Greenpeace activists beam film about people struggling with fuel poverty to Rishi Sunak’s mansion

Greenpeace activists beam film about people struggling with fuel poverty to Rishi Sunak’s mansion

Greenpeace activists beam film about people struggling with fuel poverty to Rishi Sunak’s country house in North Yorkshire on the eve of the autumn declaration

  • The film is called the Cost of Living and was projected on the Prime Minister’s house
  • A trailer for the production was blasted onto its £2 million South Yorkshire pad
  • Created by Greenpeace and the New Economic Forum to highlight poverty

Greenpeace has beamed a trailer for their film about the cost of living crisis on prime minister Rishi Sunak‘s empty £2 million mansion.

The activists snuck into the South Yorkshire village of Kirby Sigston on Wednesday evening to carry out the stunt.

It made the documentary with the New Economics Foundation.

The film – which has not yet been released – would tell the story of those who live in the Rothertal.

It is said to show families fighting to keep food banks open as demand escalates during the cost of living crisis.

In a statement, Heather Kennedy, a New Economics Foundation community organizer who works in the Rother Valley and helped produce the film, urged Sunak to establish a nationwide home insulation program as temperatures plummet.

Greenpeace UK projects the trailer of a new film The Cost Of Living about the struggles of people in fuel poverty at Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s country house in Yorkshire

A bespectacled Prime Minister Rishi Sunak makes a statement to MPs in the House of Commons

A bespectacled Prime Minister Rishi Sunak makes a statement to MPs in the House of Commons

She said: ‘The cost of living shows communities in South Yorkshire, but the conditions they face will be familiar to people across Britain. After the longest drop in incomes on modern records, and more than a decade of underfunded, crumbling public services, we are hit by high energy costs that make fossil fuel companies rich and us poor.

“The rise in energy prices is compounded by our poorly insulated, leaky homes, which waste our money every time we turn on the heating.

“But there is an investment the government could make in this budget to protect us from rising energy costs this winter and winters to come.

Britain must ‘face the storm’ of a global recession, warns Jeremy Hunt this morning as he prepares for one of the most brutal fiscal packages in modern history

Extending the freeze on tax thresholds until 2028 will drag all workers deeper into the system, meaning they will be paid more

Our Prime Minister Rishi Sunak should launch a national program of home improvements to insulate Britain’s cold, drafty homes this winter. This program would reduce people’s energy bills now and in the future and keep people warm in their homes.

“The faster we do it, the more carbon, money and lives we will save.”

It came as Jeremy Hunt will reveal a pre-Christmas nightmare of tax hikes and austerity today as he races to prop up the government’s books.

Rishi Sunak has rallied the cabinet to sign a ruthless autumn declaration, with the chancellor warning the British there is no choice to ‘face the storm’ and make ‘sacrifices’ to weather the turmoil at home and abroad .

Middle earners face paying thousands of pounds more in tax as a threshold freeze drags people ‘stealth’ deeper into the system. Mr Hunt will also try to show that the rich are being duped too, by lowering the level at which the top rate of 45p is due from £150,000 to £125,000.

Town halls will be given the freedom to raise council tax by up to 5 per cent without the need for a referendum, and subsidies on utility bills are expected to be cut to save money, with the average bill likely to rise from £2,500 to £2,500 from April 3,000.

While budgets will be protected, other departments face another grim period of austerity – possibly delayed until after the general election.

WHAT TO EXPECT TODAY

Freeze tax thresholds

The ultimate stealth tax could bring in billions if a four-year freeze on income tax thresholds is extended to six years. The base rate threshold will remain at £12,571 until 2028, while the pre-tax starting point of 40p will be held at £50,271.

Tax increase by the municipality

The ten-year limit on council tax increases is expected to be lifted, allowing councilors to impose 5 per cent without holding a referendum, putting £100 on an average Band D bill.

Pensions and benefits

The chancellor is expected to increase pensions and benefits in line with September’s inflation rate of 10.1 per cent, which will increase the new state pension by £18.70 to £203.85 per week.

Energy bills

Liz Truss’ energy price ‘guarantee’ to limit the average bill to £2,500 over two years will now be increased to around £3,000 from April. A universal one-off payment of £400 this winter will not be repeated, meaning millions will be an average of £900 worse off.

45 cent tax

The Prime Minister vetoed plans to reinstate Labour’s top tax rate of 50 pence. But he has accepted proposals to lower the starting threshold from £150,000 to £125,000, which could drag some 250,000 high earners into the top rate for the first time.

Social Security

The Chancellor is expected to delay the flagship social care cost cap by two years, with officials predicting it will save £1bn next year.

Expenses

Mr Hunt is expected to announce government spending cuts totaling around £30bn. Some capital projects face constraints such as prison construction.

Savings and investments

The £12,300 capital gains tax free allowance is halved to around £6,000. The annual limit of £20,000 for ISA savings will be frozen.

Windfall tax

The 25 percent levy that will be introduced this year on oil and gas profits could be increased to 35 percent and is likely to be extended until 2028.

Driving

Motor vehicle tax will be levied for the first time for electric cars.