
Starmer backs ‘excellent' Rachel Reeves after chancellor's tears in House of Commons
Keir Starmer
said he did not appreciate how upset
Rachel Reeves
was in the House of Commons, because he was focused on answering prime minister's questions (PMQs).
The prime minister said all people could be caught 'off guard' by their emotions, but the chancellor had to deal with it while on camera in parliament.
He said she was doing an excellent job, would remain in place beyond the next general election, and that they were both absolutely committed to the chancellor's 'fiscal rules' to maintain discipline over the public finances.
UK Government bonds rallied and the pound steadied on Thursday, after reassurances from the prime minister about the chancellor's future.
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The sight of Ms Reeves in tears on Wednesday, and the £5 billion black hole in her public spending plans as a result of the welfare U-turn, had spooked the markets, triggering a sharp sell-off of bonds, with the yield seeing the sharpest increase since US president Donald Trump's tariff plans shook up financial markets in April.
Mr Starmer told Virgin Radio he had spoken to the chancellor on Wednesday evening and she was 'fine', and her tears were as a result of a 'purely personal' matter rather than the 'ups and downs of this week'.
Ms Reeves was visibly upset as she sat beside Mr Starmer in the Commons on Wednesday, but he said: 'I actually personally didn't appreciate it was happening in the chamber, because I came in, I've got questions being fired at me in PMQs, so I'm constantly up at the despatch box and down.
'I think we just need to be clear, it's a personal matter, and I'm not going to breach Rachel's privacy by going into what's a personal matter for her.'
He said that 'in politics, you're on show the whole time, there's no hiding place'.
Ms Reeves was a 'great colleague, she's a friend of mine and I'll be working with her for a very long time to come'.
'But like all human beings, we're also personal.
'There are moments that catch us off guard and if you're in front of a camera for large periods of your life, unfortunately, that could be caught on camera in a way, if it had been anybody else at work, it would have not really been noticed.'
The sight of the Chancellor in tears on the front bench and Mr Starmer's initial lack of public support for her caused jitters about the government's borrowing plans, as Ms Reeves's commitment to her rules to control spending are a key reassuring factor for the bond markets.
Mr Starmer said: 'She is an excellent chancellor, she will be chancellor for a very long time to come, into the next election and beyond it.
'She and I are absolutely committed to our fiscal rules and the economic stability that is so important to this country, and that is the rock on which we build everything else.
'On that issue, Rachel and I are in lockstep, and have been for years.' – PA
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Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘Worst of any prime minister': Ten moments that defined Labour's first year in power in the UK
At its core, politics is a game of numbers. What share did we get of the vote? How many seats did we win? How much can we raise taxes? In advance of last July's UK general election, Keir Starmer 's Labour Party was focused on just one number – 14 – the time in years it had spent in opposition while the Conservative Party ruled. This weekend, Starmer's government reaches the first anniversary of his party's return to power. It has been a bumpy ride. The undulating nature of his first year in Downing Street was evident in the never-ending number play around Labour's muddied efforts to define its priorities: the five 'missions' with which it entered government (economic growth, green energy, the NHS, safer streets, education); its 'three foundations' for stability; its 'six first steps' in power. READ MORE By December Starmer was at it again. After a rocky start, he launched 'six milestones', or specific targets, by which he wanted voters to measure Labour at the next election. Meanwhile, here are 10 moments that defined Labour's turbulent first year in power. Keir Starmer speaks to supporters at the Labour watch party after the 2024 UK general election. Photograph: Jeff Moore/PA Wire 1. July 4th and 5th 2024: Election triumph, but optimism soon dissipated Labour recorded a landslide victory with a disciplined campaign in the election on July 4th. It won 412 seats, versus the Tories' 121. As he stood outside Downing Street on the afternoon of the 5th, Starmer promised to show that 'politics can be a force for good'. Yet the party's victory, though wide, was actually quite shallow. It won just 35 per cent of the vote, less than the 40 per cent share it won under Jeremy Corbyn's in 2017. Voters didn't so much embrace Labour as eject the Tories. Starmer was never popular in polls: journalists in Westminster soon began calling his victory the 'loveless landslide'. There were early warnings of the challenge to come from Nigel Farage's Reform UK . It won only five seats but came a close second in more than 70 constituencies. Starmer now sees Reform, which tops the polls, as a bigger electoral threat than the Tories. There were also early examples of the sort of petty rivalries among Labour's senior backroom teams that would dog the party all year. On election night, for example, Labour's official staff watch party was held at the Tate Modern gallery. Yet some senior aides of party deputy leader Angela Rayner were not given tickets. They were told by senior HQ staff to go instead to an unofficial watch party held by a private lobbying firm. It was seen as a deliberate snub of Rayner's team by staff loyal to the leader. A restaurant owner clears debris from the street in front of his restaurant in Middlesbrough, northeast England after rioting and looting in August. Photograph: Yelim Lee/AFP via Getty Images 2. 