The Tory mantra has always been that they are the party of low taxation, in contrast to Labour who they characterise as a profligate tax-and-spend party. Thus 2 years ago Cameron put clear water between the Conservative and Labour party by promising no hikes in personal and purchase taxes and to guarantee state pension rises of 2% above price inflation. Recently Labour have been making a case for tax increases to support public services, offering a clearish choice between a more regressive tax/diminished public service sector (Tory) and a more progressive tax/maintained public service sector (Labour).In her first long interviews of this election campaign, the prime minister told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show on Sunday she had “absolutely no plans to increase the level of tax” and an intention to lower taxes on working families.
But pressed about Cameron’s promise not to raise income tax, NI or VAT, she added: “I don’t want to make specific proposals on taxes unless I’m sure I can deliver on those.”
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... be-ditched
All this is superfluous of course, because the coming election is all about Brexit, not the economy, and as the press have demonstrated, Corbyn rides a chairman Mao style bicycle so the country will vote the Tories in again anyway.