Tories 'are true One Nation party'
Filed under: News
Chancellor George Osborne has sought to seize back the One Nation slogan for the Conservatives, after Labour leader Ed Miliband used it to make an audacious grab for the political centre ground.Conservatives are the true party of "one nation working together", said the Chancellor, as he announced plans to cut a further £10 billion from welfare by 2016-17, on top of the £18 billion in benefit reductions already being implemented.
In his keynote speech to conference, Mr Osborne admitted that the recovery from recession is "taking longer than we hoped, because the damage was greater than we feared". But he insisted: "We will finish the job we have started."
Mr Osborne and Prime Minister David Cameron have made clear this week that they plan to increase demands on the rich in order to help pay down the state deficit but ruled out the Liberal Democrats' favoured mansion tax on expensive properties.
In his speech, the Chancellor said: "Just as we should never balance the budget on the backs of the poor, so it's an economic delusion to think you can balance it only on the wallets of the rich. Yes, we inherited a tax system where some in the City were paying lower tax rates than their cleaners. That was wrong and we were right to change it. But in the same way, it is wrong that it's possible for someone to be better off on benefits than they would be in work."
Conservatives will stand up for those who put in an effort and expect to get a fair reward, such as corner-shop owners who stay open late into the night, teachers who take after-school clubs, commuters who leave for work before their children get up and pensioners who save for their retirement.
Denouncing Mr Miliband's claim of Disraeli's "one nation" mantle as "risible", Mr Osborne said: "They are all part of one nation: one nation working together to get on. That is the nation I represent. Those are the people who I will serve as Chancellor. Where is the fairness, we ask, for the shift worker, leaving home in the dark hours of the early morning, who looks up at the closed blinds of their next-door neighbour sleeping off a life on benefits? We speak for that worker. We speak for all those who want to work hard and get on. This is the mission of the modern Conservative party."
Mr Osborne said the Conservatives are the party of "low taxes for the many" not "no taxes for the few" as he vowed to continue the crackdown on tax avoiders. The Chancellor insisted the problem is not how much is collected but how much the Government is spending as he confirmed that an extra £10 billion of welfare savings will be made by the first full year of the next Parliament.
Mr Osborne said the Government will not shirk tackling welfare at a time when other budgets are being squeezed just because it is politically difficult. That includes reforming a system which allows young people who have never had a job to be given homes while their working counterparts are forced to live with their parents, he said.
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