Boris Johnson has ruled out new cost of living measures until a new prime minister is in place, with No 10 saying the worst financial pressure on families will not hit until later in the year.
The prime minister’s official spokesperson said there were no plans for a Cobra meeting to address the cost of living crisis, and it would be for either Liz Truss or Rishi Sunak to work out a plan for dealing with the economic situation when the new prime minister is in post in a month’s time.
Downing Street said the “bigger challenges” for family budgets “are coming towards the end of the year” and this would be a matter for either Truss or Sunak to decide whether to take action to help.
Energy bills are due to rise in the autumn and will have potentially trebled since 2019 to £3,600 by January. In addition, families are also facing inflation forecast to rise to up to 13% in October and mortgage bills going up due to the interest rate rise to 1.75%.
Johnson declined the former Labour prime minister Gordon Brown’s suggestion of a cost of living summit between No 10, Truss and Sunak as he returned from a holiday in Slovenia. No 10 refused to say who had paid for the prime minister’s break.
The spokesperson said Johnson was due to speak to Nadhim Zahawi, the chancellor, later this week to make sure support coming later this year was “on track”, but insisted it would be inappropriate for him to take on major financial challenges.
“Clearly these global pressures mean challenging times for the public. The government recognised that the end of the year will present wider challenges with things like changes to the [energy] price cap,” the spokesperson said.
“That is why, at the start of the summer, we introduced a number of measures to help the
Read more on theguardian.com