Peter Riddell, Political Briefing
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British politics is back to square one. Alistair Darling’s Pre-Budget Report was as much about closing the month of election frenzy as it was about looking forward to the next three years.
As George Osborne said, it was an electioneering budget without an election.
What can Mr Darling have altered since a November election was ruled out on Saturday? Perhaps a spending sweetener or another 1p off income tax, on top of the 2p cut for next April already announced, but nothing much else. It made electoral sense for Mr Darling to steal many of the Tories’ clothes: big changes to inheritance tax; increasing the tax on nondomiciled workers; and shifting air duty from passengers to flights.
With the added twist of spending an artificially conjured up £2 billion on more for schools and hospitals rather than on tax cuts for the wealthiest, you almost expected Gordon Brown to head off to Buckingham Palace to ask for an election.
With no election, however, it all seems a bit strange. The Tories can crow over Labour having stolen their ideas but the reality is that they will have to go back to the drawing board on their tax and spending policies. Mr Osborne’s grand coup lasted eight days, although it has boosted his reputation.
Mr Darling’s statement was in the style of Gordon Brown, with a blizzard of figures, most of which are virtually meaningless because they are not a comparable basis. As always, you have to look at the accompanying Treasury documents. These show, first, why it is “very unlikely” that there will be a general election next year with growth expected to slow from now, before being forecast to pick up again in 2009 and 2010 (it had better). Secondly, the fiscal outlook remains very tight with slower activity hitting tax receipts, while spending continues to rise, boosting borrowing by £4 billion this year and £6 billion next year.
Public spending, especially on schools, will grow by slightly more than previously announced, adding up to £2.5 billion more next year than set out in the March Budget, and health spending will still rise by 4 per cent in real terms in future.
Nevertheless, overall spending growth of 2.1 per cent in real terms up to 2011 is less than half the recent rate. This implies tight squeezes on some budgets and pressure on council taxes, as the Local Government Association complained. As often happens when the economy slows, the tax burden in the short term will be less than expected, but the trend is still clearly upwards.
The key question is how the extra money will be spent. Mr Darling insisted that investment would be matched with reform. While there was a lot about higher spending yesterday, however, there was very little about reform from Mr Darling. The postponement of the election for at least 18 months gives Mr Brown no excuse for not clarifying the next phase of reform, which he insists is still a priority.
That was the big gap at the Labour conference in Bournemouth. Lord Darzi’s report on the NHS gave some clues but much more needs to be said. Tory policies on public services are still only partly formed.
The battle of the non-election of autumn 2007 is now over. The parties have still to define the battleground for the election of 2009 or 2010.

Peter Riddell has been a leading political commentator and an Assistant Editor for The Times since 1991. He writes mainly, but not exclusively, about British politics and has published several books on British politics, including not one, but two, on Margaret Thatcher
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Edwin Thornber, Bucharest,
What we have seen over the last 10 years HAVE been Brown's policies. He has been domestic PM for this period whilst Blair was doing his 'international statesman bit'. He had complete control over which Ministry and department was given which funding. If he didn't agree with the policy it didn't get funding.
John, Reading, Uk
Has Labour increased the inheritance tax threshold to £1m? No. That's the Tory policy.
Has Labour said that all non-domiciles will be subject to a flat levy of £25,000? No. That's the Tory policy.
Granted Labour have come around to the idea of a 'flight tax' but wasn't that originally a Lib Dem, rather than a Tory, idea? Actually, something of a 'tri-partisan' consensus on that one now.
Dave , Durham,
No, it's back to square one. Now the Tories are somehow rebaptised as the holy ones, Labour tainted as the shifty party of half truth, ' opportunism' and dodgy dealing. Now it's sleazy Labour and squeaky clean Tories
We inhabit an emotivist culture: the emotivist force is now with the Tories, Labour are the dark side.
bigT, Abingdon, UK
It is not only politicians who should resort to the the drawing board, but commentators such as Riddell.
Alan Smith, SWANSEA,
Bereft of other ideas Labour steal Tory ones. Hardly a massive foundation for an election campaign had Brown not bottled it.
This budget shows why Brown was so scared of the polls - he has absolutely nothing to offer the country other than a future of unpicking Blair's and his own 10 year of mistakes.
One would have thought that with 13 years to think about it, Brown would have been itching to unveil a host of his own policies, but not a bit of it. He has to rely on the Conservatives.
Edwin Thornber, Bucharest,
Oh how clever Labour thought they were yesterday. And how cynical, smug and manipulative they actually appeared. The end of spin? Not flash, just Gordon? Even if we believed it before this last week has proven the opposite.
Do they have any policies, any ideas about what they are going to do other than bland assurances about schools and hospitals we've all heard before? Gordon Brown and his 'new' government will be seriously damaged by all of this and deservedly so.
Paul Owen, Birmingham, UK
Couldn't disagree with you more, Sir. Labour have not stolen the Conservatives' clothes.
For example, raising the IHT allowance to £1m, as suggested by the Conservatives, would make a difference. The measures announced yesterday do not.
If you are married and you have written your wills sensibly, you already have a £600,000 allowance. And if you are not married, you still don't.
What has changed is that the Prime Minister has lost all credibility with the press and the broadcast media. You yourself yesterday described his explanation for calling off the election as "absurd". Others were not so kind.
That will quickly cause him to lose credibility at home and abroad. A Prime Minister with no credibility is no use to the country. We must have an election as soon as possible.
He will not be able to hold out until 2009. The question is whether he can hold out until the Spring of 2008.
In the meantime, the Conservatives must continue to prepare for government.
David Moss, London, UK
Brown's childishly gleeful, cocky-schoolboy and grin at the triumph of stealing Tory policies from under their noses in the House of Commons was extraordinary - as though he actually thought it was a victory; not transparently and deeply pathetic
Jonathan Graham, London, Greater London