The Chancellor also discusses the Government’s plans for military action in Syria.
From Osborne’s response to the tax credit row to his additional sources of revenue.
Last week’s Autumn Statement was part of the third act. Will there be a fourth?
Plus: Marr again. Shot foxes. Unhatted rabbits. Bercow’s revenge. Sir Trevor Brooking’s posterior. And: thanks to Stuart in customer services, who made this column possible.
Clegg hides from the Autumn Statement. Cable sends weird letters to the OBR. Is this really the differentiation strategy?
Ryan Bourne, Cllr Sir Merrick Cockell, Andrew Lilico, Cllr Binita Mehta, Andrew Mitchell MP and others give their take on Osborne’s latest mini-Budget.
There is a growing sense that the Opposition has wasted the last four years and is quite unable to offer an alternative economic programme.
From a northern Sovereign Wealth Fund to reforming Stamp Duty, George Osborne has apparently been reading our submission.
There will be no shortage of claimants for the Chancellor’s extra £billions. But none of them should forget the necessity of reform.
The Autumn Statement will feature extra health spending.
The Chancellor’s new pitfall for Ed Balls is a good idea, but he could go much further.
Clegg says that the Lib Dems co-authored the Autumn Statement. Farron wants a free hand. Which side will win out?
The Chancellor warns that “the job is not done”, adding that the biggest risk comes from “those who would abandon the plan”.
Bright red, hollering himself hoarse, the Shadow Chancellor made a spectacle of himself today.
The key moment was his Autumn Statement of 2012 – in which he determined not to reduce the growth in spending further to try to hit his debt target.