Labour will reverse the cut in the higher rate of income tax if it wins power at the next election, Sir Keir Starmer has said.
Around 660,000 of the highest earners on more than £150,000 will benefit from the scrapping of the 45p rate, getting back on average £10,000 a year.
Asked if Labour would reintroduce the 45% rate, Sir Keir told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme: “Yes”.
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He said: “I do not think that the choice to have tax cuts for those that are earning hundreds of thousands of pounds is the right choice when our economy is struggling the way it is, working people are struggling in the way they are… that is the wrong choice.
“I would reverse the decision that they made on Friday.”
However, he said he supports the government cutting the basic rate to 19p.
“I’ve long made the argument that we should reduce the tax burden on working people,” he said.
“That’s why we opposed the national insurance increase earlier this year, which of course the government is now reversing.”
The measures were announced in Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget on Friday.
Labour had faced pressure to say if it would reverse the cuts after tearing into the policy announcement, with shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves calling Mr Kwarteng’s growth plan “an admission of 12 years of economic failure under successive Conservative governments”.
Speaking to Sophy Ridge on Sky News earlier this morning, Ed Miliband, the shadow secretary for climate change, all but confirmed the reversal when he said Labour would be “consistent in our election manifesto with our opposition to the 45p tax cut”.
He said: “Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves set out tax policy and Keir will be saying more about this quite shortly.
“We think it’s the wrong thing to do for the country.”
However Andy Burnham, the Labour mayor of Greater Manchester, went a step further and said Labour should reverse the basic rate income tax cut as well as the cut for top earners.
He told Sophy Ridge that now is “not the time” for tax cuts and the billions being spent on them should be used to offer targeted support for the most vulnerable.
He called the Conservative’s mini-budget a “flagrant act of vandalism on the social cohesion of this country”.
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“You have a budget that splurges billions on the wealthiest people in the country and actually doesn’t do anything meaningful to get people through the autumn and the winter… I can barely believe it,” he said.
“The government has drawn battle lines with working people – they’ve told us which side they’re on.”
Mr Burnham said he believed Labour has a realistic chance of making it to Downing Street in the next two years, as he called for his party to unite and set out an alternative plan that people can support.
That optimism was echoed by Sir Keir in his BBC interview. Sir Keir said he had picked Labour “up off the canvas” after the 2019 general election hammering which saw the Tories under Boris Johnson win an 80-seat majority.
He said the hope of a Labour government has now turned into a belief and that switch “is worth its weight in gold”.
The interview came as Labour members gather in Liverpool for the annual party conference.
In the first announcements of the conference, Sir Keir will today set out plans to make the UK a world-leading clean energy superpower by 2030 as an urgent priority of a future Labour government and to bolster neighbourhood policing.