Rishi Sunak pledges £435m to beef up CCTV, street lighting and sex offence ...

Rishi Sunak pledges £435m to beef up CCTV, street lighting and sex offence ...
Rishi Sunak pledges £435m to beef up CCTV, street lighting and sex offence ...

Chancellor Rishi Sunak will announce a £435 million crime-fighting package in this week’s combined Budget and Spending Review – with a particular emphasis on tackling violence against women.

In his statement to MPs on Wednesday, Mr Sunak is expected to say that he has earmarked £355 million for measures such as improved street lighting and better CCTV, with a further £80 million going to the Crown Prosecution Service.

In an acknowledgement of the national revulsion over the murder of Sarah Everard, who was kidnapped, raped and murdered by serving Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens, the Chancellor expects the CPS to devote a significant proportion of the extra funds to improving its response to cases of sexual violence.

It also coincides with rising alarm over the number of cases around the country of women being drugged after being spiked by injection or through having their drinks tampered with in nightclubs.

Exact details of the funding were still being thrashed out with Justice Secretary Dominic Raab this weekend, with Mr Raab understood to be the last Cabinet Minister to reach agreement with the Chancellor over the final Spending Review settlement.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak (pictured) will announce a £435 million crime-fighting package in this week’s combined Budget and Spending Review – with a particular emphasis on tackling violence against women

Chancellor Rishi Sunak (pictured) will announce a £435 million crime-fighting package in this week’s combined Budget and Spending Review – with a particular emphasis on tackling violence against women

The most contentious part of the Budget has already been announced – the £12 billion rise in National Insurance to fund social care in England and help the NHS recover from the pandemic. 

The 1.25p in the pound increase, which takes effect from April, has unsettled many Tory backbenchers who regard it as ‘unconservative’. 

The NHS already accounts for 8 per cent of GDP, up from 3 per cent in the 1950s.

Former Tory Cabinet Minister David Davis today raises dire fears that Mr Sunak will drive the economy ‘onto the rocks’. 

Writing in today’s Mail on Sunday, opposite, Mr Davis casts doubt on the Chancellor’s ‘Thatcherite’ credentials and as a worthy successor to the Iron Lady’s ‘great Chancellor’ Nigel Lawson.

The ex-Brexit Secretary also says the Treasury under Mr Sunak is ‘too concerned with image over substance’, and that hiking taxes now to pay for Covid debt risks ‘stoking a cost-of-living crisis’ on a par with Labour’s ‘Winter of Discontent’ in the 1970s.

Mr Davis writes: ‘The way to dealing with such debt levels is to do exactly what we did after the war – issue the modern-day equivalent of “war bonds”, to be repaid over 50 years or more…

In an acknowledgement of the national revulsion over the murder of Sarah Everard (pictured) the Chancellor expects the CPS to devote a significant proportion of the extra funds to improving its response to cases of sexual violence

In an acknowledgement of the national revulsion over the murder of Sarah Everard (pictured) the Chancellor expects the CPS to devote a significant proportion of the extra funds to improving its response to cases of sexual violence

‘Once we have dealt with the debt, we can set about balancing the books, but by tax cuts – not tax increases.’

Allies of Mr Sunak say that his room for manoeuvre has been severely restricted by the billions of pounds he had to borrow to protect the economy during the pandemic, along with inflationary pressures building up in the economy due to factors such as higher energy prices.

The Bank of England has cut its GDP forecasts for the third quarter by one percentage point to 2 per cent, and now expects inflation to rise above 4 per cent.

With national debt running at almost 100 per cent of GDP, the highest since 1963, Mr Sunak is already paying £9 billion in interest every month on borrowing – a sum which will rocket if interest rates rise from their record low of 0.1 per cent. 

Serving Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens

Serving Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens

However he was given some extra wriggle room after Government borrowing fell to £21.8 billion in September, from £28.8 billion in the same month a year earlier, a larger fall than expected.

The new money to tackle crime will include a rise in funding to help victims to £185 million, which amounts to an 85 per cent increase since 2020, while £50 million will go towards the Safer Streets Fund for investment in CCTV, improved street lighting, intruder alarms and locked gates around alleyways.

The fund also helps local authorities and police forces to pioneer new crime-prevention strategies through programmes to raise awareness and change attitudes.

The CPS will be expected to improve the way it deals with rape cases by increasing prosecution numbers, helping restore victims’ confidence, and improving their collaboration with the police.

The funding will also be used to help the CPS prosecute additional cases brought into the system by the Government’s commitment to recruit 20,000 extra police officers.

Labour last night called for VAT on domestic energy bills to be scrapped over the winter to alleviate a cost of living crisis (file image)

Labour last night called for VAT on domestic energy bills to be scrapped over the winter to alleviate a cost of living crisis (file image)

Mr Sunak said: ‘We should all feel as safe, whether we’re walking our streets, staying at home or going out for the evening – but this is sometimes not the case, especially for young women.

‘That is why we’re committing hundreds of millions of pounds to change this, from boosting investment in better CCTV and street lighting, to better home security and support for repeat victims.’

Labour last night called for VAT on domestic energy bills to be scrapped over the winter to alleviate a cost of living crisis.

Rishi Sunak will cut air passenger duty for flights within the UK as part of the Government's 'levelling up' agenda 

Rishi Sunak is planning to cut air passenger duty for flights within the UK in the Budget, as part of the Government’s drive to ‘level up’ the country and cement closer ties within the Union.

The move will coincide with a hike in the rate for long-haul destinations such as Australia, South Africa and Japan as the Treasury tries to burnish its ‘jet zero’ environmental credentials ahead of next month’s COP26 climate summit in Glasgow.

The duty, which is currently levied in two bands – under 2,000 miles and above 2,000 miles – is paid by airlines, but is usually passed on to their customers. 

The move will coincide with a hike in the rate for long-haul destinations such as Australia, South Africa and Japan as the Treasury tries to burnish its ‘jet zero’ environmental credentials ahead of next month’s COP26 climate summit in Glasgow

The move will coincide with a hike in the rate for long-haul destinations such as Australia, South Africa and Japan as the Treasury tries to burnish its ‘jet zero’ environmental credentials ahead of next month’s COP26 climate summit in Glasgow

The maximum levied per passenger, which is already due to rise to £554 next April, is likely to go even higher for destinations more than 6,000 miles away.

The Chancellor is also planning to help ‘level up’ the country by spending £6.9 billion on improving rail, tram, bus and cycle networks in English big city regions.

Mr Sunak is also considering cutting the tax on beer from kegs and sparkling English wine to protect pubs and vineyards from the economic damage wrought by Covid, and imposing a residential property developer tax to pay for the removal of flammable cladding from high-rise buildings. 

The Chancellor is also planning to help ‘level up’ the country by spending £6.9 billion on improving rail, tram, bus and cycle networks in English big city regions (file image)

The Chancellor is also planning to help ‘level up’ the country by spending £6.9 billion on improving rail, tram, bus and cycle networks in English big city regions (file image)

The levy would be paid by housebuilders with profits of more than £25 million who hoard land.

Mr Sunak is also expected to announce £3 billion of investment in education, including the quadrupling of places on skills bootcamps and more classroom hours for up to 100,000 16- to 19-year-olds studying ‘T levels’.

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