Gove dismisses talk of emergency budget to tackle rising costs

2 years ago 26
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Watch: Animated Michael Gove denies cost of living split between PM and Treasury

Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove has dismissed suggestions the government could hold an emergency budget to tackle rising costs.

He said ministers were looking at ways to help but talk of a budget was simply the media "chasing their own tails".

A No 10 source said a dozen ideas to help ease the cost of living are being considered, including ideas like changing the frequency of MoTs.

Labour said the Queen's Speech did not contain enough measures to help people.

The Queen's Speech - delivered this year by Prince Charles in the Queen's absence - contained 38 bills and draft bills for the coming year.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, shadow justice secretary Steve Reed said many were surprised the government's plans for legislation in the coming months did not include more measures to help people out.

He said Chancellor Rishi Sunak should announce an emergency budget to implement a windfall tax on oil and gas companies, and "look again at the tax rises he imposed".

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson told MPs during a debate on the Queen's Speech that he and the chancellor would be "saying more" about ways to help people "in the days to come".

But the Treasury played down the suggestion, while a No 10 source stressed there were no plans for an emergency budget and that it would be "wrong to build up expectations of a major moment".

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said: "At one stage he [the PM] was sort of offering something but sources in the Treasury said he didn't know what he was talking about - it appears chaotic."

Image source, Getty Images

Mr Gove hit back that it was Sir Ed who was "chaotic" adding: "He doesn't have a scooby."

He said the prime minister was "making the point clearly that we are constantly looking at ideas in order to ensure we relieve the pressure on people facing incredibly tough times."

"That doesn't amount to an emergency budget... this is an example of some commentators chasing their own tails."

He said suggestions there was a split between No 10 and the Treasury were "overinflated".

The minister said the government had already introduced measures to reduce people's council tax payments and the Queen's Speech included proposals that would help minimise rent increases.

He argued that the opposition parties had failed to come up with any "whizz-bang" ideas.

The next Budget - when the chancellor outlines tax and spending plans - is not due until November.

In the meantime ministers are said to be focusing on what regulations can be tweaked, rather than making big changes to their tax and spending plans.

It comes as the National Institute for Economic and Social Research says that falling real incomes mean a further quarter of a million households face sliding into destitution this year - taking to one million the number which can't afford essentials to eat, stay warm and keep clean.

The think tank has called for a boost to benefits of £25 a week, and a one-off payment of £250 for the poorer half of households.

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