The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Boris and Rishi at war as Chancellor ‘plays hardball’ on £10bn care tax

Tense stand-off as Westminste­r abuzz with rumours over reshuff le this week

- By Glen Owen and Anna Mikhailova

CHANCELLOR Rishi Sunak was last night ‘playing hardball’ over Boris Johnson’s proposed care tax.

Downing Street had been hoping to secure agreement with the Treasury over the new NHS and Social Care Levy by early yesterday and to announce the details on Tuesday.

But amid mounting tensions between No10 and No11, by early evening Mr Sunak was still demanding assurances from the Prime Minister that, once introduced, the £10billion-a-year levy would cover the cost of dealing with the NHS’s Covid backlog – and that he would not be forced to keep finding top-up funds from depleted Treasury coffers.

The row has come amid growing Westminste­r rumours that Mr Johnson could reshuffle his Cabinet as early as Thursday.

The rumours started after some advisers were told to ‘block out their diaries’ for the end of the week, with Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab and Education Secretary Gavin Williamson favourites to be moved.

Mr Sunak is presumed to be safe because his popularity in the party would make him too great a threat to Mr Johnson.

No 10 and No 11 were also negotiatin­g yesterday a separate, multi-billion-pound boost for the NHS this winter until the proposed levy comes into effect in April.

The strain placed on the NHS by the pandemic – more than 500,000 Covid patients have been admitted since March last year – has pushed the waiting list for elective surgery and routine treatment to a record high of 5.3million.

This figure is predicted to rise to 13million by the next election if no action is taken.

The Chancellor’s stance came amid a growing revolt in the Cabinet and on the backbenche­s over the levy, which would breach the party’s manifesto promise at the last election not to raise taxes.

At least six Ministers, including the Chancellor, have expressed concerns.

The Prime Minister has said he is determined to fulfil the pledge he made when he entered No 10 to ‘fix’ long-term care for the elderly.

After deploying Health Secretary Sajid Javid to put pressure on Mr Sunak to agree to a dedicated levy, arguments continued across the summer over what form it should take – a 2 per cent rise on National Insurance paid by employees or 1 per cent on that paid by employers and employees. Both options would raise about £10 billion a year.

Mr Sunak has also been pushing for a cap of around £80,000 on the maximum amount which people have to pay towards care. The money raised would be split between reducing the backlog of operations and reforming long-term care.

A source said: ‘The Chancellor doesn’t think we should be increasing taxes when people are struggling to get back on their feet, and particular­ly not when we said we wouldn’t.

‘So he has made sure he has played hardball over how the money is spent. He is not going to just hand over endless amounts of money.’

A Conservati­ve MP said a ‘Battle Royale’ was going on over how the final plans will look, adding: ‘Do we want to be hiking up taxes to preserve the assets of people who are much better off?’ Another said: ‘There are broadly two concerns. First, is [a rise in] National Insurance the right thing to do, as it’s a tax on jobs? It also has the generation­al unfairness aspect of taxing young people.

‘Secondly, there is a broader question of whether it is right for a Conservati­ve government to be increasing income taxes.’

Former Cabinet Minister David Davis said: ‘I will only vote for an increase in National Insurance contributi­ons if there is a proper worked out plan to go with it.’

Mr Sunak is expected to attend a reception for the 1922 Committee of Tory backbenche­rs tomorrow, where the tax hike will be high on the agenda.

The Government is also expected to announce a suspension of the pensions triple lock on the same day as the National Insurance announceme­nt.

The commitment guarantees the state pension will rise in line with inflation, earnings or 2.5 per cent, whichever is higher. Distortion­s to wages following the Covid crisis could mean a rise of as much as 8 per cent for pensioners next year, unless the triple lock is amended.

In Scotland, some tax-raising powers are devolved, but many taxes are still reserved to the UK Government and collected by HMRC. As such, the SNP has demanded that Scotland receives a fair share of any proposed UK Government levy.

There are a number of difference­s in the social care systems across the four nations of the UK.

In England, people who require at-home care must pay some or all of the cost, unless they qualify for a grant. In Scotland, there is free personal care at home if approved by a patient’s local authority.

Meanwhile, there are different thresholds for care home fees. In England, a person has to pay for all their own care home fees if they have assets and savings that exceed £23,250. In Scotland, the threshold stands at £27,250.

‘Sunak is not going to just hand over money’

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