Tag: high

  • Newspaper headlines: ‘High welfare, high tax’ and ‘Budget goes as billed’ | Reeves: working peopl…

    Newspaper headlines: ‘High welfare, high tax’ and ‘Budget goes as billed’ | Reeves: working peopl…

    Explore the latest developments concerning Newspaper headlines: 'High.

    Newspaper headlines: 'High welfare, high tax' and 'Budget goes as billed'

    "Chancellor wallops workers", declares the Sun, while the Times opts for "high welfare, high tax", as the front pages deliver their verdicts on the Budget. Contained in what the Daily Telegraph describes as a "red box of broken promises", the paper says Rachel Reeves delivered a £30bn package of tax increases "largely targeting the middle classes". The Daily Mail is damning, accusing her of "spiteful raids on strivers – to lavish billions on benefits street".

    The Guardian quotes the chancellor's words at the despatch box: "I am asking everyone to make a contribution" in its headline. The Daily Mirror's assessment is that it was a Budget "with a Labour heart", praising the decision to end what it calls the "cruel" two-child benefit cap. The i Paper and the Financial Times are among the front pages to highlight one of the risks of Ms Reeves' plan, with both quoting analysis from the Institute for Fiscal Studies that she has opted for a "spend now, pay later" approach.

    Reeves: working people will pay ‘a bit more’ through income tax threshold freeze; OBR chief ‘mortified’ by leak – business live

    JP Morgan points to ‘The UK government’s priority of economic growth’ as it announces plans for new Canary Wharf HQ

    Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

    It’s the morning after the budget, a time when the real story behind the fiscal event often emerges.

    And today, the Resolution Foundation is warning that the job of repairing the UK’s public finance is “far from complete”, and that major tax rises and cuts to public services are coming down the line.

    The think tank has issued its overnight analysis of Rachel Reeves’s budget, which shows that pre-election austerity and tax rises are both pencilled in.

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    UK government unveils budget aimed at stabilising economy

    Britain's Chancellor Rachel Reeves has handed down a high-stakes national budget overnight, which the government hopes will boost economic growth, reduce child poverty and ease cost-of-living pressures.

    Ms Reeves is under pressure from within her own party and from the business sector after weeks of government leaks, policy backflips and internal disputes over welfare and income tax.

    Analysts warn the budget may not be enough to restore confidence, with fears that sluggish growth and rising debt could undermine the government's plan.

    People cross the Westminster Bridge in the rain, in London, Britain, August 29, 2025.(Reuters: Jack Taylor)

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  • Hanson’s high steaks dinner didn’t get Joyce over line | ‘They’ve lost their way’: Turnbull…

    Hanson’s high steaks dinner didn’t get Joyce over line | ‘They’ve lost their way’: Turnbull…

    Explore the latest developments concerning Hanson's high steaks.

    Hanson's high steaks dinner didn't get Joyce over line

    Barnaby Joyce is waving goodbye to the Nationals. (ABC News: Luke Stephenson)

    Welcome back to your weekly federal politics update, where Courtney Gould gets you up to speed on the happenings from Parliament House.

    As parliament wound up for the year, Labor joked two ghosts of Christmas past stalked the hallways.

    The first, Malcolm Turnbull, was back for the unveiling of his prime ministerial portrait. The second, was Turnbull's former deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, who confirmed his exit from the Nationals. 

    It's been more than seven years since Turnbull last addressed a crowd at Parliament House, on his final day as prime minister.

    ‘They’ve lost their way’: Turnbull unveils portrait, lets rip at former party

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    For a moment, just a moment, it looked as if Anthony Albanese could break down in tears. On the final parliamentary sitting day of a long election year, the prime minister was speaking at the unveiling of Malcolm Turnbull’s official prime ministerial portrait.

    Albanese wanted the crowd to know something about Malcolm the man, not just the politician.

    “On a very personal level, there was a moment, nothing to do with politics, where Malcolm and [wife] Lucy, to me, showed their character, where they reached out to me at a difficult time in my personal life, and just had me to dinner,” Albanese said. “No one knows about it.”

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    Australia politics live: Ted O’Brien leads procession of Coalition MPs ejected from chamber in final question time of the year

    Labor strikes deal with Greens on nature protection laws overhaul amid criticism ‘dirty deal’ being ‘rammed’ through

    Explainer: Seven ways Australia’s nature laws are changing after Labor’s deal with the Greens

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    ‘Secret’ Aukus committee ‘doesn’t pass the pub test’, says crossbench MP

    Crossbench MPs are not happy at the prospect of a secretive new committee of federal parliament to consider the Aukus nuclear submarine deal and Australia’s involvement in military conflicts.

    Labor and the Coalition are preparing to pass legislation to establish a joint house and Senate committee on defence, with a makeup mirroring the powerful parliamentary joint committee on intelligence and security.

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