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    Labour deputy leader’s views on party policy are ‘irritating’, says Labour peer

    Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell’s views on party policy “really irritate me”, former shadow culture secretary Thangam Debbonaire has said. The Labour peer accused Ms Powell of “giving a running commentary and undermining” the government after she said plans to break the manifesto pledge on tax rises would damage “trust in politics”. Ms Powell had said the government “should be following through” on its pledge not to raise income tax, national insurance or VAT, amid mounting speculation Rachel Reeves is preparing to do so at the Budget.Thangam Debbonaire accused Labour’s new deputy leader of ‘giving a running commentary’ More

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    Angela Rayner in talks to write book just weeks after resigning from government

    Angela Rayner is in talks to write a book just weeks after being forced to resign from the government over a tax scandal.Sir Keir Starmer’s former deputy is speaking to publishers about the prospect, according to The Times. Ms Rayner quit as Labour’s deputy leader and housing secretary in September after she was found to have breached the ministerial code over questions about the stamp duty she paid on a home on the south coast.The Independent understands that nothing is as yet set in stone about a book, but there is a lot of interest around the prospect. Ms Rayner, the MP for Ashton-under-Lyne, was one of the most left-wing voices in the cabinet before her departure, and secured more than 50 per cent of the final round votes from Labour members when she was elected in 2020.The former deputy’s resignation triggered a wider reshuffle of Starmer’s top team More

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    Rachel Reeves ‘plans to raise income tax’ in Budget

    Rachel Reeves has reportedly told the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) that she intends to increase income tax in her upcoming Budget.The Chancellor told the watchdog that a rise in personal tax is one of several “major measures” planned for the Budget at the end of the month, according to The Times.She is said to be considering a 2p rise in income tax and a 2p cut in national insurance, which would cancel out the burden on workers and move it onto other groups, such as landlords and pensioners.The cut to national insurance could be limited to people earning below £50,270 per year, while earnings over the threshold would still be subject to a two per cent rate, the newspaper reports.The OBR will produce an impact assessment from her proposals to be presented to the Treasury on Monday, ahead of the Budget on November 26.Campaigners opposed to the Rosebank oil field have urged the Chancellor to investigate a deal between the majority owner of the field and Shell (Justin Tallis/PA)Proposals put to the OBR are not binding, but would indicate the government plans to break its manifesto pledge not to raise income tax.Such a move could generate as much as £6 billion to help repair public finances, according to the Resolution Foundation think tank, which supported a ‘two up, two down’ package.The Foundation assessed that the chancellor would need to require tax rises of at least £20 billion a year by 2029-30 to meet her fiscal rules.Speaking to the same reported plans, AJ Bell assessed that pensioners would be the hardest hit.An individual taking a pension of £35,000 would see their tax bill rise by almost £450 under the proposal, they found.Some self-employed individuals who pay income tax but not national insurance would also be affected.Scott Gallacher, director at Rowley Turton, told FT Adviser that while the impact on landlords may not garner much public sympathy, the furore around the scrapping of the winter fuel allowance “shows that granny is off limits as far as the Great British public is concerned”.Reeves signalled in a speech on Tuesday that she could break the pledge in order to put “the national interest” ahead of “political expediency”.Asked if she was willing to raise income tax, she said, without explicit affirmation: “If you’re asking what comes first, the national interest or political expediency, it’s the national interest every single time for me and it’s the same for Keir Starmer too.”She also signalled that the government could raise spending to offset rising energy costs.“As I take my decisions on both tax and spending, I will do what is necessary to protect families from high inflation and interest rates, to protect our public services from a return to austerity and to ensure that the economy that we hand down to future generations is secure,” she said.Raising income taxes could help repair a hole of some £30bn in Britain’s public finances, but would likely come at a political cost.The chancellor has said all will have to “contribute” to “to build the future of Britain”. More

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    Mistakenly released prisoner hands himself in as Lammy faces fresh pressure over handling of fiasco

    One of the prisoners mistakenly released from HMP Wandsworth handed himself in amid mounting pressure on David Lammy over his handling of the fiasco, as the hunt continues for a registered sex offender who is still at large. Billy Smith, 35, was pictured grinning on Thursday morning as he gave himself up three days after being released in error, having been sentenced to 45 months for multiple fraud offences. Wearing a tracksuit, the criminal was filmed hugging his partner and enjoying a cigarette on the jail steps before turning himself in. The latest blunders were blamed on clerical errors in a system under “relentless strain”.Meanwhile, the justice secretary insisted he was “not equipped with all of the detail” when he appeared at PMQs on Wednesday and repeatedly failed to answer questions on whether there had been another mistaken release since Epping hotel migrant Hadush Kebatu was wrongly freed last month.Speaking as builders broke ground at a new 1,700-cell prison in Leicester, Mr Lammy said: “I first found out about this on Wednesday morning. I was in the department, both learning from officials, but also preparing for Prime Minister’s Questions.Algerian sex offender Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, and fraudster Smith More

