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Sir Keir Starmer has attacked the budget as “the last desperate act of a party that has failed” as he branded Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak “the Chuckle Brothers of decline”.

The Labour leader criticised the chancellor for presiding over a recession and the highest tax burden in 70 years – and accused Mr Hunt of using the budget to “give with one hand and take even more with the other”.

The chancellor announced a 2p cut to national insurance and abolished the current tax system for non-doms, which has been a Labour policy for some time.

Sir Keir called the move, which is expected to raise £2.7bn a year, a “short-term, cynical political gimmick” – adding there was not a “more obvious example of a government that is totally bereft of ideas”.

The Labour leader said Mr Hunt was a chancellor who “breezes into this chamber in a recession and tells the working people of this country that everything’s on track”.

Budget live: No rabbit out of the hat on income tax from chancellor

“Crisis? What crisis? Or as the captain of the Titanic and the former prime minister herself might have said, iceberg? What iceberg?” he joked.

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“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.”

Sir Keir said Britain deserved better than a “Rishi recession” and claimed the Tories had “maxed out the nation’s credit card”.

And calling for the government to confirm a May general election, he added: “It’s time to break the habit of 14 years – stop the dithering.”

Mr Hunt unveiled his budget – expected to be the last before the general election later this year – after speculation in the media pointed towards a possible cut in income tax to woo voters.

But the chancellor resisted calls from Tory MPs for income tax to be cut and instead stuck to reducing national insurance further from 10% to 8%.

Mr Hunt said that, combined with the reduction in national insurance in the autumn statement last year, the average worker would be £900 better off.

In his statement responding to the budget, Sir Keir said his party would support the cuts to national insurance because it had “campaigned to lower the tax burden on working people for the whole parliament”.

But he accused Mr Sunak of breaking a promise he made when he was chancellor that the basic rate of income tax would be cut from 20 to 19p in 2024.

Elsewhere in his budget, the chancellor earmarked almost £6bn for the NHS with artificial intelligence set to be used to “cut form-filling for doctors” in a digitisation drive – although Labour pointed out that Mr Hunt promised to make the NHS paperless by 2018 when he was health secretary.

Other headline measures include extending the 5p cut to fuel duty for another 12 months and maintaining the price of beer, wine and spirits until February 2025.

The High Income Child Benefit Charge threshold will also increase from £50,000 to £60,000 while the higher capital gains tax rate on property will fall from 28% to 24%.

There were signs of some discontent on the Tory benches after the Scottish Conservatives said the extension of the windfall tax on oil and gas was “deeply disappointing”.

Andrew Bowie, a minister in the Department for Energy and Net Zero, said he would work with Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross in response to the extension of the energy profits levy, which charges oil and gas companies an extra 35% tax on the money they make in the UK.

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Most RWAs remain isolated and underutilized instead of composable, DeFi-ready building blocks. It’s time to change that.

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Collapsed crypto firm Ziglu faces $2.7M deficit amid special administration

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Heidi Alexander says ‘fairness’ will be government’s ‘guiding principle’ when it comes to taxes at next budget

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Heidi Alexander says 'fairness' will be government's 'guiding principle' when it comes to taxes at next budget

Another hint that tax rises are coming in this autumn’s budget has been given by a senior minister.

Speaking to Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips, Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander was asked if Sir Keir Starmer and the rest of the cabinet had discussed hiking taxes in the wake of the government’s failed welfare reforms, which were shot down by their own MPs.

Trevor Phillips asked specifically if tax rises were discussed among the cabinet last week – including on an away day on Friday.

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Tax increases were not discussed “directly”, Ms Alexander said, but ministers were “cognisant” of the challenges facing them.

Asked what this means, Ms Alexander added: “I think your viewers would be surprised if we didn’t recognise that at the budget, the chancellor will need to look at the OBR forecast that is given to her and will make decisions in line with the fiscal rules that she has set out.

“We made a commitment in our manifesto not to be putting up taxes on people on modest incomes, working people. We have stuck to that.”

Ms Alexander said she wouldn’t comment directly on taxes and the budget at this point, adding: “So, the chancellor will set her budget. I’m not going to sit in a TV studio today and speculate on what the contents of that budget might be.

“When it comes to taxation, fairness is going to be our guiding principle.”

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Afterwards, shadow home secretary Chris Philp told Phillips: “That sounds to me like a barely disguised reference to tax rises coming in the autumn.”

He then went on to repeat the Conservative attack lines that Labour are “crashing the economy”.

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Chris Philp also criticsed the government’s migration deal with France

Mr Philp then attacked the prime minister as “weak” for being unable to get his welfare reforms through the Commons.

Discussions about potential tax rises have come to the fore after the government had to gut its welfare reforms.

Sir Keir had wanted to change Personal Independence Payments (PIP), but a large Labour rebellion forced him to axe the changes.

With the savings from these proposed changes – around £5bn – already worked into the government’s sums, they will now need to find the money somewhere else.

The general belief is that this will take the form of tax rises, rather than spending cuts, with more money needed for military spending commitments, as well as other areas of priority for the government, such as the NHS.

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