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Middle classes will bear the brunt of new Rachel Reeves tax raid, Labour minister hints

The worker opened the door to the tax raid yesterday yesterday and a minister said only those who were ‘modest income’ would be saved.

The party seems to be ready to get a fresh tax in this autumn, which refuses to expand a tax on secret taxes or a length.

Yesterday, Transportation Secretary Heidi Alexander could not deny that the Labor Party was trying to increase taxes, but the government would be guided by ‘justice’.

He told Sky News that the cabinet ministers did not talk about the idea of a leyal tax on the Prime Minister’s Checkers’ property on Friday for a day.

However, he added: ‘I think, the chancellor in the budget [Office for Budget Responsibility] The estimation will decide in accordance with the financial rules given to him.

‘In our manifestion, we have committed not to put taxes on modest income, working people. We clung to it. ‘

He refused to speculate by pressure on whether there will be a tax increase in this autumn, but he said: ‘When it comes to taxation, justice will be our guiding principle.’

Labour opened the door to the tax raid on middle class workers yesterday and a minister said that only those who were ‘humble income’ would be saved (in the picture: Rachel Reeves)

Yesterday, Transportation Secretary Heidi Alexander could not deny that the Labor Party was trying to increase taxes again, but the government said it would be directed with justice

Yesterday, Transportation Secretary Heidi Alexander could not deny that the Labor Party was trying to increase taxes again, but the government said it would be directed with justice

Labour’s General Election Manifesto promised that he would not increase taxes on ‘working people’, including national insurance, income tax or VAT, but since then the ministers struggled to describe what a ‘working person’ was.

Big increase in job seekers

Employers who were frightened by tax increases increased the dismissal of employers, while the number of people looking for jobs saw the biggest increase.

The recruitment companies survey showed a ‘accelerated decrease’ in the activity – evidence of Labour’s 25 billion £ national insurance raid with the global political turbulence, including Donald Trump’s trade war and conflict in the Middle East, damages growth.

The numbers of accountants KPMG and

Recruitment and Employment Confederation (ReC) comes after the economy decreased by 0.1 percent in May last week.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves refused to exclude tax increases in the budget, as the government was forced for a humiliating U -turn on welfare reforms that would save £ 5 billion.

Financial surveillance OBR warned that Britain’s state financing is on a ‘sustainable’ path because of a public expenditure promise that the government cannot meet in the long term.

In the meantime, the economists warned that Mrs. Reeves’ financial ceiling gap can be eroded by unexpected economic turns.

A reserve tax implementation labor to balance the books is under the pressure of MPs, trade unions and senior figures.

Telegraph reported that it can increase business rates for stores and supermarkets with an increase of £ 1.7 billion.

Mrs. Reeves will cut the bureaucracy tomorrow and announce a ‘Big Bang’ plans in the city.

In his speech, Konak House will undertake to reduce the excessive regulation to make the UK ‘the best place to do business’.

But last night, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stide said that the Labor Party sent it to investors because they knew that ‘tax increases have arrived’.

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