'Britain deserves better': Keir Starmer slates 'Tory con' Budget and brands 'nicked' non-dom policy 'a desperate move'

6 March 2024, 15:20 | Updated: 6 March 2024, 15:27

'Britain deserves better': Keir Starmer slates 'Tory con' Budget and brands 'nicked' non-dom policy 'a desperate move'
'Britain deserves better': Keir Starmer slates 'Tory con' Budget and brands 'nicked' non-dom policy 'a desperate move'. Picture: Alamy

By Christian Oliver

Sir Keir Starmer has branded Chancellor Jeremy Hunt's Budget a 'Tory con', slating the Conservative Party for 'stubbornly clinging to the failed ideas of the past'.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

Providing his rebuttal to the Government's Spring Budget in the House of Commons this afternoon, Sir Keir said "Britain deserves better" and his party is "ready" to govern.

Mr Hunt earlier announced a series of fiscal measures that would be rolled out over the next few years, including modest cuts to National Insurance tax and frozen fuel and alcohol duty.

Speaking following the vote on the Budget, the Labour leader called for the government to "break a habit of 14 years" and to "confirm May 2 as the date of the next general election".

Continuing his rebuttal of the budget, Sir Keir said: "There we have it, the last desperate act of a party that has failed. Britain in recession, the national credit card maxed out, and despite the measures today, the highest tax burden for 70 years."

"That is their record, it is still their record, give with one hand and take even more with the other, and nothing they do between now and the election will change that."

Sir Keir Starmer and shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves prepare ahead of Wednesday's spring Budget, Tuesday
Sir Keir Starmer and shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves prepare ahead of Wednesday's spring Budget, Tuesday. Picture: Alamy

Read More: Budget at a glance: Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced National Insurance tax cuts and alcohol and fuel duty freezes

Read More: Hunt hands £450 to millions and overhauls child benefit in 'tax-cutting' budget - but bad news for non-doms and smokers

Sir Keir then referred to the prime minister and the chancellor as the "chuckle brothers of decline".

He told the Commons: "The Chancellor, who breezes into this chamber in a recession and tells the working people of this country that everything's on track. Crisis? What crisis? Or as the captain of the Titanic and the former Prime Minister herself might have said, iceberg? What iceberg?

"Smiling as the ship goes down, the chuckle brothers of decline, dreaming of Santa Monica or maybe just a quiet life in Surrey not having to self-fund his election."

Turning to some of the policies announced, Sir Keir said the Conservatives were trying to save their own skin by assuming Labour's policy of abolishing non-domicile status for wealthy foreign nationals.

He said copying the Labour policy was "a desperate move" before asks why they did not do it earlier.

Labour's Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting yesterday told LBC's Andrew Marr that he expected the Conservative government to 'nick' his party's flagship non-dom policy.

The loophole lets foreign nationals who live in Britain but are domiciled overseas avoid paying UK tax on overseas income or capital gains.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt leaves 11 Downing Street, London, with his ministerial box before delivering his Budget, Wednesday
Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt leaves 11 Downing Street, London, with his ministerial box before delivering his Budget, Wednesday. Picture: Alamy

Read More: The government has its budget priorities wrong, public services suffer as they prioritise tax cuts over vital investment

Read More: Jeremy Hunt freezes duty on fuel and alcohol as he unveils pre-election 'tax-cutting' Budget

Starmer also welcomed the government's cut to national insurance, but claimed Mr Sunak had broken a promise to cut income tax.

Sir Keir said: "Because we have campaigned to lower the tax burden on working people for the whole Parliament, and we won't stop now, we will support the cuts to national insurance today.

"But I noticed this in 2022 when the Prime Minister was chancellor, he made this promise: 'I can confirm in 2024 for the first time the basic rate of income tax will be cut from 20 to 19 pence'.

"Having briefed that all week, that an income tax cut was coming, that promise is in tatters today."

He also claimed Mr Sunak was overseeing a "Rishi recession" as he hit out at the Government's record on the economy.

The Labour leader said it remains true that taxes are at "a 70-year high" despite the Chancellor's budget, adding: "The British people paying more for less, an unprecedented hit to living standards of working people, the first time they have gone backwards over a Parliament, and they were cheering that today.

"The reason is equally simple, there is no plan for growth. How can there be? He can say 'long-term plan' all he likes," Sir Keir added to jeers from the Prime Minister and Chancellor.

He insisted it was a "statistical sleight of hand" by ministers to claim Britain has grown more quickly than countries like Germany over the last 14 years, telling MPs: "Indeed, in per capita terms, our economy has not grown since the first quarter of 2022, the longest period of stagnation Britain has seen since 1955."

Sir Keir said: "There is nothing technical about working people living in recession for every second the Prime Minister has been in power. This is a Rishi recession."

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

The Belem, the three-masted sailing ship bringing the Olympic flame from Greece, sails past a container ship decorated with the Paris 2024 logo when approaching Marseille, southern France

Ship carrying Olympic torch arrives in Marseille amid fanfare and high security

Russell Brand has posted a new picture of him hugging Bear Grylls in the Thames

Russell Brand hugs Bear Grylls in the River Thames after being baptised in a bid to ‘leave behind his sins’

Secretary of defence Lloyd Austin speaks during a hearing of the Senate Appropriations Committee Subcommittee on Defence on Capitol Hill in Washington

Pentagon chief confirms US paused bomb shipment to Israel over Rafah concerns

Lauren Wasser lost both of her legs

Model, 24, issues stark warning to all women after losing both legs due to correct use of tampons

Georgia Harrison was the victim of Stephen Bear's revenge porn

Reality star Georgia Harrison says leaked sex tape filmed without consent by Stephen Bear 'spread like a house fire'

Supermarkets have been warned they must start selling items at the appropriate price levels

Grocery stores caught charging wrong prices for everyday staples including coffee and crisps - see full list of items

Andrew Tate has been served with civil proceedings papers at his home in Romania.

Four British women sue Andrew Tate over rape and physical assault allegations

Charles and Harry are not going to meet

King Charles and Prince Harry at London events just two miles apart - but no hope for reunion between father and son

Exclusive
John McDonnell and Mish Rahman have both questioned the move to accept Natalie Elphicke into the Labour party

John McDonnell 'shocked' by Natalie Elphicke defecting to Labour, as top official brands party 'dustbin for far right'

David Lammy has said that Trump's approach to Nato is “misunderstood”.

Donald Trump’s approach to European security is ‘misunderstood’, says Labour's David Lammy

Rebecca Joynes is accused of having sex with teenage boys

'Anyone in my position would have had sex with good-looking teacher,' schoolboy, 15, tells police as she stands trial

Natalie Elphicke has defected to the Labour Party

'Monumental disloyalty’: Shocked MPs hit out at Conservative MP Natalie Elphicke's defection to Labour

Rebel Wilson has broken her silence on the pair's divorce.

Rebel Wilson breaks silence over Sacha Baron Cohen and Isla Fisher divorce following memoir speculation

Kate Osamor

Labour MP Kate Osamor has whip restored after being suspended for Gaza comments

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike on buildings near the separating wall between Egypt and Rafah, southern Gaza Strip

Israel reopens key Gaza crossing but UN says no aid has entered

Fani Willis

Georgia appeals court agrees to review ruling allowing DA to stay on Trump case