Labour's Rachel Reeves Faces Economic Firestorm: Green Levy Cuts & Income Tax Taboo on the Table

Rachel Reeves's recent major speech, framing this month’s Budget, has been widely interpreted as an exercise in blame deflection, encapsulated by the phrase ‘Nothing to do with me, guv.’ Delivered unusually early at 8 am, three weeks ahead of the Budget, the address saw Reeves openly tell the country to 'Don't look at me. The buck stops with someone else,' a stance critics have labeled as politically inept. Unlike chancellors who claim success or make tough future-oriented decisions, Reeves sought to distance herself from the nation's economic woes.
During her speech, Reeves identified no fewer than 15 separate people, policies, or external factors as responsible for the economic challenges facing the UK. These included former Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, current Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his '£22billion black hole,' international figures like Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin (whose aggression necessitated confrontation), and broader issues such as supply chain volatility and global levels of borrowing. Domestically, she also pointed to Keir Starmer and his Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Pat McFadden for demanding welfare reform, issues like unreliable trains and slow broadband, and the austerity programme of former Tory Chancellor George Osborne and David Cameron. The Covid pandemic and Brexit were also cited. Conspicuously absent from her list of those bearing responsibility was Rachel Reeves herself, despite her acknowledging that economic challenges like global tariffs, sticky inflation, volatile supply chains, and defence spending had worsened since the previous year's financial statement.
According to Labour insiders, the flurry of pre-Budget speculation and announcements stems from a more basic and troubling reality: Reeves is 'boxed in' and 'genuinely doesn’t know what to do.' She understands that tax rises are inevitable, which will mean breaking her promises to voters, but she has not yet decided on the best strategy to minimize political damage. Her refusal to provide specifics to hardworking families, instructing them to wait until November 26, highlighted this predicament. This entire exercise is seen as a pre-emptive attempt to find anyone but the current Chancellor of the Exchequer to blame for the dire state of UK finances, a strategy many believe will ultimately fail as she is 'about to run out of road.'
Reeves's current dilemma echoes that of Labour Chancellor Denis Healey in April 1975, who, faced with runaway inflation, raised the basic rate of income tax. Reeves is now contemplating breaking a 50-year taboo by potentially becoming the first chancellor since Healey to hike the basic rate of income tax, despite Labour's 'cast-iron promise' made just a year ago not to raise income tax, national insurance, or VAT. Polling consistently shows such a move would be highly unpopular; YouGov data indicates 65% of Britons oppose an income tax increase, with only 22% supporting it. However, research by Persuasion UK suggests a potential willingness among voters to forgive broken tax promises if these lead to tangible improvements in the cost of living and public services. Experts suggest that if the choice is between raising taxes or failing on public services, the
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