Home

Labour's autumn fightback begins

Mr Brown's political future is on the lineMr Brown's political future is on the line

Tuesday, 02, Sep 2008 06:00

Labour's long-expected Autumn fightback began with gusto today, with Hazel Blears unveiling the government's plans for the housing market and an announcement on stamp duty.

The government plans would provide loans of up to 30 per cent of a new home, interest free for five years, to households with an income of under £60,000.

The stamp duty threshold will rise up to £175,000 for one year only.

But the announcement suffered an early hit when the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) said Britain is already in recession.

"It never rains but it pours for Gordon Brown," said Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Lord Matthew.

"While the highly respected OECD is claiming that Britain is in recession, the prime minister admits he doesn't even know where the money for his misguided £600 million stamp duty suspension will come from."

The package of measures had been expected for some time by political insiders, with details of state support for those facing repossession being leaked late last week.

Today's measures mark the first stage of Gordon Brown's efforts to protect himself against a leadership bid from within the party.

A hardcore of MPs, known as the Blairite Taliban, want Mr Brown gone as soon as possible, but the consensus among Labour politicians is that the prime minister should be given until after the party conference to demonstrate an improvement in the party's electoral performance.

Stage one begins today, but all eyes will soon be on Mr Brown's speech to the party conference. After that – if he survives that long – comes the Glenrothes by-election. A loss there, in Mr Brown neighbouring constituency, would almost certainly bring the prime minister down.

Labour selected its candidate for the by-election last night, opting for Kirkcaldy high school headteacher Lindsay Roy.

Today's package follows a Tory announcement on inheritance tax last night, with the party basically doubling the threshold at which couples pay to the Treasury.

Previous Conservative plans allowed for a £1 million inheritance tax threshold, but now the party have announced they will double the limit for married couples by allowing £1 million per person.

Labour accused the party of giving tax cuts to millionaires.

"When hard working families are facing real pressure, how on earth can the Tories justify more tax cuts for millionaires?" asked Yvette Cooper, chief secretary to the Treasury.

"David Cameron has clearly tried to hide this but now we know the Tories' priority is to give money to a few thousand of the wealthiest estates in the country. How can this be fair?"

Ms Cooper's husband, children's secretary Ed Balls, took to the airwaves last night to try to settle the fallout from chancellor Alistair Darling's incendiary interview with the Guardian over the weekend.

Speaking on ITV news, Mr Balls said: "I have no reason to believe there's any prospect in any change in the chancellor… It would be the wrong thing to do."

Some analysts believe Mr Darling's comments have actually secured his position. Were Mr Brown to sack him now, it would allow the Conservatives to argue he had been got rid of for telling the truth.

Labour are also benefitting from a virtual silence from the Tories on economic issues. Apart from their inheritance proposals and some discussion on stamp duty, the Conservatives have so far failed to unveil a comprehensive economic package.


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

New jobs channel

The new look politics.co.uk now includes a jobs channel, where you can search for jobs and sign up for our jobs bulletin.

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

Electoral Reform Society

The Electoral Reform Society is a voluntary organisation that campaigns for a better democracy, particularly through changes to our electoral system.

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles

Current Vacancies:

Related News

Downing Street denies Brown-Darling rift

Downing Street has been forced to deny a rift between prime minister Gordon Brown and chancellor Alistair Darling, after the latter's explosive interview with the Guardian over the weekend.

Downing Street denies Brown-Darling rift

Related Analysis

The new Cabinet in full

The new Cabinet has now been fully revealed, after a weekend of gradual releases. Here it is, in full.

The new Cabinet in full

Latest Headlines

No warrant issued for Green search

Commons speaker Michael Martin has sparked outrage from MPs after admitting he was not told police planned to search shadow immigration minister Damian Green's parliamentary office.

Speaker Michael Martin said he was only officially told of Damian Green's arrest yesterday

Issue briefs

Labour Leadership

What is the Labour leadership? The Labour party leader heads the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) and is appointed as prime minister when the party holds a majority in the House of Commons.

Speakers Corner