Politics

Treasury won’t cut threshold for higher rate income tax, say sources – UK politics live

Fallout continues over budget income tax U-turn, with Treasury saying expected fiscal gap has dropped to £20bn

Treasury won’t cut threshold for higher rate income tax, say sources – UK politics live

12.58pm GMT Too much market-sensitive economic forecast information getting out ahead of budget, says thinktank The Resolution Foundation has expressed concern about the amount pre-budget briefing that has come out this year about the financial forecasts. This is from Ruth Curtice, the thinktank’s chief executive. At the budget the hancellor needs to do three things: take decisive steps to improve the public finances and increase the financial buffers against her fiscal rules; address cost of living pressures for families and support the Bank of England in lowering inflation; and in the interest of growth make tax changes that improve the system overall. There is more than one way to skin this particular cat, and we won’t know until we see the whole package whether she has achieved these three objectives. Much depends on the forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility. A significant economic deterioration would leave the chancellor choosing whether to break the spirit or letter of her manifesto pledge on income tax. A more benign economic outlook will make it far easier to avoid breaking it at all. It is normal for economic forecasts and policies to change in the run up to the budget. It is not normal for so much of that to be laid bare in public. The market moves this morning and in recent weeks suggest a serious look should be taken at the approach to market-sensitive forecast information. Ed Conway from Sky News was making a similar point earlier. (See 11.38am.) 12.40pm GMT Treasury not considering cutting thresholds for higher rates of income tax, sources say This is from Pippa Crerar, the Guardian’s political editor, on where we stand this morning after all the fallout from the budget income tax U-turn. She confirms that sources are now ruling out cutting the thresholds for paying higher rates of income tax. She says government insiders claim the change is all down to better-than-expected fiscal forecasts, and that Labour opposition to the proposal was not a factor. Where we are on budget after revelation Rachel Reeves will no longer hike income tax rates - Treasury confirms that stronger than expected OBR forecasts means fiscal gap is closer to £20bn than previously speculated £30-£40bn. Reeves also wants headroom of around £15bn in addition. - This means Reeves does not need to become first chancellor in 50 years to raise basic rate on income tax - breaching a central manifesto promise. - Improved forecasts are result of stronger wage growth (and therefore higher tax receipts) which started to feed into figures last week. - But £20bn is still big number - so expect income tax thresholds to be frozen for another two years, taxes on salary sacrifice schemes, fuel duty equivalent for electric vehicles - plus ‘smorgasbord’ of other measures. - As per previous post, I’m told that income tax thresholds will not be cut, despite speculation. - Govt insiders say decision to drop income tax plan is nothing to do with political fall-out after Reeves publicly signalled manifesto breach - causing huge anxiety among Labour MPs (which ultimately fed into No 10’s extraordinary attempts to shore up PM). - They defend decision to ‘roll the pitch’ on income tax rises - saying at that point they thought it might be necessary and leaving it to just before budget would’ve spooked MPs and markets. 12.23pm GMT Here is the clip of Wes Streeting denouncing striking doctors on LBC earlier. See 11.26am for the full quotes. 'Don't tell me you don't want to be out on strike - because that is exactly where you are. Own it.' As resident doctors walk out again, @wesstreeting calls out the 'reprehensible and cartel-like behaviour' of their union. pic.twitter.com/AHAKm0WIL1— LBC (@LBC) November 14, 2025 12.17pm GMT The Liberal Democrats are urging Rachel Reeves to face the press and explain her plans today. Sarah Olney, the party’s business spokesperson, said: The chancellor gave a press conference to trail her income tax hikes. She must come before the British public today, unroll that particular pitch and come clean on what on earth is going on at the Treasury. 12.16pm GMT Ed Conway, Sky News’s economics editor, says a Bloomberg report saying the fiscal forecast is better-than-expected (see 9.03am) led to gilt yields coming down a bit (see 9.31am). 12.07pm GMT Here is my colleague Kiran Stacey’s take on what we know about the budget. Some things to bear in mind about these late changes to the budget: 1) Govt sources say the forecasts changed. But the only new thing they learned this week was the OBR’s assessment of their own plans. Maybe the OBR said their tax rises would raise more than expected? 