New chancellor tells Commons there will be tax rises and spending cuts, as PM dodges urgent question.
The yield on 30-year gilts fell by 0.4 percentage points to 4.37%, reversing some of the increase since Kwasi Kwarteng announced Mordaunt said the prime minister was not in hiding. “That means decisions of eye-watering difficulty,” he said. That is my message to my colleagues.” One member of the 1922 executive said the group could take action this week, either by changing the rules or sending Brady to tell Truss it was over. Truss declined to appear at the dispatch box in parliament on Monday despite calls from Labour, leading one cabinet minister to clarify she was not “hiding under a desk”. “I am not against the principle of taxing profits that are genuine windfalls,” he told the Commons. In her BBC interview, Truss said she intended to stay on as prime minister. And now we need to deliver for people what we’ve said we’ll deliver. “I’m sticking around because I was elected to deliver for this country. [Conservatives](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/conservatives) into the next general election … Estimates of what it would take to achieve this range between £60bn and £72bn.
Some Tory MPs may conclude it is better to pretend that the chancellor is really PM and see how far it takes them.
Mr Hunt announced he was scrapping "almost all" of the tax cuts announced by the government last month, in a bid to stabilise the financial markets. A minister ...
Allies of Ms Truss have acknowledged it was a crucial 24 to 48 hours for her premiership. You can also get in touch in the following ways: She also denied there had been a "coup" to remove her. Instead, Ms Truss sent Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt in her place for the clash. He told Sky News: "I think her position is untenable. Ms Truss had previously ruled out a further windfall tax on energy companies. A penny cut in income tax due in April will now not happen. Former chief whip Andrew Mitchell said the prime minister had just a fortnight to save her premiership and "if she cannot do the job, she will be replaced". In a series of tense exchanges, Ms Mourdant told MPs the "prime minister is not under a desk" hiding to avoid difficult decisions. A minister had to deny Ms Truss was hiding "under a desk" after the prime minister did not attend a clash with Sir Keir Starmer in the Commons. Asked if he would introduce a "proper" windfall tax on energy companies, Mr Hunt said he was "not against the principle" of taxing profits that are "genuine windfalls", adding that "nothing is off the table". Mr Hunt announced he was scrapping "almost all" of the tax cuts announced by the government last month, in a bid to stabilise the financial markets.
New U.K. Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt is announcing parts of his medium-term fiscal plan, bringing forward the policy statement in an effort to calm ...
However, the full medium-term fiscal plan is still set to be published on Oct. 31, accompanied by a forecast from the independent Office for Budget Responsibility — something that was lacking in the original mini-budget announced on Sept. [The stream is slated to start at 6 a.m.
New chancellor made no mention of policy in economic update but Treasury sources confirm he will go ahead with controversial move.
A Treasury source rejected the suggestion and said further details would be released at the end of the month. The Bank of England also warned at the time that the cap would lead to a rise in fixed-salary costs and squeeze bank finances. A source familiar with the plans confirmed that City regulators were still preparing to consult on the rule changes this autumn. However, Hunt has not made any commitment to follow suit, despite fears that banks would now have to prepare for taxes worth 33%, rather than 28% as previously promised. “What a contrast, that cuts to benefits are still on the table, but the one thing the chancellor couldn’t bring himself to reverse today was lifting the cap on bankers’ bonuses. The hope was that, with less of an individual’s pay riding on performance, there would be a lower incentive for risky behaviour.
A new economic plan for the U.K. aims to calm markets and give pension funds some breathing room.
Hunt said the government will make “decisions of eye-watering difficulty” to restore confidence. The group “will meet regularly to discuss U.K. While it eases pressure on the Bank of England to hike rates, “the U.K. “The immediate impact is to reduce the pressure to source further liquidity to meet collateral obligations,” Ms. looking to commit money here, this see-sawing can’t help our case,” he said in an email. Hunt’s office said in a statement.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt ripped up most of what was left of Prime Minister Liz Truss's controversial economic program, scrapping tax cuts and ...
The U.K.'s new finance minister scrapped almost all of Prime Minister Liz Truss's tax plans, as her premiership looks increasingly shaky.
[calling him](https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/uk-pm-liz-trusss-news-conference-after-finance-minister-sacked-2022-10-14/) “one of the most experienced and widely respected government ministers and parliamentarians” in a news conference Friday. [tax rate to 15%](https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/flashback-hunt-demands-15p-corporation-tax), a view that is now in opposition to what he announced in Monday’s emergency fiscal statement. [2016 dispute with junior doctors](https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/sep/01/jeremy-hunt-five-day-doctors-strike-worst-in-nhs-history) over National Health Service contracts and pay for evening and weekend work. During his tenure, Hunt said he did “everything I could” in his role to secure the release of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe. The pound gained and gilt yields dropped as the new chancellor set out his emergency measures aimed at stabilizing the extremely choppy waters of the last couple of weeks,” Green said. Additionally, the basic rate of income tax was due to be cut from 20% to 19%. Today, he unraveled the economic agenda she established with his predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng, who was fired after [just 38 days](https://news.sky.com/story/kwasi-kwartengs-38-days-as-chancellor-12720243) on the job, following his “mini budget” last month that [entailed a series of](https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/kwasi-kwarteng-sacked-chancellor-liz-truss-tax-press-conference-b1032759.html) unfunded tax cuts for the wealthy that angered the public, spooked markets, and saw the British pound tumble to a 37-year low. In May 2010, Hunt was appointed Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport, a role in which he oversaw the successful 2012 London Olympics. Hunt will outline a full budget on Oct. He wielded that power on Monday to scrap “almost all” the deeply controversial tax cuts outlined in Kwarteng’s mini-budget. His tough stance resulted in the first junior doctor strikes in 40 years, with hospital staff in England walking out of routine and emergency care. Many view Truss’s decision to appoint Hunt as a move to calm investors’ nerves, and fend off calls for her to step aside.