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    Labour’s new deputy leader warns Rachel Reeves not to break manifesto pledge and raise taxes

    Labour’s new deputy leader Lucy Powell has warned Rachel Reeves not to break her manifesto pledges and raise taxes, saying voters have to be able to “trust” the government. After both the chancellor and the prime minister refused to repeat the promise not to hike income tax, national insurance or VAT, Ms Powell said there was “no question” the party should keep its pledges. She also said it was urgent the government lift the two child benefit cap in full in this month’s Budget. Chancellor Rachel Reeves (Justin Tallis/PA) More

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    Voices: ‘The books cannot be balanced by Doge-style cuts’: Readers debate how to tackle taxes in upcoming Budget

    Ahead of Rachel Reeves’ looming Budget, Independent readers have weighed in on Britain’s public finances – and largely agree that tax rises may now be unavoidable if essential services are to be maintained.When we asked what the chancellor should prioritise, many stressed the need for fairness, arguing that income tax, national insurance (NI), and other levies should be applied progressively, protecting those on lower incomes while asking more of higher earners.Closing loopholes and tackling tax avoidance were widely highlighted, alongside calls for greater government efficiency.Readers also urged broader systemic reforms: removing private money from politics, boosting public service productivity, and ensuring that any tax rises are transparent and part of a long-term plan rather than a short-term fix.Long-term policy decisions – from Thatcher-era tax cuts to recent NI changes – were cited as factors constraining today’s options, leaving the public frustrated with declining services, soaring energy bills, and failing infrastructure.Overall, our community agreed that while no one enjoys paying more tax, honesty, fairness, and careful planning are essential if the UK is to navigate its financial challenges without undermining public services.Here’s what you had to say:DOGE-style cuts won’t workThe books cannot be balanced by making DOGE-style cuts. Whatever fantasies Farage may conjure up, there are not 90,000 surplus civil servants waiting to be fired, with zero impact on public services.We can’t continue to print or borrow money without trashing our credit rating and/or further increasing our £120 billion-a-year interest bill.So tax rises are inevitable. Reeves will simply be doing what every chancellor since the 2008 crash has failed to do, knowing full well it is the right thing to do. In a way, it’s pretty gutsy and almost admirable.Get a free fractional share worth up to £100.Capital at risk.Terms and conditions apply.Go to websiteADVERTISEMENTGet a free fractional share worth up to £100.Capital at risk.Terms and conditions apply.Go to websiteADVERTISEMENTNo, I don’t expect to be personally thrilled about paying more. But how long are we content to acquiesce in declining public services?SteveHillWhy did you not give this speech a year ago?I heard all of Rachel Reeves’ speech and all the questions asked. I really wish I had been there and had the chance to ask the following question:“Why did you not give this speech a year ago, and why did you simply not reverse the 2p cut on national insurance that Jeremy Hunt recklessly gave away before the election? That would have solved the £20 billion black hole and not caused all the issues with businesses and employment.Of course, the answer is obvious. No one is going to break a key manifesto commitment within months of being elected. However, I really wish she had done so. She would be in a far better position politically today.clivelosebyNo surpriseThis should come as no surprise, should it? Rishi Sunak warned us before the last elections.Given the position the economy is in, some things have to give. One of them is income tax, which will need to go up, and we have to accept that reality. In return, I would like to see a committed plan on fiscal discipline, economic growth, and slashing of waste. I also want to see a reduction in energy costs by reining in the green levies.KrispadIncremental bandsBack in the 1980s, when Mrs Thatcher reduced the top rate of income tax from 60 per cent to 40 per cent, economists warned it was unaffordable. Given that all our public services are now on their knees as a result of decades of spending cuts to fund that reduction, it proves they were right.But with a £47 billion tax gap, any chancellor having to increase taxes to plug a £40 billion black hole has a moral responsibility to invest additional ring-fenced resources to close that gap and tackle the shadow economy so legitimate businesses can compete on a level playing field.Increasing income tax seems inevitable, but it needs to be done transparently. Personal allowances should be increased in line with inflation, and far more gradual incremental rate bands introduced, starting with a lower rate, followed by more rate bands rather than a leap from 20 per cent to 40 per cent. The top rate on the highest portion of wealth should be increased to at least 50 per cent, which would create a fairer distribution of the tax burden proportionate to individual income levels.VickiGCutting MPs’ pay and perksWe can make a start on saving by cutting MPs’ and Lords’ pay by 10%, capping their bottomless expense accounts, stopping them owning multiple houses which they “flip” when they want them done up, looking at them having only taxpayer-owned accommodation, and ending the subsidised food and drink in the Houses of Parliament.Then stop renovations to Parliament – such as £9 million for a door – move Parliament out of London into a new purpose-built building with flats available for overnight stays, and reduce the legislature by at least 10 per cent, if not more. End the payment to past PMs “for expenses” and cut the number of unelected, unaccountable SPADs, if not eliminating them altogether. But of course none of this will ever happen while we let MPs make up their own rules.ListenVeryCarefullyComparing UK to MexicoI emigrated in 1990, and since then, it seems to me the UK has done poorly, with Brexit being an appalling act of self-harm. I live in Mexico, a developing country. The UK is supposed to be a developed country. If so, why does the UK not offer:Free university education Free childcare Free prescriptions Free broadband All of which are policies of the government here.Heisenberg97I feel targetedI have worked for over 40 years, paid off my mortgage, and am working on getting a decent-sized pension pot. I have never claimed any benefits. I feel like I am now a target. I should have been less responsible and spent more. I assume that is what the younger generation is also thinking, as it will be their pensions/contributions that will be taxed for longer than mine will be.Straight as a dieClosing tax loopholesOur tax system needs a very big dose of medicine. We have had too many years of loopholes to pacify the rich, allowing them, with clever sleight of hand, to avoid many of the taxes our legislation permits to be collected. We need fairness. Rachel must close all those loopholes before she raises our taxes.Just SayingRaising taxes fairlyRaise taxes fairly. Increase personal allowances, then raise percentages incrementally on the upper brackets. Increasing the basic personal allowance means the poorest don’t get hit by the increases further up the chain.SRKfanWe will run out of things to taxWithout major reform of the most significant costs to the government (i.e., our money), eventually we will run out of things to tax.The welfare system (beset with fraud), mass immigration of largely non-net tax contributors and their dependents, and a public service which is at the bottom of the developed world productivity tables.You can ignore all of these for the next year or two, but then where do you get the tax ££s from?Lambeth1000Some of the comments have been edited for this article for brevity and clarity.Want to share your views? Simply register your details below. Once registered, you can comment on the day’s top stories for a chance to be featured. Alternatively, click ‘log in’ or ‘register’ in the top right corner to sign in or sign up.Make sure you adhere to our community guidelines, which can be found here. For a full guide on how to comment, click here. More

