Charles Windsor challenged to declare full income as he becomes first monarch to release tax payments
Thousands of protesters will target legal loan sharks across Britain today.
The People’s Assembly has thrown its weight behind campaigners in towns and cities including London, Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool, Ashford, Derby, Doncaster and York mobilising against payday lenders that cash in on victims of the government’s vicious austerity programme.
The sharks can charge charge annual interest of 2,000 per cent and more.
Unite general secretary Len McCluskey backed the protests, saying: “The fact that Wonga’s profits rose to £62.5 million in 2012 urgently reinforces the need for legislation to curb payday lenders and also for a Treasury select committee probe into this industry.
“Payday lenders are making their profits on those struggling to make ends meet on a daily basis with outrageous rates of interest that mount up with an alarming speed, causing fear and insecurity.”
Journalist and campaigner Owen Jones said that Britain’s “boom industry” was food banks to feed the hungry as a million struggling families a month are forced to borrow from the sharks to pay bills.
Liverpool Trades Council has unveiled a ‘People’s Budget’ to fight £56m cuts and council tax rises. DEAN YOUNG reports
Hurricanes might have natural causes but the tragedy that follows is entirely human-made and a consequence of capitalist greed, asserts ROGER McKENZIE
The wealth of the super-rich grows by £35 million daily while our NHS and schools collapse — that’s why thousands of us will be gathering in London demanding that the billionaires foot the bill for the many crises they have caused, writes TYRONE SCOTT