He won only 18 of 357 votes from his parliamentary colleagues when he tried for a second time to become Britain's prime minister this summer, but Jeremy ...
"He was very frank about the difficulties with the public finances," one lawmaker said after leaving the meeting. Hunt has since repaired some of that damage. The pound soared against the dollar but the cost of government borrowing remains high. 31 and publishes an independent forecast from the Office of Budget Responsibility. His appointment has not ruffled feathers in any section of the deeply divided party. Hunt backed the Remain camp ahead of Britain's 2016 referendum on whether to leave the European Union and he is seen as liberal on social matters, but he campaigned for the party leadership on a pledge of hefty tax cuts.
The incoming Chancellor of the Exchequer has acted decisively to change course. But his new direction leaves the prime minister without a policy compass.
Hunt has met already with Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey and, tellingly, with the head of the UK Treasury's debt management office. He knows where the priorities lie. [tax cuts to the sword](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/live-blog/2022-10-14/uk-s-truss-press-conference-on-uk-tax-plans?srnd=premium-uk&sref=pyEmpNIC).
'I'm chancellor Hunt's deputy prime minister'
'We will get more money out of the pockets of rich bankers by what we are going to do now,' Hunt says.
New Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is expected to U-turn on more of the government's tax-cutting plans.
"She is the prime minister at the moment, we will not have an election for the next couple of years. It would be best for the party… Under current Conservative Party rules, Ms Truss is safe from a no confidence vote by Tory MPs to oust her for a year. if we don't have another leadership campaign," he told Today. "It's done... He said the appointment of Mr Hunt had "begun to repair some of the damage" but a change of prime minister was needed as well.
'We went too far, too fast,' says PM in TV interview after new chancellor rips up her economic policy in bid to calm markets.
Emergency surgery on Trussonomics was vital, but years of grind now lie ahead, says Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff.
Years of grind lie ahead as Britain is called out not just for the madness of making Truss prime minister but before that the madness of Brexit, and perhaps also a more longstanding sense of decline. A painful readjustment looms not just of the public finances, but of Britain’s idea of itself. The way he kept repeating the word “stability”, meanwhile, suggests that whatever Tory MPs or indeed a deeply humiliated Truss herself may want, Hunt and the circle of Sunak-backers around him think she has to stay on for now, if only to avoid the immediate chaos of a leadership contest or general election that may well fail to deliver a mandate for such bitter economic medicine. Watching this statement, that seemed for a moment believable, for this was not the fiscal package of someone out to court popularity. The new chancellor’s friends insist he isn’t after Truss’s job, even though he ran for it in the summer and is pretty much now doing it in all but name. Not just the obviously gangrenous parts of Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng’s budget, like her corporation rate tax cut or the abolition of the 45p tax rate, but pretty much everything still within reach of his scalpel.
Hunt was named chancellor — the most senior position in government, beneath the prime minister — after Truss sacked her hitherto close ally Kwasi Kwarteng last ...
When it comes to economic policy, and much else, he is in a position to dictate terms for as long as she lasts.” chancellor, but “this government has now gone into such a close-to-doom position that the gravity of the Treasury orthodoxy is all it can think about.” Once you put someone in of such a different political opinion, you can't even claim this is about recognizing the markets and we are back on growth. Indeed, allies of Hunt have— perhaps optimistically— taken to referring to Hunt as 'Jeremy Draghi,' given the rescue job lying before him. He stressed the need for “confidence and stability" in the U.K. The markets also responded positively both to Hunt’s appointment and his first acts as chancellor. government would “make whatever tough decisions are necessary” to calm the markets. "Mrs Hunt rules it out. Jonathan Portes, professor of economics at King's College London, compared the U.K. Giles Wilkes, a partner at Flint Global and former No. Three Hunt children rule it out." In a hastily-arranged TV statement Monday, Hunt struck a markedly different tone from the libertarian defiance of Truss and Kwarteng.
Plus, Rishi Sunak would crush Liz Truss in leadership race rerun, according to new poll.
Roster of clear environmental policies could help new chancellor plug multibillion-pound hole in finances.
