Close Menu
WTX News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Tottenham’s Frank hopes Kolo Muani’s brace is just the start
    • Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises
    • Military chiefs in ‘difficult meeting’ as tensions mount over money
    • PSG 5-3 Tottenham: Thomas Frank’s side show promise in Paris goal-fest
    • Budget 2025: The same old Labour? Why their credibility might not be recoverable
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    WTX News
    • Live News
      • US News
      • EU News
      • UK News
      • Politics
      • COVID-19
      • Business
      • Tech zone
    • World news
      • Middle East News
        • UAE News
        • Palestine News
      • Europe
        • Italian News
        • Spanish News
      • Africa news
      • South America
      • North America
      • Asia
    • News Briefings
      • UK News Briefing
      • World News Briefing
      • Live Business News
    • Sports
      • Football News
      • Tennis
      • Women’s Football
    • MY World
      • Climate Change
      • In Review
      • Expose
      • Special Reports
        • Conscience Convoy
        • Rohingya Report
    • Entertainment
      • Insta Talk
      • Royal Family
      • Gaming News
      • TV Shows
      • Streaming
    • Lifestyle
      • Fitness
      • Fashion
      • Cooking recipes
      • Luxury
      • Money Saving Expert
    • Travel
      • Culture
      • Holidays
    • Sign Up
      • Log In
    WTX News
    • Live News
    • World news
    • News Briefings
    • Sports
    • MY World
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Sign Up
    Home - UK News - Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    • WTX News Editor
    • November 27, 2025
    • 2:35 am
    • No Comments

    TL;DR

    • Rachel Reeves faces scrutiny over a budget that imposes £26 billion in tax rises, raising concerns about breaching Labour’s manifesto commitments.
    • Key measures include a mansion tax on properties over £2 million and new taxes on the gambling industry, alongside cuts to tax-free savings limits.
    • Criticism from both Labour backbenchers and opposition leaders highlights potential risks to Reeves’s leadership amid claims of “taxing to cover spending”.

    Budget 2025: Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises | Politics News

    Rachel Reeves will face further questions this morning after being accused of presiding over a manifesto-busting budget that rose taxes by £26bn.

    The Chancellor has acknowledged she is “asking ordinary people to pay a little bit more” following her series of announcements yesterday, including extending the freeze on income tax bands.

    But when challenged by Sky News political editor Beth Rigby that this amounted to a breach of Labour’s manifesto, she argued it didn’t because the rates themselves had not changed.

    Ms Reeves said the party’s election document was “very clear” about not raising the rates of income tax, national insurance, and VAT.

    But she added: “If you’re asking does this have a cost for working people? I acknowledge it does.”


    3:00

    Beth Rigby asks Reeves: How can you stay in your job?

    The chancellor – who will be questioned on Mornings With Ridge And Frost from 7am – is set to inflict a record tax burden upon Britain.

    Her other measures include:

    • A “mansion tax” on properties worth over £2m;

    • New taxes on the gambling industry to raise more than £1bn;

    • A new mileage tax for electric vehicles from April 2028;

    • Slashing the amount you can save in a tax-free cash ISA from £20,000 to £12,000, except for over-65s;

    And in a move that will prove particularly unpopular with savers, people paying into a pension under salary sacrifice schemes will face national insurance on contributions above £2,000.


    2:41

    What is a ‘salary sacrifice’?

    The tax rises – which were published by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) ahead of time in an unprecedented blunder – are mostly needed to pay for increased welfare spending.

    Ms Reeves announced the abolition of the two-child benefit cap, expected to lift 450,000 children out of poverty.

    You should resign, says Badenoch

    Tory leader Kemi Badenoch accused her of “hiking taxers on workers, pensioners, and savers to pay for handouts”, claiming the budget will increase benefits for 560,000 families by £5,000 on average.

    Ms Reeves had sought to cut the welfare bill earlier this year, but the government was forced into a damaging retreat after backbench Labour MPs rebelled.

    “What she could have chosen today is to bring down welfare spending and get more people into work,” Ms Badenoch told the Commons on Wednesday.

    “Instead, she has chosen to put a tax up to tax after tax.”

    She called on the chancellor to resign.

    From our experts:
    Ed Conway: This was a historic budget
    Beth Rigby: Labour’s credibility might be shot
    Sam Coates: It’s not clear if Reeves will survive


    2:38

    How will the budget impact your money?

    Under fire from left and right

    Labour MPs cheered raucously at the two-child benefit cap announcement, but one backbencher told Sky News: “We are effectively doing government by consent of the PLP, if not the cabinet – a bad place to be.

    “The Tories did it for years, and it can only lead to the death of us at the general election.”

    Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey, meanwhile, warned Ms Reeves cannot “tax her way to growth”, while Reform’s Nigel Farage described the budget as an “assault on ambition and saving”.

    Greens leader Zack Polanski criticised the budget for not raising taxes on the “super wealthy”.


    3:47

    What does the public think?

    Sky’s Sophy Ridge and Wilfred Frost won’t be the only ones putting the chancellor under more scrutiny today – two influential economic think tanks will also give their full verdicts.

    The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and the left-leaning Resolution Foundation have already been critical in their immediate verdicts, with the former describing the budget as “spend now, pay later”, with tax rises being increasingly relied upon over time.

    It also accused Ms Reeves of breaching Labour’s manifesto commitments on tax.

    Monterosa

    This content is provided by Monterosa, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
    To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
    You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable Monterosa cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
    You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.


    Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to Monterosa cookies.
    To view this content you can use the button below to allow Monterosa cookies for this session only.

    Enable Cookies
    Allow Cookies Once

    The Resolution Foundation warned of a hit to living standards because of Ms Reeves’s measures, though she has said policies aimed at cutting household energy bills and freezing rail fares and prescription charges will help people.

    She also claimed her decisions would help cut NHS waiting lists and the national debt.

    Also facing more questions today is the head of the OBR, as he remains under pressure over how its forecast of the chancellor’s announcements were published ahead of time.

    Follow live updates on the fallout from the budget in the Politics Hub and Money through the day.

    Advertisment
    News Headlines
    Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises

    Military chiefs in ‘difficult meeting’ as tensions mount over money

    Military chiefs in ‘difficult meeting’ as tensions mount over money

    Save 70% on VIP subscription
    News Briefings - the way to a better life
    News Briefings - the way to a better life
    Advert by Sponsors
    More from WTX News
    The latest gaming news - with game reviews and tips and tricks. updated 24 hours a day.
    The latest gaming news
    Hot off the press!
    • Tottenham’s Frank hopes Kolo Muani’s brace is just the start November 27, 2025
    • Budget 2025 Reeves to face further questions after being accused of broken promises November 27, 2025
    • Military chiefs in ‘difficult meeting’ as tensions mount over money November 27, 2025
    • PSG 5-3 Tottenham: Thomas Frank’s side show promise in Paris goal-fest November 26, 2025
    • Budget 2025: The same old Labour? Why their credibility might not be recoverable November 26, 2025
    WTX News latest breaking news sports and travel
    Latest News and analysis - Deciphering through the BS with exclusive News Briefings
    Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • EU News
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • News Briefing
    • Live News

    Company

    • About WTX News
    • Register
    • Advertising
    • Work with us
    • Contact
    • Community
    • GDPR Policy
    • Privacy

    Services

    • Fitness for free
    • Insta Talk
    • How to guides
    • Climate Change
    • In Review
    • Expose
    • NEWS SUMMARY
    • Money Saving Expert

    News delivered to your inbox

    Copyright WTX News 2025

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.