Andy Burnham plots Budget from hell – here’s how he’ll hike your taxes | Personal Finance | Finance


The Makerfield by-election is less than three weeks away on Thursday 18 June. If Burnham gets into Parliament, it wonโ€™t be long before he replaces Keir Starmer as PM. That would give him plenty of time to pick his chancellor and prepare an autumn Budget. Exciting times for him. For taxpayers, it’s another nightmare in the making. Weโ€™ve already endured two disastrous Budgets from chancellor Rachel Reeves. So far sheโ€™s hit Britain with ยฃ66billion in extra tax, ยฃ32billion in spending hikes and ยฃ140billion in borrowing. Incredibly, Burnham thinks she hasnโ€™t gone far enough.

Like much of Labour, he acts as if governments can tax, spend and borrow without consequences. No wonder gilt yields soar and the pound falls at the thought of him as PM. So where would his tax barrage land? Before the 2024 general election, Starmer and Reeves ruled out rises in the โ€œbig threeโ€ taxes of income tax, VAT and National Insurance. Reeves, of course, broke that promise twice. First, with a ยฃ26billion hike to employer’s National Insurance, second, by extending the income tax threshold freeze to 2031. Both of which ultimately hit working people.

Incredibly, Burnham is repeating the same big three pledge. Does he think weโ€™re stupid? Actually, it doesnโ€™t matter. We donโ€™t get to vote.

Heโ€™s also contradicting himself, having said thereโ€™s โ€œdefinitely a caseโ€ for hiking the additional rate of income tax from 45% to 50%. Still more punishment for aspiration, success and hard work. But the really big raid would come elsewhere.

Burnham repeatedly argues Britain โ€œovertaxes labour and undertaxes wealthโ€. In practice, that means he’ll go after our homes, savings, assets and inheritances. Heโ€™s backed higher council taxes on expensive properties, which would hammer homeowners in London and the South East.

Leadership rival Wes Streeting has floated a wealth tax, and Burnham might be tempted too. Even though they’re incredibly complex to administer and would drive still more wealth Britons abroad, eroding our tax base. As the Budget gets closer, there may be other tax hikes too.

Businesses wouldn’t escape either. Today, they’re struggling with high taxes and rocketing costs. Burnham would add to their burden, with still more tax and regulation. So where would all this money go?

Towards a bigger welfare state, higher public spending and nationalisation. All of which would destroy wealth, rather than create it. The IMF just warned we cannot keep hiking tax damaging growth, investment, hiring and ambition. Burnham will do it anyway. Because that’s what Labour MPs, activists and the trade unions are demanding. As are Burnhamโ€™s backers Angela Rayner and Ed Miliband. Only voters in Makerfield can save us. If Burnham wins, taxpayers will be the losers.

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