Who do you trust more with the economy? Sunak or Starmer?

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Yahoo UK’s poll of the week lets you vote and indicate your strength of feeling on one of the week’s hot topics. After 72 hours the poll closes and, each Friday, we’ll publish and analyse the results, giving readers the chance to see how polarising a topic has become and if their view chimes with other Yahoo UK readers.

Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Britain's main opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer arrive to the House of Commons Members' Lobby during the State Opening of Parliament at the Houses of Parliament in London on November 7, 2023. (Photo by HANNAH MCKAY / POOL / AFP) (Photo by HANNAH MCKAY/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Prime minister Rishi Sunak and Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer together at the state opening of Parliament. (AFP via Getty Images) (HANNAH MCKAY via Getty Images)

Voters have a major choice to make in the next general election – who do they trust more with the economy?

In the blue corner stands Rishi Sunak, eagerly pushing his latest policies in a bid to stop the Tory slide at the opinion polls before the only poll that counts – a general election sometime next year.

The prime minister’s latest opportunity comes in the shape of Wednesday’s Autumn Statement, in which his chancellor Jeremy Hunt is expected to announce a series of tax cuts.

In the red corner waits Sir Keir Starmer, considering how to land the knockout political blow that will see him going through the door of No 10 Downing Street.

One of these two men is set to be in charge of the UK’s economy in the wake of the general election, but who do you want fighting for you?

Sunak has suggested his government will use the Autumn Statement to reduce the tax burden while also squeezing welfare spending to get people back into work.

He said he was able to move on to the “next phase” of his economic plan after inflation fell to 4.6% in October.

Sunak attacked Starmer’s economic approach, comparing his plans to those of his predecessor Liz Truss, whose 49 disastrous days as prime minister were defined by her catastrophic goal to slash taxes for high earners.

Sunak said Starmer wanted to continue this “big government, big spending approach”, pointing to Labour’s £28bn green business plan.

The prime minister said: “This makes the same economic mistake as last year’s mini-budget, blowing tens of billions of pounds on unfunded spending is just as dangerous as blowing tens of billions of pounds on unfunded tax cuts.”

Starmer said of the Autumn Statement: “What I want to see is a serious plan for growth.

“We haven’t had significant growth for 13 years and that has held us back. We’ve got a cost of living crisis.

“We’ve got huge damage done to our economy by Liz Truss in that mini-budget, people are still paying for that in their mortgage payments month after month after month.”

Tell us how you feel about this issue by voting below.

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