Eight million of the poorest UK households will receive a one off “cost of living payment” of £650 – and there will be an effective windfall tax on the profits of oil and gas companies, the chancellor has announced. The policy they called ‘socialist’ has now been adopted by the Tories.

Rishi Sunak said the package of support for households is worth over £5bn and will come in two lump sums, one in July and one in August.
In his speech in the Commons, the chancellor did not specifically refer to a windfall tax but said he would introduce a “temporary targeted energy profits levy” on oil and gas companies.

The new levy will be charged on profits of oil and gas companies at a rate of 25%, Mr Sunak said.
“It will be temporary. And when oil and gas prices return to historically more normal levels, the levy will be phased out with a sunset clause written into the legislation,” he said.

Ministers had been resistant to Labour proposals for a windfall tax claiming it would deter investment but with inflation hitting a four-decade
Mr Sunak’s announcement comes a day after Sue Gray’s damning report into lockdown parties in Downing Street, laying bare details of drunken parties, altercations and karaoke in the heart of government at a time when COVID-19 restrictions were in place.
The prime minister’s chief of staff Steve Barclay earlier brushed off the suggestion that the launch of the cost of living policy was designed to deflect attention from the partygate scandal.

He pointed instead to a forecast earlier this week by regulator Ofgem that an increase in its price cap was expected to see the typical annual energy bill rise by more than £800 to £2,800 this autumn.
Surging energy costs have already pushed inflation to 9%, its highest level since the early 1980s, and the Bank of England has warned it could top 10% later in the year and that a recession looms.

The Bank’s governor Andrew Bailey has also warned of “apocalyptic” food price rises as the war in Ukraine hits wheat and cooking oil supplies.

This represents a finger up to two hardline far right Tory MP’s in Dorset:

South Dorset MP Richard Drax stated:

Mr Drax told the Commons: “Unbelievably, we, the Conservative Party, are presiding over the steepest taxes since the 1940s and the highest sustained spending levels since the 1970s.

“This is not the Conservative way. Nor is it the way to cope with a struggling economy.”

And Christchurch MP Christopher Chope:

“When I was first elected in Christchurch 25 years ago, I would never have been able to contemplate that (we) would have a Conservative government presiding over the highest levels of taxation in a generation and with inflation raging at 10 per cent.”

Thus Boris Johnson has gone for a ‘socialist’ policy to help relieve the pain of the economic crisis and ignored the wittering of:

and

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