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Reform UK abandoning manifesto pledge of £90bn in tax cuts, deputy leader admits

about 13 hours ago
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Reform UK’s deputy leader has admitted the party cannot deliver the £90bn in tax cuts promised in its manifesto, saying it would concentrate on public spending cuts once in government.Richard Tice said key election pledges such as lifting the income tax threshold would be an “aspiration” and that once in government Reform would concentrate on cutting the civil service and scrapping net zero.Reform’s leader, Nigel Farage, is said to be planning a speech next month to overhaul the party’s economic policy – which Labour and the Conservatives see as a key weakness.The Times reported that Farage would promise to reduce spending before reducing taxes.Farage has previously said he expected to make £350bn worth of spending cuts over the course of the parliament – the equivalent of axing the whole schools budget every year or wiping out a third of NHS funding annually.

He has said he would find the savings via cuts to net zero, migrant hotels and diversity initiatives, but added the target figure was also widely expected to be revised.“A manifesto is based on a point in time,” Tice told Times Radio.“The principles behind it are absolutely rock solid.We said we’ve got to make very significant savings in order to fund a different way to run the economy.“What’s happened since then is that the state of the economy, because of the mismanagement by this Labour government, the numbers have got far worse.

And we will be focusing relentlessly, as I’ve been saying, on the savings.”Policies in the manifesto included raising the inheritance tax threshold to £2m, lifting the income tax personal allowance to £20,000 and the higher rate to £70,000 and reducing corporation tax to 15%.It also included tax relief on private school fees and cuts to fuel duty.“As an aspiration, that is absolutely the plan, the principle behind it.But we cannot do any of this, given the state of the finances, until we deliver on the savings,” Tice said.

“We’re focusing on the savings, deliver on the savings, deliver on the regulation cuts, that’s the way we change the way that you run and manage this economy, then you can get performance-related tax cuts further down the road only when you’ve delivered on the savings,”Reform has made a major play of finding cuts in local government after victories in the 2025 local elections – suggesting the party would send in cost-cutting teams modelled on the US president Donald Trump’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge),Tice said changes to regulations would make cost-cutting easier, saying they would not run up against the same issues nationally,“We will change the obligations that are set down by the government because we will completely, boldly change the way that the government functions, the way the civil service functions,Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotion“There are a whole range of things, frankly, that the government does at the moment that regulations provide that are a hindrance to productivity, a hindrance to growth.

”A Labour spokesperson said Reform’s economic plans were “built on sand”.“Farage continues to flirt with Liz Truss’s economy-crashing unfunded pledges – which would leave family finances at risk.Working people simply cannot trust Reform.They offer anger but no answers,” the spokesperson said.“Only this Labour government is focused on renewing Britain, so that we can grow the economy and put money back in people’s pockets.

”The Institute for Fiscal Studies has previously said the sums in Reform UK’s 2024 manifesto were implausible,“Regardless of the pros and cons of shrinking the state, or of any of their specific measures, the package as a whole is problematic,” it said,“Spending reductions would save less than stated, and the tax cuts would cost more than stated, by a margin of tens of billions of pounds per year,”The Conservative shadow chancellor, Mel Stride, said the plans were “all over the place … Reform stood on a platform last year of huge unfunded commitments which would have wrecked the public finances,They cannot be trusted to run our economy.

“It’s Corbynism in a different colour – undeliverable, uncosted, and totally detached from reality,Britain needs a serious and honest plan to live within our means, support wealth creators and grow the economy,”
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Why Britain’s climate and defence strategies need to be better integrated | Letter

Your article (National security threatened by climate crisis, UK intelligence chiefs due to warn, 8 October) exposed the dangerous disconnect between climate policy and defence. It raises vital questions about Britain’s – and the world’s – readiness to face the security threats posed by the climate crisis, none of which can be met if leaders keep treating climate and defence as separate issues.This summer, wildfires linked to climate change brought Europe to its knees, wreaking economic havoc, overwhelming health systems and draining military resources. All over the world, climate breakdown is fuelling instability, conflict and displacement. The EU’s failure to break free from Moscow’s pipelines is jeopardising its energy sovereignty

about 9 hours ago
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Swinney says Scottish government will sponsor visas for foreign care workers

