UK politics live: Rachel Reeves breaks cover as she joins Starmer for unveiling of NHS 10 year plan

WorldPolitics
3 Jul 2025 • 6:01 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

image is not available

Rachel Reeves has appeared in public with Sir Keir Starmer a day after breaking down in tears alongside the prime minister in the Commons.

The public show of unity came after Sir Keir gave her his full backing and said he did not appreciate how upset she was in the Commons because he was focused on answering PMQs.

The pair were both at the launch of the government’s 10-year plan for the NHS in London.

The prime minister said all people could be caught “off guard” by their emotions, but the chancellor had to deal with it while on camera in Parliament.

He said she was doing an “excellent” job, would remain in place beyond the next general election, and that they were both absolutely committed to the chancellor’s “fiscal rules” to maintain discipline over the public finances.

UK government bonds rallied and the pound steadied on Thursday, after reassurances from the prime minister about the chancellor’s future.

Read More

Key Points

  • Reeves appears in public day after PMQs tears
  • Starmer insists Rachel Reeves doing 'excellent job'
  • Starmer says he didn’t realise Reeves was upset during PMQs but praises her resilience
  • PM admits he 'didn't get process right' in handling welfare reforms
  • ‘We are all human beings,’ Streeting declares in defence of Reeves

Rachel Reeves sighs at Beth Rigby question

11:13

,

Archie Mitchell

Rachel Reeves audibly said ‘ugh’ when Sky’s Beth Rigby asked Sir Keir Starmer about her tears in the Commons on Wednesday.

She was the second journalist in a row to ask about the chancellor, who has appeared alongside Sir Keir in a show of unity as he unveils his NHS plan.

But she is clearly in no mood to go into the personal matter that left her in tears, if her audible sigh is anything to go by.

Starmer says NHS reform is ‘about fairness’

11:11

,

Jabed Ahmed

Reforming the NHS is “about fairness” for everyone, Sir Keir Starmer said as he spoke at the launch of the NHS 10-year plan.

The Prime Minister said: “Millions of people across Britain no longer feel that they get a fair deal, and it’s starting to affect the pride, the hope, the optimism that they have in this great country, and our job is to change that.”

He continued: “For 77 years this weekend, the NHS has been the embodiment, if you like, of British pride, of hope, that basic sense of fairness and decency. 77 years of everyone paying in, working hard, doing the right thing, secure in the knowledge that if they or their family needs it, the NHS will be there for them.

“In 10 years’ time, when this plan has run its course, I want people to say that this was the moment, this was the Government, that secured those values for the future.

“Look, when people are uncertain about the deal they’re getting from this country, what fairer way is there to respond than that, by giving them more control, by partnering with them to build an NHS that is fit to face the future? And that is what this plan that we are launching today will do.”

Starmer credits Reeves’ decisions for record NHS investment

11:10

,

Jabed Ahmed

Sir Keir Starmer has hailed the decisions made by Chancellor Rachel Reeves as playing a part in the government investing “record amounts in the NHS”.

He said: “It’s all down to the foundation we laid this year, all down to the path of renewal that we chose, the decisions made by the Chancellor, by Rachel Reeves, which mean we can invest record amounts in the NHS.

“Already over 6,000 mental health workers recruited, 1,700 new GPs, 170 community diagnostic centres – really important – already open.

“New surgical hubs, new mental health units, new ambulance sites. Record investment right across the system.”

Pictured | Starmer, Reeves and Streeting at launch of NHS 10-year plan

11:09

,

Jabed Ahmed

image is not available

image is not available

Watch live | Starmer joined by Reeves as Labour unveil 10-year NHS plan

11:06

,

Jabed Ahmed

Starmer says NHS still needs work but future ‘already looks better’ under Labour

11:02

,

Jabed Ahmed

Sir Keir Starmer acknowledged improvements were needed in the NHS but said the situation was better than when Labour first took over from the Conservatives a year ago.

The prime minister said: “I’m not going to stand here and say everything is perfect now, we have a lot more work to do and we will do it.

“But let’s be under no illusions: because of the fair choices we made, the tough Labour decisions we made, the future already looks better for our NHS.

“And that is the story of this Government in a nutshell.”

Reeves says NHS plan is ‘good for nation’s health and finances’

11:01

,

Jabed Ahmed

Labour’s plan for the NHS will be “good for the health of our nation and good for the health of our nation’s finances”, Rachel Reeves has said in her first public appearance since crying in the Commons chamber on Wednesday.

