Jeremy Hunt MP, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, said: “Labour's
claims are nothing but a fabrication - the books have been wide
open since the OBR was set up 14 years ago. They show an economy
that has turned the corner and a deficit one-third of that left
behind by Labour - and not this nonsense the Chancellor is
peddling. “The reality is she does not want to take the difficult
decisions on pay, productivity or welfare reform that would have
meant we could live...Request free
trial
MP, Shadow Chancellor of the
Exchequer, said:
“Labour's claims are nothing but a fabrication - the books have
been wide open since the OBR was set up 14 years ago. They show
an economy that has turned the corner and a deficit one-third of
that left behind by Labour - and not this nonsense the Chancellor
is peddling.
“The reality is she does not want to take the difficult decisions
on pay, productivity or welfare reform that would have meant we
could live within our means and is laying the ground for tax
rises.
“After Labour promised 50 times not to do this, they will find
trust in the new government evaporates sooner
than they expect.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
-
said that because of the
Office for Budget Responsibility opposition parties have access
to information about public finances. As reported in
the Financial Times, claimed: ‘We've got the OBR
now…We know things are in a pretty bad state. You don't need to
win an election to find that out' (The Financial
Times, 16 June 2024, link).
-
Paul Johnson, Director of the independent Institute for
Fiscal Studies, said that ‘any sense of surprise' about the
state of public finances is not ‘really credible at
all'. STUDIO: On that surprise point, how credible is
it for the new government to say “oh my goodness, this is much
worse than we expected”? PAUL JOHNSON: I don't think it's
really very credible at all. (BBC Radio 4 Today
Programme, 26 July 2024, archived)
-
Paul Johnson, Director of the independent Institute for
Fiscal Studies, said the country's ‘books are wide
open'. Speaking at the IFS's manifesto analysis event,
Johnon said ‘I thought I saw ruling out, actually, that
she would, you know, come in and say over the books and all
look terrible. I mean, we would be very rude if someone were to
do that. I mean, the books are wide open'. He then tweeted that
‘the books are wide open, fully transparent' (Institute for
Fiscal Studies, Manifesto Response, 16 June 2024,
archived; Paul Johnson, Twitter, 25 June 2024,
link).
Labour promised 50 times not to raise
taxes
Manifesto
-
The Labour Party manifesto committed to not raising
taxes on working people.‘We will ensure taxes on
working people are kept as low as possible. Labour will not
increase taxes on working people…' (Labour Party, The
Labour Party Manifesto 2024, pg. 19, 13 June
2024, link).
Other
-
said Labour would keep
taxes as ‘low as possible' for working people.
JONES: ‘But our six first steps, they're called first
steps because they lead towards our missions. So our overall
missions will take time to deliver. One is on sustained
economic growth. Another is on clearing not just the backlog in
the NHS, but reforming the system. And so our money will be
going when we get the economy growing. We'll be going into
public service reform, trying to keep taxes as low as possible
on working people and putting the country back on track'
(Sky News, 25 May 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not be
raising taxes on working people.
JONES: ‘That's why we've supported, the last two
cuts to, National Insurance and why we said we won't be
increasing taxes on working people if we win the election in
July' (LBC, 25 May 2024, archived).
-
said that Labour had ‘no
plans to increase taxes on working people'. ‘Keir has
been very clear that we have no plans to increase taxes on
working people. It's not that he's not all that tax rises. We
have no plans to increase taxes on working people'
(LBC, 25 May 2024, archived).
-
said she did not come into
politics to raise taxes on working people.
REEVES: ‘I do not believe you can tax and spend
your way to growth, and I didn't come into politics to raise
taxes on working people' (Daily Mail, 25 May 2024,
link).
-
said she and wanted taxes on working
people to be lower. STUDIO: ‘Would you rule
out putting up income tax?'REEVES: ‘Well, I want and
Keir wants taxes on working people to be lower. And we
certainly won't be increasing income tax or national insurance
if we win the election' STUDIO: ‘That is a clear
commitment. You will not increase income tax' REEVES:
‘No we won't increase income tax or national insurance'
(Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, 26 May 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not
increase taxes on working people. JONES:
‘Well, we're not putting up taxes on working people' (BBC
Politics West, 26 May 2024, archived).
