Chief secretary told she’s gone ‘too far’

LibDems warns Cooper she has ‘gone too far’ by questioning Scotland’s local income tax plans

Written by AccountancyAge.com

The Liberal Democrats has warned Yvette Cooper, the chief secretary to the Treasury, she went too far when she criticised one of the Scottish National Party government’s flagship policies - its local income tax plans.

Ahead of a meeting with Cooper today, John Swinney, Scottish finance secretary, said he would call for an end to the UK Treasury’s attempts to ‘bully’ the Scottish government, arguing that Scotland was being short-changed, BBC News reports.

Cooper is expected to use the talks to reiterate the UK government’s claim that SNP's plans to scrap the council tax and replace it with a local income tax could result in a £750m financial black hole in the Scottish government's plans.

But Swinney is adamant £400m of council tax benefit should continue to come to Scotland, even if the specific tax is abolished, because it is part of the existing Scottish block grant. He will also argue a proportion of the additional £1.2bn funding for prisons in England should be allocated to Scotland under existing funding rules.

Further reading:

Setback for Scotland’s local income tax

SNP courts Lib Dems in bid to secure local tax

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