Theresa May reveals Conservative Manifesto - This is what's in it

Theresa May has revealed the Conservative Manifesto (Getty)
Theresa May has revealed the Conservative Manifesto (Getty)

Theresa May has unveiled the Conservative Party manifesto as she campaigns for victory in the General Election.

The Prime Minister warned that Britain is facing ‘the most challenging five years in our lifetime.’

Here are the key points from the document.

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Health

  • Increase NHS spending by a minimum of £8 billion in real terms over the next five years.

  • A new GP contract and changes to the contract for hospital consultants.

  • Retain the 95% A&E target.

  • No-one will have to sell their home to pay for care costs in their lifetime while a person’s assets would not be allowed to dip below £100,000 as a result of paying for care.

  • Means-test winter fuel payments.

Tax

  • Personal tax allowance to be increased to £12,500 while higher tax rate threshold increased to £50,000 by 2020.

  • Corporation tax to fall to 17% by 2020.

  • A full review of business rates.

Brexit

Immigration

  • Aim to reduce annual net migration to the tens of thousands.

  • Students expected to leave the country at the end of their course unless they meet new “higher” requirements allowing them to stay.

  • Overseas students to remain in the immigration statistics.

Spending

  • A balanced budget by the “middle of the next decade”.

Wages

  • Increase so-called national living wage to 60% of median earnings by 2020 then by the rate of median earnings.

  • Legislation to make executive pay packages subject to annual votes by shareholders and listed companies will have to publish the ratio of executive pay to “broader UK workforce” pay.

Media

  • Second part of the Leveson Inquiry into the culture, practices and ethics of the press will not take place.

  • Repeal section 40 of the Crime and Courts Act 2014, which would – if enacted – force newspapers to pay their opponents’ legal costs linked to libel and privacy actions, even if they win in court, if they are not signed up to an officially-recognised regulator.

Pensions

  • Maintain the triple lock pension guarantee until 2020, then replace it with a double lock – meaning pensions will rise in line with earnings or inflation, whichever is highest.

  • Tougher punishments for those caught mismanaging pension schemes.

  • Provide new powers to the Pensions Regulator to issue “punitive” fines for those found to have “wilfully left a pension scheme under-resourced” and, if necessary, powers similar to those held by the Insolvency Service to disqualify the relevant company directors.

  • Consider a new criminal offence for company directors who “deliberately or recklessly put at risk” a pension scheme’s ability to meet its obligations.

Homelessness

  • Halve rough sleeping over the course of the next parliament and eliminate it by 2027.

Markets

  • Make it clearer for mobile phone customers to know when they have paid off the price of their handset.

  • Consider a ban on companies which cold call people to encourage them to make false personal injury claims.

  • Reduce insurance costs by “cracking down on exaggerated and fraudulent” whiplash claims.

  • Review rail ticketing to remove “complexity and perverse” pricing, with a passenger ombudsman introduced.

  • Minimum service levels agreed with train companies and staff during times of industrial action. A pledge to make this mandatory if a deal cannot be reached voluntarily.

  • Smart meters offered to every household and business by the end of 2020.

  • Make it easier to switch energy providers and introduce a “safeguard tariff cap”.

  • Introduce a “breathing space” scheme to help those in serious debt be protected from further interest, charges and enforcement action for up to six weeks.

Defence

  • Spend at least 2% of GDP on defence and increase the budget by at least 0.5% above inflation in every year of the new parliament.

  • Pledge to “maintain” the overall size of the armed forces.

  • Retain the Trident continuous-at-sea nuclear deterrent.

  • Better compensation for injured personnel and the families of those killed in combat.

Crime and Justice

  • Create a “national infrastructure police force”, which brings together the Civil Nuclear Constabulary, the Ministry of Defence Police and British Transport Police.

  • Serious Fraud Office to be incorporated into the National Crime Agency.

  • £1 billion to modernise the prison estate

  • Legislation to make changes in police practices if “stop and search does not become more targeted and stop to arrest ratios do not improve”.

  • Legislate if progress not made to reduce the “disproportionate use of force” against black, Asian and ethnic minority people in prison, young offender institutions and secure mental health units.

Housing

  • Meet 2015 commitment of a million homes by the end of 2020, with a further 500,000 by the end of 2022.

  • New “council housing deals” to allow local authorities to build more social housing.

  • Fixed-term social houses, to be sold privately after 10 to 15 years with an automatic right to buy for tenants. Cash raised from sales to be used to build further properties.

Education

  • Increase overall schools budget by £4 billion by 2022.

  • Ensure no school has its budget cut as a result of new formula seeking to make funding fairer.

  • A free school breakfast to every child at primary school.

  • An end to free school lunches for all children in their first three years of primary school.

  • At least 100 new free schools a year.

  • Lifting the ban on grammar schools, with conditions including allowing pupils to join at other ages as well as 11.

  • A specialist maths school to be opened in every major city in England due to new funding arrangements.

  • Every 11-year-old expected to know their times tables off by heart.