-
said there was a ‘need' not
to put ‘working people' through rising taxes, rising prices and
rising mortgage costs. STARMER: ‘The
importance above all of economic stability, the need never to
put working people through the whirlwind of chaos, the rising
taxes, the rising prices, rising from mortgage costs'
( West Sussex Keynote
Speech, 27 May 2024, archived).
-
said she wanted taxes on
working people to be lower. STUDIO: ‘On
your plans. You've said corporation tax won't go up above 25
per cent before 2030. What about income tax and national
insurance? Will that also not go up over those five years?'
REEVES: ‘So I want taxes on
working people to be lower, but I'm not going to make
commitments without saying where the money is going to come
from. But I can make the commitment that income tax and
national Insurance won't go up under a Labour government. And
of course, the...' STUDIO: ‘The whole five
years?' REEVES: ‘The whole five years of the next
parliament and on corporation tax' (, Speech to Business
Leaders at Rolls Royce Q&A, 28 May 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour want to lower
the tax burden on working people. HAIGH: ‘And
we want to lower that burden on working people' (LBC,
28 May 2024, archived).
-
said Labour had no plans to
raise taxes on working people. STUDIO: ‘Let
me put this to you, should I? Straight off the bat. ''Keir
Starmer, and have repeatedly refused to
rule out raising VAT throughout this campaign and have now only
caved in due to a CCHQ press release. They have pulled their
shadow Home Secretary off the morning media round and deployed
to tell everything that
nothing has changed” JONES: ‘Was that from CCHQ or
?' STUDIO: ‘No, it
was from CCHQ' JONES: ‘I mean, come one. Look, the
Conservative Party is desperate… has been consistently clear
that we have no plans to raise taxes on working people. We've
said it a million times… We have no plans to raise taxes on
working people' (Sky News, 30 May 2024,
archived).
-
said VAT, National Insurance
and VAT would not rise for working people under a Labour
government. STUDIO: ‘Yeah, but well, but
that's all aspirational, isn't it when you say, I mean, it's
all well and good to say to people watching and listening right
now well, you know, under a Labour government, we would want
your taxes to come down. But there's no guarantee, no promise
that they will' JONES: ‘Well, no, I'm giving you
that promise today that we will not be increasing National
insurance, income tax or VAT on working people. But the long
term, sustainable approach to further tax cuts is to get growth
back into the economy because people also want their public
services funded' (GB News, 30 May 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not be
raising the tax burden on working people.
STUDIO: ‘I'm asking you whether or not you will be
changing the thresholds, which is a stealth tax, because people
ultimately end up paying more. They get dragged into a higher
threshold, they don't necessarily realise it. And it is widely
seen as quite a sneaky way to increase tax by tens of billions
of pounds a year. And you are unable to answer my question when
I'm asking if Labour will raise those thresholds'
JONES: ‘No, no. With respect, I've answered it a few
times...' STUDIO: ‘No, you've told me that you won't
increase the headline rate of tax' JONES: ‘If you if
you let me, to try to explain it to you for the fifth time. We
will not be increasing the tax burden on working people. That
means that taxes will not be going up on the basis that we've
set out on income tax, National Insurance or VAT…' (Times
Radio, 30 May 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. STARMER:
‘Inheritance tax is completely different. We have no plans to
raise inheritance tax, in fact none of our plans involve tax
rises over and above the ones we've spelled out. All of our
plans are fully costed and fully funded, but it's important
that I get across that we will not be increasing tax on working
people, so no increase in income tax, in national insurance or
VAT. We've said that we will not raise corporation tax and
we've locked that in for the entirety of the incoming
Parliament if we're privileged enough to come into power.
That's already been set out some time ago by . I'm very happy to confirm
it here today' (Press Association, 5 June 2024,
archived).
