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Downing Street refused to collect the rule of a “Tax Temple” of Britain’s richest people Lord Neil Kinnock was a good way to fill a growing public finance hole.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves It’s under pressure to raise taxes after last week £ 5bn withdrawal of welfare in storage despite the rule of treasure on several occasions, including April this year.
Kinnock calls for a 2 percent tax on properties over £ 10mn, claiming it Increase in more than £ 10bn one year. Many Labor MPs encourage reeves to increase taxes to rich people, despite increasing capital tax or imposing a possible “mansion tax” of expensive assets.
To a short reporters on Monday, a spokesman for Sir Keir Starmer said: “Primer minister always tells the widest shoulder.”
He also emphasized Reeves that Reeves rejected a new treasure tax, but, asked if he could rule such debt, he said: “I do not write a future budget for you today.”
Starmer’s spokesman said the reeves raised the duties of private jets and non-dom. He also raises capital tax rates last year and increases taxes to private schools.
Economists estimate that Chancellor can face a fiscal hole of £ 20bn or more than autumn withdraws of reforms of reforms of reforms and possible downgrades.
The reeves ordered any fun of his borrowing rules and acknowledged that forcing painful parliaming by Parliament can be difficult, leaving the big solution.
He said in 2023, before the total election, he had “no plans for a treasure tax”, a position he restored in April 2025.
Telegraph immediately asked if he could turn off the tax tax on his autumn budget, he said: “I can.” He added: “I’m very clear about it on many occasions.
“We are not interested in a treasure tax,” he said on that occasion. “Our priority is economic growth and that is the way you make people better and safely better in public.”
Reeves are troubling with Labor MPs voting welfare storage as the cost to be reached by taxing the rich.
The Treasury was already concerned about leaving the rich people after he restricted the rule non-dom on the previous year’s budget and considered Pull suggestions to stop the exodus.
Lord MacPherson, formerly permanent Secretary of Treasury and today’s private bank c Hoare & Co, “the theory taxes, not working.”
He added: “Why is a government nearly lost in our non-reforms of DOM opens a new front in the footloose, and unchanged in income or consumption.”
John Glen, the former conservative minister of town, says it is “perfectly aware” wants to work with MPs and peers to increase the taxes of the rich.
“We need treasure traders to feel part of the growth solution not the whip men of unwavering ways to work,” he said. “The lack of a serious benefit plan and reduced growth forecasts means unavoidable next tax waves to be regarded.”