Machiavelli
Well-known member
The British public have long been keen on either keeping spending levels as they are or, increasing public spending/taxation as is increasingly the case. What they're not keen on is lower taxes which also means lower public spending. See:There’s a £22 billion hole in our country’s finances that has to be filled somehow. So would you be prepared to see your income tax go up (let’s say by 2% on every band), so that pensioners not claiming pension credits (including those who currently donate it to charity) keep their WFP?
I would by the way. I’ve always believed those with more can and should pay more.
BSA 40: Role and responsibilities of government | National Centre for Social Research
Have voters attitudes changed in respect to the role and size of government?
natcen.ac.uk
It really hasn't been mentioned much but as Chancellor Hunt reduced NI by 2p twice, which has had a major hit on the public finances. It's that (alongside the mess he/they left behind: verified by the IFS and OBR) provides the context for the WFP withdrawal.