Wales On Sunday

Labour piles pressure on Rishi Sunak over his family’s tax affairs

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RISHI SUNAK and his family potentiall­y saved tens of millions of pounds in taxes through his wife’s non-dom status, Labour has said as it sought to maintain pressure on the Chancellor.

Akshata Murty announced on Friday she would pay UK taxes on all her worldwide income as she did not want her financial arrangemen­ts to be a “distractio­n” for her husband.

The dramatic move came after Mr Sunak had previously denounced the disclosure of his wife’s tax status as a “smear” by opponents intended to damage him politicall­y.

Labour and the Liberal Democrats called on the millionair­ess Ms Murty, who remains an Indian citizen, to pay the back taxes she had saved through not having to pay UK taxes on her overseas income.

Shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh said that while the arrangemen­t was legal, Mr Sunak had failed to be transparen­t about his family’s tax status at a time when he was raising taxes for millions of people.

“The Chancellor has not been transparen­t. He has come out on a number of occasions to try and muddy the waters around this and to obfuscate,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

“It is clear that was legal. I think the question many people will be asking is whether it was ethical and whether it was right that the Chancellor of the Exchequer, whilst piling on 15 separate tax rises to the British public, was benefiting from a tax scheme that allowed his household to pay significan­tly less to the tune of potentiall­y tens of millions of pounds less.”

In a statement Ms Murty, who is to keep India as her “place of domicile”, said she had done nothing wrong but acknowledg­ed some people did not see her tax status as being compatible with her husband’s position.

“I understand and appreciate the British sense of fairness and I do not wish my tax status to be a distractio­n for my husband or to affect my family,” she said.

“I do this because I want to, not because the rules require me to.”

Her announceme­nt came just hours after Mr Sunak admitted that he had continued to hold a US green card - granting him permanent residency in the United States - for a period while he was Chancellor.

He initially obtained the permit while he was working in the US, and a spokeswoma­n said he had continued to use it for travel purposes until he was advised that he should give it up when he made his first official visit to the US as Chancellor.

While the spokeswoma­n said “all laws and rules” had been followed, the disclosure­s have led some Tory MPs to question the political judgment of a man many believe harbours ambitions to enter No 10.

It comes at a time when Mr Sunak has faced intense criticism over his failure to do more to help families struggling with the soaring cost of living, while he has hiked taxes to their highest levels since the 1950s.

While the Chancellor has publicly blamed Labour for the disclosure­s, some around him see the hand of Downing Street amid reports of renewed tensions between Boris Johnson and the man he put in charge of the nation’s finances.

At a joint news conference on Friday with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, the Prime Minister was forced to deny claims No 10 was responsibl­e for briefing against Mr Sunak, insisting he was doing an “outstandin­g job”.

An ally of the Chancellor, Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake, rejected suggestion­s his leadership credential­s had been damaged, pointing to his record of supporting the economy through the pandemic.

“That takes incredible skill and incredible judgment,” he told the Today programme.

Mr Hollinrake also denied that Ms Murty’s non-dom status was a “tax dodge”, saying it was a policy which had been supported by both Conservati­ve and Labour government­s.

 ?? ?? Chancellor Rishi Sunak alongside his wife Akshata Murty
Chancellor Rishi Sunak alongside his wife Akshata Murty

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