Budget date may be delayed by new Chancellor, Grant Shapps says

New Chancellor Rishi Sunak who took over the role from Sajid Javid may delay the date of next month's Budget in order to give himself more time to prepare, a senior minister has said.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said ministers had still not been told whether the Budget would go ahead on March 11 as planned after Sajid Javid’s resignation.

“I know that the Budget plans are well advanced but I also know that Rishi Sunak, the new Chancellor may want time,” Mr Shapps told Sky News’s Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme.

“I haven’t heard whether the date of March is confirmed as yet.

"He is probably looking at it, I should think this week.”

Grant Shapps said Cabinet ministers have not been told if the Budget will still take place on March 11. Credit: PA

Also on Sunday, Mr Shapps told BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show: "The guy's only been in place for a few days, let's give him a few days to decide on the date."

Mr Sunak, previously the Treasury chief secretary, was catapulted into the top job after Mr Javid dramatically resigned in last week’s Cabinet reshuffle.

It followed a series of well-publicised clashes between Mr Javid and Boris Johnson’s chief adviser Dominic Cummings, who was reportedly pressing for the Treasury to relax constraints on public spending and to replace all of Mr Javid's political advisers.

The former chancellor said he was left with "no option" but to resign, as he was not prepared to replace all his staff.

Grant Shapps denied Dominic Cummings is 'all powerful'. Credit: PA

Mr Shapps however denied that Mr Cummings was now “all powerful” in Whitehall.

He pointed to last week’s decision to give the go ahead to the HS2 high speed rail link – a project Mr Cummings was known to oppose.

“It is not the case that things necessarily go Dominic Cummings’ way or anyone else’s,” he said.

“Take HS2, a big decision that Dominic had views about, I had views about.

“We discussed it, we discussed our various views, and we came to a conclusion. The idea that just because Dominic thinks something, that’s what happen is clearly not the case.”

Speaking on BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show, Mr Shapps said the Government was determined to deliver a “big uplift” for infrastructure spending.

At the same time he said they would be sticking to their manifesto pledge to get debt down over the course of the parliament.

“Our manifesto commitments are our commitments. We absolutely intend to stick to the manifesto commitments. For the rest of it, you will need to wait to the Budget,” he said.