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    HomePoliticsUK's Rishi Sunak pledges £17 billion in tax cuts by 2030, looking...

    UK’s Rishi Sunak pledges £17 billion in tax cuts by 2030, looking to bounce back from D-Day gaffe


    British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks at the Conservative Party’s general election manifesto launch at Silverstone Circuit on June 11, 2024 in Towcester, United Kingdom.

    Leon Neal | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    LONDON — British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak released his Conservative Party’s official election manifesto on Tuesday, announcing help for first-time home buyers and promising more tax cuts.

    The pledges come as the Conservatives look set for a drubbing to the rival Labour party at the July 4 General Election, while Sunak has personally come under fire several times during the campaign.

    Sunak apologized for leaving D-Day commemorations in France early last week and has also been accused of misleading the British electorate with a claim that Labour would raise taxes by £2,000 ($2,547) per working household.

    On Tuesday, he pledged to cut another 2 pence off National Insurance — a British tax on workers’ income — and reiterated his plan to bring back national service, which would oblige 18-year-olds to complete a 12-month community program or a year-long period of military training.

    He also said that the Conservatives would look to halve migration then “reduce it every single year,” also promising “Help to Buy” program for first-time property buyers amid the U.K.’s housing crisis.

    Sunak and Labour leader Keir Starmer are both forefronting economic growth, the cost of living and taxes in their campaign messaging. A Labour win would mark its first parliamentary majority in 14 years. Polls have for some time been pointing toward a Labour victory in a General Election after the Conservatives’ ratings tanked following a series of scandals under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s tenure.

    Total tax cuts under the Conservative manifesto would progressively climb to an annual £17.2 billion by 2029-30. In an initial response to the manifesto, the independent thinktank the Institute for Fiscal Studies said that the package is “supposedly funded by reducing the projected welfare bill by £12 billion” among other strategies like cracking down on tax avoidance.

    “Those are definite giveaways paid for by uncertain, unspecific and apparently victimless savings. Forgive a degree of scepticism,” Paul Johnson, IFS director, said in the statement.

    UK election result will be 'historic,' political lecturer says

    -CNBC’s Jenni Reid contributed to this article.



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