Minister for Finance Simon Harris says he’s planning on cutting taxes for middle Ireland for the next four years – but he’s definitely ruling out following suit on other popular budgetary measure

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Minister for Finance Simon Harris says he’s planning on cutting taxes for middle Ireland for the next four years – but he’s definitely ruling out following suit on other popular budgetary measure

Daily Mail · 7 hours ago

Ireland's Minister for Finance, Simon Harris, has said the Government intends to cut income taxes for middle-income earners over each of the next four years, signalling a multi-year approach to easing the tax burden on so-called "middle Ireland". However, he has explicitly ruled out continuing with another budgetary measure that has proved popular with the public, suggesting a shift away from the one-off cost-of-living style supports seen in recent budgets towards more permanent tax changes.

The article, drawn from a brief report, does not detail the exact tax bands, thresholds or savings involved, nor does it specify which alternative measure has been ruled out, though such measures have typically included one-off payments or lump-sum supports introduced in earlier budgets. The comments point to Harris setting out early positioning ahead of upcoming budget negotiations, with the emphasis on sustained, gradual tax relief rather than short-term giveaways.

  • Simon Harris pledges middle-income tax cuts for next four years
  • He rules out repeating another popular budget measure
  • Signals shift from one-off supports to permanent tax relief

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