HARD working Brits could be £777 a year better off under “radical” new plans by wannabe PM Rishi Sunak.

The ex-Chancellor last night vowed to slash the basic rate of income tax from 20p to 16p by 2029 if he wins the keys to No10.

Rishi Sunak has promised to slash the basic rate of income tax from 20p to 16p by 2029

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Rishi Sunak has promised to slash the basic rate of income tax from 20p to 16p by 2029Credit: Reuters
Rishi Sunak's tax plans mean some households would save around £777 per year

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Rishi Sunak’s tax plans mean some households would save around £777 per yearCredit: PA

Under his plan workers on the average UK salary of £32,000 would save around £777 per year. 

A campaign spokesperson for Mr Sunak told The Sun: “As Conservatives, we all want taxes to be low. But we need to cut taxes in a responsible way which doesn’t stoke inflation and put prices up even higher for families.

“Rishi’s plan will control inflation, grow the economy and help you keep more of your hard earned cash and reward work.”

The ex-chancellor hailed his policy as the biggest slash to income tax in 30 years.

He insisted the plan is not a last-ditch attempt to shore up support for his leadership campaign, which has fallen well behind rival Liz Truss in the polls. 

Ms Truss has won plaudits among card carrying Conservatives for promising to start cutting taxes within seven weeks if elected PM.

The Foreign Secretary pledged £30 billion worth of tax cuts and vowed to take on Treasury mandarin who tries to get in her way. 

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Ms Truss’s allies criticised Mr Sunak’s new plan as too slow, claiming workers shouldn’t be forced to wait seven years for cuts to come in.

In a swipe at his former boss, Treasury Chief Secretary Simon Clarke blasted: “Liz will cut taxes in seven weeks, not seven years.” 

He added that families “cannot afford to wait” until 2029 when facing the “biggest cost of living crisis in decades”.

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But hitting back at detractors, the ex-Chancellor said rushing in cuts while inflation continues soaring is irresponsible.    

This morning he told BBC Radio 4 the Foreign Secretary’s economic pledges would need to be paid through a “borrowing spree” of around £40 – £50 billion, which “wouldn’t be right”. 

The ex-Chancellor insisted his tax policy is “radical but realistic” and would be funded by economic growth.   

He said: “It’s perfectly affordable to keep cutting income tax over time whilst growing public spending at a disciplined level and reducing our borrowing. that’s affordable within the plans.”

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

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