Piers Morgan did not hold back after the news of the Budget emerged.

Rachel Reeves was skewered by Piers Morgan (Image: Getty)
Rachel Reeves has been utterly skewered by Piers Morgan after the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) figures that she received ahead of the budget emerged online. Reeves is currently facing accusations that she “deliberately made UK finances look worse” ahead of the budget. Now a table has emerged detailing the financial situation of the UK, with opposing party members, and members of the public questioning her statements leading up to the Budget, and her decision to breach her manifesto pledges on tax.
Piers Morgan shared the table to his X as he quoted the post and wrote: “Further evidence that Rachel Reeves is a disingenuous Charlatan.” He had gone on a rampage about Labour following the news of the Budget as he unleashed his fury in yet another rant on X.

Piers Morgan did not hold back (Image: Getty)
He wrote: “Labour’s PM, Chancellor, and govt ministers keep saying ‘we’re asking people to make a contribution…’ like it’s some polite request that can be declined.
“They’re not, they’re ordering us all to pay higher taxes, with heavy fines or imprisonment for those who don’t.” Piers also shared a clip from the Conservatives that claimed the party had “told a lie” to get elected.
Alongside the clip Piers wrote: “You don’t have to be a Tory to be disgusted by this devastating mash-up of Labour Party leaders lying through their back teeth about tax so they could win power.” He also shared a clip from Rachel Reeves where she wrote: “Cutting NHS waiting lists, cutting debt and borrowing, cutting the cost of living. A budget that delivers for you.”
He wrote: “You broke all your tax promises. End.”
Piers hasn’t held back at all with his fury against the Labour Party, with his page prompting a mass debate from the public as his followers all rushed to comment. One user wrote: “When the numbers tell a different story than the speeches, trust collapses fast. If the OBR timeline is accurate, this wasn’t an accidental misread it was a political choice dressed up as economic inevitability. People can accept tough decisions. What they won’t accept is being taken for fools.”
Another fumed: “She needs to go, the country has had enough of this.” A third raged: “Totally agree, Piers. Voters deserve honesty and straight answers from the Chancellor, not spin and games with the numbers.”

