Western Mail

I don’t want to raise taxes again, says Prime Minister

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

BORIS Johnson insisted he will not hike taxes again “if I can possibly avoid it” as he grapples with shortages across the economy and a looming cost of living crisis.

The Prime Minister said he is ready to take “big, bold decisions” to rebuild the country after Covid-19 as the Tory Party conference opened in Manchester yesterday.

He highlighte­d the UK economy “bouncing back” more strongly than rivals in the G7 group of leading democracie­s.

But he acknowledg­ed the “chronic” lorry driver shortage and other problems were contributi­ng to a supply chain crisis which could last until Christmas.

Rising energy bills, a £20-a-week cut in Universal Credit set to come in on the day of Mr Johnson’s conference speech on Wednesday and the hike in national insurance next April also add to the pressures facing the Prime Minister.

Mr Johnson told the BBC the decision to end the temporary uplift in Universal Credit and hike taxes to fund the NHS and social care were necessary as part of the package to rebuild after the pandemic.

“If I can possibly avoid it, I do not want to raise taxes again, of course not, nor does [Chancellor] Rishi Sunak,” the Prime Minister said.

Despite the ballooning tax burden and increased state interventi­ons as a result of the pandemic, Mr Johnson compared his approach to Margaret Thatcher - heroine of the Tory right.

“Margaret Thatcher would not have borrowed more money now, I’ll tell you that much for free.”

Mr Johnson said there was “no fiercer and more zealous opponent of unnecessar­y tax rises than me, but we have had to deal with a pandemic on a scale which this country has not seen before in our lifetimes and long before”.

Meanwhile, Welsh Secretary Simon Hart was, according to the BBC, due to tell the conference that the UK Government would “deliver on the people’s priorities”.

Calling on the government­s of the UK to pull together, he was to tell delegates that the “UK Government is committed to giving the Welsh economy a shot in the arm and creating the jobs that people need” as he referred to the billions of pounds the Treasury has spent supporting jobs in Wales and the rest of the UK via the furlough scheme, which has now ended.

He was to add: “Now, more than ever, we need to be working together across the United Kingdom to ensure that we bounce back stronger from the pandemic, but the devolved administra­tions seem to be more focused on conversati­ons about power and constituti­onal minutiae.

“In the meantime the UK Government will continue to get on with the day job and deliver on the people’s priorities.”

It came as former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith, architect of Universal Credit, urged the UK Government to maintain the £20 weekly uplift.

He told Sky News: “Even if the government is determined to do this I would urge them to think about this over the period of the winter, not do it now, think about it in February, March, as they approach the Budget, when they know what the cost of living is, when they know what inflation is, when they know what the difficulti­es are in the marketplac­e.

“Far better to wait and see where we are, as now things are moving in the wrong directions in those terms and that is going to hit the poorest in society the most. We need to make sure we keep the support measures in for them,” he said.

Household budgets will take a further hit from next April when national insurance contributi­ons rise by 1.25% to pay for the Government’s investment in the NHS and social care.

Mr Sunak sought to address some of the concerns with the announceme­nt of a £500m hardship fund for vulnerable families but it may not go far enough for some.

Former cabinet minister David Davis told The Observer: “You don’t level up by increasing the tax and cost of living on the working class. We have to be absolutely clear what levelling up means.”

 ?? BBC ?? > Prime Minister Boris Johnson on the Andrew Marr Show yesterday
BBC > Prime Minister Boris Johnson on the Andrew Marr Show yesterday
 ?? ?? Welsh Secretary Simon Hart
Welsh Secretary Simon Hart

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