[Home insulation](https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/mar/15/uk-must-spend-on-home-insulation-and-heat-pumps-ministers-told) will be key. Even now, in autumn, it is [not too late to make a start](https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/oct/03/not-too-late-to-insulate-homes-this-winter-says-lord-deben), according to the former Conservative environment minister and current chair of the Climate Change Committee, Lord Deben. Taxing them adequately would help to top up Treasury coffers, reduce expensive oil imports and send a clear signal that the richest road users are not exempt from austerity. These companies can be encouraged to give up or reinvest some of the gains through reforms to the electricity market, which should be hastened. Private sector investment will also be key to boosting economic growth as the UK heads for recession. Tessa Khan, the director of Uplift, which campaigns against the expansion of North Sea oil and gas, said: “We need wholesale reform of the entire tax regime for the North Sea, which has for years meant some fossil fuel giants have paid no tax, or negative tax, in the UK, despite making vast profits.” Britain has the [draughtiest homes in western Europe](https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/jul/01/fuel-poor-homes-face-taking-250-energy-hit-due-to-poor-insulation) and insulation rates dropped by 90% under David Cameron’s leadership. Every unit of energy saved by households means the government would need to spend less paying their bills. As a former health secretary, Hunt will also know that cold damp homes make people ill, so helping them stay warmer will reduce pressure on the NHS. Doug Parr, the UK policy director at Greenpeace, said: “If this chancellor can grasp that the same fixes can ease both the cost of living crisis and the climate crisis, he’ll be laughing.” As he faces, by some estimates, a gaping hole of least £60bn in the country’s finances, a roster of clear green measures, big and small, could help him plug the gap. This will lower people’s bills, strengthen our energy security and avoid the worst consequences of climate change.”
Brief letters: New chancellor | Memory tests | Political bilge | Odd school sayings.
[exportation of English marmalade](https://twitter.com/jeremy_hunt/status/1331691128660369411?lang=en-GB). It is more likely that he opened the bilge – ballast is intended to stop the ship listing and to set in on an even keel. dumped the ballast of her tax changes” (
Liz Truss's UK government has raced from massive tax cuts and stimulus to what is effectively austerity 2.0 in a matter of days.
Hunt urged ministers to find savings at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday, as he grappled with a budget shortfall that remains approximately £40bn, despite his ...
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Taxing oil and gas firms more should be “bottom of the list” for the new Chancellor, according to a business group. Jeremy Hunt said “nothing was off the ...
In response, the Chancellor said that “in principle” he was not against the taxing of profits that are “genuine windfalls”. The windfall tax was announced earlier this year by a previous chancellor, Rishi Sunak, as a way of funding a package of help to support households with rising energy bills. Jeremy Hunt said “nothing was off the table” when asked about a new windfall tax on energy companies.
The UK chancellor's October 31 budget will include big tax rises that allies say may target financials and oil and gas companies.
Senior bankers confirmed they expected lenders to record big profits this year, driven by higher interest rates. Connect with Jim on He has spoken of making “eye-wateringly difficult” decisions. Treasury officials said the government wanted to have a “competitive” tax system, but even if Mr Hunt cut the surcharge to 5 per cent, it would still leave the industry facing an effective rate of 30 per cent. Mr Hunt confirmed on Monday that corporation tax would rise to 25 per cent next April; he has not yet decided whether to retain the 8 per cent bank surcharge, which would give an effective rate of 33 per cent for the sector. [Jeremy Hunt](https://www.afr.com/world/europe/jeremy-hunt-not-liz-truss-is-now-in-charge-20221018-p5bqkw) is preparing to raid the profits of banks and energy companies in an attempt to fill a £40 billion ($71.8 billion) fiscal hole through a mix of tax rises and public spending cuts.
Jeremy Hunt is UK prime minister in all but name. Liz Truss is nothing more than a specter walking the corridors of power, occasionally wailing and clanking ...
The two have the same commitment to professionalism, the same respect for experts, and the same humility in the face of global markets. It is hard not to think of the former Labour prime minister while listening to Hunt’s slick parliamentary performances and emphasis on stability. A growing number of Tory MPs argue that Hunt should be made prime minister formally while Rishi Sunak is returned to the chancellorship; others ask why the party needs to bother with further disruption when Hunt is really in charge. His five years at the NHS — the biggest employer in Europe — were marked by a commitment to managerial fixes. His heart has always been on the left of the party with its commitment to sound government and social reform. Boris Johnson is a Flashman figure — a schoolboy who succeeded by breaking the rules and not giving a damn. During his exile to the backbenches, he was chairman of the Health and Social Care Select Committee, a job he did with admirable restraint, pointing to the government’s failures without breaking with party unity. His governing philosophy is a combination of One Nation Toryism — which emerged in the mid-19th century — and contemporary managerialism. Hunt took on junior doctors in a high-profile fight over pay and conditions and then went on to run the National Health Service, perhaps the most difficult job for a Tory politician, for five long years. Hunt’s emollient political manner may suggest a certain “wetness” to certain Tories — a description Margaret Thatcher used in the 1980s to deride internal party critics of her policies. He also ran for the prime ministership twice — once in 2019 when he came second to Johnson and then in the most recent round when he was eliminated in the first ballot. His survival points to the power of two great political virtues: patience and toughness.