Inheritance tax is most hated of all – Sunak might terrify Starmer by scrapping it

The Conservative Party has a mountain to climb if it wants to win the next election, which is prone to happen in 2024.

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Sunak is on track to booted out of Number 10 and replaced by Sir Keir Starmer's Labour Party, as inflation wreaks havoc.

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The cost-of-living crisis is getting worse rather than better, whereas rising interest rates will wreak more havoc.

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Sunak has portrayed himself as a protected pair of arms who will step by step restore the nation’s funds given time, and he is had some success in that.

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He has been creeping up within the polls however with the financial system nonetheless struggling there is a lengthy solution to go.

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What he wants is an enormous financial win, and there is a coverage that has been tried earlier than with nice success.

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Declaring struggle on inheritance tax.

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Survey after survey exhibits that IHT is essentially the most hated tax of all. People detest it for all types of causes.

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Families really feel they're being taxed twice. Both once they dwell, and once they die.

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Worse, IHT is levied at a punitive 40 p.c on all property that rise above a sure threshold.

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The £325,000 nil-rate band was set in 2009 and can stay frozen during to 2028, steadily catching extra folks resulting from fiscal drag.

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This 12 months we'll pay a file £7billion and that may proceed to rise.

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Middle-class Britons are sometimes those who pay whereas the super-rich make use of crafty accountants to dodge their share.

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So why doesn’t Sunak simply scrap it? We already know it will likely be a vote winner.

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In October 2007, Gordon Brown had simply changed Tony Blair as Prime Minister, and was desperately plotting win the following election.

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Then Conservative Party Shadow Chancellor George Osborne pledged to lift the IHT threshold to £1million, so "only millionaires would pay" if the Tories received energy.

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Osborne's "autumn surprise”, as it was called at the time, was an instant hit. It was particularly popular in key marginal constituencies in southern England, where homeowners more likely to get caught by IHT.

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Brown lost his nerve and postponed the election, allowing then Tory leader David Cameron to ridicule him as a “ditherer”. 

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The financial crisis followed and sunk Brown for good.

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Sunak and Hunt have a proven electrical weapon at their disposal, so will they use it?

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READ MORE: Poll shows overwhelming support for cuts to ‘abhorrent’ inheritance tax

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There are reasons why they may hold back.

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Scrapping IHT would be portrayed as a tax break for the wealthy, as was Hunt's recent decision to scrap the pension lifetime allowance.

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That will infuriate class warriors on the left, but they're never going to vote Tory anyway, while a lot of swing voters might suddenly decide they will.

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Inheritance tax is so loathed that people want to see it gone, even if they are unlikely to ever pay it themselves.

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Another thing that may deter Sunak and Hunt is that from day one, they have set themselves the mighty task of repairing the nation’s finances.

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It’s a message Hunt bangs out again and again.

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The UK still faces a price range deficit of £131.7billion within the present monetary 12 months, equal to five.1 p.c of nationwide earnings. 

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If Sunak scraps IHT then Hunt must discover one other £7billion from someplace. Cutting spending or elevating different taxes will not be common, both.

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I do not know what Sunak will do. It relies upon how determined he will get.

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I do know what thousands and thousands of voters would love him to do, although. And they'd be very grateful.

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