Is Angela ‘Two Homes’ Rayner paying the council tax surcharge on her grace-and-favour second residence?
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner was last night facing questions over whether she is paying her own council tax surcharge on her second home.
‘Two Homes’ Rayner moved into her four-bedroom, grace-and-favour residence in Admiralty House in December – four months before her Local Government Department started levying an extra 100 per cent council tax charge on second homes.
Official records of MPs’ expenses show that when she entered the Government, Ms Rayner designated her Ashton-under-Lyne constituency home as her ‘primary residence’, and her pre-Admiralty home – a rented London flat – as her second home.
That allowed her to claim back the £1,621 council tax bill on the London flat from the taxpayer as one of the housing costs reimbursed by Commons authorities.
But if she is still designating Ashton as her primary residence now, the £2,034 council tax bill for Admiralty House doubles to a whopping £4,068 if classed as a second home.
And, as a minister living in an official residence, she would have to pay both that and the £3,338 bill for the Ashton house herself – a total of £7,406.
Ashton does not attract a second-home premium because she has family members living there permanently, but questions have been raised as to whether or not she is paying the full £7,406.
Tory Shadow Minister Richard Holden asked the PM and the Chancellor if they were paying council tax on their Downing St flats as primary residences, and was informed that they were.
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner was last night facing questions over whether she is paying her own council tax surcharge on her second home
If she is still designating Ashton as her primary residence now, the £2,034 council tax bill for Admiralty House (pictured) doubles to a whopping £4,068 if classed as a second home
But on asking the same of Ms Rayner, he was stonewalled with: ‘The Deputy Prime Minister’s council tax responsibility is properly discharged.’
In a letter to Ms Rayner, Kevin Hollinrake, Shadow Secretary for Housing and Communities, asked if she had evaded the surcharge by ‘flipping’ her primary residence designation.
He said: ‘If the minister in charge of council tax has dodged the super-tax by ‘flipping’, this raises serious concerns about the ethics and integrity of Labour ministers.’
She became known as ‘Two Homes’ Rayner after this newspaper revealed she shuttled between two council properties early in her marriage.
When her office was asked if she was paying a bill of £4,068 in London and £3,338 in her constituency, a source said: ‘The administration of council tax for Admiralty House is for the Cabinet Office and Westminster Council, as has been the case for successive Secretaries of State.’
Crunch talks with President Trump over a US-UK trade deal in doubt over new Chinese ‘super-embassy’ in London, with the White House said to be ‘very concerned’
Crunch talks over a UK trade deal with Donald Trump have been thrown into jeopardy by plans for a new Chinese ‘super-embassy’ in London, diplomatic sources have revealed.
White House sources said the US Government was ‘very concerned’ about the risk the embassy posed to America’s interests in the City as a result of Beijing’s spies potentially tapping into sensitive financial cables.
As a result, Washington’s trade deal negotiators are understood to have asked for a ‘China lock’ as part of the talks, which would guarantee the development will not present a security threat to the US.
American officials are now also more concerned about the risk of sharing high-grade intelligence with Britain.
A source said: ‘The issue has led to undoubted tension during the talks. The British have been desperate to play down the concerns, even though their own intelligence services have made their worries clear.’
It comes as British negotiators are racing to implement the trade deal struck in principle between Mr Trump and Sir Keir Starmer, which would exempt the UK from crippling steel tariffs imposed by the US President.
No 10 controversially revived plans for the new development on the site of the Royal Mint buildings by the Tower of London, despite them being blocked by the previous government after warnings from MI5 and Scotland Yard.
The Bank of England has also warned No 10 about the risks of allowing it to be built close to sensitive financial centres in the City. Mapping data shows that the proposed site for the embassy lies directly between financial hubs in the City and Canary Wharf and close to three major data centres, including the Stock Exchange.
Crunch talks over a UK trade deal with Donald Trump have been thrown into jeopardy by plans for a new Chinese ‘super- embassy’ at Royal Mint Court
The Bank of England has also warned No 10 about the risks of allowing it to be built close to sensitive financial centres in the City (Pictured: a protestor at the site in February this year)
It comes as British negotiators are racing to implement the trade deal struck in principle between Trump and Sir Keir
Earlier this year, The Mail on Sunday revealed that planning documents for the embassy included ‘spy dungeons’ – two suites of anonymous basement rooms and a tunnel, with their purpose redacted for security reasons.
The Government has refused to disclose whether it is backing the plans in order to boost trading relations with the Chinese. Within a fortnight of Rachel Reeves returning from an official visit to China earlier this year, both Scotland Yard and Tower Hamlets Council mysteriously dropped their objections to the project.
Shadow levelling up secretary Kevin Hollinrake has said the lack of information about the ‘dungeons’ was ‘striking’, adding: ‘There is a chilling prospect that it could be used for the abduction, intimidation or torture of anti-Chinese dissidents living in the UK.’
The Chinese have dismissed claims the embassy could be an espionage hub, saying: ‘Anti-China elements are always keen on slandering and attacking China.’
Intelligence activity by Chinese spies is said to be at an all-time-high in the UK, with agents believed to be eavesdropping on political figures by bugging buildings in Whitehall and park benches.