2) Three major tax-raising measures now at the heart of the budget: - Freezing tax thresholds - raises an estimated £7.5bn - Ending salary sacrifice benefits for pensions - £2bn - Tax on EVs - £2bn 3) We’re now told the black hole needing to be filled is around £20bn. Plus the chancellor wants to increase her headroom. So where is the rest of the money coming from? 12.04pm GMT The BBC’s charter review will examine political appointments to the broadcaster’s board, Lisa Nandy has said, as they have “damaged confidence and trust”, Jamie Grierson reports. Related: Lisa Nandy: BBC review will examine political appointments to board 12.02pm GMT Yesterday and this morning some of the political editors were being briefed that Rachel Reeves was considering lowering higher income tax thresholds in the budget (see 8.57am, 9.03am and 10.20am.) Now other political editors (see here and here, for example) are being told that is not happening. That suggests that the line has either changed, or been clarified, as the morning has gone on. The Treasury is not saying any of this on the record. That is normal with a budget. But that does not mean they don’t talk to journalists, and it does not mean don’t think hard about how letting the City know what to expect. It is important that when the budget does get announced, the markets don’t get a nasty shock. 11.38am GMT This is from Ed Conway, Sky News’s economics editor, on the market volatility ahead of the budget. I’ve been reporting on UK Budgets for decades. So perhaps worth underlining something: this degree of market volatility ahead of a Budget is NOT normal. Underlines the extent to which UK has been in the bond vigilantes’ crosshairs, since the mini Budget. This could get v bumpy 11.34am GMT Mahmood to unveil anti-migration measures modelled on Danish system Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, is due to announce sweeping changes next week aimed at making the UK less attractive for migrants and modelled on the Danish system, Jamie Grierson reports. Related: Mahmood to unveil anti-migration measures modelled on Danish system 11.31am GMT Voter would oppose a 1p in the pound rise in the basic rate of income tax by 64% to 25%, YouGov polling suggests. 11.26am GMT Streeting says striking doctors 'extremely irresponsible' in angry exchange with caller on LBC phone-in Resident doctors in England have started a five-day strike today. Related: Resident doctors begin five-day strike in latest walkout over pay In his LBC phone-in this morning, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, accused the resident doctors of being “extremely irresponsible” in an angry response to a caller, Niraj, from Harrow in north London, who said that he and his colleagues did not want to be on strike, that they cared about patient safety, but that they had been forced to act because the government was not addressing their concerns. Streeting replied: On every single one of those fronts, on pay, on specialty training, places, on improvements to conditions, I have been working to address every single one of those issues. These are not the conditions in which people go out on strike. Strike should be a last resort, and I’m sorry, but when you say ‘I don’t want to be out on strike today’, yes, you do, because you have made that choice. You have done so having had a 28.9% pay rise, the highest in the public sector, two years in a row, and on those things that you’ve just mentioned, you say they take time. Yes, they do, because it is complicated. So, to hold patients to ransom and to be out on strike, setting back the NHS, because you don’t think we’re going fast enough, and because the leadership of your union are not honest enough that some of this change takes time, is extremely irresponsible. It is extremely unnecessary and the other listeners to this show who have not had a 28.9% pay rise, whose taxes are paying for our National Health Service and who are receiving a substandard service, not least because of the damage that these rounds of industrial action are doing, I think they will be quite shocked, actually, that against the backdrop of a health secretary that wants to work with you, who acknowledges these are challenges and wants to address them, and has given you the biggest pay rise in the public sector two years in a row, I think people will be shocked by the BMA’s reprehensible behaviour. Don’t tell me you don’t want to be out on strike, because that’s exactly where you are. You made that choice, own it and own the damage it will do to your patients. UPDATE: See 12.23pm for the clip. Updated at 12.24pm GMT 11.02am GMT Andrew Fisher, who was head of policy for Jeremy Corbyn when he was Labour leader, has expressed concern about the reports saying Rachel Reeves might use fiscal drag as a way of compensation for not putting up income tax. (See 10.20am.) The proposal seemed to be raising income tax rates but offsetting with NI cut (as per @resfoundationproposal) to protect low and middle incomes Now plan seems to be to freeze income tax thresholds which hits lower and middle incomes Make it make sense! Also there is nothing remotely honest about pledging not to raise income tax, and then freezing the threshold so that people pay more income tax. Stealth tax rises are probably more damaging to trust than openly and honestly arguing for clear rises. 