So many of his Budgets have been revenue neutral. Yesterday’s, like the first one he authored, was not.
We’ve sifted through the Office for Budget Responsibility’s latest forecasts, so that you don’t have to.
The Chancellor was haunted by the OBR’s initial forecasts of the last Parliament. Tomorrow’s Budget could end that.
The man he supplants from that position? David Cameron.
Meanwhile, the North East’s score is 2.
The trends are already going in the right direction. Driverless cars could take them even further.
The number of unemployed people competing for each vacancy is now back to pre-crash levels.
The Chancellor has foregone £billions in fuel duty revenues since 2010. But petrol prices have climbed and fallen regardless.
They are very different public services, but change needs to come to them both.
In the last five years, fines totalling £3 billion have been taken from the banks.
The suicides of six servicemen were announced last year, but, sadly, we don’t know the equivalent figure for veterans.
Will he choose to keep motorists happy? Or will it be higher tax revenues? Signs are, it could now be the latter.
Suicide rates among prisoners are almost ten times higher than among the rest of the population.
It’s the Prime Minister’s highest ever position and rating. Only George Osborne surpasses him.
To The Point returns to Labour’s past leadership elections.