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    ‘More clowns than Billy Smart’s circus’: Reform mocked as Kent council holds first meeting since video leak chaos

    Reform UK’s flagship council has been mocked as having “more clowns than Billy Smart’s circus” as councillors met for the first time since footage of a chaotic online meeting emerged.Several members of the party in Kent were suspended after footage of the meeting was leaked last month, in which council leader Linden Kemkaran could be seen berating backbench councillors when they questioned her.The administration was confronted by opposition leaders during a chaotic meeting at Kent County Council on Thursday, where they were branded a “laughing stock”.Harry Rayner, leader of the Conservatives, said the council had “more clowns on display since I saw Bill Smart’s last circus”.He was joined by leader of the Liberal Democrats in Kent, Antony Hook, who said the council is in “political crisis” and that he had heard of “bets being made” about whether the administration would last until Christmas.He urged councillors to “not act in a way that becomes a punchline on Have I Got News for You”.Harry Rayner, leader of the Conservatives, said the council had “more clowns on display since I saw Bill Smart’s last circus” More

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    Gordon Brown calls for ‘total abolition’ of two-child benefit cap to tackle ‘scar’ of poverty in Britain

    Former prime minister Gordon Brown has called for the “total abolition” of the two-child benefit cap, putting pressure on ministers to do more to tackle the “scar” of child poverty in Britain.Speaking at a conference to mark the 60th anniversary of the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG), the former Labour premier and chancellor shot down proposals to water down the controversial policy, instead calling for its complete removal.Pressure has increased on ministers to abolish the measure in the approach to the upcoming Budget and publication of the government’s delayed child poverty strategy.Campaigners at CPAG say the policy pulls 109 children in to poverty a day, and that without action, the number of children in poverty in the UK will rise from 4.5 million will rise to 4.7 million by the end of this parliament.The cap, introduced under Conservative welfare reforms, blocks parents from claiming the child element of universal credit worth £292.81 a month for a third or subsequent child born after April 2017.Gordon Brown speaks at a conference to mark the 60th anniversary of the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) More