Rachel Reeves gets Keir Starmer’s backing after she was seen crying in the Commons

By Irishexaminer.com

Rachel Reeves gets Keir Starmer's backing after she was seen crying in the Commons

鈥淚t鈥檚 got nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what鈥檚 happened this week. It was a personal matter for her.

鈥淚鈥檓 not going to intrude on her privacy by talking to you about that. It is a personal matter,鈥 he added while speaking to the BBC鈥檚 podcast Political Thinking with Nick Robinson.

Asked if Ms Reeves would remain in her post, Mr Starmer said: 鈥淪he will be Chancellor by the time this is broadcast, she will be Chancellor for a very long time to come, because this project that we鈥檝e been working on to change the Labour party, to win the election, change the country, that is a project which the Chancellor and I鈥檝e been working on together.鈥

The Chancellor has done a 鈥渇antastic job鈥, Mr Starmer also told the BBC, adding: 鈥淪he and I work together, we think together. In the past, there have been examples 鈥 I won鈥檛 give any specific 鈥 of chancellors and prime ministers who weren鈥檛 in lockstep. We鈥檙e in lockstep.鈥

Markets took fright after scenes of Ms Reeves鈥檚 tears spread, with the value of the pound and long-term Government bonds slumping sharply.

In the Commons, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said Ms Reeves looked 鈥渁bsolutely miserable鈥 and challenged Mr Starmer to say whether she would keep her job until the next election.

Mr Starmer dodged the question about whether Ms Reeves would be in place for the remainder of the Parliament, saying Mrs Badenoch 鈥渃ertainly won鈥檛鈥.

Downing Street then insisted Ms Reeves was 鈥済oing nowhere鈥 and will remain as Chancellor.

Allies, meanwhile, said she was dealing with a 鈥減ersonal matter鈥 when asked about her tears.

Mr Starmer, who stumbled on his way out of Downing Street for Prime Minister鈥檚 Questions, faced questions over his handling of a welfare reform package, which has been stripped of key elements to limit the scale of a Labour revolt.

Changes to restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment (Pip) were abandoned on Tuesday, just 90 minutes before MPs voted on them, wiping out the savings that Ms Reeves had counted on to help meet her goal of funding day-to-day spending through tax receipts rather than borrowing.

As Ms Reeves left the Commons after Prime Minister鈥檚 Questions, her sister, Ellie Reeves, took her hand in an apparent show of support.

Reports suggested Ms Reeves had been involved in an altercation with Commons Speaker Lindsay Hoyle shortly before Prime Minister鈥檚 Questions.

Mr Hoyle was said to have censured Ms Reeves for her approach to Treasury Questions earlier in the week, and the Chancellor reportedly responded that she had been 鈥渦nder so much pressure鈥.

A spokeswoman for Mr Hoyle said: 鈥淣o comment.鈥

Asked why Mr Starmer did not confirm in the Commons that he still had faith in Ms Reeves, his press secretary told reporters: 鈥淗e has done so repeatedly.

鈥淭he Chancellor is going nowhere. She has the prime minister鈥檚 full backing.

鈥淗e has said it plenty of times, he doesn鈥檛 need to repeat it every time the Leader of the Opposition speculates about Labour politicians.鈥

Asked whether Ms Starmer still had confidence in Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall, the press secretary said: 鈥淵es.鈥

Labour has promised that income tax, employee national insurance contributions and VAT will not be increased, restricting Ms Reeves鈥檚 options for raising money if she does look to hike taxes.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies鈥檚 incoming director, Helen Miller, said: 鈥淪ince departmental spending plans are now effectively locked in, and the Government has already had to row back on planned cuts to pensioner benefits and working-age benefits, tax rises would look increasingly likely.

鈥淭his will doubtless intensify the speculation over the summer about which taxes may rise and by how much.鈥

Mr Starmer declined to rule out tax rises later this year, telling MPs: 鈥淣o prime minister or chancellor ever stands at the despatch box and writes budgets in the future.鈥

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