‘Just Be Straight With People’: Laura Kuennsberg Roasts Tory Minister Over Tax Claims

A Tory minister was urged to “just be straight with people” after she claimed the government was cutting the overall tax burden.

Laura Trott was grilled on BBC 1′s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg this morning.

The chief secretary to the Treasury repeated Conservative claims that her party is reducing the amount people are being taxed – despite clear evidence to the contrary.

At last week’s Autumn Statement, chancellor Jeremy Hunt said he was bringing in “the biggest package of tax cuts since the 1980s” as he reduced National Insurance and business taxes.

But it later emerged that the overall tax burden is still set to hit a post-war high by the end of the 2020s.

Kuenssberg told Trott: “It’s very important that you are clear about the overall picture here.

″The overall picture for our viewers is that the tax burden is going up and up and up and up.”

But the minister said: “That’s actually not true. For people on average wages, their taxes would have been cut by about £1,000 on average since 2010.

“For some of the highest earners, we have asked them to take on more of the burden.”

Kuenssberg replied: “You know, and our viewers will have seen and heard on many occasions, taxes are going to reach a post-war high.

“The overall tax burden is going up. Shouldn’t you just be straight with people?”

Trott said: “I am being straight. If you are on an average income, because of the tax changes that we’ve made, your tax burden will have gone down quite significantly.”

Kuenssberg hit back: “You are going to bring some taxes down, but the overall tax burden is going up – I want people to understand that clearly.”

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‘The Hunt Hoax’: Chancellor Accused Of Autumn Statement Con As Taxes To Hit Post-War High

Jeremy Hunt has been accused of trying to “hoodwink” voters as his Autumn Statement unravelled within minutes of him delivering it.

The chancellor boasted that he had announced “the biggest package of tax cuts since the 1980s”.

He reduced the National Insurance rate paid by workers from 12% to 10%, while also unveiling cuts to business taxes.

But the independent Office for Budget Responsibility’s own assessment of the chancellor’s plans revealed that while the overall tax burden will initially come down, it is soon set to soar.

That is because of income tax thresholds remain frozen, meaning millions of workers end up in a higher tax bracket as their wages rise – a process known as “fiscal drag”.

The OBR said: “Tax changes in this autumn statement reduce the tax burden by 0.7% of GDP, but it still rises in every year to a post-war high of 37.3% of GDP by 2028-29.

“Income tax increases explain most of the increase in this forecast … driven by threshold freezes and strong nominal earnings.”

As a result, the Treasury will rake in an extra £201 billion in tax over the next six years – four times more than the cost of Hunt’s cuts to National Insurance payments.

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey said: “This Autumn Statement was a Hunt hoax.

“Buried in the small print is a massive stealth tax raid that will drag millions into paying a higher rate in the coming years.

“The British people will rightly be furious at this deception, as they are forced to pay the price for Conservative chaos through years of unfair tax hikes.

“It is high time that this Conservative government came clean about just how much money they are taking out of hard-working families’ pockets.”

The OBR also downgraded its forecasts for economic growth over the next few years.

It also said that inflation will fall to 2.8% next year, well up on the 0.9% they forecast in March.

Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said: “After 13 years of the Conservatives, the economy simply isn’t working. And, despite all the promises today, working people are still worse off.”

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Jeremy Hunt Braces UK For Economic ‘Storm’ As He Unveils Spending Cuts And Tax Rises

Jeremy Hunt will say the UK is facing an economic “storm” as he prepares to unveil £60 billion-worth of tax rises and spending cuts in his autumn statement.

The chancellor will tell MPs that the government must “take difficult decisions now” to repair the public finances, which have been battered by Covid-19, the war in Ukraine and the effects of Kwasi Kwarteng’s disastrous mini-budget.

HuffPost UK understands Hunt will confirm that he is slashing public spending by around £35 billion and increasing taxes by £25 billion as he tries to balance the nation’s books.

But he will also insist that the government will “protect the vulnerable, because to be British is to be compassionate”.

That could mean that welfare benefits and the state pension will rise in line with inflation, meaning they will not be cut in real terms.

The chancellor will deliver Thursday morning’s autumn statement against a backdrop of rising interest rates, as well as soaring energy bills and inflation.

He is expected to increase taxes for the highest earners by reducing the threshold at which they start paying the 45p top income tax rate from £150,000 to £125,000.

But he has already admitted that everyone in the country will have to pay more tax as the government tried to fill a £55 billion financial black hole.

The windfall tax on the bumper profits of energy firms is also set to be increased and extended to bring in billions of pounds more revenue for the Treasury.

In his statement to the Commons, Hunt will say: “As countries all over the world grapple with inflation, our plan reflects British values: we are both honest about the challenges, and fair in our solutions.

“We are taking difficult decisions to deliver strong public finances and help keep mortgage rates low, but our plan also protects our long-term economic growth.

“At the same time, we protect the vulnerable, because to be British is to be compassionate.

“There is a global energy crisis, a global inflation crisis and a global economic crisis.

“But the British people are tough, inventive, and resourceful. We have risen to bigger challenges before.

“We aren’t immune to these global headwinds, but with this plan for stability, growth and public services – we will face into the storm.”

In a clear repudiation of September’s mini-budget – which saw Kwarteng implement former prime minister Liz Truss’s plan for huge tax cuts funded by extra borrowing – Hunt will say the government’s priority is to bring down inflation, which has hit 11.1%, the highest rate in 40 years.

He will say: “High inflation is the enemy of stability. It means higher mortgage rates, more expensive food and fuel bills, businesses failing and unemployment rising.

“It erodes savings, causes industrial unrest, and cuts funding for public services. It hurts the poorest the most and eats away at the trust upon which a strong society is built.”

Hunt will say the Bank of England has his “wholehearted support” as it tried to tackle inflation by increasing interest rates.

“Families across Britain make sacrifices every day to live within their means, and so too must governments because the United Kingdom will always pay its way,” the chancellor will say.

“We are taking a balanced path to stability: tackling the inflation that eats away at a pensioner’s savings and increases the cost of mortgages to families, at the same time supporting the economy to recover. But it depends on taking difficult decisions now.”

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said the UK had been “held back by 12 years of Tory economic failure and wasted opportunities”.

She said: “What Britain needs in the autumn statement today are fairer choices for working people, and a proper plan for growth.”

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