Jeremy Hunt warned he will lose grey vote unless
he cuts income tax in Budget
The Chancellor has raised alarm over the prospect of
him settling just for a further reduction in national insurance as it won't
help pensioners
By DAVID
WILLIAMSON, Sunday Express Political Editor, JONATHAN WALKER, Deputy Political
Editor
21:00, Sat,
Mar 2, 2024 | UPDATED: 22:42, Sat, Mar 2, 2024
https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1873070/Fury-over-Budget-threat-to-ignore-pensioners
Jeremy Hunt to cut National Insurance from 12% to 10%
from January
Tories have
been warned they face a furious backlash from pensioners if they fail to cut
income tax in the Budget this week.
Chancellor
Jeremy Hunt has lowered his sights and is now edging towards a further
reduction in national insurance.
But it will
not help the over-65s, after the number paying income tax almost doubled since
the Conservatives came to power.
Thousands
more retired people have been dragged into income tax for the first time
because of the continuing freeze on personal allowances.
Mr Hunt had
been considering a 2p cut in income tax, but his dwindling kitty means he may
not be able to afford it.
Nearly all
planned tax cuts are said to have been shelved and there is talk in the
Treasury of a further cut to National Insurance, which is not paid by over-65s.
Angry
campaign groups say pensioners have been “ravaged by rampant inflation” and
will be hit with “stealth taxes” unless action is taken.
The
backtracking has caused friction between the Chancellor and PM Rishi Sunak,
who is aware older voters will play a major part in deciding the outcome of the
next general election.
Dennis
Reed, of pensioner campaign group Silver Voices, warned Mr Hunt “won’t win a
single older voter back” if cutting National Insurance is “all he does”.
He added:
“The National Insurance cuts last autumn did not benefit a single pensioner
directly, many of whom are being brought into the tax regime for the first time
because of the continuing cruel freeze on personal allowances.”
Pensioners
paid £25.2billion in income tax in 2021-22 – the bulk of which came from the
levy on pensions. The jump in the number of over-65s now paying has been
condemned as the “real tax scandal”.
When the
Conservatives came into power around 4.5 million over-65s paid the tax but
experts say 9.15 million people are likely to fall into the bracket in 2024-25.
The fiscal
outlook has changed dramatically since Christmas as a rise in the cost of
government borrowing and lower than expected tax receipts have more than halved
the money the Chancellor has to play with.
A former
Cabinet member said: “Treasury ministers aren’t just climbing down on tax cuts,
they’re at the bottom of the valley, trying to dig a tunnel underneath it.
They’re all going round the tea room warning all and sundry not to expect much.
I know the game is to talk things down but with this lot that tends to be the
reality.”
Former
Chancellor George Osborne claims there has “certainly been friction” between
Number 10 and Number 11 because the Prime Minister “would like to cut income
tax now”.
But he said
the Office for Budget Responsibility believes this could stoke inflation and
this has been “the source of a lot of conflict”.
Mr Sunak’s
hopes of staying in Downing Street are likely to hinge on hanging on to the
support of older voters.
The latest
WeThink polling shows 41 per cent of those aged 75-plus and 28 per cent of the
65-74 age group plan to vote Conservative – compared with just 12 per cent of
under-40s.
Alan Lees,
National Association of Retired Police Officers chief executive, said NI cuts
“will do nothing to help pensioners, the very people who have been among the
hardest hit by the cost-of-living crisis”.
Mr Lees,
whose organisation is part of Later Life Ambitions, a campaign group
representing more than 250,000 pensioners, added: “Many of our members have a
fixed income and their purchasing power has been ravaged by rampant inflation.
“While the
Chancellor hints at tax cuts for some, many pensioners will be hit by his
stealth taxes this spring.
“Around
800,000 older people are going to be dragged into paying income tax this April
due to the failure to raise thresholds in line with inflation. The number of
pensioners paying income tax has doubled since this government came to power in
2010. That is the real tax scandal that will not be addressed in the Budget.”
Joanna
Elson, chief executive of Independent Age, also warned “cutting National
Insurance won’t put more money in the pockets of older people in poverty who
are desperate for help”.
Analysis by
Ipsos found older people are more likely to vote, with 74 per cent of people
over 65 voting in the 2019 general election and 66 per cent of 55-64s, compared
to 47 per cent of those aged 18-24.
And time is
running out for the Conservatives to convince voters they should trust them to
manage the economy.
But in a
direct message to Sunday Express readers, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Laura
Trott said: “We want to make you better off. You work every hour you can to
give your family the best life possible. You know what your loved ones need
better than anyone. We will pull out the stops to help you give them the best
life you can.”
It is
reported Mr Sunak has decided to “bet the house” on tax cuts and requests for
cash from government departments are being “knocked back”.
And some
Tory MPs think the Budget could pave the way for a general election on May 2.
One said: “You announce tax cuts but make it clear this is the direction of
travel rather. Then you have a clear dividing line with Labour, and you go to
the country.”
Earlier
this year, it had been expected the Chancellor could have up to £30billion to
spend but fiscal headroom has shrunk to £13billion. Initial suggestions of a 2p
cut to income tax have died away.
But a
spokesman at the Treasury defended the Government’s record, saying: “After
providing hundreds of billions of pounds to protect lives and livelihoods
throughout the pandemic and Putin’s energy shock, we had to take some difficult
decisions.
“However,
with inflation more than halved and because of the progress we have made, we
have cut taxes for hard-working people, with the average earner paying £1,000
less in tax a year than they otherwise would have done.
“And we
have provided the biggest ever cash increase to pension payments, a 10.1 per
cent rise.”

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