Budget 2025 live: Ordinary people will pay ‘a little bit more’, says Reeves


BBC Verify

Chancellor gets Labour manifesto tax pledge wording wrongpublished at 17:24 GMT

Let’s return briefly to Reeves’s post-Budget news conference, where the chancellor was pressed about her decision to extend freezes to income tax and
National Insurance thresholds – which will raise more revenue for the
government.

She was asked whether this broke a Labour manifesto pledge
not to increase taxes on working people.

She denied this, saying: “If you read the manifesto, we’re
very clear – we say the rates of income tax, National Insurance and VAT.”

But that is not what the manifesto said.

Labour’s 2024 election manifesto pledged that the party
“will not increase taxes on working people, which is why we will not
increase National Insurance, the basic, higher, or additional rates of income
tax, or VAT”.

So it specified that the rates of income tax would not be
raised but on National Insurance it just pledged that there would be no
increase.

Freezing the thresholds on income tax and National Insurance
means that more money will be raised – an estimated £8bn in 2029-30.

Helen
Miller from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, an economic research group, says this would “break the
letter of the manifesto which said no increase in National Insurance”.



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