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How Rachel Reeves could clobber the middle classes with a wealth tax sneaked through the back door: Money experts reveal what every family and pensioner must know now

How Rachel Reeves could clobber the middle classes with a wealth tax sneaked through the back door: Money experts reveal what every family and pensioner must know now

Daily Mail​a day ago
Fears are mounting that middle-class families could face a devastating tax raid on their wealth as Rachel Reeves scrambles to find a way to fill the hole in the nation's finances.
The Chancellor last week refused to rule out a new wealth tax, while only promising that protections will remain in place for 'working people'.
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Nigel Farage to build ‘Nightingale prisons' if he wins election
Nigel Farage to build ‘Nightingale prisons' if he wins election

Times

time3 minutes ago

  • Times

Nigel Farage to build ‘Nightingale prisons' if he wins election

Nigel Farage will pledge to build five prefabricated 'Nightingale prisons' on armed forces land in less than 18 months if he wins the next election. At a press conference on law and order in Westminster on Monday, the leader of Reform UK will announce the party would 'end the prison place shortage' by building 'low-cost, high-security' modular structures. The prisons would be named after historical figures involved in policing reform such as Sir Robert Peel, the Tory prime minister who founded the Metropolitan Police. Reform said the Nightingale prisons would have enough space for 12,400 prisoners and would be built with the help of the army. Nightingale hospitals, named after Florence Nightingale, were set up at short notice in places such as exhibition centres during the pandemic. Farage will say: 'If you're a criminal, we are putting you on notice. In 2029 you have a choice to make: be a law-abiding citizen or face serious justice.' A government source said: 'These are empty promises from Farage, whose plans are unfunded and undeliverable. This government is delivering the biggest jail expansion in over a hundred years, and we've already opened 2,400 cells since taking office.' The government has announced plans to relieve Britain's struggling prisons, including the early release of serious offenders. The measures will apply to criminals whose original sentence was one to four years and will only exclude terrorists and individuals deemed by the police, prisons and probation services to be the highest risk to the public and those who commit serious further offences. On Sunday Farage announced plans to nationalise half of the water industry. Asked how much it would cost to have 50 per cent of the sector under public ownership, he told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: 'That depends what deal you do with the private sector investors. We are in a hell of a mess with this — an increase of the population by ten million has left us completely incapable of coping [and] companies have been badly run … It's all about what deal you strike, isn't it?'

Epping protests are just the latest flashpoint of frustration
Epping protests are just the latest flashpoint of frustration

Sky News

time28 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Epping protests are just the latest flashpoint of frustration

This was the fourth protest in just nine days here - around 500 people gathered outside The Bell Hotel in Epping, which is believed to house asylum seekers. There was no sign of far-right or left that had travelled to the Essex town looking for trouble. Instead, it was locals; families sat on the grass, multi-generations of them, kids playing in the sunshine - tradesmen brought their lorries; a large "Protect Our Kids" sign fixed on the back. Between the protesters and those housed inside, around 50 police officers in riot gear lined up beside eight riot vans. There were some troublemakers hiding their faces in the crowd - a few brief moments of tension when bottles and firecrackers were thrown at police. There were five arrests, according to Essex Police, with one relating to damage caused to an unmarked police car, and four related to violent disorder at the same location on Thursday night. But overall - this was event on Sunday peaceful. Residents simply angry about events that have unfolded here in recent weeks. Earlier this month, an asylum seeker was arrested and charged with offences against a teenager and an adult in the town, eight days after arriving in the UK via a boat. Hadush Kebatu, 38, from Ethiopia, denies the allegations - of three counts of sexual assault, one count of inciting a girl to engage in sexual activity, and one count of harassment without violence - and was remanded in custody. On Thursday, when he appeared in court, it did boil over outside the hotel - eight officers were injured and arrests continue to be made. One man has been charged and is due to appear at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on Monday. It was calmer on Sunday night. Mother Nicola is here with her two kids. "I'm sick and tired of working and paying for these people," she tells me. "I've got a young little girl and I want her to be safe. "By all means come over. Bring into the economy, no disputing that. But you can't just come over and take and expect everything for nothing." Aimee Keteca - a Reform councillor in Essex - was in holding a placard "I'm not far right - I'm worried about my KIDS". She says: "I've got a 16-year-old daughter, I worry about her in my local area. It's right on your doorstep, we've got people here and we don't know who they are." These protests are just the latest flashpoint of frustration - a physical place for people to vent anger that's been felt for years and continues to build. There are few here who believe the government's new plan will help solve the issue of small boat arrivals any time soon.

Reform will be ‘toughest' party on crime ever, Farage to say
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time32 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Reform will be ‘toughest' party on crime ever, Farage to say

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