Smiling as she spoke at a health centre in London, the chancellor said: “I want to be clear, we are spending money on taxpayers’ priorities, but that wouldn’t have been possible without the measures that we took in the budget last year.

“We fixed the foundations and we’ve put our economy back on a strong footing.”

She went on to say the government was “making this country fairer for those who have paid in all their lives by guaranteeing that the NHS will be there when they need it”.

Ms Reeves added: “This is the right way forward, good for the health of our nation and good for the health of our nation’s finances.

“This government will always deliver on the priorities of ordinary working people, and I am proud that with this plan the NHS will always be there for those who need it for the next 77 years, and many more beyond that too.”

Reeves returns the favour

10:58

,

Archie Mitchell

Also keen to support the PM, as he did for her, Rachel Reeves is muttering along as he lays out his plan for the future of the NHS.

‘Yes, yep, yes,’ she can be heard saying as she watches Sir Keir Starmer discuss the investment Labour is putting into the health service.

Sir Keir set out a ‘promise made, and a promise delivered’ on extra appointments, which the chancellor applauded with a wide smile.

Analysis: Rachel Reeves needed to be visible today

10:53

,

David Maddox

A beaming chancellor Rachel Reeves is definitely making an effort to look much happier today.

She has not mentioned the tears of yesterday at PMQs and the prime minister has now rallied to her saying she is safe in her job as chancellor.

Ms Reeves was not previously slated for this NHS 10-year plan launch but it was important she was here today to try to move on from a very difficult week for the government.

This is a show of unity and strength with three of the biggest figures in the government - Keir Starmer, Reeves and health secretary Wes Streeting.

Keir Starmer chants ‘wahey’ as Reeves gets on stage

10:50

,

Archie Mitchell

Sir Keir Starmer chanted ‘Wahey’ as he cheered Rachel Reeves on her way to the podium to speak about the NHS 10-year-plan.

If there was any doubt about the relationship between the PM and his chancellor, Sir Keir is trying his best to put it to bed.

He is clapping enthusiastically, smiling widely and murmuring ‘exactly’ alongside the chancellor’s speech.

Reeves appears in public day after PMQs tears

10:46

,

Jabed Ahmed

Rachel Reeves has appeared in public with Sir Keir Starmer a day after breaking down in tears alongside the Prime Minister in the Commons.

The public show of unity came after Sir Keir gave her his full backing and said he did not appreciate how upset she was in the Commons because he was focused on answering Prime Minister’s Questions.

The pair were both at the launch of the Government’s 10-year plan for the NHS in London.

Starmer set to feel the heat at NHS presser

10:51

,

Archie Mitchell

Under fire prime minister Sir Keir Starmer will be doing his best not to hand photographers and film crews a gift wrapped golden shot as he enters a sweltering room full of NHS staff to outline his NHS 10-year plan.

The PM has been under major pressure in recent weeks, and even a drop of sweat on Sir Keir’s forehead will prompt headlines about him ‘feeling the heat’.

His backdrop of nurses are wafting fans in a desperate but futile bid to keep cool. It is boiling.

Then again, the PM likes his ‘sleeves up, getting on with it’ look. So maybe it’s the perfect temperature for him.

Rayner vows to scrap ‘unfair’ council funding system in major review of red tape

10:35

,

Jabed Ahmed

The government will launch a “comprehensive” review aimed at ripping up red tape for councils and replace an “outdated and unfair” funding process with a “fair funding review”, Angela Rayner said.

The deputy prime minister told the Local Government Association: “Alongside our new outcomes framework, we’ll be launching a comprehensive review to ensure unnecessary regulations and needless asks from Government aren’t getting in the way of you serving your communities.

“We will harness the Government’s AI team to unlock efficiencies and work lockstep with the LGA so we get it right, so that’s two fundamental shifts in the way this Labour Government is doing business with local leaders, and we won’t stop there.”

image is not available

She continued: “You watched as your communities were unfairly short changed for too long. So that’s why my third pledge is to make good on a promise I made countless times in opposition, a promise to fund councils on the basis of need.

“The last government promised a fair funding review back in 2016, they recognised how outdated and unfair the funding process was back then, but as with so many of these things, their promises came to nothing.

