Sir Keir Starmer has denied misleading the public over expected tax hikes in the Budget, despite Labour’s manifesto pledge not to raise taxes for ‘working people’.
The Prime Minister rejected claims he was waging a ‘war on middle Britain’ amid speculation he could increase the burden for those who have income from shares and property.
Labour had previously promised not to increase taxes on what it described as ‘working people,’ explicitly ruling out a rise on VAT, national insurance, and income tax.
But asked to define the term during a broadcast interview in Samoa, Sir Keir said it was someone who ‘goes out and earns their living, usually paid in a sort of monthly cheque’ and who cannot ‘write a cheque to get out of difficulties’.
At a press conference at the end of the Commonwealth heads of government meeting (Chogm) in Samoa on Saturday, the Prime Minister was asked whether he was ‘plotting a war on middle Britain’.
‘No. Let me clear about that,’ he said. What we’re doing is two things in the Budget.
‘The first is fixing the foundations, which is dealing with the inheritance that we’ve got, including the £22billion black hole. We have to deal with that.
‘In the past leaders have walked past those problems, created fictions, and I’m not prepared to do that.’
Asked whether he had misled the public in the Labour manifesto, the Prime Minister responded: ‘No, we were very clear about the tax rises that we would necessarily have to make, whatever the circumstances, and you’ve listed them there, and I listed them, I don’t know how many times in the campaign.
‘We were equally clear in the manifesto and in the campaign that we wouldn’t be increasing taxes on working people, and spelt out what we meant by that in terms of income tax, in terms of NICs and in terms of VAT and we intend to keep the promises that we made in our manifesto.’
It comes after the Prime Minister told Sky News he does not consider people who have an income from assets such as shares of property to be working people, paving the way for potential tax rises.
‘They wouldn’t come within my definition,’ he said.
In a partial climbdown on Sir Keir’s position, Downing Street clarified on Friday that those who hold a small amount of savings in stocks and shares still count as working people.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Sir Keir meant someone who primarily gets their income from assets in his interview.
Ministers have resisted going into the fine detail of next week’s Budget, but sources have indicated she will seek to find £40bn in tax hikes and spending cuts in order to avoid a return to austerity in next Wednesday’s fiscal statement.
Reports suggest capital gains tax, inheritance tax and fuel duty are among some of the levers she will pull to raise revenue as she seeks to put the economy on a firmer footing.
Rachel Reeves has admitted she will raise some taxes, pointing to a £22bn black hole in the public finances which she says she discovered had been left behind by her Tory predecessors after entering office, but has not specified which ones.
In an interview with LBC on Friday evening, the Chancellor said she would avoid increasing ‘the key taxes that working people pay – national insurance, income tax and VAT.’
The Budget will be delivered on October 30.