Ed Balls committed Labour to voting against the reduction in the 50p rate at his post-Budget briefing. But he wouldn’t say whether or not Labour would pledge to restore it in their manifesto; sticking to the classic opposition line that all decisions on tax will be made in the manifesto and not before.
Balls, though, was on typically pugilistic form; few politicians relish a scrap as much as he does. The Labour leadership clearly view the abolition of the 50p rate as a major political opening for them. Balls went out of his way to attack the HMRC report that Osborne used to justify the move. He mockingly declared that he’d ‘never seen a government document with a Laffer curve in it before.’
This 50p fight is a classic Labour / Tory struggle. But three years out from an election, the real question isn’t how this polls tomorrow but whether it helps boost growth and confidence — two of the keys to the Tories winning a majority — before 2015.

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