Brits face tax rises in tough Budget as Keir Starmer warns ‘things WILL get worse before they get better’

BRITS will have to suffer "short term pain" for the "long term good" of the economy, Sir Keir Starmer warned today.

In a major speech, the PM laid the ground for a "painful" Autumn Budget where taxes will soar.

Sir Keir Starmer vowed to fix the rot in Britain's economy at a major speech in the No10 garden today
1
Sir Keir Starmer vowed to fix the rot in Britain's economy at a major speech in the No10 garden todayCredit: Sky News

Speaking from the sun soaked No10 Rose Garden, Sir Keir insisted that “things are worse than we ever imagined”.

He said: “There is a Budget coming in October and it is going to be painful.

"We have no other choice given the situation we are in.”

The PM hammered the Tories for taking a wrecking ball to the economy and leaving a £22bn black hole in the public purse.

He hinted that to fix the "rot" blighting public services and quashing growth, brutal fiscal decisions lie ahead.

Before an audience of nurses, teachers, firefighters and small business bosses, Sir Keir said: "Just as when I responded to the riots, I’ll have to turn to the country and make big asks of you as well, to accept short term pain for long term good. 

“The difficult trade off for the genuine solution.”

“We can get through this together."

The PM repeated his election campaign vow not to hike income tax, national insurance or VAT.

But he strongly hinted that other levies aren't as safe.

Capital gains and inheritance tax are among those tipped for a raid by Chancellor Rachel Reeves.

Sir Keir said: “We were being honest about the situation before the election, we set out very clearly what we would be doing with tax rises.

 “What I did not expect was a £22 billion black hole.”

The PM described how the crisis in the public purse manifested

during the far-right riots ministers constantly had to check whether there would even be enough space to lock-up yobs.

He said that the dire state of public finances has put the prison system on the brink of collapse, with overcrowding leaving the public at risk.

"But these riots didn't happen in a vacuum, they exposed the state of our country, revealed a deeply unhealthy society, the cracks in our foundations laid bare, weakened by a decade of division and decline, infected by a spiral of populism which fed off cycles of failure of the last government.

He pledged to make boosting wealth and growing the economy the “number one priority of this Labour Government”.

And he insisted that his top team has done more for the country in seven weeks than the Conservatives managed in seven years.

Sir Keir launched a fresh onslaught on Tory sleaze, highlighting the Rose Garden as a scene of lockdown gatherings.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

He vowed to put himself at the service of workers as he addressed an audience of nurses, teachers, firefighters and small business bosses.

The attack is thought to try to pave the way for tax rises at the Budget and seek to justify scrapping universal winter fuel payments for pensioners.