Election latest: Minister says he 'stands by' Rishi Sunak's Labour tax rise claim (2024)

Election news
  • Minister doubles down on Sunak's claims about Labour's tax plans
  • Starmer accuses PM of lying|Watchdog 'looking into' tax claim
  • Tories accept further donation from businessman who was embroiled in Abbott race row
  • Ross to stand as Tory candidate in Scotland
  • Politics at Jack and Sam's:The Day... Big election choices must be made
  • Battle For No 10:PM and Starmer taking part in Sky News special
  • Live reporting by Katie Williams
Expert analysis
  • Adam Boulton:Starmer's been given licence to say 'liar'
  • Sophy Ridge:No party's being honest about challenges to come
  • Ed Conway:The £13,000 omission in PM's tax warning
Election essentials
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  • Trackers:Who's leading polls?|Is PM keeping promises?
  • Campaign Heritage:Memorable moments from elections gone by
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  • Read more:Who is standing down?|Key seats to watch|How to register to vote|What counts as voter ID?|Check if your constituency is changing|Your essential guide to election lingo|Sky's election night plans

08:55:24

Ross to stand as Tory candidate in Scotland

Douglas Ross is to stand to be the Conservative candidate in the Aberdeenshire North and Moray East constituency, Sky News understands.

08:54:40

Shadow minister repeatedly declines to say whether Labour will raise property taxes

John Healey has declined to say whether Labour will rule out raising taxes such as stamp duty and capital gains tax.

It comes after Jeremy Hunt challenged Sir Keir Starmer to explicitly say he will not hike property taxes if Labour win the election.

"There are dozens of specific taxes, the ones that are most important are those that cost working people the most," Mr Healey said.

Pressed on the issue, he repeated that Labour will not "raise taxes on working people" and said the party's plans "do not require us to start looking at raising taxes across the board".

He then repeatedly declined to answer questions on whether Labour will raise capital gains tax and stamp duty.

"I'm not going to go through a list, we could be spending the next hour doing this," he said.

"Where we have plans to change the taxes, we've spelt those out and we've said what that money that we can raise will be used to do," he added.

08:48:14

'Disappointing' that blocked Labour candidate standing as independent

Shadow defence secretary John Healey says he is "disappointed" that blocked Labour candidate Faiza Shaheen has decided to stand as an independent.

Ms Shaheen, who initially won the Labour nomination for Chingford and Woodford Green, said she felt "disenfranchised" by the decision to remove her as a candidate, and accused the party of embodying a "hierarchy of racism".

Mr Healey said he understands why she is "disappointed" but added that she went through "the process that all of us as candidates for Labour have had to go through".

"I'm disappointed she's standing as an independent and one of the really big changes that Keir Starmer has brought in... is to make sure that any allegations are treated through an independent process.

"Any suggestion that there are partial treatments for some people is entirely wrong."

08:39:36

Healey: Labour won't target dividend income

Back to our interview with John Healey now, who has been questioned by Sky's Kay Burley on whether he is trying to "catch out" the public by saying taxes will not be hiked for "working people".

The shadow defence secretary said those facing higher prices are "the people who are working hard and struggle to make ends meet".

Pressed further on the matter, and whether Labour will target unearned income surcharges such as dividends, Mr Healey said "none of our plans require us to raise extra taxes beyond the ones we've already said".

However he added that Labour would have to assess "the true state of the public finances is when we get to open the books".

08:36:08

Tories accept further donation from businessman who was embroiled in Abbott race row

The Conservatives have accepted another donation from Frank Hester, who made headlines earlier this when comments he made about Labour's Diane Abbott emerged.

The latest data from the Electoral Commission shows he has donated a further £5m to the Tories.

This is on top of the £10m Mr Hester donated last year.

Mr Hester said in 2019 that Ms Abbott made him want to "hate all black women and that she "should be shot".

The comments were reported on by The Guardian back in March.

