Home » today » World » Johnson raises British taxes, justifying it with a pandemic

Johnson raises British taxes, justifying it with a pandemic

However, the prime minister’s plan violates the Tories’ campaign promise not to raise taxes.

A new tax will be introduced in Britain to pay for social sector reforms and national health care funding, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has announced.

Johnson noted that in the next three years, this will raise 36 billion pounds for first-line services in public life, said BNR.

However, the prime minister’s plan violates the Tories’ campaign promise not to raise taxes.

The prime minister’s plans call for an increase in national insurance contributions by 1.25% from April next year. This means that a person with an annual gross income of 30,000 pounds will have to pay an additional 255 pounds a year.

“Money is needed to help with the long delay in hospital treatment,” he said. Regarding criticism from his party members that the election manifesto was being violated, Boris Johnson said: “Yes, I admit that this violates the election promisewhich is not something I do lightly, but the global pandemic was not embedded in any manifesto. “

The leader of Labor’s largest opposition party, Kier Starmer, noted that national health problems were not limited to Covid-19 and that 2 million people were on the waiting list for treatment before the pandemic. He called Johnson’s plan “putting a patch on a growing wound” and said: “We need to ask the rich to pay more. The unruly fraudulent handling of dividends will not help. the government places the burden mainly on working people and businesses struggling to survive“.

Scottish National Party Parliamentary Leader Ian Blackford reminded the Prime Minister that health issues are decided by the authorities of the self-governing parts of the United Kingdom, so it is good that Johnson “to get his hands off Scottish healthcare because no one believes him“.

The director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, Paul Johnson, commented that funding social welfare reform from increased social security is not the right way.

Political observers note that Boris Johnson knows he is taking a big risk with the plan, hoping voters will forgive him for breaking one promise to fulfill another.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.