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Mainstream Guardian Politics 1 days ago

Burnham promises to ease cost of living pressures if he becomes prime minister

Andy Burnham told Tonight with Andrew Marr on LBC that he would not break the government’s borrowing rules. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA View image in fullscreen Andy Burnham told Tonight with Andrew Marr on LBC that he would not break the government’s borrowing rules. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA Burnham promises to ease cost of living pressures if he becomes prime minister Makerfield MP said he would consider reducing business rates as part of a package that could also include freeze on private rents Andy Burnham promised to ease the cost of living if he becomes prime minister in his first interview since returning to parliament. The Makerfield MP told LBC that if he became prime minister later this month, as expected, he would look at reducing business rates for some high street businesses, bringing down water and energy costs by de-privatising companies and making bus travel free for 16- to 18-year-olds. The measures are likely to be included as part of an immediate cost-of-living package which allies say could include more radical measures such as freezing private sector rents. Burnham ‘coronation’ will anger some Labour members, party bosses warned Burnham told the station’s Andrew Marr: “There is some room within [the 2024] manifesto for movement on tax. So if you take business rates, for instance, I believe there is a case for higher business rates on warehouses and the major developments we see on the outskirts of our cities, so that we can cut business rates for pubs. He added: “Britain is paying too much for the basics. People are paying too much, but businesses are also paying too much, and that is certainly true of energy. “What I would do, if successful, is lay out a plan for more public control over water, energy, transport, so that over the period we can get those bills down, fares down, and give people and give businesses breathing space. “Britain needs more breathing space … We do need to be serious about putting more money back into people’s pockets.” Polls suggest Burnham’s promises of heavy political intervention to ease cost of living pressures will prove popular with the public. A study a platform of “cost of living populism” it would win 263 more seats than if it continues on its current trajectory. Burnham’s allies have urged him to freeze rents for a year, take green levies off energy bills and fund them through taxes instead, and reduce the cap on bus fares.

Original story by Guardian Politics View original source

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