Daily Mail

BORIS’S HIGH ST BOOST

PM to slash rates for 500k small businesses

- By Jason Groves Political Editor

BORIS Johnson will announce immediate help for the high street today in the first Queen’s Speech of his ‘people’s government’.

Half a million independen­t shops, restaurant­s, pubs and cinemas will benefit from a cut in business rates from April.

Standard retailer discounts will rise from 33 per cent to 50 per cent – at a cost of around £320million.

Tory sources said the tax break would be worth up to £12,500 a year. The move, which is a victory for the Daily Mail’s Save Our High Streets campaign, will be followed at the March budget by a review of a rates regime seen as a key factor in the decline of town centres.

The Queen’s Speech is expected

to contain up to 40 pieces of legislatio­n dominated by Brexit and the NHS.

Mr Johnson warned Tory MPs last night that they would start the New Year with a frantic week of Commons sittings to push through the EU Withdrawal Agreement Bill. The Commons will hold its first vote on the legislatio­n in a special sitting tomorrow, paving the way for departure on January 31.

But Tory strategist­s have also ordered a big package of funding and reform for the National Health Service. They argue that delivering on Mr Johnson’s pledges on the issue is essential if the Conservati­ves are to lock in the support of first-time

Tory voters who helped them to electoral victory last week.

Mr Johnson underlined his determinat­ion to be seen to be acting on the NHS by holding a reception for nurses in Downing Street yesterday. He told them the Health Service was ‘the single greatest institutio­n in this country’.

The Prime Minister: ‘The pressures and demands are enormous and we have to help you cope with that. We have to invest and as you may have heard in the last few weeks, we are. We are upgrading hospitals, and building new hospitals.’

A Tory source added: ‘The way we win the next election is to show we have delivered on our promises on health. We want to neutralise the NHS as an issue for Labour at the next election, and that means making sure we deliver now.’

The announceme­nt on business rates confirms that hundreds of thousands of small businesses will get additional help with bills next year. The plan, which is designed to give struggling town centres a shot in the arm, will increase the retail business rates discount from 33 per cent to 50 per cent.

The tax break will apply to all independen­t shops, pubs restaurant­s and cafes in England with a rateable value below £51,000 – roughly 90 per cent of the total.

For the first time, the discount will be extended to independen­t cinemas and grassroots music venues.

Independen­t pubs will benefit from a further £1,000 cut in business rates on top of the 50 per cent relief.

Chancellor Sajid Javid said: ‘We want to reinvigora­te communitie­s up and down our great country, helping people put the heart back into the places they call home.

That’s why we’re taking action to save our high streets and keep pubs, cafes and hairdresse­rs open by slashing their business rate bills by a half.’

Today’s Queen’s Speech is the second in two months and Government sources said the ceremonial elements of the event would be pared back because of its proximity to Christmas.

The Queen will deliver the address but will wear a ‘day dress and hat’ rather than the usual ceremonial robes and crown.

New Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle has also had to scale back plans to reinstate the role’s full ceremonial dress after officials were unable to find the traditiona­l fullbottom­ed wig, last worn in 1992.

HOW can it be right in a civilised society to leave care of frail and elderly people – many suffering from the cruel curse of dementia – to wives and husbands in their eighties?

How is it acceptable for partners who are themselves in the twilight of life to be left to bathe, feed and fend for loved ones whose condition would challenge even a profession­al care worker?

Yet, as we report today, one in three over80s – 970,000 people – are doing just that. This selfless, unpaid work saves the taxpayer £23billion a year, according to Age UK.

Meanwhile, 1.8million people are looking after someone with dementia. And, as our society ages, this will hit 2.8million by 2035.

The social care crisis is a hidden scandal, the product of decades of parsimony, drift and dither on the part of our leaders.

On taking office, the Prime Minister stood in Downing Street and promised to fix social care ‘once and for all’. He said there was a plan. But we are still waiting to hear what it is. So far, there is no sign of it in today’s Queen’s Speech.

Boris Johnson is enjoying a political honeymoon in the wake of his election triumph and eyes are, for the moment, still focused on Brexit. But social care is a ticking time bomb for this Government – an issue that can become only more dangerous. Decisive action will be needed to defuse it.

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