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September and October: 'Free Gear Keir' and Sue Gray The prime minister was elected partly on a promise to restore probity to British politics after years of what voters saw as low standards. So it was galling for Starmer to get caught up in a sleaze scandal barely less than three months into office. It emerged Starmer had accepted more than £100,000 of gifts in recent years, including football match tickets, clothing for him and his wife and eyewear. Much of it came from wealthy Labour peer Waheed Alli, a friend of Starmer's chief of staff, Sue Gray. Meanwhile, a power struggle broke out between Gray and Morgan McSweeney, a Corkman and Starmer's closest political adviser, who blamed Gray for not preparing Labour properly for power. She was ousted by mid-October. Keir Starmer speaking the Labour Party annual conference in Liverpool last September. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg 5. September 22nd-24th: Angst at the Labour conference For a party that months earlier had won Britain's biggest election victory in 27 years, the atmosphere at its annual conference in Liverpool was fretful and downcast. The conference took place in the middle of the freebies scandal and the Downing Street war between Gray and McSweeney. Labour's poll numbers were already falling fast. In Starmer's leader's address, he said Britain was 'no longer sure of itself'. He also claimed he had 'changed' the Labour Party into a disciplined machine. Nine months later, the extent to which he had changed Labour was questioned when the supposedly disciplined backbenchers he had lauded forced him into several U-turns on cuts. UK chancellor Rachel Reeves before delivering 'a proper social democratic budget' in October. Photograph: Lucy North/PA Wire 6. October 30th: Budget tax and spend This was one of the better moments in the first year of government for many Labour true believers. 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Since then, he has secured a trade agreement with the US and won Trump's continued backing for the Nato military alliance, albeit at the cost of further investment by European nations. A view of the entrance to Keir Starmer's house in Kentish Town, north London, after a suspected arson attack in May. Photograph: James Manning/PA Wire 8. May 12th: 'Island of strangers' speech Overnight an attacker had firebombed the prime minister's north London family home, currently rented out to his sister-in-law while the Starmers live in Downing Street. Starmer later claimed it had shocked him so much that he hadn't noticed that a speech he gave later that morning on immigration echoed language used by the anti-immigrant politician Enoch Powell decades earlier. The prime minister was accused of using inflammatory wording when he warned that mass immigration risked turning Britain into an 'island of strangers', similar to Powell's references to 'strangers in our own land'. The speech was believed to have been pitched at voters who may be inclined to vote for Reform. Pensioners marching on Stormont in October to protest against the cut in winter fuel payments by the UK government 9. May 21st: Winter fuel U-turn encourages more rebellion One of Reeves's first acts as chancellor was to axe universal winter fuel payments for all but the poorest of pensioners. It hadn't been in Labour's manifesto but she said she needed to do it to fill a £22 billion fiscal 'black hole'. [ Lucy Letby case roils Britain's legal and medical establishments Opens in new window ] Starmer and his government spent the next 10 months denying they would backtrack on the controversial move, before, under pressure from Labour backbenchers, he suddenly flagged a U-turn during prime minister's questions (PMQs) one Wednesday afternoon. It was the first of several policy about-turns that have weakened his authority. People taking part in a protest in London in June against disability welfare cuts. Photograph:10. July 1st: Backlash and tears over disability cuts Starmer's first year in government had started in hope but ended in farce, as Labour rebels forced him into a humiliating climbdown on £5 billion of disability welfare cuts. He had to offer enormous concessions to his own MPs in the hour before they prepared to vote on his proposals, after a debate in the Commons where some rebels had become emotional as they argued against their own party. The next day, Reeves burst into tears in the chamber beside Starmer at PMQs. Polling guru John Curtice said he has had the 'worst first year of any prime minister'.


Irish Independent
6 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Government committed to €200 childcare fee, but increase in places must happen
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Irish Examiner
10 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
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