Scottish Daily Mail

Hammond hints tax rise is on cards

- By John Stevens Deputy Political Editor

The chancellor hinted that taxes could rise in order to ease cuts to public spending yesterday – as he attacked theresa May for hiding him away during the election campaign.

Philip hammond warned that ‘people are weary of the long slog’ of austerity.

But he accused the Prime Minister of losing her commons majority by failing to make the case for economic responsibi­lity.

criticisin­g Mrs May’s election strategy, Mr hammond joked that he had been kept ‘not quite in a cupboard’ over the course of the campaign.

the chancellor – barely visible in the run-up to the vote on June 8 – said the tories would have ‘probably done better’ if they had focused on their economic record.

Mr hammond said that his role in the campaign had not been the ‘one i would have liked it to be’. he told BBc1’s Andrew Marr Show: ‘i would have liked to have made much more of our economic record, which i think is an excellent one, creating 2.9million new jobs, getting the deficit down by three-quarters.’

Asked if the PM’s former aides Nick timothy and Fiona hill had kept him off the air waves, Mr hammond said: ‘i’m not going to speculate about what happened inside the campaign leadership team.’

he added: ‘We didn’t put enough energy into dismantlin­g Jeremy corbyn’s economic proposals and his spending plans, which would be catastroph­ic for this country, and we will now do that.’

he said that, in light of the election result, he would look again at planned spending cuts ahead of November’s Budget, adding: ‘obviously we’re not deaf.’

But Mr hammond warned that taxpayers could face rises to pay for a loosening of the purse strings.

he said: ‘We’ve never said we won’t raise some taxes. overall we are a government that believes in low taxes and we want to reduce the burden of taxes overall for working families. that is our political objective. But what is dishonest is the approach the Labour Party took in the election – pretending that you can raise taxes but they will never impact ordinary people.

‘increasing the burden of taxation will have an impact. if it’s tax on companies it will reduce investment and the creation of jobs.’

Later, Mr hammond told Itv’s Peston on Sunday: ‘i certainly recognise that people are weary after seven years of rebuilding the economy from the horrors that we saw after the financial crash.’

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