10.51am GMT Streeting says he and Starmer both 'extremely frustrated' by this week's No 10 briefings In his LBC phone-in this morning, Wes Streeting, the health secretary, was asked what happened when Keir Starmer phoned him on Wednesday night. Starmer apologised to Streeting, No 10 said. This happened after No 10 sources were reported as saying that Starmer was getting ready to fight off a leadership challenge, with Streeting being identified as the person most likely to mount such a challenge. Streeting said he did not want to discuss the call. But, asked to comment on Starmer’s “tone”, Streeting said it was “as nice as usual”. Asked if Starmer was “apologetic”, Streeting replied: To be honest, I think the prime minister and I are both in the same boat here of being extremely frustrated because this is a total distraction. And I just say – the season finale of the of The Traitors is over and it’s time we focused on the news. Asked if he had confidence in Morgan McSweeney, the PM’s chief of staff (who has been blamed by some for the briefings), Streeting replied: “Of course I do.” 10.20am GMT Pippa Crerar, the Guardian’s political editor, says that a combination of better-than-expected fiscal forecasts, and internal opposition – at cabinet level (see 9.59am), not just in the PLP – persuaded Rachel Reeves to drop the plan to raise the basic rate of income tax. But Reeves may compensate by dragging more people into higher rates of tax, Pippa says. We’re also hearing that the OBR’s fiscal forecasts are better than expected, as result of stronger wage growth and therefore higher tax receipts. It means Rachel Reeves doesn’t need to put up basic rate of income tax to fill lower than expected fiscal gap: the politics of that were proving just too hard with disagreement w/in cabinet and anxiety among Labour MPs over manifesto breach. But - not least because she wants bigger than before headroom to protect against future risks - we’re still expecting chancellor to fill the gap through taxes. We were already expecting threshold freezes but now reducing thresholds for 40p and 45p rates also an option. Would drag more people into paying higher rates, esp given wage growth. Salary sacrifice schemes also likely to be hit. Ministers will hope that this will be seen as a fudge of manifesto promise - rather than blatant breach which would have made them first government in 50 years to hike basic rate of income tax. Cutting the thresholds for the higher and additional rates of income tax would not be an easy political choice for the chancellor. (See 8.57am.) Rightwing papers in particular regularly complain about “fiscal drag”, the process whereby not raising thresholds in line with inflation pulls more people into higher tax brackets. This has affected millions of people because thresholds have been frozen for much of this decade. (In Australia the process is called “bracket creep”, which is more distinctive.) Cutting thresholds would be like fiscal drag on steroids. Updated at 12.02pm GMT 9.59am GMT 'I'm not in favour of breaking manifesto pledges' - Streeting suggests Reeves right to ditch budget plan to raise income tax When Wes Streeting did a media round on Wednesday morning, after No 10 briefing that implicitly accused him of plotting against Keir Starmer, he was mostly supportive of Starmer and the government. But he included some criticism, including a subtle hint than he thought breaking the manifesto promise on income tax would be a mistake. This morning he has said it out loud. This is what he told listeners during his LBC phone-in this morning when asked about the budget U-turn story. I’m not in favour of breaking manifesto pledges. I think that trust in politics and politicians is low and it’s part of our responsibility to not only rebuild our economy and rebuild our public services, but to rebuild trust in politics itself. The fact that the chancellor – and we’re going on speculation here – but the fact that the chancellor was reported as even considering breaking manifesto commitments tells you two things: Firstly, the public finances are under real pressure, and secondly she is fundamentally, unequivocally, committed to her fiscal rules and so therefore she’s got some invidious choices to make, and she’s weighing those up. I’ve not spoken to the chancellor overnight. I’ve seen the reports this morning that she’s no longer planning to increase income tax. I think what the news overnight has shown is that people speculate on the budget but ultimately you don’t know what’s in it until the day it’s delivered, and that includes the cabinet, by the way. So we will all have to wait and see. On this issue, on Wednesday, Streeting certainly gave the impression of being ahead of the curve. That may be one reason why has ended the week as the clear favourite in the betting markets to replace Keir Starmer as Labour leader. 9.42am GMT Luke Tryl, the More in Common pollster, says on Bluesky he can understand why Rachel Reeves thought twice before breaking Labour’s manifesto promise on tax. Too much analysis was still treating breaking the tax pledge as “just another unpopular decision” rather than recognising consequence of breaking a promise which defined an election for the public. If is correct the govt won’t now break it they may have avoided a deeply scarring loss of public trust This is not about tax (I remain convinced Labour could have pledged to reverse hunts NI rises and still won comfortably). But breaking a pledge which was so central to labours offer at a time when trust already fragile, and the public won’t buy circs have changed (this isn’t like the pandemic). 9.37am GMT While Alex Wickham from Bloomberg reports that a better-than-expected fiscal forecast has allowed Rachel Reeves to drop the plan to raise income tax in the budget (see 9.03am), other explanations are also being offered. This is from an analysis from Beth Rigby, Sky News’s political editor. I understand Downing Street has backed down amid fears about the backlash from disgruntled MPs and voters. 