The Daily Telegraph

Focus on cutting income tax before IHT, Tories tell Rishi Sunak

- By Ben Riley-smith POLITICAL EDITOR

DOWNING STREET is facing a backlash over its considerat­ion of abolishing inheritanc­e tax as Conservati­ve MPS called for reducing income tax to be the focus instead.

Both Jonathan Gullis, the Tory MP for Stoke-on-trent North, and Neil O’brien, the former health minister, tweeted yesterday arguing for income tax cuts.

The interventi­ons came after The Daily Telegraph reported that axing inheritanc­e tax was being seriously considered for the spring Budget as a pre-election giveaway is planned.

The reaction from some Tory politician­s exemplifie­s the debate going on inside the Conservati­ve Party about which tax cuts to prioritise before voters go to the polls. The same debates are playing out inside No 10, with both the economic impact and potential political boost being factors in the discussion­s.

Reducing the 20 per cent basic rate of income tax and raising the threshold at which people start to pay the higher 40 per cent income tax band are also being explored by No 10.

Final decisions are unlikely to be taken until March, when the Budget – potentiall­y the last major fiscal event before the general election – is expected to be held.

Mr Gullis tweeted: “Axing inheritanc­e tax is something we should do, just not yet. Tax cuts for Spring 2024 I’d prefer us to prioritise: Raise the higher rate income tax threshold; Cut the basic rate of income tax; Scrap IR35 reforms; Increase VAT registrati­on threshold to £250,000.”

Mr O’brien wrote that “people most want to cut taxes that fall on low to middle earners and council tax and VAT”. He included a graph from the pollster Ipsos Mori from June showing that voters would prefer tax cuts on income, council tax, VAT, fuel duty and national insurance ahead of inheritanc­e tax.

Mr O’brien also reposted a comment from another Twitter user who said they were “amazed” that inheritanc­e tax abolition was still being looked at by.

The comments reflect just one side of the tax debate inside the Tory party. The Conservati­ve MPS Ranil Jayawarden­a and David Jones have already welcomed a potential inheritanc­e tax cut.

Income taxes are paid by many more people than inheritanc­e tax, meaning the political upside of reductions there could in theory be greater.

Just 4 per cent of estates paid inheritanc­e tax in 2021, according to HMRC figures. Some 32 million people paid income tax in 2022, with four million of those people paying the 40 per cent higher rate.

However, Labour insiders have indicated that the party would be much more likely to match income tax reductions adopted by the Tories than the abolition of inheritanc­e tax.

Should Labour promise not to reverse any income tax reductions announced, as they have done with the national insurance tax cut unveiled in November, its political benefit for the Tories could be blunted.

James Murray MP, Labour’s shadow financial secretary to the Treasury, reacted to reports that the abolition of inheritanc­e tax was being considered: “This is a desperate briefing from a desperate Prime Minister who is spending his Christmas break trying to keep Tory MPS on side. There have been 25 Tory tax rises since the last election.”

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