Guernsey Press

Cabinet ministers pushing back against department spending cuts

Senior ministers are pushing back against cuts as Rachel Reeves finalises her first Budget as Chancellor.

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Sir Keir Starmer is facing a backlash from senior ministers over cuts to their departments’ spending planned at the Budget.

Concerns about the spending cuts have been raised across different Government departments, the PA news agency understands.

Several senior ministers were reported to have voiced concerns at Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting about Treasury proposals to reduce some departments’ spending by as much as 20%, according to the Times newspaper, and have since followed up with formal letters to the Prime Minister.

Rachel Reeves told ministers during Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting that plans to fill what Labour calls a “£22 billion black hole” in the UK’s finances will be enough only to “keep public services standing still”.

Sir Keir Starmer walking out of 10 Downing Street
Sir Keir Starmer is understood to be facing a backlash from senior ministers over spending cuts (PA)

It is with the Treasury rather than the Prime Minister that ministers are said to be largely directing their pushback efforts, as Ms Reeves seeks to finalise her first Budget which she will deliver on October 30.

Experts have argued that ministers need to find £20 billion to avoid a squeeze on so-called “unprotected” departments pencilled in by their Tory predecessors, and billions more to prevent a sharp fall in investment spending.

Some of that could come from changing the measure the Government uses to calculate debt, but economists from the Institute for Fiscal Studies have suggested that some tax rises are all but inevitable to prevent cuts to day-to-day spending.

Downing Street has denied that Sir Keir gave the public the wrong impression about the scale of tax rises that would come under Labour.

“We were honest with the British public, both during the election and since, about the scale of the challenge that we would receive.

“Then, of course, one of the first things the Chancellor did when we came in was do an audit of the books and found a £22 billion black hole that the previous government lied about and covered up.

“So that’s why we have continued to be honest with the British people that there are going to be difficult decisions in this Budget, and that’s because of the mess that the Conservatives left the economy in.”

The Treasury was contacted for comment.

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