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Rachel Reeves is in a mess of her own making

by Jonathan Eida, researcher   Rachel Reeves is in a self-inflicted financial predicament - squeezed from all sides.   On one side, there’s the Labour mantra. Supporters and MPs didn’t vote for a Labour government to tighten the screws on disability benefits or hike taxes on “working people.” They want... Read more...

Ten takeaways from Town Hall Rich List 2025

by Callum McGoldrick, researcher    We have just released the 19th annual edition of our Town Hall Rich List (THRL). A complete database of every council employee receiving over £100,000 in total remuneration, THRL compiles every remuneration report from all of the councils in the UK. Here are the ten... Read more...

No silencing the voice of taxpayers

by Benjamin Elks, grassroots development manager   On Sunday night, a message went out to TPA staff informing us that we’d have to spend Monday working from home. In an effort to disrupt our work and that of other organisations based in our building, someone cut the fibre optic cable... Read more...

Rachel Reeves must avoid a wealth tax

by Matthew Bowles, strategic partnerships manager at the Institute of Economic Affairs   The Chancellor’s Spring Statement had all the impact of a soggy firework – lots of anticipation, but barely a spark when it came to real policy changes. The most enlightening, but depressing, element was probably the warnings... Read more...

Spring Statement 2025: The Calm Before the Storm?

by Darwin Friend, head of research    For a government that spent much of the winter defending its credibility, Rachel Reeves’ Spring Statement was, if nothing else, a relatively calm affair. Markets didn’t panic. Businesses weren’t blindsided. And the chancellor didn’t spring any new tax rises on long-suffering households. In... Read more...

Public spending is too high - even Labour knows it

by Shimeon Lee, policy analyst    It is the eve of the spring statement and the chancellor is expected to announce billions of pounds of spending cuts in order to meet her budgetary target, which is for day to day spending to be covered by taxes. Despite much hand wringing over... Read more...

The Entitlement Epidemic

by Joanna Marchong, investigations campaign manager    Shoplifting has been a long-standing issue for retailers, but a recent trend has left many scratching their heads - a rise in shoplifting among the well-to-do. These aren't your typical cases of theft driven by necessity or poverty; instead, they stem from a... Read more...

Spring Statement or Emergency Budget?

by Callum McGoldrick, researcher    The news leading up to the Spring Statement has been anything but encouraging for the Chancellor. To set the tone for what’s shaping up to be a grim budget, the Telegraph announced that the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) will halve its growth forecast for... Read more...

Good riddance NHS England

by Jonathan Eida, researcher   Keir Starmer announcing the closure of NHS England is a good thing. The quango has been beset with failure for years with examples ranging from ballooning waiting times to a failure to digitalise and integrate nationally. The resignation of its chief, Amanda Pritchard, is the... Read more...

The law works when there's the will to enforce it

by William Yarwood, media campaign manager Remember Insulate Britain? If not, that’s not surprising. They vanished almost overnight in late 2022, disappearing as quickly as they had emerged. But their brief, chaotic existence tells us an important story - not just about environmental activism, but about how effective government action... Read more...

Not all rich lists are the same

by Elliot Keck, head of campaigns We at the TaxPayers’ Alliance are known for many things. Our grassroots campaigns work, or our laser focus on government waste, just to name a couple. But we’re surely best known for our regular rich lists, where we compile lists of the highest-paid employees... Read more...

The Family Farm Tax: A Medieval Idea for a Modern Government

by Elliot Keck, head of campaigns Following on from my colleague Callum McGoldrick’s stunning success at the York Dialectic Union last year, when he and Christopher Snowdon of the IEA won a debate on the smoking ban, I decided to try my luck with the good students of York University.Fortunately... Read more...

Ten takeways from our study of council reserves

By: Shimeon Lee, policy analyst As residents brace themselves for yet another council tax hike this month, they will no doubt be familiar with the narrative that cash strapped councils are struggling to stay afloat. Yet, few will be aware that even as local authorities warn of further cuts to... Read more...

Will DOGE be a flash in the pan?

by Joanna Marchong, investigations campaign manager When America sneezes, Britain catches a cold. Or so the saying goes. But this time, instead of catching the sniffles, politicos have begun feverishly discussing an old issue but one that, thanks to Elon Musk, has been made anew: government waste. It turns out... Read more...

Government waste is back in the headlines

By: Elliot Keck, head of campaigns For twenty years the TPA has been by no means a lone voice in the battle against government waste. But we’ve often felt like a lonely voice. We’ve often been told that waste is inevitable in a large bureaucracy and that there’s nothing anyone... Read more...

War on Waste: October - December 2024

by Joanna Marchong, investigations campaign manager The TaxPayers' Alliance finished the year with a bang, uncovering front-page investigations and staying at the forefront of current issues. Let’s recap some of the best investigations. First up, the absurd decision to hand out taxpayer cash for a Star Wars-themed climate change study.... Read more...

South Cambridgeshire: a timeline of a scandal

South Cambridgeshire District Council are over two years into what was supposed to be a three month trial of a four-day week. This bonkers experiment was never in a manifesto, until recently residents had never been consulted and councillors have never been given a vote. It is one of the... Read more...

The absurd cost of the Chagos deal

by Callum McGoldrick, researcher Earlier this week the Mauritian prime minister claimed that the British government had made a new offer for the Chagos islands. In this new deal, Britain will pay £18 billion (instead of £9 billion) and hand full sovereignty of the island of Diego Garcia over to... Read more...

Dicing with debt

by Mike Denham, former chairman Since the turn of the millennium public sector debt as a percentage of GDP has tripled. It is now around 100 per cent of GDP and on official forecasts, set to go on increasing. The Office for Budget Responsibility projects that on unchanged policies it... Read more...

Why we are fighting the Windsor and Maidenhead tax hike

By: Oliver Dean, grassroots intern at the TaxPayers’ Alliance “Ridiculous”, “preposterous” and “absurd” were just some of the words that the residents of Cookham, a village near Maidenhead, used to describe their local council’s plan to raise council tax by 25 per cent. Yet, despite widespread distaste for such proposals,... Read more...

Tina is heading our way

by Mike Denham, former chairman She’s never welcome, but Tina, or the point where politicians are finally forced to accept that there is no alternative, is heading back our way. The combination of Rachel Reeves’ disastrous tax-borrow-and-spend budget, longer-term fiscal numbers that have never added up, and a sell-off in... Read more...

It's time to come clean about migration data

by William Yarwood, media campaign manager Transparency is the cornerstone of good governance. Without it, the public is left in the dark, unable to fully understand or debate the policies that shape their lives. That’s one of the key reasons why the TaxPayers’ Alliance was founded. If taxpayers have no... Read more...

War on Waste: July - September 2024

Labour came to power last July with a promise to launch a war on waste. It’s no wonder in the final few months of the Conservative government, we found countless examples of frivolous spending, of which this blog lays out just a few. Unfortunately, things have not gotten any better... Read more...

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