Is Rachel Reeves hiding her real tax plans?
The shadow chancellor is being careful to keep her options open on capital gains and new council tax bands.
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The shadow chancellor is being careful to keep her options open on capital gains and new council tax bands.
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The 50 most influential people shaping Britain’s progressive politics.
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Jeremy Hunt says the UK economy is back to “full health”, but Rachel Reeves claims we have gone from “no…
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The three big ideas powering the next Labour government.
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To reduce tax avoidance by £5.1bn by the end of the next parliament, Labour will need to invest as soon…
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The party’s strategy to win power might make sense. But what happens when they win?
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A little-noticed aspect of Rachel Reeves’ Mais lecture could give Labour the fiscal headroom they need.
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The Reeves doctrine looks like a more compelling political strategy than an economic one.
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Labour’s decision to accept the government’s debt rule means a brutal spending squeeze unless it can deliver growth.
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Rachel Reeves, Labour’s chancellor-in-waiting and chief ideologue, aims to establish a new economic consensus with an active state at its…
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Rachel Reeves has ruled out additional tax rises and borrowing – does that mean bringing back austerity?
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Labour will now pledge only to invest £4.7bn a year rather than £28bn.
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Confusion over the £28bn-a-year green pledge is a sign Labour’s team is not working as it should.
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The cap, which Rachel Reeves has said she won’t reinstate, doesn’t make a huge difference to the economy.
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While the Labour leader is happy to reaffirm the figure, the shadow chancellor avoids it all costs.
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The shadow chancellor’s refusal to reinstate the cap on bankers’ bonuses is a political signal.
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Without economic growth, tensions between the leader and Rachel Reeves could emerge.
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Even in office, the party would still want to fend off Tory economic attacks.
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The party is desperate to avoid being painted as a party of higher taxes.
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If the party wants strong economic growth it will need to think radically.
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