Labour surges as Tory fears grow over Truss’s tax
cut agenda
Likely PM’s policies will mean ‘big trouble’, say
critics, as Starmer’s energy price initiative boosts him in polls
Liz Truss has been criticised by the former Tory
chancellor Kenneth Clarke for proposing tax cuts during a time of ‘enormous
public debts’.
Toby Helm
Observer political editor
Sat 20 Aug
2022 20.30 BST
Senior
Tories have warned that their party will suffer dire electoral consequences
under a Liz Truss premiership that fails to address the cost of living crisis,
as Labour enjoys a poll bounce suggesting Keir Starmer could be on course for
No 10.
Amid signs
of mounting panic among high-ranking Conservatives about Truss’s economic
policies, several former cabinet ministers told the Observer on Saturday the
party would suffer devastating losses in blue and red wall seats unless Truss
changes tack, if and when she enters No 10.
After
Michael Gove described Truss’s plan to focus on cutting taxes as a “holiday from
reality” and announced he was supporting Rishi Sunak, the latest Opinium poll
for the Observer gives Labour and its leader a double poll boost, days after he
backed a complete freeze on energy bills this autumn. Labour now enjoys its
biggest Opinium poll lead in months – eight points – while Starmer has surged
well ahead of Truss in the past two weeks when voters are asked who would be
the best prime minister.
Two weeks
ago 29% of all voters said Truss would be the best PM, against 28% who chose
Starmer. This weekend, Truss has dropped to 23% while Starmer, who announced
his price cap policy only last Monday, has increased his score to 31%. When the
choice was Starmer versus Sunak, 29% backed Starmer and 23% Sunak.
A poll on
Saturday for the Times by YouGov, whose current methodology tends to give
Labour a higher figure than Opinium’s, showed Starmer’s party enjoying its
biggest lead in 10 years, on 43% – 15 points ahead of the Conservatives on 28%.
Truss – the
runaway leader in the contest to be the next Tory party leader and prime
minister – is insisting she will resist more “handouts” to those struggling
most with the cost of living, an approach she describes as “Gordon Brown
economics”.
Instead,
she says, she will use tax cuts as a way to boost the economy – despite
warnings from economists and senior Tory colleagues that this will merely stoke
and embed inflation.
In an
interview in this weekend’s Observer New Review, the former Tory chancellor
Kenneth Clarke describes the Truss approach as “nonsense” and “simplistic”.
Clarke
says: “Everybody would do it if that worked. There’s a slight touch of the
Argentinian or Venezuelan government about it. This is not a time for tax cuts
because we have enormous public debts. Tax cuts will stimulate growth in
demand, but the problems are with the difficulties in supply, so they will push
inflation further up.”
Already,
the deputy prime minister, Dominic Raab, and the former Tory leader Michael
Howard have gone public to criticise Truss’s approach.
Gove said
going down the tax-cutting route would benefit those least in need, and fail
the poorest: “The answer to the cost of living crisis cannot be simply to
reject further ‘handouts’ and cut tax. Proposed cuts to national insurance
would favour the wealthy, and changes to corporation tax apply to big
businesses, not small entrepreneurs.
“I cannot
see how safeguarding the stock options of FTSE 100 executives should ever take
precedence over supporting the poorest in our society, but at a time of want it
cannot be the right priority.”
Another
former Cabinet colleague of Gove and Truss, who is backing Sunak, said: “If Liz
does not change tack and back a real economic package that does more to help
those in need, I think we will be in big trouble. But to do so she will need to
go back on what she has said in the leadership campaign, which will not be
without consequences either.”
A former
minister added: “We can write off those ‘blue wall’ seats under Liz. Cutting
taxes won’t help us win support in the ‘red wall’ either. You can’t cut taxes
and level up.”
Reacting to
Gove’s announcement, a spokesperson for the Sunak campaign said the former
chancellor was “delighted to have the support of a party and cabinet veteran
who has incredible intellectual heft and has shown the radical reforming zeal
in every job he has had, that we now so desperately need”.
He added:
“Michael also understands the severity of the challenges we face in the winter
and we need honesty about that and a plan to tackle it and support people,
which Rishi has.”
Meanwhile
the Liberal Democrats have set up a new “attack Truss unit”, to highlight what
they say is her failure to help people with energy costs, in the hope of
winning over more voters in the blue wall seats in which they came second to
the Conservatives at the 2019 general election.
In his
interview, Clarke predicts a serious recession that will be made worse by the
wrong tax policies, and suggests that under Truss the country could be in a
desperate economic situation at the next election.
“I’ve felt
for some time that we’re bound to have a very severe recession. And if we’re
not careful, it’s going to be combined with very bad inflation, which does
social, as well as economic, damage. Living standards generally are going to
fall for the first time for a long time, and the main short-term measures
should be to stop us seeing any increase in the number of people becoming
destitute in this country. The government shouldn’t be asking themselves, what
is the Daily Mail going to be saying tomorrow, but what is the economy going to
look like in a couple of years’ time when we have an election?”
The Sunak
campaign believes the polls suggesting Truss is home and dry in the leadership
race are wrong, and is convinced the ex-chancellor is still in with a chance
and is making up ground.
Opinium
found that 62% of people support Labour’s policy of freezing energy bills.
About 40% of respondents said they would not be able to afford the rise in the
cap due to be announced by the energy regulator Ofgem this week without falling
behind on other essential bills.
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