“They dithered, they delayed and abandoned the fair funding review, but not under my watch. Anyone who knows me knows that I don’t make promises that I can’t keep.

“I listen to the people in this room calling for government funding to recognise the unique challenges of their place, whether that be rising temporary accommodation or even the pressure caused by huge footfall in coastal communities on the weekends… this Labour Government will waste no time in delivering it. We will implement a fair funding review, and yes, that’s a full fat version.”

Watch | Rachel Reeves is resilient and will bounce back, says Wes Streeting

10:28

,

Jabed Ahmed

Can Labour survive its identity crisis? Ask chief political commentator John Rentoul anything

10:16

,

Jabed Ahmed

Submit your questions in the comments section of the blow article. If you’re not already a member, click “sign up” in the comments section to participate. For a full guide on how to comment, click here.

Don’t worry if you can’t see your question right away – some may be hidden until the Q&A starts at 2pm

image is not available

Rayner promises ‘fundamental shift’ to cut local government bureaucracy

10:12

,

Jabed Ahmed

Angela Rayner has vowed to deliver a “fundamental shift” in how local government is run, with plans to strip back red tape and refocus efforts on long-term outcomes.

The deputy prime minister said a new local government outcomes framework would “radically simplify the funding and reporting regime” and help “prioritise the long-term instead of getting caught up in the nuts and bolts”.

She said the aim was to support councils to “deliver meaningful outcomes and facilitate a shift towards prevention”, adding: “The micromanagement of previous governments failed. It wasted taxpayers’ money and got us into a mess that we’re in now.”

Ms Rayner also pledged to end the “Westminster knows best” attitude and said ministers would work with local leaders who showed results through new ways of delivering services.

image is not available

Analysis | Why Starmer finally came out to give his full backing to his tearful chancellor

10:09

,

Jabed Ahmed

Our Political Editor David Maddox writes:

There are moments in politics where the situation has spun so badly out of control that somebody has to step in quickly to end the chaos.

Most famously in recent history it was former 1922 committee chairman Sir Graham Brady’s visit to Liz Truss in Downing Street to force her to resign after the mini-budget fallout.

But last night Keir Starmer had reached such a moment. His government was in meltdown.

Read the full analysis below:

image is not available

Reeves to flank Starmer in show of unity

10:05

,

Archie Mitchell

Rachel Reeves is to flank Sir Keir Starmer as he unveils his big plan for the NHS in a show of unity after yesterday’s grim scenes in the commons.

The chancellor is said to be at a hospital with the prime minister in London ready to put on a brave face after breaking down in tears behind him in Wednesday’s PMQs session.

The PM belatedly threw his arms around the chancellor, insisting she has his full backing until the next general election and beyond. But much damage had already been done - not least on financial markets - as he refused to guarantee her safety while she wept behind him.

She was not initially set to appear at the event, giving the impression that the side-by-side outing has been hastily arranged to show the two are walking in lockstep and quell rumours she is on the way out.

‘Well-known’ figures want to join Reform UK cabinet, Farage claims

09:59

,

Jabed Ahmed

A Reform UK cabinet could include people from outside Parliament, Nigel Farage has said.

During an LBC phone-in on Thursday, the Reform UK leader said it was “nonsense” that ministers “must all be politicians in the House of Commons” and suggested following the US example where cabinet members have often never stood for election.

He said: “I really mean this, I do think that you’ve got to think a little bit more about running the public finances as if you’re running a business.”

Asked if there were any names he was considering, he declined to say, but added: “I’m amazed by the conversations we’re having already.”

image is not available

He said: “Some of them are very well-known people.

“This country is in economic, social and cultural decline, we are in big trouble, and a lot of people recognise that if this is not turned around within the next decade, the place will, frankly, not be worth living in.”

In the wide-ranging phone-in, he also said he wanted to be prime minister because he did not “see anybody else with the guts to take on the really tough issues this country faces and turn it round”.

Asked whether he supported same-sex marriage, which he previously opposed, he would only say it was a “settled issue”, and he described a recent Commons vote to decriminalise women who have abortions after the 24-week limit as “disturbing”.

Watch | Starmer admits to 'tough' few days as PM addresses Reeves crying

09:49

,

Jabed Ahmed

Labour sees biggest first-year poll drop for governing party since 1990s

09:34

,

Jabed Ahmed

Labour has experienced a significant double-digit decline in public support since the general election a year ago, marking the first such drop for a governing party since John Major's Conservative administration in the 1990s.

