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Middle classes left ‘ bruised and demoralised’ while distrust burdens voters post-Budget, GB News guest warns

Britain’s middle-classes have been left “battered, bruised and demoralised” just as distrust burdens the electorate in the fall-out from the Budget, a GB News guest has warned.

The Daily Mail’s Editor-at-large Charlotte Griffiths admitted Rachel Reeves is “probably on the ropes” after the Chancellor became laden with accusations of covering up the real state of the economy.

“So this is obviously Reeves misleading the public saying we needed emergency surgery on public finances, but actually, we didn’t,” Ms Griffiths said.

“The economy was in a better position, and she misled the public, really.

“Already, I feel the middle classes are feeling battered and bruised, demoralised. And now on top of that, they feel distrustful and they feel they’ve been misled.

“So I think it’s going to be a very tricky few days.”

Political commentator Duncan Barkes echoed a similar sentiment, branding the whole run-up to the Budget as “laughable” with Labour sent into a spin over potential income tax rises.

In the end, Ms Reeves announced income tax thresholds would continue to be frozen, dragging hordes of Britons into coughing up more cash for the state.

Charlotte Griffiths

More than 1.7 million people are set to pay more income tax due to the continued freeze, which will push workers into higher tax bands as wages rise.

Ms Reeves admitted the policy would impact “working people” despite Labour’s previous persistent pledges to protect them, saying she was “asking everyone to make a contribution”.

No10 dismissed claims the Chancellor misled the public when she warned of difficult decisions needed to fill the black hole in the public finances.

Dire warnings had been thrown around ahead of the Budget the Chancellor could face as much as a £20billion “black hole” in the public purse.

FALL-OUT FROM THE BUDGET:

Kemi Badenoch

However, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) told the Chancellor as early as September 17 prevailing economic winds meant the gap would be much smaller than she had been indicating.

GB News star Patrick Christys totted up the total of tax rises slapped on Britons from next April, reporting that it amounted to a staggering 43.

Issuing a response in the Commons, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch furiously railed against the high-tax Budget.

Mrs Badenoch demanded Ms Reeves is sacked if she failed to have the “decency to resign”.

“I think the May elections will be pivotal to whether or not she survives. And she gave this quite boisterous speech, didn’t she?

“That was all building into a narrative that she might go by May, but this is actually something very concrete that she’s actually done.

“She’s actually misled the public. So I think if any kind of independent inquiry proves that to be true, I think she’ll be out before Christmas.”

Ms Griffiths heaped praise on the North West Essex MP’s Commons performance, declaring: “I thought she did an amazing job. She did go quite hardcore.

“She was angry. But I could see the anger. Yeah. Yeah. And it made for an amazing performance because she’s had some lackluster performance in the past.

“But I think she was reflecting the anger of the nation. I mean, especially in the middle classes, we’re furious. We can’t get opportunities, jobs.

“We’re all kind of going a bit mad. She pulled in on her inner Thatcher, she?”

She added: “I thought her advisers must have said to her to try and make Rachel Reeves cry.”

Our Standards:
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LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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