When does a political stunt become a gimmick? Not today. Daily Telegraph politics 10/03/26 Even Reform’s detractors must give credit where credit is due: the party managed to pull off cut-price fuel at a petrol station in deepest Derbyshire, as lorries rolled past tooting their horns approvingly. Ed Miliband’s Stone or Kinnock: The Movie this was not. Alongside Robert Jenrick, one of Nigel Farage’s newest MPs, the Reform leader filled punters’ tanks with the “cheapest” fuel in Britain, in an attempt to give voters a flavour of what life under the party might feel like. “Reform rates,” Jenrick quipped, as he manually adjusted the prices on a totem sign. Farage and Jenrick pictured today at petrol station in Derbyshire Nigel Farage and Robert Jenrick have reduced petrol prices at the Newhaven services, near Buxton Beneath the theatre was some policy: the party has promised to reinstate the 5p cut to fuel duty in its first budget, paid for using £12bn savings from the green energy ...
Labour has raised taxes to a near post-war high – its language on raising living standards is just rhetoric Daily Telegraph 04/03/26 Listening to the Chancellor’s Spring Statement in isolation would give the impression that the Government is running an efficient economy with a realistic promise of improving living standards. Unfortunately, I don’t think that this was likely to be the case for most of us, even before we had the uncertainty imposed on us by international events. Improved living standards rely principally on the ability of the Government to do so through economic growth. This in turn relies on greater business investment and improved productivity. On taking office, Rachel Reeves declared that economic growth was to be her priority, but it has not worked out that way. A combination of the increase in employers’ National Insurance, business rates, and changes to the minimum wage has placed a heavy burden on business and reduced their incentive to take on addition...