This article is more than 3 months old
Tory MPs sound alarm over cost of living crisis
as local elections loom
This article is more than 3 months old
Polls in May pose danger to Johnson as voters will
face further budget squeezes in preceding weeks
Michael
Savage
Sat 8 Jan
2022 16.42 GMT
A cost of
living crisis is “driving angst” among Conservative MPs about spring’s local
elections, senior party figures are warning, as an overwhelming majority of
voters in a survey reported that they had seen their costs rise faster than
their income.
With the
Treasury examining an expansion of a scheme designed to help the poorest with
their energy bills, influential Tories are already saying that the plan will be
too narrow and that the party will suffer big losses in May’s elections.
The
elections, which take place across London, metropolitan boroughs and some
county councils, are being regarded as the next major source of political
danger for Boris Johnson. MPs are sounding the alarm because inflationary
pressures are set to peak just weeks before voting takes place. Some Tories are
already warning they will try to engineer a parliamentary clash with the
chancellor, Rishi Sunak, to force him into action.
“I think
it’s fair to say that the cost of living is one of the things that’s actually
driving angst amongst MPs,” said Lord Hayward, the Tory peer and respected
pollster.
The MPs are
conscious that the elections will be happening in the wake of increases in
energy and national insurance charges due to come in three or four weeks
earlier.
“Large
numbers of MPs have never been in a parliament where the government has been 15
points behind. This for them is a new experience to be even 6% or 7% behind,
though the last two opinion polls have actually been better for the Tories,”
Hayward said. “But certainly there is an angst amongst MPs who, confronted by
6% to 8% deficits, are looking towards their local elections.”
The news
comes as an Opinium poll for the Observer suggests households are already
noticing price inflation. About 70% of voters said they had seen their cost of
living increase more than their income over the last 12 months, despite reports
of pay rises. A majority who voted Tory at the last election (57%) said they
backed removing VAT from energy bills.
One in eight
voters (12%) would now describe their financial situation as “struggling”, up
slightly from 9% from the end of lockdown in April. A huge majority of the
public say they have noticed price rises. About 86% have noticed a rise in the
overall cost of living, 83% a rise in grocery bills, 80% a rise in energy bills
and 59% a rise in council tax.
A likely
remedy from the government will be an expansion of the £140 Warm Homes Discount
aimed at the poorest households. However, Tories are already warning that expanding
the scheme will be insufficient: some even suggested they would threaten to
vote against this year’s budget without firmer action. “That is only for those
on benefits, predominantly,” said one influential figure. “The
just-about-managing are not helped. I hope that they introduce a green levy
escalator that goes down when the wholesale energy price rises.”
The
government is receiving guidance that inflation could rise to as high as 7% if
they fail to take action. Average annual fuel bills could rise from £1,300 to
about £2,000 a year.
“The whole
timing of this cost of living increase, whether it’s caused by world factors
such as energy prices or whether it’s caused by domestic factors such as
increased taxes, is coming at a very awkward time,” said another party veteran.
“Not only the local government elections, but just at a time when really
everybody wants to sort of get beyond Covid. We’re all hoping that after this
winter is over and Omicron doesn’t turn out as bad as everybody feared, we want
to emerge from that and start to get our lives back. This whole cost of living
thing – I think it’s going to become quite tricky for the government.”
Energy
regulator Ofgem is set to announce a rise of up to £700 in its price cap at the
start of next month. Bills would increase from April, with the local elections
set for 5 May.
Tories have
been demanding a cut to green levies, the end of VAT on energy bills or a
reversal of a coming increase in national insurance to ease the pressure.
Labour has so far backed cutting VAT on energy bills, but is also under
pressure to go further.
Stephen
McPartland, the Tory MP for Stevenage, said that family finances were like a
“leaky bucket that is getting leakier and leakier”. He called for the energy
price cap not to be increased.
Lib Dem
leader Ed Davey said there was now a “growing revolt in former Conservative
heartlands against this government”. He added: “As we saw in North Shropshire,
even lifelong Conservative voters are fed up with Johnson’s incompetence and
lack of decency. His failure to act on the cost of living crisis is simply
adding fuel to the fire.”
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