Sajid Javid tries to defend huge tax hikes as MPs set to vote on NHS spending spree TODAY

0
70

HIKING taxes to pay for crippling NHS and social care costs is “a very Conservative move”, Sajid Javid insisted today as MPs prepared to vote on the spending spree.

The Health Secretary tried to convince voters the Government’s £12billion-a-year tax raid was smart book-keeping after months of Covid spending.

Sajid Javid today defended the tax hikes
Boris Johnson yesterday unveiled a £36billion cash injection

Boris Johnson yesterday unveiled a £36billion cash injection over three years to tackle the NHS backlog and cap social care costs at £86,000 over a lifetime. 

Brits were hit with a double-tax bombshell as National Insurance Contributions and shareholder levies on dividends will both rise by 1.25 per cent next year.  

The NICs increase means someone on £25,000 will pay an extra £193 each year, rising to £715 for someone earning £67,000.

The controversial plan – that raises the tax burden to the biggest in peace time – is set to squeak through the Commons this evening after a brewing Tory revolt melted away.

CHILD OF THATCHER?

Mr Javid – a former chancellor who lionises anti-state heroine Margret Thatcher – was adamant the tax rises squares with the Tory brand.

He told BBC Breakfast: “As Conservatives, we believe in the NHS, that it should be the world-class universal health service, free at the point of use, paid out of general taxation for all of us.

“If we believe in an NHS that’s paid out of general taxation, this is a very Conservative move.

“Also as a Conservative, I believe in fiscal responsibility. That means that if we are going to raise taxes you’ve got to be able to absolutely 100 per cent justify that, and I think we’ve done that both with health care and the adult social care package yesterday, but also you should try and keep taxes as low as possible and be as fair as possible.

“This tax increase yesterday is a very progressive way of raising money, but also it means that even after this change, I think we end up with something like a tax rate versus our GDP of 35.5 per cent in total, and that is still lower than Germany, it’s lower than Italy, it’s lower than France, so we remain a low tax country, and that’s important to me.”

BROKEN PROMISES

The Health Sec later confirmed he still has a portrait of Mrs Thatcher hanging in his office.

Mr Johnson has also consistently championed low taxes and once described NICs hikes as the unfairest tax to raise.

The PM did admit the rise ripped up a 2019 election pledge not to raise NICs, VAT or income tax.

He said unprecedented spending to pay for pandemic support justified the broken promise – and didn’t rule out more hikes.

BUSINESS RAGE

Business chiefs last night savaged the PM for hammering firms with tax raids so soon after a “torrid” 18 months of lockdown.

British Chamber of Commerce top economist Suren Thiru said the NI rise would be a “drag anchor on jobs” already teetering on the brink.

He said the hikes would also “dampen the entrepreneurial spirit needed to drive the recovery”.

CBI boss Lord Bilimoria also warned ministers were clobbering companies vital to the economic bounce-back. 

The big business leader said: “Government must be wary of heaping further pressure on businesses who will be central to the recovery, particularly by making it more expensive to recruit.”

Taxpayer’s Alliance chief John O’Connell blasted the tax-grab for hurting both “low-paid workers and struggling employers”.