Sir Keir Starmer’s party has averaged 24% in opinion polls over the past month, a notable 10-point decrease from the 34% recorded in the weeks immediately following the 2024 election.

While it is common for political parties to experience a slide in the polls after taking power – a trend observed in almost every UK government over the last four decades – a drop of this magnitude is considered unusual.

Read the full report below:

image is not available

Governemnt bonds rally after Starmer backs Reeves

09:18

,

Jabed Ahmed

UK government bonds rallied and the pound steadied after reassurances from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer over Chancellor Rachel Reeves.

Fears over her position as Chancellor sparked a sharp sell-off on Wednesday, with the yield on Government bonds, known as gilts, seeing the sharpest increase since US President Donald Trump’s tariff plans shook up financial markets in April.

Gilt yields move counter to the value of the bonds, meaning that their prices fall when yields rise.

But yields on 10-year and 30-year gilts dropped back on Thursday, down 0.1 percentage points each to 4.54% and 5.33% respectively.

The pound also edged higher, having suffered marked falls on Wednesday and was 0.1% higher at 1.37 dollars and 0.04% up at 1.16 euros in Thursday morning trading.

MPs declare more than £1m of gifts and hospitality in year since election

08:59

,

Jabed Ahmed

MPs have received more than £1 million in gifts since the election, including foreign travel, accommodation and tickets to sporting events and concerts.

Rows over free tickets and other gifts given to senior Labour figures, including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, posed an early problem for the Government, which had made restoring trust in politics a major part of its election campaign.

Some 236 MPs declared gifts from UK sources, totalling £477,539, while 144 said they had been on overseas trips paid for by donors, charities, think tanks or foreign governments, worth another £810,761.

In total, 318 MPs declared that they had received gifts in the year since the election, just under half the number sitting in the Commons.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage declared the highest value, receiving gifts worth a total of £98,709 over the past year.

The biggest recipient of hospitality from UK sources was the Prime Minister, thanks to his regular attendance at Arsenal games.

image is not available

Reeves' tears were 'purely personal', Starmer says

08:49

,

Jabed Ahmed

Sir Keir Starmer said people could be caught “off guard” by their emotions, but not everyone had to do so in the public eye.

He said Rachel Reeves was an “excellent Chancellor” and they were both “absolutely committed to our fiscal rules”.

The Prime Minister told Virgin Radio the Chancellor’s tears were “nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with the ups and downs of this week, or her relationship with anybody in the Labour Party, it’s purely personal”.

He said: “What I would say is – and you’ll understand this – in politics, you’re on show the whole time, there’s no hiding place.

“But we are humans in the end and sometimes personal things are obviously on our minds and, in this case, that was the situation.”

image is not available

He said they were “absolutely committed to our fiscal rules and the economic stability that is so important for this country, and that is the rock on which we build everything else”.

“On that issue, Rachel and I are in lockstep, and have been for years.”

He added: “She’s great colleague. She’s a friend of mine and I’ll be working with her for a very long time to come.

“But like all human beings, we’re also personal. There are moments that catch us off guard and if you’re in front of a camera for large periods of your life, unfortunately, that could be caught on camera in a way, if it had been anybody else at work, it would have not really been noticed.”

Starmer says he didn’t realise Reeves was upset during PMQs but praises her resilience

08:44

,

Jabed Ahmed

Sir Keir Starmer said he did not fully appreciate how upset Rachel Reeves was in the Commons on Wednesday because he was focused on responding to Prime Minister’s Questions.

He told Virgin Radio: “I actually personally didn’t appreciate it was happening in the Chamber because I came in, I’ve got questions being fired at me in PMQs so I’m constantly up at the despatch box and down.

“I think we just need to be clear, it’s a personal matter, and I’m not going to breach Rachel’s privacy by going into what’s a personal matter for her.”

image is not available

He later added she was “fine” following the tearful episode.

He told Virgin Radio: “She’s fine. She’s good… I had a long chat with her last night.

“She’s very resilient and strong is Rachel. She’s driven through lots of change in the Labour Party. We’ve had to change the Labour Party, fought an election together.

“I’ve seen her resilience first hand. I admire it. She’s a really powerful woman, and she’s also very widely respected.

“The sort of messages of concern that have come in over the last 24 hours or so show the great affection and respect in which she is held.

