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‘Clearly I was upset,’ says Reeves as she responds to questions about tears at PMQs – UK politics live | Politics

Reeves says it was her job to be at PMQs supporting government, but ‘clearly I was upset’

Rachel Reeves has said “clearly I was upset” when asked about being tearful during PMQs yesterday, PA Media reports. But it was her job to be at PMQs “supporting the government and that’s what I tried to do”, she said.

Reeves also appeared to reject suggestions that her tears were related to a conversation with Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle or another member of government.

Asked whether this was the case, the chancellor told broadcasters:

No, it was a personal issue, and I’m not going into the details of that. It wouldn’t be right or fair. People saw I was upset, but that was yesterday. Today’s a new day and I’m just cracking on with the job.

My job as chancellor is to return the stability to the economy, bring investment into Britain, but most importantly to improve the lives of ordinary working people, which is why I’m so pleased that in this first year interest rates have come down four times, saving money for people with mortgages, I’ve been the chancellor who’s increased the national living wage… so I’m proud of what we’ve done this last year.

But is there more to do as a government? Absolutely there is, and I’m going to get on with that job.

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Starmer says last year’s tax-raising budget did ‘lot of heavy lifting’, but declines to say this year’s won’t be similar

Last year, in a Q&A at the CBI conference, Rachel Reeves said that after the 2024 budget she would was “not coming back with more borrowing or more taxes”. That is sometimes quoted as Reeves rolling out any further tax rises, but in fact anyone who heard the full Q&A will have understood that she was ruling out was future tax rises on the scale of what was in that budget. She also told the CBI: “We won’t have to do a budget like this ever again.”

The budget raised taxes by £25bn in 2025-26, and by almost £42bn by 2029-30.

Until recently, ministers have been happy to repeat that version of the Reeves promise – to say that the 2024 budget was a one-off, and that the government will never come up with tax rises that big ever again.

But this morning, when Gary Gibbon from Channel 4 News asked Keir Starmer if he was still willing to rule out tax rises “anything like” those in the 2024 budget, Starmer did not quite give that pledge. (See 11.20am.) Starmer replied:

First of all, let me say what every prime minister or chancellor says anytime they’re asked about a future budget – it’s always the same, thisn’t a Labour answer or Conservative answer – no prime minister or chancellor is going to write a budget in advance.

But we did really tough stuff in that budget last year. We made sure we stabilised the economy, and we took big decisions early on …

So I say again today, we’ve done a lot of the heavy lifting, we’ve done a lot of the hard yards. The result of that, we’re turning our economy around, fastest growth in the G7 in the first quarter of this year, business confidence at a nine-year high and record investment.

In the end, that’s what drives growth. That’s what we were saying a year ago, the other side of the election. And that’s what I’ll say it again here today.

Keir Starmer at his Q&A this morning. Photograph: Jack Hill/PA
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