On the doorsteps, my conversations with voters have been about jobs for young people, helping families make ends meet, protecting the elderly – and that’s where the chancellor went.

Extending the popular winter fuel payment and increases in payments for children will help all families; the stamp duty holiday will please the many parents who’ve expressed concern to me about getting their children onto the housing ladder – this budget addresses the whole of the lifecourse. Taxing homes worth over £1 million will affect a tiny minority – this tax, and the 50 pence top tax rate on incomes and tax on bankers’ bonuses, please the ordinary voters, who’ve made it quite clear they want a more progressive tax system – Tory plans to benefit only the richest are seriously misjudged.

Most important though is the continuing focus on helping business and getting and keeping people in work. That’s a theme that comes up again and again on the doorstep, as people recall the rocketing unemployment of the 1980s and 1990s recessions, and it’s greatly to the government’s credit that its interventions so far have helped keep the rise in unemployment down. In difficult times, it’s our Labour values that have proved effective in protecting the economy, vindication if ever we needed it that social, moral and economic justice go hand in hand.

Photo: Rogue Soul 2007