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HIT IN THE PUMPS

Britain’s 37million drivers face £107 annual tax hike if the Chancellor raises fuel duty by 5p

BRITAIN’s 37 million drivers face a £107 annual tax hike if the Chancellor goes ahead with plans to raise fuel duty by 5p.

The Sun revealed yesterday that Rishi Sunak is considering using his autumn budget to end the ten-year fuel duty freeze - and add another 3p on top.

Rishi Sunak is considering whether to end the ten-year fuel duty freeze
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Rishi Sunak is considering whether to end the ten-year fuel duty freezeCredit: PA:Press Association

But analysis by The Sun has revealed the crippling impact the move would have on Britain’s motorists.

The average White Van Man driving 50,000 miles per year will be whacked with an extra £670 at the pump under the proposals.

For a truck driver doing the average 70,000 miles per year, the fuel duty hike would add nearly £2,000 to their annual bill.

Even a small hatchback driving 10,000 miles a year would be hit with a £68 rise.

Howard Cox, founder of the FairFuelUK campaign, warned: "Do not screw the commercial and social heartbeat of our economy to mollify the environmental lobby to pay off your post pandemic debt.

"The UK needs to recover big and fast, using incentives not more punitive knee jerk draconian taxes.

"The Chancellor knows full well, lower fuel duty, as published by his own department, massively benefits growth in GDP, jobs, inflation, business investment and consumer spending."

Fuel duty is also known as fuel tax, petrol tax or gas tax and is an excise tax imposed on the sale of fuel

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