John Swinney has said the Scottish government will help hundreds of overseas care workers stay in the UK, as he attacked Westminster for its rising hostility to immigrants.The first minister said it was unfair Scotland’s older people had to “pay the price for Westminster’s prejudice”, and that his devolved government would sponsor visa applications for workers needed to staff care homes, at a cost of about £500,000.Swinney described the UK government’s decision to greatly restrict access to visas for those jobs, in an effort to respond to rising tensions over mass migration, as deeply damaging.“Thousands of care workers here in the UK entirely legally have been left high and dry, unable to work, while care homes are crying out for staff,” he told the Scottish National party’s annual conference in Aberdeen. “In what world does that make any sense?”Swinney told delegates the measure was further evidence Scotland’s interests were being damaged by continued membership of the UK, as he confirmed he would make a fresh push for independence central to Scottish parliament elections next year

about 9 hours ago
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Families of David Amess and Jo Cox voice concern at rise in violent political rhetoric

The families of the murdered MPs David Amess and Jo Cox have voiced concern about a recent surge in violent political rhetoric in Britain.While the fatal attack on a synagogue in Manchester and targeting of Muslims have placed a renewed spotlight on violent antisemitism and Islamophobia, there are also concerns over an increasing normalisation of language calling for political figures to be killed.Examples include the suspension of a Reform UK councillor linked to a social media account calling for Keir Starmer to be shot and the arrest of a man allegedly captured on film at major far-right rally last month in London threatening to kill the prime minister. At the same rally, Elon Musk made comments that later drew condemnation from Downing Street when he told the crowd that “violence is coming”.The language comes after a summer of anti-immigration protests, culture war flashpoints and a surge in podcasts and YouTube videos predicting civil war

about 11 hours ago
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Reform UK abandoning manifesto pledge of £90bn in tax cuts, deputy leader admits

Reform UK’s deputy leader has admitted the party cannot deliver the £90bn in tax cuts promised in its manifesto, saying it would concentrate on public spending cuts once in government.Richard Tice said key election pledges such as lifting the income tax threshold would be an “aspiration” and that once in government Reform would concentrate on cutting the civil service and scrapping net zero.Reform’s leader, Nigel Farage, is said to be planning a speech next month to overhaul the party’s economic policy – which Labour and the Conservatives see as a key weakness. The Times reported that Farage would promise to reduce spending before reducing taxes.Farage has previously said he expected to make £350bn worth of spending cuts over the course of the parliament – the equivalent of axing the whole schools budget every year or wiping out a third of NHS funding annually

about 13 hours ago
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UK charities say toxic immigration rhetoric leading to threats against staff

Charities have warned of growing racial abuse, intimidation and threats of violence towards their staff and beneficiaries amid increasingly toxic rhetoric around immigration and race by politicians and extremist activists.Voluntary organisations say they are being forced to introduce extensive security measures to protect staff and property – a trend described by one charity head as in danger of becoming the “new normal” – after being targeted.Refugee and asylum seeker charities, Muslim, Jewish and ethnic minority organisations, women’s groups, youth bodies, homelessness charities and even charity shops have reported being subject to violence, threats and abuse.Incidents include threats to rape and kill staff, verbal and physical abuse of beneficiaries on the street, attempted break-ins to charity-owned accommodation, and damage to offices and vandalism, including anti-migrant and racist graffiti.Charities were being “targeted because of what they stand for and who they support”, said Saskia Konynenburg, executive director at the National Council for Voluntary Organisations

about 18 hours ago
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Post-ministerial jobs watchdog closes as part of UK government ethics shake-up

The much-criticised watchdog that scrutinises the jobs UK ministers can take after leaving office will be formally scrapped on Monday as part of a wider shake-up of the ethics structure in government.The Advisory Committee on Business Appointments (Acoba), described by critics as fundamentally toothless, has been closed, a Cabinet Office announcement said, with its functions taken over by two existing regulators.At the same time, a new organisation called the Ethics and Integrity Commission will oversee the work of a series of other regulators, the centrepiece of what Keir Starmer has promised will be a robust new approach to government and to any ministerial misdeeds.Also from Monday, a previously announced ban on severance payments for ministers who lose their job after a serious breach of the ministerial code comes into force.In the change, first revealed by the Guardian in July, former ministers who take up new jobs in a serious breach of the rules for post-government appointments could be asked to hand back any severance payment

1 day ago
societySee all
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Two years after school phone bans were implemented in Australia, what has changed?

1 day ago
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Georgia’s story: how a domestic abuse victim’s suicide was ruled an unlawful killing by her partner

2 days ago
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Revealed: Labour-run council using legal loophole to serve families with no-fault evictions

3 days ago
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Gen Z women in the US: do you identify as liberal?

3 days ago
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High street slot machine shops pay staff bonuses linked to how much gamblers lose

4 days ago
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Millions of over-50s have undiagnosed sight and hearing problems, UK study suggests

4 days ago