Red Wall Labour MPs need a Cabinet Minister to represent them amid "anger" about a southern bias in infrastructure spending ...
People always like to grumble when something changes. Fury followed the mandatory wearing of seatbelts, with the editor of ...
Rachel Reeves — the undeniable main character of the Readout in recent months — will end this week pretty pleased with ...
The host, 68, brutally tore into the Chancellor, 45, as he quizzed her about why she had lied about the length of time she had worked at the Bank of England.
To govern is to choose. So what have Labour’s ministers chosen to hung on their walls? Raiding the Government Art Collection ...
There was more bad economic news for Chancellor Rachel Reeves this morning as the closely-watched S&P Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) data came out. Output was marginally up in January, relative to ...
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves said she will relax some of her changes to the UK’s tax regime for wealthy foreigners, known as “non-doms,” amid concerns the Labour government’s ...
Rachel Reeves has said she plans to soften the proposed tax regime on non-doms after listening to their concerns. Downing Street said the move does not “change the overall approach” to the ...
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves poses outside 11 Downing Street, London, with her ministerial red box, before ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. For a Labour chancellor it was a bold move: Rachel Reeves went to Davos and told an audience of global ...
That left Rachel Reeves, Britain’s chancellor, with an uphill task when she arrived at the Swiss alpine town to court investors at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. She met a raft ...
Earlier in January, we discussed the growth crisis facing Rachel Reeves, Britain’s chancellor. Today, she’s in Davos trying to sell her remedy to the country’s manifold economic woes.