Angela Rayner just set out her plan for power – leaves us totally screwed | Personal Finance | Finance
On a scale of one to 10, I would normally say 11 or 12. But that still understates the scale of the threat. There are no sensible numbers for it. Ultimately, it would run into billions or trillions. Iโm talking pounds, obviously. Because thatโs the kind of money we’d lose if she and her boyfriend ever make it across the doorstep of No 10. And that nightmare scenario could be upon us within weeks, as Labour leadership contenders battle to replace PM Keir Starmer.
Right now, the race is between Andy Burnham, Wes Streeting, Ed Miliband, Red Ange and Starmer himself. As PM, Sir Keir is a known quantity. As in: known to be hopeless. But the others arenโt much better. Burnham doesn’t even get how the bond market works, even though we rely on it to stay afloat. Miliband doesn’t understand basic physics. He thinks that if we burn imported fossil fuels, they don’t count as carbon emissions. Whereas UK ones do. Yet Rayner remains the spookiest of the lot.
She may have escaped punishment over her stamp duty swerve, but the public hasnโt forgotten it. There are all sorts of reasons why she isn’t fit for high office. Including smashing a Parliamentary door in a drunken fit last week. And now she’s just given us three more.
The Labour leadership race will become a bidding war to please the hard left with promises the country simply cannot afford. Streeting looks the most economically literate, which probably rules him out immediately. I donโt fancy Burnhamโs chances given that he first has to win a by-election against Reform. And I genuinely canโt bear the thought of Miliband reaching No 10. My head would explode, followed shortly afterwards by Britainโs finances.
So far the candidates have avoided spelling out too many policies, but Rayner dropped three giant hints this week. First came more nationalisation. Train companies, water companies, energy companies, whatever.
She didnโt explain where the money would come from. Nor why Britain should dump more liabilities onto a national balance sheet that already groans under mountains of debt. Either way, we have far more pressing priorities than reheating failed 1970s Marxist economics. Her other ideas look just as dangerous.
Second, Rayner wants another jump in the minimum wage. That sounds lovely in theory. Iโd love workers to earn more too.
But Rachel Reeves has already hiked the minimum wage twice in two years by inflation-busting amounts. Combined with her disastrous jobs tax, businesses can’t afford to hire. Youth unemployment has soared and economists expect another 160,000 job losses this year.
Push wage floors even higher and more employers will stop recruiting or go bust. Others will replace staff with AI faster than they already planned. Finally, Rayner wants higher taxes on the rich. Has she noticed Reeves already piled roughly ยฃ70billion of tax rises onto the economy and still canโt balance the books?
The top 1% already shoulder around 30% of income tax. Squeeze them much harder and more will leave Britain altogether, taking their money and tax revenues with them. Running a modern economy requires serious judgement and basic financial literacy. Instead, Labour risks handing power to somebody who couldnโt even settle her own tax affairs without lawyers and an HMRC dispute.
If bond markets finally lose confidence in Britain, lawyers wonโt save us. They’ll simply cut off the countryโs credit line. At that point, we will be totally screwed.
