The TUC has today (Thursday) published new polling which shows the public overwhelmingly back a package of taxes on wealth, bank and gambling companies to fund our public services and rebuild Britain.
There is significant support for implementing a package of higher taxes on wealth, gambling and banks to:
Voters across the political spectrum, including Reform-leaning voters, back several different options for raising taxes on the wealthiest and financial institutions:
And as a package of measures, these wealth, gambling and bank taxes have huge popular and cross-party support:
Separate new polling from the union body also shows the government’s standing with the public would improve if they implemented taxes on wealth to fund public services.
The polling shows taxing wealth to deliver better public services:
The TUC says voters will reward the government if they invest in public services and fund it through wealth taxes.
Grown up conversation
The TUC says the public wants a “grown up conversation” about tax – and they fundamentally want a fair system which invests in vital public services to fix broken Britain.
The union body says the findings demonstrate that the public know that tax rises are needed to pay for vital services – and in this context they are overwhelmingly supportive of getting those with the broadest shoulders to pay their fair share.
The public also wants a fairer system. While cutting NHS waiting lists was the top reason for the public being on board with tax rises (chosen by 64%), closing tax loopholes came second (49%).
There is also widespread support for a modernised and simplified system – three in four support (73%) such reforms, including 83% Labour to Reform switchers.
The union body says the government must continue to build on the vital investment in public services and infrastructure announced in the Budget.
The country is “crying out for sustained investment” after years of Tory neglect – and faces real risks with growing global uncertainty, decimated public services and living standards hammered.
Windfall tax on banks
New TUC analysis shows that an increase in the bank surcharge – a tax on bank profits – could raise significant funds over the coming years.
In recent years, banks have made significant unexpected profits because of increased interest rates. This has led to higher returns both from net interest (the difference on interest charged to borrowers and paid to savers) and interest paid to banks on reserves they hold at the Bank of England.
As a result, bank profits are now higher than they were in the period before the financial crisis. But under the Conservatives, taxes on banks were slashed. An increase in the bank surcharge could raise between £20-50bn over the next four years:
Even just reversing the Tory cuts and setting it at 8% – which the TUC says is the “bare minimum” – would raise £8bn over four years.
Profits have risen significantly from pre-pandemic levels and OBR forecasts show that profits will remain high over coming years.
Banks made £37bn of profit in 2023-24, up by 41% from £26.3bn in 2019-20. More recent figures from Positive Money show the big four banks made £45.9bn profits in 2024 and £24.1bn in just the first half of 2025.
TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:
“After more than a decade of Tory neglect, this country is crying out for investment – in our schools, NHS and local services.
“The public overwhelmingly want investment to deliver better services right across the country – whether it’s cutting NHS waiting lists so patients can get the prompt treatment they need or funding schools so our kids have the right books and resources.
“And they want fair taxes too. People have had it with a system where those with the broadest shoulders don’t pull their weight.
“The public are behind tax reform so that the wealthy, banks and gambling companies pay more – they know this will deliver better services and a fairer society.
“It’s time for a grown-up conversation about tax – that's what voters want, and it’s what they deserve.”
ENDS
- About the TUC: The Trades Union Congress (TUC) exists to make the working world a better place for everyone. We bring together the 5.5 million working people who make up our 48 member unions. We support unions to grow and thrive, and we stand up for everyone who works for a living.
- About the poll: Hold Sway polled 5,024 British adults online from 15-19 August. The sample is nationally representative of the adult population of Great Britain, with quotas and weights applied on gender, age, region, ethnicity, education level and past voting behaviour.
Hold Sway is an insight and strategy agency founded by Peter McLeod, a pollster with 20 years’ experience in UK and international opinion research.
Contacts:
TUC press office
media@tuc.org.uk
020 7467 1248
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