Martin Lewis is set to interview Rishi Sunak live following the announcement
Consumer expert Martin Lewis is set to interview Rishi Sunak live this evening, as the chancellor has announced more help to tackle the cost of living crisis.
The MoneySavingExpert founder will discuss with the Chancellor of the Exchequer in an interview, which will be live-streamed online.
Martin will reportedly ask his own questions to the Chancellor, he will also ask him to field questions from MSE users, and his social media followers.
The interview will be live-streamed on MoneySavingExpert.com from 5.15 pm this evening.
It will also be available live via @MartinSLewis and @MoneySavingExpert on Twitter; Martin Lewis and MoneySavingExpert on Facebook and also on Youtube.
Mr. Sunak today announced more money to help people across the UK pay their gas and electricity bills.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak said he had offered “significant support” for the whole UK.
Worth £15bn in total, the package will be partly funded through a 25% windfall tax on oil and gas firms, whose profits have drastically soared in recent months.
It follows intense pressure on the government to do more to help people with the cost of living crisis and continuous calls from Labour to introduce the windfall tax.
Announcing the support in the Commons, Mr. Sunak said the government would also offer more targeted help to pensioners and the disabled.
“We know that people are facing challenges with the cost of living and that is why today I’m stepping in with further support to help with rising energy bills,” Mr. Sunak said.
“We have a collective responsibility to help those who are paying the highest price for the high inflation we face. That is why I’m targeting this significant support to millions of the most vulnerable people in our society. I said we would stand by people and that is what this support does today.”
Earlier this week the UK’s energy regulator Ofgem said the typical household energy bill was set to rise by £800 in October, bringing it to £2,800 a year. Bills had already risen by £700 on average in April.
Ofgem warned that 12 million households could be pushed into poverty because of the cost of heating their homes.