“People are held in respect for a reason, and that’s because people know they’re very good at what they’re doing.”

Starmer refuses to say if watered-down welfare reforms will save money

08:42

,

Jabed Ahmed

The Prime Minister refused to confirm whether his welfare reforms will save any money after they were stripped of key elements to prevent a Labour revolt.

Asked on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme how much money the welfare reforms will now save, Sir Keir Starmer said: “In terms of getting people back into work, of course, that will be good for the economy, because more people coming back into work and being supported back into work is good for them.”

He said the amount saved will be determined after disability minister Sir Stephen Timms completes his review of the Pip assessment process.

Pressed on whether the changes made will now cost the Government more money, Sir Keir said: “We need to finish the Stephen Timms review in order to properly answer that question.”

He added: “We will deal with all these matters at the budget and we will set out what we’re spending money on and how we’re going to spend it.

Starmer says NHS must ‘reform to survive’ despite progress on waiting lists

08:31

,

Jabed Ahmed

The Prime minister said he is “proud” of how his government has tackled NHS waiting lists, but added that “if the health service is to survive, it’s got to reform”.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Sir Keir Starmer said the health service was “left in a terrible state” by the previous government.

He said: “But even if that had not been the case the nature of illness and the presentation of the public in terms of: we all live longer, but with more conditions – what the health service has to deal with is so different to what it was 70 years ago when the NHS was set up that we have to change.

“And I know that simply putting more money into the old system isn’t going to produce what we need.”

Sir Keir added: “We’ve been driving down those waiting lists.

“I’m really pleased about that. I’m proud of what we’ve done. But I know that if the health service is to survive, it’s got to change, it’s got to reform.”

Streeting sets out 10-year NHS plan

08:21

,

Jabed Ahmed

Health secretary Wes Streeting told BBC Breakfast the 10-year health plan meant people would “begin to see and feel those changes” to the NHS and improvement in the health service.

He said new neighbourhood health services were in place in some regions but the government “will be rolling health centres starting off in areas with the highest levels of need, the communities that are also the most poorly served”.

He said people will get increasing amounts of care in their home, adding: “This is the game changer for the 21st century.”

He said: “Often we’ve been sent from village to town, to city. So now we’re going to design care around you.

“You’re going to have much more personal, personalised care, more ease, more convenience, more choice and control.”

Streeting launches staunch defence of his ally the chancellor

08:15

,

Tara Cobham

It is perhaps no surprise that Wes Streeting has launched the most staunch defence of Rachel Reeves yet since she broke into tears in the Commons on Wednesday.

The health secretary and the chancellor, as well as being political allies, are genuine friends.

So, taking to the airwaves in her support on Thursday morning, Mr Streeting told Sky News: “The strength of Rachel isn't just the judgment she applies where she says yes, but perhaps even more importantly, those judgments where she says no, because you need someone in that office who has the experience, the judgment and the strength to make, not always the easy choices, not always the popular choices, but the right choices to get our economy growing.

“And you see that reflected in the record of Rachel in her first 12 months as chancellor.”

'Tough' last few days but Labour will 'come through it stronger', Starmer says

08:00

,

Tara Cobham

The last few days have been “tough” for the government, Sir Keir Starmer has acknowledged, but said his party would “come through it stronger”.

In an interview with the BBC, the prime minister said: “I’m not going to pretend the last few days have been easy, they’ve been tough.

“I’m the sort of person that then wants to reflect on that, to ask myself what do we need to ensure we don’t get into a situation like that again, and we will go through that process.

“But I also know what we will do and that’s we will come through it stronger.”

‘Of course Rachel Reeves will be chancellor at election,’ Streeting promises

07:52

,

Tara Cobham

Wes Streeting has promised that Rachel Reeves will be chancellor at the next general election, doubling down on the prime minister’s guarantee.

In a boost for the chancellor, after her tearful display in the Commons on Wednesday, the health secretary said “the election victory was built on the bedrock of the reputation Rachel Reeves built as shadow chancellor”.

Speaking to Sky News, he said Ms Reeves “rehabilitated for the Labour Party the reputation of being able to be trusted with the public finances”.

“Just to knock this issue on the head, Rachel Reeves as chancellor is here to stay,” he said.