9.33am GMT This is from Helen Miller, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank, on the market reaction to the chancellor’s reported budget U-turn. Investors will have 2 broad concerns about news that Chancellor won’t increase income tax rates 1. Does it signal less willingness to do politically difficult things 2. Will alternative tax increase be more damaging to growth Yes to either will push up on govt borrowing costs 9.31am GMT UK government borrowing costs still up after budget U-turn report, but initial spike has eased Speculation the chancellor has scrapped plans to raise income tax sparked a sell-off in UK government bonds amid fears over unfunded spending pledges, PA Media reports. PA says: Britain’s long-term borrowing costs were sent soaring as reports suggested the latest U-turn would leave Rachel Reeves scrambling to fill a gaping black hole in the nation’s finances just two weeks before the 26 November budget. Yields on 30-year UK government bonds, also known as gilts, jumped as much as 14 basis points in early trading, and the yield on 10-year gilts also shot up 12 basis points – rising the most since July. The yield moves counter to the price of bonds, meaning that prices fall when yields rise. Yields later eased back a little, with 30-year gilt yields standing seven basis points higher at 5.3% and 10-year gilt yields up six basis points at 4.5%. Sterling initially fell on the political concerns swirling around the budget, falling 0.3% against the US dollar and euro, before later regaining its poise to remain largely flat at 1.32 US dollars and 1.13 euros. Kalyeena Makortoff has more on this on our business live blog. Related: Pound and UK bonds slide as Reeves ditches plans for income tax hike – business live 9.15am GMT These are from Ben Zaranko, an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, on the chancellor’s U-turn, and in particular on the FT’s claim that, instead of putting up income tax, she will “rely heavily on what has been dubbed the ‘smorgasbord’ approach of increasing a range of narrowly-drawn taxes”. Considerable risks with this approach: 1) revenues more uncertain; 2) greater risk of damaging economic impacts; 3) lots of angry interest groups, makes U-turns more likely; 4) viewed less favourably by bond market investors, many of whom were expecting an income tax rise. But on the flip side, it could allow a Budget that doesn’t strictly break manifesto promises (which isn’t a trivial concern given low trust in politicians). It is possible to raise tens of billions without raising rates of the big 3 taxes. It’s just really, really difficult. Here’s an extraordinarily cynical take: did the government talk up the likelihood of a manifesto-breaking income tax rise in the knowledge that it would push down gilt yields in the window the OBR will use for its forecasts? 9.09am GMT This is from Kevin Schofield from HuffPost UK this morning. Senior Labour source: “Keir and Rachel - in office, but not power.” 9.07am GMT This morning a Treasury spokesperson issued this statement in response to the reports that Rachel Reeves has abandoned plans to raise income tax in the budget. We do not comment on speculation around changes to tax outside of fiscal events. The chancellor will deliver a budget that takes the fair choices to build strong foundations to secure Britain’s future. 9.03am GMT Alex Wickham from Bloomberg is reporting that Rachel Reeves dropped her plan to raise income tax in the budget after the fiscal forecast improved. He says: Rachel Reeves received an improved fiscal forecast from her budget watchdog putting the fiscal hole at £20 billion, leading her to drop plans to raise income tax rates, people familiar with the matter said. The latest update from the Office for Budget Responsibility moved in a significantly better direction due to the strength of receipts and stronger wage performance. As well as filling the £20 billion gap, Reeves is still expected to deliver headroom against her fiscal rules of between £15 billion and £20 billion. An expected productivity downgrade from the OBR has been partially countered, the people said. Wickham also says, on the basis of what he has been briefed, that Reeves “will likely lower income tax thresholds at the budget [see 8.57am] and raise significant taxes from salary sacrifice schemes”. 8.57am GMT The Treasury has now triggered speculation that, to compensate for not rising the basic rate of income tax, it will have to bring down the threshold at which people start paying higher rates. In its story the Financial Times says: The chancellor is now exploring alternative ways to fill a fiscal hole estimated by economists to be up to £30bn. One option to raise revenue would involve cutting the thresholds at which people pay different rates of income tax, while leaving the headline basic and higher rates of the tax unchanged. Reeves was pictured leaving Downing Street earlier this month with her diary on display, with a single word written in relation to a meeting: “Thresholds.” Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer were nervous about putting up the main rate of income tax because that would have been a direct breach of the Labour manifesto, which said: Labour will not increase taxes on working people, which is why we will not increase national insurance, the basic, higher, or additional rates of income tax, or VAT. But Labour has already increased employer national insurance, which was seen by many as a breach of this pledge. Reeves is expected to extend the freeze in income tax thresholds and this would increase the amount of income tax people pay, although technically it would not be a breach of the manifesto if the manifesto is understood as referring just to headline rates. Bringing down thresholds would also be seen as a breach of the spirit of the manifesto, if not the letter of it. 8.52am GMT SNP says Labour acting like it's 'completely lost control' and Starmer on his way out Stephen Flynn, the SNP leader at Westminster, says the latest news about the budget shows the government is in chaos. In a statement this morning, he said: This isn’t government, this is chaos. Labour give the impression of a party that has completely lost control - playing a dangerous game with people’s finances so that their prime minister can try to cling to power. But everyone now knows the clock is ticking until he is dumped from Downing Street. His last act should not be to play fast and loose with the public finances - they’ve already more than paid the price for the constant chaos and crisis that passes for politics at Westminster. 