taxes to the highest level in
our country's history – and that's before you add in the £38.5
billion black hole in their promises.
“That's the choice at this election – lower taxes with the
Conservatives or a £2,094 tax hike under Labour that would hammer
working families hardest.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
Labour have repeatedly failed to rule out increasing
Council Tax or conducting a Council Tax
revaluation
-
Just this morning, refused to rule out raising
council tax. Q: ‘My question is, you said
you're not going to raise income tax, VAT or National
insurance, but what about council tax and pensions? Like at the
minute, you get 25 per cent tax free and your private pension.
Will you be reducing that figure so you'll end up paying more
tax when you draw your pension?' STARMER: ‘Yeah. Sid
on the question of tax we've been really clear we're not going
to be raising tax on working people. So as you rightly say,
that means no increase in income tax in National Insurance and
in VAT' Q: ‘Council tax?' STARMER: ‘And then
on top of that Sid, the approach we've taken is this we
published our manifesto with our plans, and it said every
single thing in that document is fully costed and fully funded…
But beyond that, Sid, we are, none of our plans require a tax
rise because our focus is on growth. So Sid, none of our plans
require tax rises over and above the ones we've set out'
STUDIO: ‘So you can say, now, there will not be an
increase in council tax?' STARMER: ‘Look Nick what I'm
not going to do is sit here two weeks before the election and
write the budgets for the next five years'STUDIO: ‘So
you can't rule it out?' STARMER: ‘What I what I can
say is that none of our plans require a tax rise, and that is
for a reason and the reason is our focus is on getting our
economy going on building on, growing on, raising living
standards, creating wealth' (LBC, 18 June 2024,
archived).
-
repeatedly refused to
rule it out undertake a council tax revaluation and
re-banding. RIGBY: ‘But the point is, is
there are other taxes that affect working people, aren't there?
What about council tax? I'm sure many people are worried
about that, yeah? The Labour Party in Wales launched a review
of council tax banding. Are you going to rule out a review in
England too?' STARMER: ‘Well, council tax is too
high for many people. It's been going up, it went up again this
year, but that's because the government lost control'
RIGBY: ‘So you're not going to do a review of the
council tax bands?' STARMER: ‘I'm really trying...'
RIGBY: ‘You know they were last revalued when I was a
teenager and I'm really old now' STARMER: ‘Beth,
you're pushing me over and over again on tax. I'm not wanting
to raise tax. I think people are taxed too much already. What I
want to do, my central mission, is to grow the economy. I'm not
going to apologise for that, because I genuinely think that if
you don't grow the economy, then you're taxing an
ever-diminishing return' (Sky News, The Battle for Number
10, 12 June 2024, archived).
-
In an interview with the Financial Times, failed to rule out a
revaluation of council tax and new council tax bands.
The Financial Times reported that said ‘It doesn't really
matter whether I think it's [council tax revaluation] sensible
or not; is that where I'm going to put my political energy? No'
leaving open the suggestion there could be a revaluation and
new bands added (The Financial Times, 16 June 2024,
link).
-
On Laura Kuenssberg, refused to rule out
a rise in council tax three times. STUDIO:
'And what about council tax? Would you rule out
putting up council tax or revaluing the system? Because for
social care, that's one of the income streams that councils
absolutely rely on. But you would rule out putting up council
tax?' STREETING: 'We don't want to
see the tax burden on working people increase. I know the
Conservatives have baked into their plans council tax rises.
That's in the government's spending forecast. What is going to work to do is
to get growth back into our economy, so we can invest in our
public services and ease the tax burden on people'
STUDIO: 'Would you rule out
increasing or allowing councils to increase council tax still
further?' STREETING: 'We are anxious
about the burden of taxation on working people. That's why
we've ruled out income tax, National Insurance and VAT rises'
STUDIO: 'I'm asking you a different
question about council tax. As you said, the current spending
plans set out by the Conservatives assume a certain rise in
council tax over time. But would you rule out increasing that
even further and would you rule out a revaluation of the
council tax system that many people actually think is long
overdue?' STREETING: 'Well, I know
the Conservatives have baked into their plans, inflation
busting increases in council tax rises in fuel duty and other
taxes that will that will hit working people. It's our ambition
to get our country back to growth so that we can invest in our
public services without clobbering people with higher taxes.
Every promise in our manifesto is a promise we can keep and the
country can afford. And none of those pledges in our manifesto
requires increases in council tax, or increases in fuel duty,
or any of the other number of taxes the Tories are claiming we
want to increase, but you should ask because they haven't ruled
out any of those tax increases. And it's time to scrutinise the
Tories, because if there's a nightmare on Downing Street on the
5th of July, they will do what did on steroids because we have
got this manifesto tens of billions of pounds of unfunded
spending commitments' (BBC, Sunday with Laura
Kuenssberg, 16 June 2024, archived).
-
refused twice to rule
out a change in council tax bands under a Labour
government. STUDIO: ‘There will be no change
under a Labour government to council tax bands?'
REYNOLDS: ‘These are not part of our plans. But to
answer your earlier point...' STUDIO: ‘No, no, I
asked, no change, no change to council tax bands?'
REYNOLDS: ‘There there there is no change to
council tax bands in our manifesto' STUDIO: ‘Hang
on, Mr. Reynolds, you know, let's kind of be clear here. You
aren't saying to us that in the next Parliament there will be
no tax measures in any Labour budget other than those which are
in the manifesto, are you?' REYNOLDS: What I'm saying
to you is over these questions, is that...' STUDIO:
‘It sounds like that's what you're saying' REYNOLDS:
‘Let me just let me just answer this point. The premise of
these questions is that the economy cannot grow any faster than
it has done for the last 14 years, and therefore, the only way
to fund public services is tax rises. We reject that case
entirely' (ITV, Good Morning Britain, 18 June 2024,
archived).
indicated that Labour would
target those with savings with new tax rises
-
indicated that his
definition of not raising taxes on working people would mean
instead taxing people with savings. STUDIO:
What is a working person? KEIR STARMER: A working person
is... STUDIO: Simon Cowell? KEIR STARMER: Well, a working
person is someone, who works their living and, uses our public
services. The person I have in mind... STUDIO: So it is Simon
Cowell? KEIR STARMER: The person I have in my mind Nick,
when I say, working people is people who earn their living,
rely on our services and don't really have the ability to write
a cheque when they get into trouble. So the sort of people
I'm meeting pretty well every day now, I met a couple couple in
Stafford, a paramedic, and her wife works in a jewellery shop.
Their mortgage has just gone up several hundred pounds, and
they don't have the sort of money in the bank, to pay for it.
They're the people I have... STUDIO: So a working person is
someone who works, who cannot write a cheque when they get into
trouble. KEIR STARMER: And therefore relies on our public
services like the NHS, etc. it's quite a big group because
these days there are many people obviously not so well off.
Even better off these days, particularly when it comes to
mortgages, I mean, because it is important in politics, who do
you have in your mind's eye? And I have all those people who
are for the cost of living crisis in Southampton yesterday I
had a woman who she's got one job, she's trying to get another
job, and the bills are still bearing down on her. That's the
sort of person I have in my mind my mind's eye (LBC,
18 June 2024, archived).
-
About two-thirds of the UK have access to some form of
savings. According to the personal finance website
Finder, ‘68% of Brits have some money in savings in
2024' (Finder, What are the average savings by age in the
UK, 4 June 2024, link).
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