-
said there would be no tax
rises on working people under a Labour government.
STARMER: ‘He breached the ministerial code because he
lied and he lied deliberately… Because we have made clear that
our plans are fully costed, fully funded, they do not involve
tax rises for working people – so that's no income tax rise, no
national insurance rise, no VAT rise… And the Prime Minister,
with his back against the wall, desperately trying to defend
his awful record in office, resorted to lies and he knew what
he was doing, he knew very well what he was doing' (Press
Association, 5 June 2024,archived).
-
she had no plans to raise
taxes on working people. REEVES: ‘Well, the
letter from the Permanent Secretary of the Treasury confirms
what Labour has said last night, that the Prime Minister lied
in the debate last night. Labour has no plans to increase taxes
on working people. In fact, I have ruled out increases in
income tax, National Insurance and VAT for the duration of the
next parliament' QUESTION: ‘Is this becoming a bit of
a dirty campaign? Do you think where, you know, tactics like
this going back and forward?' REEVES: ‘Well, it's
who lied 12 times in the
debate last night about Labour's tax plans. The truth is, it's
the Conservatives that have taken the tax burden to the highest
it's been in 70 years. That is the Conservatives' record and
their legacy' (BBC News Pool Clip, 5 June 2024,
archived).
-
said she did not come into
government to raise taxes on working people. tweeted, ‘I didn't come
into politics to raise taxes on working people. Labour will not
put up your income tax, national insurance or VAT. The
Conservatives are the party of high tax' (, Twitter, 4 June
2024, link).
-
said Labour would not put up
taxes on working people. tweeted, ‘Rishi Sunak's
claims about Labour and tax are categorically untrue. Labour
will not put up taxes on working people' (, Twitter, 4 June
2024, link).
-
said Labour will not raise
taxes on working people. STUDIO: ‘Stamp duty,
will you increase that' HEALEY: ‘We will not, we will
not, we will not raise the taxes that are most important to
working people that are part of' STUDIO: ‘Will you
increase stamp duty?' HEALEY: ‘(inaudible) after 14
years of Conservative government' STUDIO: ‘Will you
increase stamp duty?' HEALEY: ‘I'm not going to go
through the list. I'm saying to you' STUDIO: ‘Why not,
it's really important?' HEALEY: ‘So the taxes that are
most important to people, income tax, VAT and National
Insurance, will not be raised under a Labour government'
(Sky News, 6 June 2024, link).
-
said Labour will ‘not be
raising taxes on working people'. HEALEY: ‘It
is indeed a sad place when we will not be raising taxes on
working people and we've got a prime minister, the deeper into
the election he gets, the more desperate he gets' (Times
Radio, 6 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not
raise taxes on working people. STUDIO:
‘Okay, couple of things again, that you won't be raising taxes,
but will you be raising tax thresholds?' HEALEY: ‘Well
we will set out exactly how we'll pay for the plans that we've
got…' STUDIO: ‘So it's not beyond the realm of
possibility, , that you will keep tax
thresholds frozen as the Conservatives have done…'
HEALEY: ‘We appreciated the burden of the highest tax
levels for 70 years. We know they're hitting working people
first and foremost alongside the wider cost of living… but on
the levels of income tax, VAT and national insurance, we will
not be raising those' (Times Radio, 6 June 2024,
archived).
-
said it was a ‘lie' to say
Labour would raise taxes on working people.
