Labour has consistently pledged not to hike taxes on working people but ambiguity around the wording of the pledge has “left the door open to other changes” in the form of a stealth tax.

In his manifesto, Sir Keir Starmer vowed there would be no increase in income tax, National Insurance or VAT on working people.

And when pressed on the issue the Prime Minister has said: “We are going to keep our manifesto pledges.”

However, with an alleged £40billion shortfall in public finances which Labour claim was left by the last Conservative Government, critics have suggested this election pledge may be broken.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves during the International Investment Summit in London

PA

As the policy would not be a direct increase in taxes, Labour could safely maintain they upheld their manifesto pledge.

Labour sources argue that freezing thresholds does not constitute a tax rise despite themselves calling the policy a “stealth tax” while serving as the opposition.

Asked by GB News for details on Reeves’s upcoming Budget, Health Secretary Wes Streeting quipped that he won’t spill the beans because he “values his kneecaps”.

Streeting told GB News’Political Editor Christopher Hope: “I genuinely don’t know what decisions the Chancellor has made or is making about tax because she doesn’t share those until much closer to the budget.”

“And I’m not going to speculate because I value my kneecaps. And the Chancellor won’t tolerate me going around speculating about her budget.

“We were very clear in our manifesto no increases in income tax, National Insurance or VAT on working people,” he stated. “And we will keep those promises.”

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Rachel Reeves could raise £7billion annually by freezing income tax thresholds

PA

Additionally, plans to end the stamp duty discount could mean thousands of buyers will end up paying the property tax.

Introduced by Liz Truss’ short-lived Government in 2022, the house price thresholds at which stamp duty is paid were raised from £300,000 to £425,000 for first-time buyers.

However, Reeves could lower the threshold back to £300,000 from April 2025, meaning thousands of buyers will now have to pay more.

Kirstie Allsopp, the property guru, called the levy “a monster” and said the changes would cause “chaos” while failing to “claw back any money” for the Government

She told Times Radio: “It’s become so complicated that I can no longer tell anyone what they would be paying in stamp duty. I have to go on to the stamp duty calculator and calculate it with the Government calculator per property and I have to put in all the different circumstances. Stamp duty has become a monster.”

She added: “It won’t claw back any money. Stamp duty is a dead tax.”

Implementing the change is expected to generate an annual £1.8billion for the Treasury by 2030.

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