8.49am GMT Lib Dems welcome reported 'screeching U-turn' on income tax, and urge Reeves to tax banks more This is from Daisy Cooper, the Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesperson and deputy leader, on the reported budget income tax U-turn. If true, this 11th hour screeching u-turn might just spare struggling families from yet another punch in the stomach Budget. The Chancellor should look at our plan for a windfall tax on the big banks’ billions in profits and put £270 back into people’s pockets. 8.40am GMT Reeves accused of ‘rattling the markets’ after income tax U-turn pushes up borrowing costs Good morning. On Monday last week Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, gave a speech that implied it was all but certain she would break a manifesto promise and raise the main rate of income tax in the budget. Government officials made no attempt to challenge this idea, and some briefings said the decision was “nailed on”. Only it wasn’t. There has been a U-turn. The news was broken by the Financial Times last night, in a story saying Reeves and Keir Starmer have have “ditched their manifesto-busting plan to increase income tax rates, in a dramatic U-turn ahead of the budget”. The Guardian was soon able to confirm the story and here is our report by Jessica Elgot, Pippa Crerar and Peter Walker. Related: Rachel Reeves to abandon plans to raise income tax rates in budget As the story explains, a U-turn on this scale may be hard to explain. Downing Street and the Treasury have been preparing the ground for weeks with Labour MPs for a breach of the manifesto. In particular, it has been stressed to Labour MPs that they should not speak out against the budget because of the effect any potential measures might have on the bond markets and the UK’s borrowing costs. That message to MPs is likely to ring hollow if the chancellor has U-turned after days of internal warfare over a potential challenge to the prime minister’s leadership and the spotlight on briefings against the health secretary, Wes Streeting. This is all happening less than a fortnight before the budget, which is taking place on Wednesday 26 November. Here are the main developments on this story this morning. Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, has not denied the FT scoop. But, in an interview on Sky News, she rejected suggestions that the reported U-turn made the government look chaotic. Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, has welcomed the reports saying the proposed rise in income tax has been ditched. On social media, commenting on a link to the FT story, she said: Good. (If true). Only the Conservatives have fought Labour off their tax-raising plans. But one retreat doesn’t fix a Budget built on broken promises. Reeves must guarantee no new taxes on work, businesses, homes or pensions -and she should go further by abolishing stamp duty. UK government borrowing costs are rising this morning in response to the FT report. In our business live blog Kalyeena Makortoff says: We’re getting some market moves as investors digest Rachel Reeves’ change in plans on income tax ahead of the autumn budget. In the bond market, the yield on the UK’s 30-year gilt is up 12 basis points, suggesting there is a perception of growing risk to the fiscal position. The yield on the 20-year gilt, meanwhile, was sitting at 5.225%, also up 12 basis points on the day Reuters says this is putting long-dated gilts on track for their worst day since July 2, when a Reeves’ tearful appearance in parliament spooked investors. This is from Faisal Islam, the BBC’s economics editor. Ouch.Considerable spike in 10y gilt rates after FT reports that option of income tax rate increase now off table …11 basis points up… pic.twitter.com/oCLoZRM4FU— Faisal Islam (@faisalislam) November 14, 2025 Kalyeena has more on this here. Related: Reeves to ditch income tax hike in UK budget; China suffers slowdown in factory output – business live And, in response, the Conservative have accused Reeves of “rattling the markets”. This is from Kevin Hollinrake, the Tory chair. What Rachel Reeves fails to grasp is that this constant ‘will she, won’t she’ briefing is rattling the markets and undermining business confidence. It’s bad for growth, bad for investment and bad for jobs. The country is paying the price for her indecision. Here is the agenda for the day. 9am: Wes Streeting, the health secretary, takes part in an LBC phone-in. 10am: Peers start the committee stage debate of the assisted dying bill. 11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing. Morning: Kemi Badenoch is on a visit in Essex. If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word. If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary. I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog. Updated at 9.28am GMT

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