
Kemi Badenoch promised to abolish stamp duty if the Conservatives win the next election as she closed the party conference.
Having focused on borders in her opening address, Mrs Badenoch used her leaderâs speech on Wednesday to set out her vision of a country where the state âdoes less but does it betterâ and âprofit is not a dirty wordâ.
She pledged to impose a âgolden ruleâ on her budget plans, spending only half of any savings made through spending cuts, with the rest going to reduce the deficit.
And she said she would cut student numbers, saving ÂŁ3 billion that would then be spent on doubling the apprenticeship budget.
But in the final passages of her speech, she went further, committing to free up the housing market by abolishing stamp duty on peopleâs primary homes.
She said: âStamp duty is a bad tax.
âWe must free up our housing market, because a society where no one can afford to buy or move is a society where social mobility is dead.â
Stamp duty land tax brought in an estimated ÂŁ13.9 billion in the last financial year, but a large proportion of this is from additional homes and other buildings.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has estimated that abolishing stamp duty on primary residences will cost around ÂŁ4.5 billion.
But, claiming that the Chancellor Rachel Reeves was planning a significant increase in stamp duty, the Conservatives said they had âcautiouslyâ estimated that the policy would cost ÂŁ9 billion.
Mrs Badenoch insisted she could meet this promise while sticking to her new âgolden ruleâ, saying this was the âfiscally prudentâ thing to do.
Her address brought to a close a conference that had been overshadowed by questions about her leadership and the threat from Reform UK.
The day before her speech, Nigel Farageâs party announced 20 councillors had defected from the Tories, while a poll published by More in Common on Wednesday showed the Conservatives continue to languish in third place.
But the major defection that some in the party feared would take place on Wednesday morning did not come, while Mrs Badenoch attacked her opponents, vowing to reverse Labour policies and accusing Sir Keir Starmer, Nigel Farage, Jeremy Corbyn and Sir Ed Davey of âshaking the same magic money treeâ.
Although she dismissed Reform as promising âfree beer tomorrowâ, Mrs Badenoch reserved most of her attacks for Labour, pledging to reverse a swathe of policies introduced by the new Government.
These included abolishing VAT on private schools, reversing changes to inheritance tax for farms and scrapping the carbon tax.
Along with other spending promises made during the conference, the Conservatives estimated that these would cost a total of ÂŁ21.1 billion, compared with ÂŁ47 billion of savings shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride said he had identified in his own conference speech on Monday.
In an apparent response to reports that attendance at this yearâs conference had declined, leaving swathes of the exhibition hall in Manchester empty, she said the Conservatives were âfizzing with ideasâ.
And insisting that the Tories were the only ones who could âmeet the test of our generationâ, she thanked members for âstanding byâ the party.
Earlier, Tory chairman Kevin Hollinrake had told the PA news agency he expected the announcements from the party conference would âmove the needle in terms of the pollsâ.
He said: âI think those messages have been very well received this week by our members, very optimistic view of where we are today from our members and indeed the future.
âSo yeah, we expect things to improve in terms of our political fortunes.â
Following the speech, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey urged âone nationâ Conservatives to join his party, accusing Mrs Badenoch of deciding to âabandon the traditional British values of tolerance, decency and the rule of lawâ over plans to leave the ECHR.
And Green Party leader Zack Polanski said Mrs Badenoch had been âspeaking to the room, not listening to the nationâ.
He said: âWhile she got rounds of applause from men in suits sitting in front of her, she still sounds painfully out of touch with those dressed and ready to work for this country.â