STUDIO: ‘At the beginning of the interview… You said
that has lied because of this
£2000 claim… Other people say, You know what? This happens a
lot. This idea of opposition costing has been going on since
1985 and you yourselves Labour. You've claimed that the
conservatives have made unfunded spending pledges of 46 billion
pounds, then you raise it to 64 billion and then 71 billion…
don't know how much of these figures actually will happen, but
you have to project into the future. Everyone does
this'HEALEY: ‘So we've disputed the claim that the
costings the Tories came up with were independent. They've
been disowned by those people. They said in the Treasury who
had produced them. We've said that it's a lie to say that
Labour will raise taxes on working people' (Times
Radio, 6 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. STARMER: ‘Let me be
crystal clear about this. We will not be raising taxes on
working people. That means we won't be raising income tax,
National Insurance, or VAT. We will launch our manifesto very
soon, and that will have no tax surprises in it, because all of
our plans are fully funded and fully costed…' STUDIO:
‘But can you rule out spending cuts?' STARMER: ‘We are
not returning to austerity. We will grow our economy. That will
start by stabilising the economy, because the Tories have lost
control of the economy, and its working people are paying the
price for that…' (BBC News Pool Clip, 9 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. CORRESPONDENT: ‘The
Liberal Democrats today have said that they will increase
capital gains tax and tax on big banks to try and fund some of
their policies. Would you consider doing the same? And if not?
Are you being honest with the public about how many cuts or
potential tax rises might be needed to fund some of your
pledges?' STARMER: ‘We're going to launch
our manifesto later this week. There'll be no tax surprises in
there. We're not going to increase tax on working people. And
that means no increases in income tax in National Insurance and
VAT and all of our plans. As I say, fully costed, fully funded.
And they don't require tax rises over and above those that
we've already set out. So, there won't be any surprises when
the manifesto is unveiled on Thursday' (Sky News Pool
Clip, 10 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour had ‘no
plans' to raise taxes for working people.
STUDIO: ‘Will the party increase fuel duty if you win
the election?' PHILLIPSON: ‘We have no plans to
increase taxes on working people…' STUDIO: ‘Stamp
duty?' PHILLIPSON: ‘No plans on that either'
STUDIO: ‘Council tax?' PHILLIPSON: ‘Same
again' STUDIO: ‘Capital gains?' PHILLIPSON:
‘No I mean we can go through all of these… We've got no plans
to increase taxes' (Sky News, 10 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour will not raise
taxes on working people. STUDIO: ‘So
just to follow up on that, they say, that you will be putting
up taxes, not cutting them. Is that correct? No tax cuts from
you' STARMER: ‘We have been absolutely clear that
all our plans are fully costed, fully funded. We will not be
increasing income tax, National Insurance or VAT. So no tax
increases for working people. None of our plans require tax
rises. But this is coming from the party that's put tax at the
highest level since, you know, for 70 years. And they're
building the sort of style manifesto where
anything you want can go in it. None of it is costed. It's a
recipe for more of the same. And that's why this choice of
turning back on this. Turn the page and rebuild it with
Labour's simple six first steps. We're ready to go on July the
5th' (Sky News Pool Clip, 11 June 2024,
archived).
-
gave a ‘cast-iron' guarantee
Labour would not increase tax on working people. ‘We
need to ensure everybody reading the Sunday Express knows in
cast-iron terms, we will not be increasing tax on working
people. We will not be increasing income tax. We will not be
increasing national insurance. We will not be increasing VAT
because we think people have paid too much tax' (The
Express, 16 June 2024, link).
-
said Labour will not
raise taxes on working people. STUDIO: ‘There
seems to be concern that the Labour, a Labour led government
would increase council tax. Can you say that is either true or
false?' ASHWORTH: ‘We have said there will be no
council tax refunding. We have made firm commitments, no
increase in income tax, VAT, national insurance or corporation
tax. There's nothing in our manifesto which requires additional
taxes on working people' STUDIO: ‘So there will be no
increase in council tax?' ASHWORTH: ‘We're very clear
on the tax on income tax, VAT, National Insurance, and there is
nothing else in our manifesto that requires additional taxes on
working people' STUDIO: ‘So... I'm sorry we come
around in circles here. Council tax will not be increased?'
ASHWORTH: ‘Well the tax triple lock tax commitment we
have made is on income tax, VAT and National Insurance and on
corporation tax which is a different tax as you know…'
STUDIO: ‘So council tax will be taxed then?'
