The inheritance tax raid on family farms ranks high: cruel, vindictive and betraying a startling ignorance of how farming families actually live and work. Thankfully, that's been partly reversed. Then there's her looming inheritance tax grab on pensions, which will create a legal and administrative nightmare for pensioners and grieving families.
Extending the Tory freeze on income tax thresholds all the way to 2031 is another nightmare. Then there's the upcoming "mansion" tax, the cap on pension salary sacrifice, the tax blitz on pubs and many more.
The UK tax take was already at an all-time high when Labour won the election. In 18 months, Reeves has hit us for another £66billion. And she's still borrowing another £150billion a year to make her sums add up. Carnage is not too strong a word.
Yet there's an even more destructive tax, one that's wiping out businesses and destroying the employment prospects of an entire generation. It's as if she launched a bomb strike on your town.
Take a walk down the average British high street. You'll find boarded-up shops, empty precincts, drifting litter and an unmistakable air of decline. Soon, all we'll have left are betting shops, vape stores and dodgy barbers who know more about laundering money than clipping hair.
The decay predates Labour, driven by out-of-town retail parks, online shopping, Covid and the cost-of-living crisis. But instead of trying to reverse the decline, Reeves has doubled down.
In her maiden Budget, a panicking Reeves unleashed her ultimate tax weapon of mass destruction. It's since been dubbed the "jobs tax".
Hiking employers' National Insurance contributions by a stunning £25billion is proving the death knell for thousands of smaller businesses, and hundreds of thousands of jobs.
Labour-backing tax expert Dan Neidle has slammed this as one of the very worst taxes of all, warning it would slash wages, destroy jobs and sink companies. And it has. Under Labour, unemployment has rocketed from 4.1% to 5.1%. It will go higher.
Higher business rates are destroying pubs, restaurants, cafes and hotels, and wiping out the small shops that give high streets life.
You see the damage every time you pass another shuttered shop, or when a younger family member, fresh out of school or university, can't find work.
Reeves insisted her jobs tax didn't break Labour's manifesto pledge not to raise taxes on working people. That's another lie. The Office for Budget Responsibility estimates workers will ultimately bear more than 75% of the cost, through lower wages, hiring freezes, reduced hours and redundancies.
To do this just as artificial intelligence threatens to wipe out entry-level jobs borders on the lunatic. But that's what Reeves has done. And for once, there's no U-turn in sight. Even younger voters are giving up on Labour, and no wonder.
Reeves has unleashed hell on town after town. She might as well have called in the bombers.
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