British PM Rishi Sunak gets small bump in opinion polls after crowd-pleasing tax cuts
The Hindu
Tories gain 4 pts in polls after Sunak's tax cuts; Labour still leads with 44%. Public support for tax cut, minimum wage hike, work placement scheme. Little optimism among voters; Wells cautions against putting too much weight on bump.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and the governing Conservatives are enjoying a small bump in the opinion polls after some crowd-pleasing tax cuts were announced in the Autumn Statement budget this week, it emerged on November 24.
According to a YouGov survey for ‘The Times’ conducted after the budget was tabled by UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt in Parliament on Wednesday, the popularity rating for the Sunak-led Tories rose to 25% — which is four points up from the previous week, the party’s highest rating in recent weeks.
The Opposition Labour continues to hold on to their firm lead, with no change to their 44% rating.
“It is the highest rating since mid-September and only three points below Mr. Sunak’s highest-ever rating last April,” the newspaper analysis notes.
"Labour still holds a commanding 19-point lead over the government, however, with the poll suggesting that most voters do not believe the measures announced by Hunt will make either themselves or the country materially better off," it states.
YouGov found that Hunt’s central measure — cutting 2p (pence) off the rate of National Insurance (tax) — was supported by 61% of voters and 72% of those who backed the Conservatives at the last election. There was overwhelming public support for raising the minimum wage to GBP 11.44 an hour, backed by 85 per cent of the public. There was also strong support (60%) for requiring people who have been out of work for 18 months to take part in a compulsory work placement or lose their benefits.
The extra points, however small, after months of lagging in the opinion polls will be welcomed by the Tories as the party prepares for general election mode.

U.S. President Donald Trump threatens 200% tariff on wine, champagne from France, other EU countries
Trump threatens 200% tariffs on European alcohol in response to EU levies, sparking trade tensions and market uncertainty.