The Scotsman

Four reasons Starmer says the Budget will be ‘painful’

- Alexander Brown

Sir Keir Starmer warned that the UK Government’s forthcomin­g Budget will be “painful” as he asked the country to “accept short-term pain for long-term good”.

Delivering a speech in the Downing Street Rose Garden, the prime minister claimed his Government has done more in seven weeks than the tory government did in seven years.

However, he also warned things are “worse than we ever imagined”, in an address that focused on the tough decisions ahead, rather than reasons for optimism. With the Chancellor Rachel Reeves set to deliver the Budget on October 30, here are four reasons why the PM said it will have to be “painful”.

The public finances

Far and away the biggest reasonfor pessimism is the state of the public purse, with Sir Keir repeatedly citing the £22 billion “black hole” that Labour claims to have only found out about last week.

This follows the allegation, broadly backed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the Tories borrowed almost £5bn more than the Office for Budgetresp­onsibility expected. his language appears to hint at cuts, even if he refused to elaborate on measures that may or may not be in the Budget.

Cuts

Sir Keir’s hesitance to elaborate on what might be in the Budget was revealing, with the few things he would commit to being particular­ly telling.

He insisted national insurance, VAT and income tax would not go up, and neither would “the triple lock for working people”. With no immediatec­hanges on tax. The only possible conclusion­s to draw are new taxes on the wealthy, and cuts to public services. This was made especially clear by his assertion “those with the broad est shoulders should bear the heavier burden”, a comment that was referencin­g non-doms, but is likely to have further implicatio­ns in the Budget.

Pay rises

The prime minister also sought to defend the above-inflation pay rise for millions of public sector workers, which ended more than a decade of austerity in the sector. Economists believe the move could cost up to £10bn, and the Government has been criticised for delivering the rise while also cutting the winter fuel allowance. Sir Keir argues this is part of getting the country back on track, ensuring there are staff to keep the transport system working, or doctors to deal with thenhs back log. but he made very clear this will be a trade-off and not everything will be able to be fixed immediatel­y. This tracks with what Labour MPS have been saying privately for some time, that they expect the first term to be a clean-up job, and only in a second term will people really start to feel the change required.

Prisons

The Prime Minister was also defensive over prisons, claiming the UK government had to undertake daily checks on the number of prison places to “make sure we could arrest, charge and prosecute people quickly” during the recent riots.

He said: “No prime minister should ever be in that position when trying to deal with disorder. That’s what we inherited, that’s what we will fix.”

Saying it was impossible to build a new prison “by Saturday”, the Labour leader was making it clear the prisons situation represente­d the wider issue.

 ?? PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA WIRE ?? Millions of public sector workers have been handed a pay rise
PICTURE: STEFAN ROUSSEAU/PA WIRE Millions of public sector workers have been handed a pay rise

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