The Institute for Fiscal Studies assessed the Scottish Conservative manifesto, Get Scotland Working, and described its £500 annual pensioner tax cut as unlikely to "survive contact with reality." In a separate assessment, the IFS costed Reform UK's Scottish income tax cuts at a minimum of £2 billion per year, rising to £3.7 billion for the full pledge, and found "no credible evidence to suggest this tax cut would pay for itself." Both assessments arrived within days of each other; both found the same fundamental problem: promises costed against a Scottish budget that cannot absorb them.
The Scottish fiscal context is constraining. Scotland's post-devolution funding settlement links its block grant to English public spending through the Barnett formula. The next Scottish Government inherits a budget in which the main fiscal lever, income tax rates, has already been used extensively by the SNP to raise more than rest-of-UK rates at the upper end. Cutting income tax below rest-of-UK rates, as Reform UK proposes, does not simply reduce revenue by the costed amount; it creates a structural divergence that is politically difficult to reverse and mechanically expensive to maintain as English rates change.
Russell Findlay's Conservatives enter the final campaign month with a fiscal offer the IFS rejects and a polling position that eliminates their constituency presence. The two problems compound: a party projected to hold no constituency seats has less democratic leverage to defend an unpopular manifesto from IFS challenge. The credibility of the offer and the credibility of the messenger collapse together.
For Reform UK, the IFS Scottish critique lands alongside candidate attrition in Wales and the crypto donation compliance window from the Representation of the People Bill. Each problem is individually manageable; together they constitute a multi-front exposure across the same campaign period. A party polling strongly in both Scotland and Wales is simultaneously defending the financial assumptions of its manifestos, the legal standing of its donations, and the integrity of its candidate selection.
