Rayner denies wrongdoing over council house sale
amid police review
Labour deputy leader says she can provide tax advice
given at time after Tory complaint to Manchester force
Eleni
Courea Political correspondent
Thu 28 Mar
2024 09.53 GMT
Angela
Rayner has said she did “absolutely nothing wrong” when she sold her council
house after the police announced they were reviewing a decision not to
investigate.
The deputy
Labour leader told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme she was confident she had not
broken any rules.
Greater
Manchester police are reassessing their decision not to investigate claims
Rayner may have broken electoral law, after the Conservative MP James Daly made
a complaint about the force’s handling of the issue.
The Tories
have piled pressure on the police to investigate claims Rayner was liable to
pay capital gains tax (CGT) on the sale of the council house before she became
an MP. The claims were made in a book by the former Tory deputy chair Lord
Ashcroft, which suggested she had failed to properly declare her main
residence.
“I am
confident that I’ve done absolutely nothing wrong. I’ve been very clear on my
advice that I’ve received,” Rayner told Today.
Rayner has
said she had received tax advice at the time stating she had followed the
proper process. She said on Thursday she was happy to hand this advice over to
the police or HMRC but would not make it public.
“I don’t
need to publish all of my details,” she said. “My child’s birth certificate was
put out in the public domain and it’s not fair on my family for that
information to be out there.
“I’ve been
very clear, I will if HMRC want that information, I will comply and give HMRC
that information. If the police want that information, and they want me to give
them that information, I’m happily going to give that information. But I’m not
going to put out all of my personal details for the last 15 years.”
Rayner
argued that the claims were politically motivated. “What the police have done,
they’ve conducted an investigatory review, following pressure from the
Conservative deputy chair, and concluded there was no case to answer,” she
said. “But since then, the Conservatives have made a complaint about the police
actions in that, and the police are reassessing that.”
Rayner also
argued that “Boris Johnson was on to something” with his levelling up agenda
while he was prime minister. She and the Labour leader, Keir Starmer, vowed on
Thursday to revive the plan to redress regional inequality.
In an
article for the Times ahead of Labour’s local elections campaign launch, Rayner
and Starmer wrote that the Conservatives under Johnson were “starting to
understand” the issues behind regional inequality but accused Rishi Sunak of
killing the agenda.
“There is a
consensus, I would argue in the country that that work needed to be done,”
Rayner told the Today programme. “The problem was that the Tories then decided
not to do that, hollowed out and took money under the guise of austerity from
those areas and then created this Dragons’ Den bidding process where councils
spent millions of pounds bidding against each other for little pots of their
own money back.”
Rayner also
said she would not slow down implementation of her planned workers’ rights
reforms despite criticism from Peter Mandelson, the former business secretary
and architect of New Labour.
Labour has
committed to banning zero-hours contracts and strengthening workers’
protections. Last weekend, Mandelson wrote an article warning against “rushing”
through changes championed by trade unions.
Rayner said
on Thursday: “I’m not going to slow it down. I’ve been working with business
and with the trade unions and I’ve been working with all different sectors on
this.
“There is
an acknowledgment that – at the moment – insecure work that people face is not
only having an impact on working people’s lives, but it actually creates a
circumstance where employers can’t get the staff they need, [and] have massive
[staff] turnover. This affects profit as well. So there has to be a
rebalancing.”

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