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Finance (No. 2) Bill (Fourth sitting) 2026-01-29

29 January 2026

Lead MP

James Wild

Debate Type

General Debate

Tags

Migrants & BordersDefenceEconomyTaxationClimate
Other Contributors: 49

At a Glance

James Wild raised concerns about finance (no. 2) bill (fourth sitting) 2026-01-29 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

Opened the debate
Amendment 42 proposes to exempt journeys by taxi and private hire vehicle in rural areas from the provisions of subsection (3A) of section 79. The clause changes VAT application for taxis and private hire vehicles, which is currently under dispute with HMRC. It warns about fare increases affecting vulnerable passengers and local businesses, proposing an impact assessment through new clause 14.

Government Response

Migrants & BordersDefenceEconomyTaxationClimate
Government Response
Responds that the exclusion drafted in the Bill is carefully targeted and will not have unintended implications by limiting activities of legitimate tour operators. Confident that this change will raise £700 million in tax revenue, which should already be paid. Acknowledges concerns about SEND transport but states local authorities have usual mechanisms for handling VAT liabilities. The Government are committed to ensuring that world-leading capital markets support our firms to raise the capital they need to continue to grow and invest. Clause 82 introduces UK listing relief, which means that transfers of a company’s securities will be subject to relief from stamp duty reserve tax for the first three years after the company lists in the UK. Defends clause 82 by emphasising that the relief period must be limited to three years as extending it would not represent value for money. Also rejects new clause 31 on assessing tobacco duty rates impact, stating that this is already considered in decision-making processes. Tomlinson argues that HMRC's estimates are reliable and provides figures showing a 13.8% tobacco duty gap equivalent to £1.4 billion for 2023-24. He discusses ongoing efforts with Border Force, including funding commitments of £100 million towards enforcement. The Government do consider the impact of each individual tax measure on businesses and consumers in the round with the others, at Budgets and in between them too. As a result, we have concluded that this is the right and proportionate way forward, to protect revenue and make sure that we can increase revenue in line with inflation, rather than beyond it. Clause 94 will increase the threshold for zero emission cars from £40,000 to £50,000. This measure is projected to benefit over half a million drivers of zero emission vehicles over the next five years and incentivise electric vehicle take-up. The Government remain fully committed to the EV transition, which will drive economic growth, help meet climate change obligations, and improve air quality. Discusses the necessity of uprating air passenger duty rates in line with RPI. He rebuts Opposition new clauses, arguing they impose an unnecessary administrative burden on airlines. The Government will continue to champion free and fair trade while protecting UK interests through a robust but flexible trade defence system. The measures do not lapse into protectionism and balance the need for action with openness, ensuring long-term prosperity.

Shadow Response

None
Shadow Response
It is important to support both free trade and protection against unfair dumping, and amendments strike a balance between them transparently. Amendment 44 gives Parliament meaningful oversight of ministerial decisions to initiate investigations.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

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