Analysis: Starmer hints at lessons to be learned after welfare debacle

07:45

,

Tara Cobham

The Independent’s political correspondent Archie Mitchell writes:

Sir Keir Starmer has said he is the type of person who likes to reflect on his mistakes, and how not to make them again.

In the wake of the debacle over his botched welfare bill, the prime minister admitted the government “did not get the process right”.

The main problem for Sir Keir, though, is that it is far from the first time he has faced a similar debacle. The episode was reminiscent of - although more extreme than - his U-turns over winter fuel payments and an inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal.

So while voters, and furious Labour backbenchers, will welcome the PM’s reflective remarks, made during a BBC podcast to mark one year of Labour, it is words not deeds that will win back their trust.

With his internal critics emboldened by the U-turn, there are only so many more mistakes the PM can afford to make.

‘We are all human beings,’ Streeting declares in defence of Reeves

07:38

,

Tara Cobham

The Independent’s political correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:

Wes Streeting has jumped to the chancellor’s defence, declaring “we are all human beings” and praising her strength and resilience.

The health secretary said Rachel Reeves is “resilient and she will bounce back… we have in Rachel, someone who will lead our economy from strength to strength, support family finances from strength to strength and back British business”.

Pressed on why she was in the Commons chamber to be seen crying behind the prime minister in the first place, Ms Streeting told Sky News he was “not going to get into it more than I already have” and “it is what it is”.

image is not available

PM admits he 'didn't get process right' in handling welfare reforms

07:30

,

Tara Cobham

The prime minister has admitted his government “didn’t get the process right” in handling its package of welfare reforms.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Sir Keir Starmer said: “We didn’t get the process right.

“Labour MPs are absolutely vested in this.

“It matters to them to get things like this right, and we didn’t get that process right.”

The reforms had been stripped of key elements to reduce the scale of a Labour revolt.

The prime minister added: “We didn’t engage in the way that we should have done.”

image is not available

Mel Stride uneasy about Jenrick's public outburst against Reeves

07:18

,

Tara Cobham

The Independent’s political correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:

Sir Mel Stride has suggested he feels uneasy about Robert Jenrick's public outburst against an emotional Rachel Reeves.

The shadow chancellor distanced himself from his Tory colleague over a video in which the shadow justice secretary claimed Ms Reeves' career – alongside her welfare bill – is dead.

Asked about it, Sir Mel said: "I think everybody has their own way of doing politics.

"I think, personally, keeping the personal out of politics is really important.

"But I think the point that Rob is making there is a very valid one, which is that this government has really lost control of the economy."

image is not available

Only Angela Rayner has emerged from the welfare debacle with her reputation intact

07:00

,

Holly Evans

It is a cliche that Labour is the party of work – “the clue is in the name” – and yet the first time that proposition has been tested in government resulted in a humiliating retreat. Keir Starmer failed to make the case for welfare reform, which meant that it looked as if he and Rachel Reeves, his iron chancellor, just wanted to save money.

After it was presented to Labour backbenchers as a choice between austerity and defending the rights of people with disabilities, there was only going to be one outcome – and it is a measure of the prime minister’s naivety that he didn’t see this until the last moment.

It is significant that it was Angela Rayner, who lives and breathes politics, who led the effort behind the scenes to save the government from being defeated in the Commons. It was she who forced the prime minister to bow to the reality of parliamentary arithmetic.

Read the full analysis here from John Rentoul here:

image is not available

Angela Rayner reveals why she’d never want to be prime minister

06:00

,

Holly Evans

Angela Rayner has said she would never want to be prime minister because “it would age me by 10 years within six months”.

“Have you ever seen a prime minister after a year or two in government?” the deputy prime minister joked.

The morning after Sir Keir Starmer scraped through a major rebellion over his watered-down welfare reforms, Ms Rayner was asked whether she is waiting in the wings to take the embattled PM’s place.

Read the full article here:

image is not available

Labour MP who led welfare revolt calls for wealth tax to meet £5bn cost of U-turn

05:00

,

Holly Evans

The leader of the rebel Labour MPs who forced Sir Keir Starmer to abandon his welfare reforms has called for a wealth tax to meet the £5bn cost of the U turn.

On Tuesday, the prime minister suffered the biggest blow to his leadership since coming into power a year ago after he was forced to shelve a key plank of his controversial benefit cuts in order to get them through parliament.

While his welfare reform bill passed its second reading by 335 votes to 260 – a majority of