Rachel Reeves — the undeniable main character of the Readout in recent months — will end this week pretty pleased with ...
As UK economics editor, my life for the last week has felt a lot like surrealist movie Being John Malkovich — but with Rachel ...
Here's a round-up of the responses from the aviation and tourism industries after yesterday's announcement that a third ...
The Reeves plan will fail because it's based on the belief that Government generates growth rather than the animal spirits of ...
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.
An investigation has been launched after a man died after allegedly being pushed down an escalator at Waterloo station.
Rachel Reeves was seeking to win over business chiefs in Davos to invest in Britain by portraying herself as the “Iron Chancellor” who will stick to her fiscal rules and deliver economic growth.
Despina Alexiadou does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations ...
Rachel Reeves has declared she's "here for the long haul" amid a backlash over her handling of recent financial market turmoil. In her first broadcast interview since the economic upheaval began ...
Rachel Reeves has insisted that her critics “won’t get me down” after the UK’s poor economic performance led to intense speculation about her future. Keir Starmer was forced to insist that she would ...
The Chancellor is caught between the neo-Croslandites and the neo-Blairites. By George Eaton It’s been a better week for Rachel Reeves. On Tuesday, the Chancellor comfortably dismissed the shadow ...