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The Sun saves motorists £100bn after long-running battle to keep fuel duty frozen

THE Sun’s long-running battle to keep fuel duty frozen has saved cash-strapped drivers a total of £100billion, according to the spending watchdog.

And, in a telling tribute to our campaign, the decision not to raise pump prices in Wednesday’s Budget won the widest support among voters.

a person wearing an apple watch is pumping gas into a car
Our long-running battle to keep fuel duty frozen has saved drivers £100billion
getty

A thumping 73 per cent backed it in a poll on Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ announcements.

The policy even topped other big-ticket items such as £22.6billion for the NHS and compensation for the infected blood scandal.

They were supported by 72 and 68 per cent respectively.

The poll of 2002 adults comes amid claims from the Office for Budget Responsibility that the cost to the Treasury of maintaining the freeze from 2010/11 to 2025/26 will hit £100billion.

But motorists’ champion and Tory MP Saqib Bhatti hit out: “Their analysis actually shows how important cuts to fuel duty have been since 2010/2011 with drivers saving £100billion.

“If it wasn’t from pressure from the Conservatives, FairFuelUk and The Sun, Britain’s 37million motorists would have been impacted in this woeful Budget that has undermined the people’s confidence in the Government.

“Luckily, we were able to help hard-working families and small businesses across the country by forcing Rachel Reeves into a U-turn.”

Fears had been mounting that Ms Reeves could reverse the 5p a litre cut and reinstate an inflationary increase. This could have added £3.85 to the cost of filling up an average family car.

Instead the Chancellor resisted Treasury demands — even as she unveiled £40billion of tax rises elsewhere.

The JL Partners poll for Arden Strategies found support for freezing fuel duty is booming across all age groups.

It was backed by 83 per cent of voters aged between 55 and 64, while 71 per cent of voters aged 25 to 34 are also in support.

And the support also crosses party lines, with 85 per cent of Tory voters, 71 per cent of Labour supporters, and 81 per cent of Reform UK’s backers all behind the policy.

Scarlett Maguire, director at JL Partners, said: “The public are fully behind Labour’s commitment to continue the fuel duty freeze.

“It was the most popular measure of Rachel Reeves’ first Budget, even trumping the extra billions of pounds pledged to the NHS.”

Labour MP Graeme Downie said: “I met with small businesses yesterday, who were pleased, and I know it is really helpful for ordinary working people as well.”

Hailing the crucial role of The Sun’s crusade against fuel duty rises, the AA spokesman on pump prices Luke Bosdet added: “With 70 per cent of commutes to work outside London done by car, rising to 81 per cent in rural areas, it is little wonder that maintaining the duty freeze was so popular.

“It underlines the importance of The Sun’s Keep it Down campaign and serves as a warning for future Budgets.

Households have had a miserable two to three years trying to make ends meet.

Luke Bosdet

“The fact of the matter is that a hike in road fuel costs most hits those on low-incomes and with finances on a knife-edge.

“Households have had a miserable two to three years trying to make ends meet.

“Resurrecting fuel duty increases when petrol and diesel remains very expensive historically would have caused a backlash.”

The poll also reveals a stark contrast to other measures announced in the Budget, such as the increase in air passenger duty, which received only 47 per cent support.

Increases in capital gains tax were approved by just six per cent.

The rise in the rate of employers pay in National Insurance also got the thumbs-down, with six per cent more respondents against it than supporting it.

Meanwhile post-Budget jitters around Britain’s growth prospects have made the cost of government borrowings more expensive.

Government bond yields were choppy yesterday but the Chancellor could breathe a sigh of relief there was not a more dramatic market rout.

Government bonds rose to 4.46 per cent, slightly above the 4.43 per cent a day earlier.

It is still higher than the panic level caused by Liz Truss’s mini-Budget meltdown in 2022, albeit the shift was far less dramatic.

Meanwhile, the Pound yesterday strengthened against the dollar back to $1.29 and the London stock markets closed higher.

a woman holding a green container that says keep it down
Fears had been mounting that Reeves could reverse the 5p a litre cut and reinstate an inflationary increase
a woman is standing next to a car at a gas station
A change in fuel prices would hit ordinary punters in the pocket

Docs warn of staff axe

TOP doctors yesterday said GP surgeries will have to lay off staff or close unless they are protected from the National Insurance raid.

The British Medical Association warned the NI hike on employers could tip practices over the edge.

Meanwhile, care home and hospice bosses warned their services will also be at risk unless they are exempted.

Last night, No10 defended the move in the name of “economic stability”.

£950 a day is fair pay

a man in a suit and tie is smiling for the camera .
David Goldstone has become chair of the new Office for Value for Money

PAYING a mandarin £950 a day to determine taxpayer value for money is fair, a minister insisted yesterday.

Treasury Secretary Darren Jones defended HS2 board member David Goldstone becoming chair of the new Office for Value for Money where on average he will work one day a week.

Mr Jones said yesterday: “Actually, the day rate for David is, on a benchmark basis, competitive.”

Mr Goldstone will take up the independent role for a year.

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Mercedes star George Russell reveals how he LOST over £100k during his first season in F1 due to tiny salary

GEORGE RUSSELL has revealed he lost more than £100,000 during his first season in Formula 1.

The Mercedes driver, 26, is now the joint-fifth highest earning driver on the grid, raking in £14million per year.

a man wearing a black shirt that says ineos on it
George Russell spent three seasons at Williams before being promoted to Mercedes
Alamy
a race car with the number 03 on it
He lost more than £100,000 during his debut season in F1 with Williams in 2019
Getty Images - Getty

But prior to his move to Mercedes in 2022, he spent three seasons with Williams.

The Brit’s debut year in the sport – 2019 – saw him finish 20th in the drivers’ standings without a point.

And he has now opened up about the tiny base salary he was earning at that time.

Russell was discussing new regulations which mean offences such as crossing the track could now carry fines of up to €1million – a significant increase on the €50,000 punishment Lewis Hamilton received last season.

Speaking as the chairman of the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association, Russell said: “I think it’s pretty ridiculous that a driver could be fined €1m.

“In my first year of F1, I was on a five-figure salary and actually lost over six figures in that first year from paying for my trainer, paying for flights, paying for an assistant.

“And that’s probably the case for 25 per cent of the grid.

“We’re doing what we love, so we’re not complaining about that.

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“But if you take a year one driver who probably by the end of the year is losing over €100,000 because of the investments he has to make, you fine them a million, what’s going to happen?”

Williams were in a dire financial position in 2019, before Claire Williams sold the team to Dorilton Capital the following year.

Alex Albon and Franco Colapinto are their current drivers, but Carlos Sainz is leaving Ferrari to join Williams to complete their 2025 line-up.

Meanwhile, Russell sits seventh in the drivers’ championship, 12 points behind team-mate Hamilton.

He has one victory in 2024 and was stripped of another after his car was found to be underweight during a post-race inspection.

Next season, he will have a change of team-mates when Andrea Kimi Antonelli, 18, replaces Hamilton as the seven-time champion joins Ferrari.

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Strange but true connection between rain in Columbus and who wins the White House

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) -- First off, weather does not predict the outcome of who will be the next president. But sifting through data, I did find a fun coincidence that has occurred since 1972: rainfall. What Columbus weather tells us about the next President Looking at the winners of every presidential election since 1972, the [...]

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High school football scores and highlights for Columbus and central Ohio, Nov. 1, 2024

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) -- The regular season is in the books, and the quest for regional and state titles begins. Friday features the start of the playoffs, with the opportunity for every team to make a deep run into November. Although there are favorites who are expected to ease into the next round, like undefeated [...]

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