Defiant Angela Rayner breaks cover in Downing Street amid furious row over tax discount for her lavish new £800,000 seaside flat

Angela Rayner made her first public appearance today in the heart of Downing Street amid a furious row about her tax affairs.

The Deputy PM rocked up to the first Cabinet meeting of the new Parliamentary term in a pair of eye-catching sunglasses paired with green flares and a cream double-breasted jacket.

And she was given a warm welcome by colleagues including Foreign Secretary David Lammy as she made her way into No10. 

It came as tax experts suggested she may not have been eligible for a £40,000 stamp duty discount she received when she bought a lavish seaside home.

Ms Rayner, who is also the Housing Secretary, paid £30,000 instead of the full £70,000 rate levied on second homes when she purchased an £800,000 flat in Hove this summer.

She told authorities it was her only property, having forfeited her interest in her £650,000 constituency home in Ashton-under-Lyne two months previously. The Mail On Sunday revealed at the weekend she split the ownership with a trust administered by law firm Shoosmiths.

The legal manoeuvre could be consistent with Ms Rayner placing some of the house’s equity in trust for her three children.

But tax experts today suggested that given two of her three children are still aged under 18, depending how the trust was set up, she could still be deemed to have an interest in it, which would make her ineligible for the discount on her flat. 

In the spotlight: The Deputy PM rocked up to the first Cabinet meeting of the new Parliamentary term in shades, as tax experts suggested she may not have been eligible for a £40,000 stamp duty discount she received when she bought a lavish seaside home.

In the spotlight: The Deputy PM rocked up to the first Cabinet meeting of the new Parliamentary term in shades, as tax experts suggested she may not have been eligible for a £40,000 stamp duty discount she received when she bought a lavish seaside home.

She was given a warm welcome by colleagues including Foreign Secretary David Lammy as she made her way into No10.

She was given a warm welcome by colleagues including Foreign Secretary David Lammy as she made her way into No10.

One told the Times: ‘When you have a minor child that’s treated as owning an interest in land, and that’s usually where a trust isn’t discretionary in nature, but they have an interest to live in it during their life – usually called an interest in possession – then in those sorts of circumstances it’s the parents that are treated as still owning an interest in the property.

‘Were this to be the case, Rayner would be required to pay the higher rate of stamp duty as the home in Ashton would still be attributed to her.’

There is no suggestion that Ms Rayner has broken the law and she has denied any wrongdoing.

Conservative MPs question whether the move was intended to avoid potential inheritance tax liabilities.

Tory Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake said the Deputy PM should ‘come clean on the litany of accusations of tax avoidance – be it stamp duty, council tax or inheritance tax’.    

Ms Rayner is facing fresh allegations that while she said the Sussex flat was her main home, she told the Cabinet Office that her primary residence was her former family home in Greater Manchester.

When Parliament is sitting, Ms Rayner is thought to live mainly in a third property – a lavish grace and favour apartment in central London, funded by the taxpayer.

Yesterday Keir Starmer came to the aid of his embattled deputy as No10 insisted she wanted to reveal more about her property deals but was constrained by a court order.

Sir Keir told the BBC the former teen mum is a ‘great story of British success’.

‘Angela came from a very humble background, battled all sorts of challenges along the way, and there she is proudly – and I’m proud of her – as our Deputy Prime Minister’, he told Matt Chorley on BBC Radio 5 Live. 

The Prime Minister’s spokesman said Ms Rayner is ‘urgently’ working on a way to give more details about her ownership of two homes ‘in the interests of public transparency’. The nature of the order is not known. 

A spokesman for Ms Rayner has said she had not broken any rules and had paid all relevant taxes.

The deputy prime minister paid £30,000 instead of the full £70,000 rate levied on second homes when she purchased an £800,000 flat in Hove this summer by saying it was her only property.

The deputy prime minister paid £30,000 instead of the full £70,000 rate levied on second homes when she purchased an £800,000 flat in Hove this summer by saying it was her only property.

She had forfeited her interest in her £650,000 constituency home in Ashton-under-Lyne two months previously, with The Mail On Sunday revealing she split the ownership with a trust administered by law firm Shoosmiths.

She had forfeited her interest in her £650,000 constituency home in Ashton-under-Lyne two months previously, with The Mail On Sunday revealing she split the ownership with a trust administered by law firm Shoosmiths.

Tory Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake (pictured) said the Deputy PM should 'come clean on the litany of accusations of tax avoidance – be it stamp duty, council tax or inheritance tax'

Tory Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake (pictured) said the Deputy PM should ‘come clean on the litany of accusations of tax avoidance – be it stamp duty, council tax or inheritance tax’

She is said to have relinquished her stake in the Ashton-under-Lyne home before buying the Hove flat as part of the process of divorcing her former partner Mark Rayner. 

Friends say this means she would not have been liable for the punitive rate of stamp duty on second homes.

Ms Rayner is also facing fresh questions after registering to vote in person in Hove despite electoral records showing she is already registered for postal votes in Westminster and her constituency.

But No 10 said it was ‘quite common to be registered to vote in multiple places’.

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