Autumn statement 2012
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Labour's line in the sand on benefits
Ruth ListerRuth Lister: George Osborne's rhetorical traps won't make Labour turn against people already struggling to get by on benefits
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Robert Chote tells MPs he would not stake his reputation on the Office for Budget Responsibility's autumn statement predictions
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Letters: Labour should make it clear now that we are not voting for this attack on the poorest, which includes cutting benefits to many people in work and struggling to survive on low pay
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Vince Cable says the Tories still don't understand that they are alienating voters by failing to spread the pain of austerity
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Will Hutton: George Osborne in his autumn statement displayed a total contempt for the welfare of the less well-off
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Business leader: George Osborne publicly disparages avoidance and abuses – but his relish at undercutting other countries' corporation tax rates is palpable
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The chancellor said raising personal tax allowances will mean millions paying less – but it's not that simple
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Meet the real William Beveridge
Geoffrey WheatcroftGeoffrey Wheatcroft: The man who inspired the welfare state and is idolised by Labour was in fact an anti-statist Liberal -
Letters: The chancellor's announcement of tax breaks for fracking shale gas and approval for more than 30 gas-fired power stations is bad for the environment, energy security, and our economy
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Editorial: Dickens would have had fun with a baronet-to-be implicitly likening the condition of unemployment to an eight-pint bender
Politics live with Andrew Sparrow MPs vote on 1% benefits cap: Politics live blog
Andrew Sparrow's rolling coverage of the day's political developments as they happen, including MPs debating the welfare benefits uprating bill which imposes a 1% benefits cap