A spokesperson for the entrepreneur released a statement at the time saying: "Frank Hester accepts that he was rude about Diane Abbott in a private meeting several years ago but his criticism had nothing to do with her gender nor colour of skin.

"The Guardian is right when it quotes Frank saying he abhors racism, not least because he experienced it as the child of Irish immigrants in the 1970s."

They added that Mr Hester rang Ms Abbott to "try to apologise directly for the hurt he has caused her, and is deeply sorry for his remarks".

"He wishes to make it clear that he regards racism as a poison which has no place in public life."

You can read more background to this story here:

08:31:40

Shadow minister doesn't say if Labour will take action on claim Sunak 'broke ministerial law'

We've also heard this morning from Labour's shadow defence secretary John Healey, who has declined to say whether the party will take action against Rishi Sunak and the Conservatives over claims about Labour's tax plans.

He echoed the view of Sir Keir Starmer that the claim of a £2,000 tax increase per family was "a lie", and said the prime minister is getting "more desperate" as the election campaign rolls on.

But asked if Labour will take any action after Sir Keir's claim that Mr Sunak broke the ministerial code, Mr Healey said: "That'll be for the statistics authority to pursue for now."

"But we're really clear that... the trust in British government is broken, it needs to be earned again," he adds, saying that Labour has been "so careful" to explain how it will fund its plans for the country.

"We have seen too much of gimmicks that make no difference to people's lives and broken promises," he says.

Mr Healey says Labour "will not be raising taxes on working people".

08:15:01

The Day... Big election choices must be made

Sky News' deputy political editor Sam Coates and Politico's Jack Blanchard provide you with their guide to the election day ahead.

This is day 15 of the campaign. Jack and Sam discuss the Conservatives on tax and if they have their figures on Labour right, the latest on new likely manifesto pledges, and what next for Welsh First Minister Vaughan Gething after losing yesterday's vote of no confidence.

Email Jack and Sam: jackandsam@sky.uk

👉 Tap here to follow Politics at Jack at Sam's wherever you get your podcasts 👈

08:07:36

'I fight for every single vote'

Back to our interview with Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride now, who says he will "fight for every single vote" after a recent poll suggested he was among several cabinet ministers who could lose his seat in the election.

Asked how worried he is, Mr Stride says he has had "majorities with anything from about 10 to 21,500".

"In every single election... I fight for every single vote. I have great pride in the fact that I've stood up for my constituents over many years on many, many issues.

"I hope that will be reflected in the result," he says.

Asked by Sky's Kay Burley what job he would do if he lost his seat, Mr Stride says he won't speculate.

07:59:46

Labour drops lawsuit against five former employees

Labour is dropping its lawsuit against five former employees whom it had accused of leaking a controversial report into how antisemitism complaints were handled under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn.

The former staff members - including Mr Corbyn's former chief of staff Karie Murphy and his former director of communications Seumas Milne - denied the claims and previously said they would "vigorously defend themselves" in court.

A statement from their lawyers Carter-Ruck said: "The party is discontinuing its legal claims against Karie Murphy, Seumas Milne, Georgie Robertson, Harry Hayball and Laura Murray on a 'no order as to costs' basis.

"The five welcome the resolution of the claims."

07:54:41

Stride defends Tories' tax record after Sky News analysis

The Work and Pensions Secretary is presented with analysis by our economics and data editor Ed Conway, who found that each household has experienced £13,000 in extra taxes under the Conservative government since 2019.

You can read that analysis in full here.

Mel Stride, in response, calls it a "number out of context that I haven't had a chance to properly look at".

He says the country has been through "two once-in-a-generation" external events with COVID and the Ukraine war.

"We supported the economy, if you go back to COVID, through furlough, millions of jobs, all that unemployment, that never happened because Rishi Sunak did the right thing," he says.

"We have seen some tax increases, but the trajectory now is downward," he adds.

Election latest: Minister says he 'stands by' Rishi Sunak's Labour tax rise claim (2024)
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