Labour Day: Miliband shocks Westminster with 10p tax announcement

By

Ed Miliband shocked Westminster and addressed concerns about his lack of policies with a keynote speech promising major redistributive tax reforms today.

The Labour leader said he would reintroduce the 10p tax rate scrapped by Gordon Brown and fund the move with a mansion tax on homes worth over £2 million.

"We would put right a mistake made by Gordon Brown and the last Labour government," he said.

"Moving Labour on from the past and putting Labour where it should always have been, on the side of working people."

Ed Miliband speech in full

He added: "When you play your part, when you make your contribution to the economy, you will be rewarded.

"Britain's economic success will be built by the many, not just by a few at the top."

The move corresponds neatly to Miliband's fairness agenda, which demands some measure of redistribution through the tax system, coupled with a 'predistribution' drive which would try to boost wages.

But it is also strategically significant. The policy distances Miliband from the Brown government in which he served by undoing one of its least popular policies.

The 10p tax rate policy was demanded by Tory MP Robert Halfon and yesterday's PMQs suggested David Cameron and George Osborne were weighing up whether to include it in next month's Budget.

Its use by Labour suggests Miliband and Ed Balls are intent on stealing the Conservative's embryonic focus on 'strivers'. If, as suspected, the Tories were intending to use it, Miliband's move today will seriously complicate Osborne's preparation for the Budget.

By pledging a mansion tax Miliband is also stealing a key Liberal Democrat policy which has been regularly shot down by their Tory coalition partners.

Tellingly, today's speech was the first time the Labour leader has spoken on the economy without the presence of Balls, although the shadow chancellor was present for the Q&A session.

The announcement was greeted positively by commentators on the left and the right, but there were concerns around its affordability.

Liberal Democrats forecast revenue of £2 billion from a mansion tax, which would mainly hit wealthy parts of London and the south-east.

Labour says the £2 billion would let the government apply the 10p band up to £1,000.

But a House of Commons library assessment suggests the 10p rate would cost £6 billion if it was created between the personal allowance (£9,440) and £12,000.

A Downing Street spokesperson said:  "This is a stunning admission of economic incompetence  – that their decision in government to scrap the 10p tax rate hurt millions of working families. People will never trust Labour again.

"Now Labour’s new homes tax would mean government snoopers in every home to revalue your house for council tax, meaning council tax rises for millions."

The speech was one of several keynote addresses made today by senior Labour figures.

Jon Cruddas, who is leading Labour's policy review, spoke at an event organised by centre-left think tank  IPPR, during which he outlined Labour's alternative to the Conservative's much-maligned 'big society' agenda.

Finally, shadow defence secretary Jim Murphy made a speech on foreign intervention in which he reflected on the decade since the war in Iraq.

All three speeches are intended to correct the impression of an opposition party without fleshed out policy proposals.

Meanwhile, in a little-reported meeting an organisation subcommittee of the National Executive Committee of the party is expected to announce which seats will use all-women shortlists to pick their party candidates in the 2015 general election.

The move will be crucial to candidates hoping to run and may also revive the debate on the ethics of the all-women shortlists.

Labour does not have a particularly good relationship with all-women shortlists. In 2010, Harriet Harman's husband, Jack Dromey, was selected to contest a safe seat where only women candidates were expected to run.

Political news to your inbox

Fill in your details to receive Politics.co.uk's brand of informed, in-depth and independent coverage of Westminster to your inbox

Hot topics

Britain's great energy debate

How the power gets to Britain's homes in the next century remains a matter of deep controversy

As the next general election begins to loom over the horizon, the debate over Britain's future energy mix is starting to hot up - and nothing seems guaranteed.

The Heathrow third runway debate

Heathrow's third runway is just one of many options

There won't be a final decision on Britain's long-term aviation strategy until after the 2015 general election - but an aggressive national debate is already underway.

Opinion Former Events

BSIA: Information Destruction Exhibition & Conference 2013

Following the great success of the BSIA's Information Destruction Conference and Exhibition in May 2012, we are pleased to annouce that the event is returning again in June 2013. This one-day conference and exhibition is aimed at key decision makers in organisations that carry out the secure destruction of confidential material.