Tax and spending, General election 2024, General elections, Neil Kinnock, Politics, Economics, Business, Thinktanks, Rishi Sunak, Keir Starmer, Labour, Conservatives, Economic policy, Economic growth (GDP), D-day Business | The Guardian
‘Tax bombshell’ claims undid Labour in 1992 but the Conservatives’ ‘catalogue of chaos’ and the PM’s actions means fears are misplacedMinister defends ‘deeply patriotic’ PM after D-day decisionAny lingering doubts about the result of next month’s election have been dispelled by Rishi Sunak’s inexplicable decision to leave last week’s D-day commemorations early. Only the scale of the Tory defeat remains in question.Last week was supposed to be the start of the Conservative party’s fightback. The idea was to go hard on Labour’s tax and spending plans in the hope that it would make voters forget that they are poorer now than they were at the start of this parliament. Continue reading…
‘Tax bombshell’ claims undid Labour in 1992 but the Conservatives’ ‘catalogue of chaos’ and the PM’s actions means fears are misplaced
Minister defends ‘deeply patriotic’ PM after D-day decision
Any lingering doubts about the result of next month’s election have been dispelled by Rishi Sunak’s inexplicable decision to leave last week’s D-day commemorations early. Only the scale of the Tory defeat remains in question.
Last week was supposed to be the start of the Conservative party’s fightback. The idea was to go hard on Labour’s tax and spending plans in the hope that it would make voters forget that they are poorer now than they were at the start of this parliament.