He has chosen his path – Boris Johnson redrawing lines of what it means to be a Conservative

Politics

The significance of Boris Johnson’s announcement goes well beyond social care.

It sets the tone and the terms for the next general election and signals what type of prime minister he wants to be.

The wager is clear, he believes voters will grudgingly forgive him for breaking not one, but two manifesto commitments if it means a huge increase in spending on the NHS and social care.

By going back on his 2019 guarantee against lifting National Insurance, income tax or VAT, and temporarily scrapping the triple lock for pensions, he is counting on their understanding.

Back then, of course, the prime minister explicitly promised to fix social care without tax rises – so make no mistake, this is a big political gamble.

The surprise announcement of an increase in dividend tax alongside the National Insurance rise was a clear attempt to try to broaden the tax base while at the same time neutering one of the criticisms of this policy – that it is unfair because working people would foot the bill.

But, despite that effort to see off criticism, questions remain. What about wealth taxes? What about wealthy pensioners?

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They get the benefit, but they don’t actually pay into the levy – so there is controversy there.

Most significant though is what this all says about the changing face of the Conservative Party under Boris Johnson.

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PM ‘accepts’ breaking manifesto commitment

In his statement, the prime minister claimed: “We are the party of the NHS.”

That has always been the strapline for the Labour Party, the issue on which Labour has always won with voters.

The Conservatives’ strapline, by contrast, has always been the claim to be the party of low taxation that is most trusted on the economy. Well, not under Boris Johnson.

The 2019 Conservative manifesto included a personal 'guarantee' from Boris Johnson that there wouldn't be tax rises
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The 2019 Conservative manifesto included a personal ‘guarantee’ from Boris Johnson that there wouldn’t be tax rises

He is redrawing the lines – some could argue he’s stealing the clothes from Labour – and wants to go into the next general election as a prime minister who is prepared to break promises and raise taxes to fund public services.

The calculation, I think, is that there is a new appetite for public spending.

The risk for Johnson is that there are many low-tax, small-state Conservatives out there who will be deeply uncomfortable with the shape of the party under his leadership, but those are the terms in which he has decided to lead his government – he has chosen his path.

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