ASHWORTH: ‘No there's nothing in our manifesto that
requires additional taxation' STUDIO: ‘Well why can't
you say it won't be increased Mr Ashworth? You're a plain
speaking bloke' ASHWORTH: ‘Because we're not going to
go... We're not going... I am a plain speaking bloke, you know
me well' STUDIO: ‘I know you are. I know, Jon'
ASHWORTH: ‘No no no no no. And I'm not going to go
through all of these different, different tax taxes in the
system because...' (LBC, 17 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour will not raise
taxes on working people. STUDIO: ‘And I guess
that goes for capital gains tax, which is an option which is
still at least option. And you're not going to close that now,
are you?' JONES: ‘Well, we don't need to because we
don't need to raise the money to pay for anything in the
manifesto because the manifesto is fully funded. The reason we
made the commitment on a headline rate freeze on income tax,
National Insurance and VAT is because we know that working
people are feeling the pressure after so many tax rises from
the same. So we know it's the highest tax burden that people
have faced in this country since the Second World War. But the
reason our manifesto was very focused and very tight in a way
that some people have been critical of, is because it had to be
fully costed and fully funded with the loophole closures that
we put forward, we were not willing to raise taxes on working
people to, you know, announce a whole lot of giveaways in the
manifesto in the same way that, like the Green Party have, or
even the Conservative Party have, because we don't think it's a
realistic offer that the British people will buy into. That's
why our manifesto is fully funded and fully costed, with those
commitments not to increase the headline rates of tax'
(Times Radio, 17 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. JONES: ‘Well, no.
And that's why you've made the commitment on not increasing
taxes on working people, because all the new things we want to
do are fully funded. And as I said on those great pages. And
then the question is, well, then how do you spell to spend the
existing budget on your priorities more efficiently? And then
the long term answer is how do you get the economy growing?
Because that will then create extra money that's not allocated
to be spend on future projects' (TalkTV, 17 June 2024,
archived).
-
refused to rule out raising
council tax and cutting pensions tax relief.
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'QUESTION:
‘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).
-
said there will be no new
taxes on working people. HOST: ‘Economists
say one way to raise revenue is to raise tax on banks. You've
said you won't raise tax for working people. Can you reassure
banks specifically you're not planning to tax them?'
STARMER: ‘Well, we've set out in the manifesto the
clear position for working people, which is no income tax
rises, no national insurance rises, no VAT rises. And we've
also been clear that nothing in our manifesto requires tax
rises, other, over and above the ones we've already set out in
relation to non-doms, the private schools, VAT, private equity,
loopholes and the extension of the tax in relation to oil and
gas' (Bloomberg, 1 July 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not
raise taxes on working people. KENDALL: ‘I
think he was crystal clear that we are not going to be raising
taxes on working people, but that we will be closing tax
loopholes and the non REM tax status to fund the extra
appointments we need in the NHS' (BBC News, 4 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. KENDALL: ‘Garbage.
It's complete garbage. We will not be raising taxes on working
people. We've made that crystal clear. Clear, people don't want
smears and lies. They want actually, honesty and being
straightforward, and that's what Keir did today' (LBC,
4 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour wants taxes on
working people and will not increase income tax, national
insurance and VAT. REEVES: ‘The most senior civil
servant at the Treasury has been very clear today that these
numbers were not signed off by the Treasury, and I have
committed that we will not increase, the Labour government will
not increase income tax, national insurance or VAT for the
duration of the parliament if we win the general election in
four weeks time, that is my pledge to working people. Their
taxes have reached a 70 year high under the Conservative
government, I want taxes on working people to be lower'
(LBC, 5 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour will not be
putting up taxes on working people. REEVES:
‘Absolutely clear that Labour will not be putting up taxes on
working people. That's why I've made the promise no increases
in income tax, national insurance or VAT if I am Chancellor of
the Exchequer. lied last night. He lied
about Labour's policies' (ITV News, 5 June 2024,
archived).
-
said she will not raise
taxes on working people. REEVES: ‘So we won't raise
taxes on working people' (ITV News, 5 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour will not be
raising the three main taxes on working people.
MALHOTRA: ‘Well we've said very clearly that we won't
be raising those three main taxes on working people. So it's
income tax, National Insurance and VAT' (BBC 2, Politics
Live, 6 June 2024, archived).
