Labour MPs banned from over 1,000 pubs in mass nation-wide tax protest | Politics | News
More than 1,000 pubs have now banned Labour MPs from being served, as part of a mass protest against tax hikes threatening their survival. These now include three of Rachel Reevesโs own local pubs, who have said they will refuse her entry over the Christmas period.
Dorset publican Andy Lennox, who is organising the campaign, said that if a Labour MP attempted to buy a pint from him he would demand they โgo back and donโt comeโ in. He blasted: โWeโve done enough talking. Weโve had letters hand-delivered to the chancellor. Weโve told the chancellor what we need. We need an emergency VAT cut to 13 per cent now. Until that happens, this is going to get bigger and bigger and bigger. The vast majority of everybody I know is either going bust, struggling, or on their last legโ.
Jeremy Clarkson joined the campaign last week, barring entrance for any Labour MPs from his famous Farmerโs Dog establishment in the Cotswolds.
He posted: โTo be clear, I have banned all Labour MPs from my pub, except one: Markus Campbell-Savours. Heโs welcome any time. And not just because the Labour Party has now sacked him.โ
Mr Campbell-Savours lost the Labour whip last week for rebelling against Rachel Reevesโs Family Farms Tax.
Pubs are facing an onslaught of costs, from the rises in minimum wage, VAT, alcohol duty and the latest eye-watering business rates reevaluation.
From April 2026, retail, hospitality and leisure relief will beย replaced with two lower business rate multipliers for properties with rateable values below ยฃ500,000.
The lower tax rates will be funded by a higher multiplier applied to all properties with a rateable value of ยฃ500,000 or above.
Many businesses have seen their tax bill skyrocket by tens of thousands of pounds since the rate changes were announced.
Labour MP Tom Hayes posted a video on social media condemning his local boozerโs ban on his entry, accusing them of โundermining the inclusive culture that business owners locally have helped to nourish.
โMy job has just got a million times harder because I canโt go and bang the drum for businesses with the chancellor if I canโt speak to business owners because theyโre banning me from doing so.โ
A Treasury spokesman said: โWeโre protecting pubs, restaurants and cafรฉs with the budgetโs ยฃ4.3 billion support package. Without this support, pubs would face a 45 per cent increase in the total bills they pay next year. Because of the support weโve put in place, weโve got that down to just 4 per cent. This comes on top of our efforts to ease licensing to help more venues offer pavement drinks and put on one-off events, maintaining our cut to alcohol duty on draught pints, and capping corporation tax.โ
