Jeremy Hunt is considering cutting an extra penny off National Insurance in a Spring Budget giveaway. Speaking to the Daily Express, the Chancellor vowed he would prioritise tax cuts that boost growth. On the day Labour paraded its credentials with big business,
Britons hoping to see their tax bills go down after the Spring Budget could be disappointed. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has told a Cabinet meeting there is less capacity for slashing taxes than previously hoped. As reported in The Times, he told his
Former Brexit Party MEP Ann Widdecombe clashed with Jeremy Vine in a brutal debate about whether or not Channel migrants should be able to work. The former Tory MP claimed that the Government must “take control” of the issue before the question of
Treasury number crunchers said it means the Chancellor has more money to play with than the £13 billion he had his Autumn Statement in November. But the figure is lower than the £20 billion “fiscal headroom” forecast by independent analysts. The estimates
A council tax hike for expensive foreign-owned properties could raise millions according to a group of experts. The Northern Powerhouse Partnership (NPP) is calling for council tax bands in England to be changed dramatically to raise millions for councils bereft of funding.
Campaigners are demanding that Britain uses its Brexit freedoms to save thousands of pubs from closure and put a smile on Nigel Farage’s face. The former Brexit Party leader turned GB News host is known to love a glass of beer but
Activist, Gina Miller, claims voters have had enough of the “chaos” and believes it is time to head to the ballot box, which received pushback on Jeremy Vine’s Live on 5. Britain’s next General Election is expected to be held this year,
Polling shows most of the public want the threshold to be raised to take more people out of paying (Image: Getty) Jeremy Hunt has a surprise £20 billion war chest for pre-election giveaways after a major fall in borrowing. Tories are clamouring
Jeremy Hunt has reminded Tory grassroots that the party will always “cut taxes when we can”. The Chancellor also warned that Labour will never do the same because they want to squander taxpayers money on “ludicrous” pledges. His rallying cry to party
“I believe fundamentally that low-tax economies are more dynamic, more competitive and generate more money for public services like the NHS,” Hunt said. The Chancellor is entirely correct – high taxes discourage investment, undermine innovation, and stifle economic growth. The Chancellor’s comments