-
said ‘we don't plan
to raise taxes on working people'. PENNYCOOK:
‘But we've got no intention to raise additional taxes, and
we've been very clear. We don't plan to raise taxes on working
people' (Times Radio, 7 June 2024, archived).
-
said there would be
‘no additional taxes on households'.
REYNOLDS: ‘And we acknowledge that taxes on working
people are at a high level. They were at a historically high
level. And it's not, frankly, because public services are doing
well. It is because the economy hasn't grown. It's been really
poor over the last few years. We want to address that. But
there'll be no additional taxes on households under a Labour
government' (BBC Breakfast, 8 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not
increase taxes on working people. REED: ‘But
we said, how are we going to fund those commitments without
recourse to further increasing taxes on working people which,
the Conservatives have walked up to the highest levels since
the Second World War' (Times Radio, 9 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not increase
‘personal taxes on working people'. REED:
‘But we will not further increase personal taxes on working
people after the Conservatives landed us with the highest rates
for 70 years.' (Sky News, 9 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not raise
taxes on working people. KENDALL: ‘We have
said we will not be raising taxes on working people, income
tax, National Insurance or VAT, but we will be increasing taxes
on, non-doms' (Times Radio, 10 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour would not
raise taxes on working people. RAYNER: ‘We're
not raising taxes on working people because we've got a 70 year
tax high under the Conservatives. And you know we can't do
that. We can't tax our way out of the situation' (The News
Agents, 10 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not
increase taxes on working people. STREETING:
‘And I think that will be a combination of fairer choices on
how we raise the money and wiser choices on where we spend the
money. And at the heart of that is a commitment not to increase
taxes on working people' (Sky News, 11 June 2024,
archived).
-
said she will not raise
taxes on working people. REEVES: ‘I will not
raise taxes on working people and I will not raise income tax,
National Insurance or VAT with a Labour government for the
duration of the next Parliament. In fact, I want taxes to be
lower' (, Labour responds to
Conservative manifesto press conference, 11 June 2024,
archived).
-
said Labour will not raise
taxes on working people. HAIGH: ‘Well, look,
we have said we're not raising taxes on working people, but we
have set out where we will raise taxes on those who can, who
have the broader shoulders abolishing the non-dom tax status,
removing the tax relief on private school VAT on their fees,
reducing, massively expanding the windfall tax...' (ITV, Good
Morning Britain, 12 June 2024, archived).
-
said it is not ‘fair' to
raise taxes on working people. STARMER: ‘I
don't believe it's fair to raise taxes on working people when
they're already paying this much, particularly in a
cost-of-living crisis. So let me spell it out. We will not
raise income tax, we will not raise national insurance, we will
not raise VAT. That is a manifesto commitment' (, Labour Manifesto Launch
Speech, 13 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour will not
be increases taxes on working people.
PHILLIPSON: ‘The cast iron guarantee that we give in
our manifesto is that we will not be increasing taxes on
working people, and that includes and no increases on VAT, on
income tax or National Insurance contributions' (Talk
TV, 13 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour do not ‘want' to
put up taxes on working people. KENDALL: ‘We
do not want and we will not put up those taxes on working
people' (Sky News, 15 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour would not
raise taxes on working people. PENNYCOOK:
‘Well, no, not specifically. Even working people who've managed
to keep some savings. We don't want to put taxes up on those
people. We've got no plans to increase taxes on working people.
That's why we put a tax lock in the manifesto' (Sky
News, 20 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour should not
raise taxes on working people. RAYNER: ‘But
no, we don't think that we should be raising taxes on working
people. We've set out proposals to increase taxes on the
non-dom status, close the tax loophole for the super wealthy'
(BBC Radio Merseyside, 21 June 2024, archived).
-
said Labour do not
‘want' to raise taxes on working people.
MCGOVERN: ‘More revenue in and that we don't want to
increase taxes on working people...' (BBC 2, Politics Live, 9
July 2024, archived).
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