The Guardian Australia

Sunak to meet Tory MPs to head off unrest over cost of living crisis

- Jessica Elgot and Peter Walker

Rishi Sunak will attempt to quell growing Conservati­ve unrest over the cost of living as delegation­s of MPs press him to cancel a planned tax rise and ditch VAT on energy bills in exchange for savings on tackling the pandemic.

The chancellor will convene MPs for several evening summits this week as tensions grow over pressures faced by households from April, with a planned 1.25-percentage-point rise in employee national insurance contributi­ons (NICs) and soaring energy bills once the price cap is reviewed.

Labour will hope to pile pressure on Sunak and Boris Johnson on Tuesday with a binding vote in parliament on cutting VAT on home energy bills.

The motion, put forward by Labour in its opposition day debate, guarantees parliament­ary time for a bill to enact the cut, a device that means Tory MPs must actively oppose it rather than abstain.

MPs’ demands are wide-ranging but the cut to VAT, which Sunak and Johnson

have previously ruled out in favour of more targeted action, has “the most widespread support”, according to one veteran Tory.

“It doesn’t hurt that it’s something we can now do because of Brexit,” said another senior Tory plugged into several key parliament­ary pressure groups.

Many are set to urge the chancellor to go further and delay the NICs rise from April, expected to bring in £12bn that Sunak wants to use to cut NHS waiting lists and fund the new social care system in the medium term.

David Jones, a former Brexit minister, said the pressure on many households would be immense from April.

“To have this tax increase at the same time the cap is removed from energy prices is very difficult. That is a couple of thousand pounds increase for many families,” he said.

One senior backbenche­r, John Redwood, warned Sunak on Monday that his own ambitions depended on his standing in the party on these issues.

“Those who brief that Mr Sunak should be the next PM should tell him imposing an avalanche of unpopular and unwise tax rises will undermine that ambition,” he tweeted.

Another MP said they would urge Sunak to ditch the rise and focus on making savings on pandemic spending, including NHS test and trace. “I will urge him to cut the NICs rise – £12bn is

not a lot of money compared to the current Covid spend. There is a great deal of support in the parliament­ary party for that.”

Though not all MPs said they would back revoking the NICs rise, one minister warned it had left Sunak exposed.

“The party hates the NICs rise. Sunak himself wouldn’t have done it apart from to head off other spending demands with warnings of more tax rises. So no wonder he comes under pressure to ditch it when there’s a hook to do it. The chancellor has to realise that the party and the country are just not where he is on tax and spend.”

Johnson said he had discussed cost of living pressures with Sunak on Sunday night. “I understand how difficult it is for people, I understand the pressures that people are facing on household finances,” he said on Monday.

“It’s making life very tough. And we’ve got to make sure that people are aware of all the things that they can do, all the money that we’re putting in via local councils to help people in hardship, the cold weather payments, the warm homes discount, the money for pensioners.”

Cabinet ministers have all but rejected a windfall tax on North Sea oil and gas profits, proposed by Labour. MPs said that was less of a priority. “Most colleagues think it’s counterpro­ductive at a time when we want to encourage inward investment,” a former minister said.

Johnson’s spokesman said a windfall tax had “not been ruled out” but hinted again that a targeted approach would be taken. “We want an approach that helps those most in need,” the spokesman said.

The communitie­s secretary, Michael Gove, underlined that new support measures were likely to be targeted to the most vulnerable. “I think that the prudent and the responsibl­e thing to do is to recognise that we need to take a balanced approach, and a balanced approach means that when we can support, we provide support most for those in the most difficult circumstan­ces,” he told Sky News.

Ministers are understood to have discussed extending the warm homes discount on bills for the most vulnerable but Tory MPs argue it does not help enough households.

Treasury sources said they were reluctant to raise the tax burden on the oil and gas sector, pointing to additional taxes on the extraction rate of oil and gas and headline tax rates on profits more than double other businesses.

Labour has criticised the education secretary, Nadhim Zahawi, who told LBC that “oil and gas companies … are already struggling”, though the companies are expected to report “near record” income in 2021-22.

 ?? Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA ?? The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, is committed to national insurance rises in the spring despite their unpopulari­ty within his party.
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, is committed to national insurance rises in the spring despite their unpopulari­ty within his party.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia