Evan Davis Attacks Grant Shapps' 'Obviously Ridiculous' Tax Claim About Labour

Watch Newsnight's Evan Davis Attack 'Nonsense' From Grant Shapps
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David Cameron's claim that Labour would impose a £3,000 tax rise on every working family has been branded "obviously ridiculous" by Newsnight's Evan Davis.

The BBC presenter and former economics editor said the prime minister's attack on Ed Miliband, made outside No.10 Downing Street as he launched the formal election campaign, had been "thoroughly demolished" within hours by the independent think-tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS).

The IFS said even if Cameron's claim that Labour would raise taxes by £15bn from 2017–18 onwards was true - the tax rise for individual households should be expressed as an annual figure of £560. The prime minister had instead chosen to talk about a tax rise of £3,028 - the cumulative figure over the entirety of the next five year parliament.

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Davis vs Shapps on Newsnight

And the IFS also suggested the annual tax rise under Labour, if it even happened, could actually work out to be closer to £100 per working household per year.

In a lengthy grilling of Grant Shapps on Monday evening, Davis could barely contain his irritation with the Conservative Party chairman.

Davis said the Conservatives had chosen a "ridiculous way of calculating" a supposed Labour tax rise. "Everybody respectable does it per year," he said.

"Is this how you're going to fight the rest of your campaign?" Davis asked. "It is obviously a ridiculous figure. The IFS are quite sensible, quite independent. They wouldn't say a much lower figure if it wasn't a better figure to use, they don't say that because they know this figure is ridiculous."

He added: "Who do you think the public should believe? Should they believe you, or should they believe the independent fiscal experts of the IFS?"

Shapps defended the Conservative Party's sums and the decision to speak of a cumulative five year number rather than an annual one. He said if Labour won power then "over the life time of the next parliament, you will pay more than £3,000 if you are a working family".

Cameron launched the election yesterday with a short speech outside No.10 after visiting the Queen. In an unusual move for the setting, the prime minister chose to attack Miliband by name. "In 38 days' time you face a stark choice. The next prime minister walking through that door will be me or Ed Miliband," he said.

"You can choose an economy that grows, that creates jobs, that generates the money to ensure a properly funded and improving NHS, a government that will cut taxes for 30 million hard-working people and a country that is safe and secure.

"Or you can choose the economic chaos of Ed Miliband's Britain - over £3,000 in higher taxes for every working family to pay for more welfare and out-of-control spending. Debt will rise and jobs will be lost as a result."

The £3,000 claim was dismissed by Labour as a "made-up figure", and the IFS analysis which found that the party had not said "anything to suggest" that this is what they are planning. "There is little value in bandying around numbers which suggest either party would increase taxes by an average of £3,000 for each working household," the think-tank said in a statement.

The election starts here
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LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 30: British Prime Minister David Cameron leaves Downing Street for Buckingham Palace on March 30, 2015 in London, England. Campaigning in what is predicted to be Britain's closest national election in decades will start after Queen Elizabeth II dissolves Parliament today. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images) (credit:Carl Court via Getty Images)
(02 of13)
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Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg outside the Cabinet Office, London, as one of the most closely-contested general elections for decades formally gets under way today, with David Cameron accusing Labour of planning a £3,000 tax hike for every working family. (credit:Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)
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Ed Miliband, leader of the U.K. opposition Labour Party, pauses during his address at Bloomberg LP's European headquarters in London, U.K., on Monday, March 30, 2015. Miliband set out his party's pledges to British businesses, seeking to offset concerns that a Labour government would work against them by reiterating his party's commitment to keeping the U.K. in the European Union. Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg via Getty Images (credit:Bloomberg via Getty Images)
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Prime Minister David Cameron leaves Downing Street, London, for a private audience with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, as one of the most closely-contested general elections for decades formally gets under way today, with David Cameron accusing Labour of planning a £3,000 tax hike for every working family. (credit:Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)
(05 of13)
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Prime Minister David Cameron as he arrives for a private audience with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, London, as one of the most closely-contested general elections for decades formally gets under way today, with David Cameron accusing Labour of planning a £3,000 tax hike for every working family. (credit:Anthony Devlin/PA Wire)
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Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron leaves Downing Street to see Queen Elizabeth II for the official dissolution of Parliament, in London, Monday, March 30, 2015. The United Kingdom will go to the polls for a general election on May 7. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant) (credit:Alastair Grant/AP)
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LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 30: Leader of the Labour party Ed Miliband leaves his home on March 30, 2015 in London, England. Mr Miliband will speak to members of the business community today where it is expected he will warn of the dangers of an EU referendum, a conservative party pledge. British Prime Minister David Cameron will visit Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace today as Parliament dissolves and the parties begin their campaigns ahead of the May 7 general election. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) (credit:Dan Kitwood via Getty Images)
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A light from a TV camera lights a pathway towards 10 Downing Street, London, as one of the most closely-contested general elections for decades formally gets under way today, with David Cameron accusing Labour of planning a £3,000 tax hike for every working family. (credit:Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)