Congratulations to everybody involved in the England women's football team. Their fantastic victory at Wembley is the only story in town today and dominates the front of every single news outlet.
Inside, the battle for the keys to No 10 rages on as Sunak promises to cut the basic rate of income tax from 20 per cent to 16 per cent by the end of the next parliament, which could be as late as December 2029 – and assumes that the Tories will win the next election.
Team Sunak says the pledge, costing £18 billion, will be paid for with extra tax receipts from economic growth – the outlook for which looks very bleak indeed, according to recent trends and forecasts.
The Tory leadership contest has been dominated by tax and Sunak clearly feels he has no choice but to go for broke and outdo Truss, the frontrunner, in reducing the burden as he tries to close the gap on his rival as Tory members receive their voting slips, with the winner announced in September.
Unsurprisingly, Team Truss has accused the former chancellor of another U-turn – a claim less well founded than their attack on his VAT pledge – saying that people need tax cuts in seven weeks, not seven years. In keeping with his sound money campaign, Sunak insists that he will not make pledges he can't pay for and that gripping inflation remains a priority.
Sunak, speaking to BBC Radio 4 Today earlier, insisted that there was a "huge difference" between what he and Truss are saying on the economy when asked why he was now backing tax cuts. "As chancellor, I was very keen to make sure that I started cutting taxes and what I'm announcing today builds on that."
Truss, meanwhile, says she would "unleash British food and farming" in order to improve the nation's food security and vowed to "remove onerous EU regulations and red tape" if she becomes prime minister, without outlining in detail which laws she would abolish.
Truss has also been boosted by the endorsement of another high profile MP. Nadhim Zahawi, the chancellor, has joined former leadership hopefuls Tom Tugendhat and Ben Wallace in throwing their support behind the foreign secretary, while former deputy PM Damian Green has come out for Sunak.
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Keep a civil tongue.