Rachel Reeves will deliver her make-or-break second Budget on Wednesday, with voters braced for a wave of tax increases as she tries to fill a black hole of between £20 and £30 billion in the public finances.

The chancellor is under huge pressure to deliver a financial statement that appeals to voters while not spooking the international money markets.

It is not an overstatement to suggest that her job – and that of her next door neighbour Keir Starmer – could rest on whether or not the Budget is a success.

The build-up to the big day has been far from plain sailing for Reeves, who dramatically U-turned on plans to raise billions by breaking Labour’s manifesto pledge not to put up income tax.

That has left her exploring a “smorgasbord” of options to raise the money she needs to balanc

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